Welcome to our first K-Tel album from 1982, the single greatest year in music history! We're kicking things off with the mellow majesty of Night Flight. It's got fourteen tracks, every single one a Top 20 hit! I'm going on the record with that prediction ahead of the K-Tel Scale™. There should be some decent chart crossover action as well. Not really a bad song in the bunch. Looking forward to listening to this one.
Listening to this album, I was taken back to late 1981 and early 1982 when I was fifteen years old. These weren't my favorite songs at the time but I saw them performed on different television shows and heard them frequently on the radio station my parents listened to at the time, both at home on Dad's sweet Teknika set-up and in their respective cars: Dad drove a Chrysler Cordoba while Mom tooled around in a faux wood-paneled Datsun F10. I was too busy loving AOR (album oriented rock) and the burgeoning New Wave scene on KWFM and KLPX back then. Doesn't mean I didn't like these songs, they just weren't my first or second choices. Let's check out some videos of a few of my favorite tracks from Night Flight.
All good stuff. Two songs I really like but didn't feature with videos are "Oh No" and "Just Once", two beautiful ballads deployed to devastating effect in scenes from the 1982 film The Last American Virgin.
Both songs are heard multiple times throughout the film which came out near the end of Summer 1982 though neither song was featured on the soundtrack album.
One last thing before we get to the K-Tel Scale - our friends over at the hopefully only momentarily defunct Show N K-Tel site featured Night Flight back in 2014 "from the top of the A side to the bottom of the B side" like they always do in superb sound. Listen via the link below. Or scroll down past the album cover and play the Spotify recreation of Night Flight I made back in April 2012.
NIGHT FLIGHT [1982]
| 34.36 | |||||||
Billboard Top 40s | ||||||||
Pop | COU | R&B | Disco | Rock | AC | CB | ||
I Can't Go For That (No Can Do) | Hall & Oates | 1 | 1 | 1 | 28 | 12 | 1 | |
Here I Am | Air Supply | 5 | 1 | 5 | ||||
Cool Night | Paul Davis | 11 | 2 | 16 | ||||
Slow Hand | Pointer SIsters | 2 | 7 | 6 | 2 | |||
Being With You | Smokey Robinson | 2 | 1 | 4 | 1 | |||
Step By Step | Eddie Rabbitt | 5 | 1 | 3 | 5 | |||
Winning | Santana | 17 | 2 | 15 | ||||
Believe It Or Not | Joey Scarbury | 2 | 3 | 1 | ||||
Oh No | Commodores | 4 | 5 | 5 | 4 | |||
We're In This Love Together | Al Jarreau | 15 | 6 | 6 | 13 | |||
Take My Heart | Kool & the Gang | 17 | 1 | 16 | 19 | |||
When She Was My Girl | Four Tops | 11 | 1 | 9 | 10 | |||
Just Once | Quincy Jones feat. James Ingram | 17 | 11 | 7 | 13 | |||
Angel Of The Morning | Juice Newton | 4 | 22 | 1 | 2 |
That's what I'm talking about - every single song a Top 20 on the Pop chart. More than half of the singles crossing over to the R&B chart and all but three of the fourteen making the Top 10 on the Adult Contemporary chart. There's minimal Rock chart crossover but we'll take what we can get. And look at the Number Ones: just one each on the Pop, Country and Disco charts but two on the AC chart and another four on the R&B chart. Every song was released in 1981, between February and November for an average release date of July 18, 1981. All but two of the fourteen songs on Night Flight also reached their peak in 1981, giving us an average peak date of October 10, 1981.
debut date | peak date | wks to pk | ||
I Can't Go For That (No Can Do) | Hall & Oates | November 14, 1981 | January 30, 1982 | 11 |
Here I Am | Air Supply | September 26, 1981 | November 21, 1981 | 8 |
Cool Night | Paul Davis | November 7, 1981 | February 6, 1982 | 13 |
Slow Hand | Pointer SIsters | May 30, 1981 | August 29, 1981 | 13 |
Being With You | Smokey Robinson | February 14, 1981 | May 23, 1981 | 14 |
Step By Step | Eddie Rabbitt | July 25, 1981 | October 17, 1981 | 12 |
Winning | Santana | April 11, 1981 | July 18, 1981 | 14 |
Believe It Or Not | Joey Scarbury | May 9, 1981 | August 15, 1981 | 14 |
Oh No | Commodores | September 26, 1981 | December 5, 1981 | 10 |
We're In This Love Together | Al Jarreau | August 1, 1981 | November 7, 1981 | 14 |
Take My Heart | Kool & the Gang | October 17, 1981 | December 26, 1981 | 10 |
When She Was My Girl | Four Tops | August 15, 1981 | November 7, 1981 | 12 |
Just Once | Quincy Jones feat. James Ingram | August 15, 1981 | November 14, 1981 | 13 |
Angel Of The Morning | Juice Newton | February 21, 1981 | May 2, 1981 | 10 |
averages | July 18, 1981 | October 10, 1981 | 12 |
Over on the Cash Box chart, all songs were also Top 20 with nine going Top 10 and three going all the way to the Top Spot. Long time readers will notice the WLS chart has been dropped from the K-Tel Scale™ as The Summer of 1981 was the last time I listened to the station, ending my six year tenure as we moved from Rantoul, Illinois to Tucson, Arizona in August 1981. In its place, a Billboard Rock chart has been permanently added to the Scale after it premiered in Billboard as Top Tracks in March 1981. The formulas and scoring have been adjusted to keep things fair. Well maybe not fair for this hits-laden album which scored an incredible 34.36, which places it at number 5 on the K-Tel Scale Top 10.
As might be expected, Night Flight is also available on 8-track and cassette tape with the 8-track featuring a reorganization of the tracklist so as to provide about thirteen minutes of music for each of the four programs.
What a wonderful compilation! It scores 71 out of 100 on the proprietary SRK scale. The Canadian version didn't fare so well with a score of 39.
ReplyDeleteA perfect merger of the two would be:
I Can't Go for That
Cool Nights
A Little in Love
A Woman Needs Love
Slow Hand
Being With You
Jessie's Girl
Step By Step
Winning
Burnin' for You
Living Inside Myself
Oh No
We're In This Love Together
Just Once
Believe It or Not
Angel of the Morning completely ruins the concept of this album. I am surprised you did mentioned that was the weakest song on this album like you do on the other albums. Whoever added that to this compilation is a complete moron.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing your opinions. The theme of the album to my ears is love songs and all the included songs qualify. Even if we took the album’s title at face value, only one of the songs is about the night and none are about flights.
DeleteDidn’t state that Angel of the Morning was weakest song on the album because there are at least two other songs that would compete for that dubious distinction.
Angel of the Morning is not only the weakest song, it completely ruins the title of this album. I am surprised that you did not mention that fact on this one.
ReplyDeleteMy brief time programming a local station taught me two lessons:
Delete1) every single song is someone’s all-time favorite song and they can’t hear it enough
2) that exact same song is the worst song ever to another listener who would prefer to never ever hear it again
While Angel of the Morning is far from one of my all-time favorite tunes I do enjoy it each time I hear it.