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Quiz about Were Number Two  Volume X  The End
Quiz about Were Number Two  Volume X  The End

We're Number Two - Volume X - The End Quiz


It took a couple of years but I finally remembered to wrap up this series of quizzes with a few more Hot 100 hits from the 1960s that couldn't quite reach the top rung of the chart! Enjoy.

A multiple-choice quiz by maddogrick16. Estimated time: 6 mins.
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Author
maddogrick16
Time
6 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
284,496
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
8 / 10
Plays
568
Awards
Top 10% Quiz
Last 3 plays: Guest 209 (7/10), jumpin1973 (8/10), Guest 199 (8/10).
Question 1 of 10
1. "Left a good job in the city
Workin' for the man every night and day
And I never lost one minute of sleepin'
Worryin' about the way things might have been"

The first of a string of Number Two hits that this recording act would have, what was the title of this 1969 song?
Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. In 1964 a song with the accompanying lyric stalled at Number Two for two weeks.

"Help me, information, more than that I cannot add
Only that I miss her and all the fun we had
Marie is only six years old, information please
Try to put me through to her"

What hit was this?
Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. The year is 1968. A song with mystifying lyrics, charitably labeled as "surrealistic", recorded by an act that would only have one top 40 Hot 100 hit, surprised us all by climbing the charts all the way to Number Two! Let's see if you can identify it after regarding the following lyrical clue, the opening verse of this "Magnum Opus".

"Spring was never waiting for us, girl
It ran one step ahead
As we followed in the dance
Between the parted pages and were pressed,
In love's hot, fevered iron
Like a striped pair of pants"
Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. In 1956, Eddy Arnold was co-composer of a song that he recorded and took to Number Ten on the Country charts. That same year, Jerry Vale had a Number 14 Hot 100 hit with this bitter-sweet ballad. Then, in 1962, a lovely cover by Ray Charles rocketed up the Hot 100 charts but finally settled in at Number Two behind "Sheila" by Tommy Roe. What song was it with these words?

"You give your hand to me and then you say goodbye
I watch you walk away beside the lucky guy"
Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. "Paint It Black" by The Rolling Stones topped the charts for two weeks in 1966 denying a hit with these lines a crack at the top.

"Sometimes you really dig a girl the moment you kiss her
And then you get distracted by her older sister
When in walks her father and takes you in line"

What was the title of this two-week Number Two hit?
Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. "I want it long, straight, curly, fuzzy, snaggy, shaggy, ratty, matty, oily, greasy, fleecy, shining, gleaming, streaming, flaxen, waxen, knotted, polka-dotted, twisted, beaded, braided, powdered, flowered, and confettied, bangled, tangled, spangled, and spaghettied!"

That's plenty of words from a Number Two hit in 1969. Please type in the four-letter word that all those adjectives describe in the song.

Answer: (One Word - four letters)
Question 7 of 10
7. Frankie Valli started doing some solo work without the Four Seasons in the mid-1960s. His first major success as a solo artist was a Number Two hit in 1967. Can you identify it with help from this piece of the lyric?

"You'd be like heaven to touch
I wanna hold you so much
At long last love has arrived
And I thank God I'm alive
You're just too good to be true"
Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. "If it's me you want to love you
I'll be more than glad to love you
Hold you till your life is done
But, darling, if I'm not the one"

Bobby Vee sang these words in 1961 and the song yielded a Number Two hit for him. The next line reveals the song's title. What was it?
Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. A song written by Bobby Russell and recorded by a couple of artists was a Number Two hit for one of them in 1968. In the lyric, he points out a number of things his wife does to make him feel ultra-special. Then he asserts "And if that's not lovin' me, then all I've got to say" are things like "it don't rain in Indianapolis in the summertime" or "it don't snow in Minneapolis when the winter comes". What was the title of this hit? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. In 1961, the Dovells had a Number Two hit with "Bristol Stomp". Len Barry was the lead singer of the group and when he went solo a few years later in 1965, his biggest hit recording was doomed to the same fate. Name it with help from this sampling of the lyric.

"A-B-C
Fallin' in love with you was easy for me
And you can do it, too, it's easy
Like takin' candy from a baby"
Hint



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quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. "Left a good job in the city Workin' for the man every night and day And I never lost one minute of sleepin' Worryin' about the way things might have been" The first of a string of Number Two hits that this recording act would have, what was the title of this 1969 song?

Answer: Proud Mary

Before Creedence Clearwater Revival disbanded in 1972, they would establish a record for bad luck... five Number Two songs with nary a Number One. "Proud Mary" led the way, their biggest and most memorable hit and I suppose that would be a portent of things to come. The other four, in order, were: "Bad Moon Rising", "Green River", "Travelin' Band" and "Lookin' Out My Back Door". Adding insult to injury, "Down on the Corner" peaked at Number Three and "Up Around the Bend" topped out at Number Four.

John Fogerty, the song's composer and group leader, kept a list of song titles with him at all times in case the muses bit. "Proud Mary" topped that list and when he started writing the song, it was intended to be about a poor washerwoman named Mary. However, the guitar riff he was playing around with conjured up images of a river and Mary became a stern wheeler on the Mississippi rather than a cleaning lady. A good choice, I think. The band had a sound that evoked images of the south and Bayou country and eventually it came to be known as swamp rock. Consequently, it was just presumed that the band was from New Orleans or somewhere else nearby. In fact, the band hailed from El Cerrito, California. Another piece of romantic imagery ruined!
2. In 1964 a song with the accompanying lyric stalled at Number Two for two weeks. "Help me, information, more than that I cannot add Only that I miss her and all the fun we had Marie is only six years old, information please Try to put me through to her" What hit was this?

Answer: Memphis

"Memphis" was Johnny Rivers' first charting hit single even though he had been bouncing around the music scene and cutting records since 1956 when he was 14 years old. The song was originally recorded as "Memphis, Tennessee" by its composer, Chuck Berry, in 1959 as the B-side to his Number 37 hit "Back in the U.S.A.". "Memphis" was culled from Rivers' maiden album "Johnny Rivers at The Whiskey a Go-Go" and both album and single made their charting debut in June 1964, right in the middle of The Beatles hysteria. Oddly enough, however, it wasn't the "Mop Tops" who denied Rivers his first Number One hit. During its two week residence at Number Two, the two per-eminent American groups at the time proved to be Rivers' nemeses; "I Get Around" by The Beach Boys and "Rag Doll" by the Four Seasons were the Number One hits during that two week stretch.

It took a while, but Rivers would eventually get his Number One hit two years later in 1966 with "Poor Side of Town".
3. The year is 1968. A song with mystifying lyrics, charitably labeled as "surrealistic", recorded by an act that would only have one top 40 Hot 100 hit, surprised us all by climbing the charts all the way to Number Two! Let's see if you can identify it after regarding the following lyrical clue, the opening verse of this "Magnum Opus". "Spring was never waiting for us, girl It ran one step ahead As we followed in the dance Between the parted pages and were pressed, In love's hot, fevered iron Like a striped pair of pants"

Answer: MacArthur Park

Jimmy Webb composed the song and it was a far cry from his usual pieces of fluff that he wrote for Glen Campbell or The Fifth Dimension. You know them: "Up, Up and Away", "By the Time I Get to Phoenix", "Wichita Lineman" and "Galveston". Those were nice, simple, straightforward songs; this one seemed complex and bizarre. Not so, said Webb years later when interviewed about the song. It was simply about a love lost but like other songwriters at the time, he felt it necessary to delve into the surreal and abstract to make it work. Anyway, he was in love with a cousin of Linda Ronstadt. She dumped him and got married to another guy. The wedding was held in MacArthur Park located on the west side of Wilshire Boulevard between downtown L.A. and Santa Monica. Webb surreptitiously took it in, hiding in a landscaping hut. The rains came. He could see the wedding cake from where he was but the raindrops trickling down the window pane made it look like the cake and the park itself was melting in the rain. End of story! Hear the song again or peruse the lyrics and it all is pretty simple in that context.

Utilizing Richard Harris to sing it was not quite as off the wall as many of us in North America thought it was at the time. Basically, he was largely unknown to us as a singer and only marginally recognized as an actor at that time. Of course, in the U.K. he was of star quality and had just begun a lengthy stage run as King Arthur in "Camelot", a role he would reprise for the screen. Webb had met him years earlier and they became good buddies. Webb promised that he would eventually create a piece for Harris, a project that they could work on together. This turned out to be it. Many critics didn't think Harris was much of a singer, that he "acted" the lyrics rather than sang them. Webb was unconcerned. He had spent many an evening with Harris in pubs and heard him sing hundreds of Irish folk songs. He knew Harris could do this and make a hit of it.

Perhaps this turned out to be one of the most famous Number Two hits ever... but just this rendering of "MacArthur Park". Ten years later, in 1978, Donna Summer surprised us all, again, when her discofied cover version reached the top of the Hot 100 charts.

Oh, yes! What song was it that stymied "MacArthur Park" from Number One? "Mrs. Robinson" by Simon and Garfunkel.
4. In 1956, Eddy Arnold was co-composer of a song that he recorded and took to Number Ten on the Country charts. That same year, Jerry Vale had a Number 14 Hot 100 hit with this bitter-sweet ballad. Then, in 1962, a lovely cover by Ray Charles rocketed up the Hot 100 charts but finally settled in at Number Two behind "Sheila" by Tommy Roe. What song was it with these words? "You give your hand to me and then you say goodbye I watch you walk away beside the lucky guy"

Answer: You Don't Know Me

"You Don't Know Me" really was a lovely ballad regardless of the singer.

Eddy Arnold, who co-wrote and first recorded it, had an extraordinarily long career in show business. Born in Tennessee in 1918, he started performing in the 1930s, cut his first single in 1944 and issued his last CD in 2005. In between, he had 28 Number One Country hits and his total of 145 weeks at the top of the Country charts continues to lead the way, as of early 2012, among country performers. More importantly, Arnold likely led the "crossover" trend from country to pop in the late 1940s, his style and delivery readily acceptable to a broad range of listeners. He passed away in 2008, one week before his 90th birthday.

Speaking of "crossover" artists, Ray Charles did that his entire career and not in just two genres. Equally comfortable in the domains of C&W, R&B, Rock, Gospel and Pop, many of his recordings often made appearances on three different Billboard charts. His recording of "You Don't Know Me" is a perfect example - Number One on the Adult Contemporary chart, Number Two on the Hot 100 and Number Five on the R&B chart. His death in 2004 signaled the end of an era in my opinion. Given the compartmentalization of music today, I doubt that we'll ever see a performer with his versatility reach star status in several genres again.
5. "Paint It Black" by The Rolling Stones topped the charts for two weeks in 1966 denying a hit with these lines a crack at the top. "Sometimes you really dig a girl the moment you kiss her And then you get distracted by her older sister When in walks her father and takes you in line" What was the title of this two-week Number Two hit?

Answer: Did You Ever Have To Make Up Your Mind?

The first seven recordings The Lovin' Spoonful released were all top ten successes and "Did You Ever Have to Make Up Your Mind" was right in the middle of that run. The group was slowly peaking. "Do You Believe in Magic", their debut release in 1965 peaked at Number Nine followed by the Number Ten "You Didn't Have to Be So Nice". In 1966, they had two Number Two hits, "Daydream" and this song before finally scoring a Number One hit with "Summer in the City". That was followed by The Number Ten "Rain on the Roof" and the Number Eight "Nashville Cats" later in 1966.

The group's decline began in mid-1967. Two of the members, guitarist/vocalist Zal Yanovsky and bassist Steve Boone were nabbed in a drug bust in San Francisco. Yanovsky was still a Canadian citizen at the time and in order to avoid deportation and maintain his working visa in the U.S., was compelled to cooperate with authorities and squeal on their drug source. The group became "persona non grata" among their peers and a segment of their fan base. A critical component to the band's success, Yanovsky decided to part company with the group and when the other mainstay, John Sebastian, also quit in early 1968, the group officially disbanded. Sometime in the early 2000s, Boone and the other original member, drummer Joe Butler, reformed the band and are touring once again as of 2012. Similarly, Sebastian still tours as a soloist or with a revolving concoction of close musical friends. Yanovsky died of a heart attack in 2002.
6. "I want it long, straight, curly, fuzzy, snaggy, shaggy, ratty, matty, oily, greasy, fleecy, shining, gleaming, streaming, flaxen, waxen, knotted, polka-dotted, twisted, beaded, braided, powdered, flowered, and confettied, bangled, tangled, spangled, and spaghettied!" That's plenty of words from a Number Two hit in 1969. Please type in the four-letter word that all those adjectives describe in the song.

Answer: Hair

Speaking from personal experience, my hair has been most of those things at one time or another but never polka-dotted, beaded, spangled or spaghettied. These days, it's just plain sparse!

"Hair", from the rock musical of the same name, was performed by The Cowsills, a musical family consisting of Billy, Bob, Barry, Paul, John and Susan. Formed in the mid-1960s, they garnered national attention when their debut release, "The Rain, the Park and Other Things", became a Number Two charting sensation in late 1967. It was followed by the Number 21 "We Can Fly", the Number Ten "Indian Lake", then "Hair" their final Top 40 charting success in 1969.

The Cowsills served as the basis for the TV hit, "The Partridge Family" and they were considered as options to play themselves in the series. Whether the fact that they did not get those parts had any bearing in the group's demise or not, by the time the TV series was airing in 1971, the Cowsills were no more. Eventually, Bob, Paul, John and Susan reformed the group in the mid-1990s and they continue to tour into the 2010s. Sadly, Barry fell victim to Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and within six weeks, Bill passed away following a lengthy bout of ill health.
7. Frankie Valli started doing some solo work without the Four Seasons in the mid-1960s. His first major success as a solo artist was a Number Two hit in 1967. Can you identify it with help from this piece of the lyric? "You'd be like heaven to touch I wanna hold you so much At long last love has arrived And I thank God I'm alive You're just too good to be true"

Answer: Can't Take My Eyes Off You

"Can't Take My Eyes Off You" peaked at Number Two during a four-week span when "Windy" by The Association ruled the roost.

Although Valli had been cutting single solo recordings for a couple of years, none had made significant dents on the Hot 100 charts. It was his personal belief that his record label was not devoting near enough energy or resources in the promotion of those recordings. For this song, he personally hired an independent agency to promote the recording the way he thought proper. Was that the difference? Probably not. It's far more likely that this Gaudio-Crewe composition was simply superior to those previous works. Regardless, after this hit both he and The Four Seasons went into a six year period barren of hits before rebounding in the mid-1970s when both entities had a few more hits before fading away once again. Essentially, Valli's charting swan song was the Number One "Grease" in 1978. As of 2012, Valli and The Four Seasons maintain a fairly heavy concert schedule... at least for guys in their late 70s!
8. "If it's me you want to love you I'll be more than glad to love you Hold you till your life is done But, darling, if I'm not the one" Bobby Vee sang these words in 1961 and the song yielded a Number Two hit for him. The next line reveals the song's title. What was it?

Answer: Run To Him

When I composed this question, I actually typed in Bobby Vinton rather than Bobby Vee as the singer. Back in the early 1960s when both artists were just starting out, I often confused them. It took quite a while for me to sort them out - Vinton was the older, laid back one who crooned ballads targeted for my parents more than me. Vee was much younger and although not a "rocker" per se, he did perform songs that were earmarked more for the teen crowd.

Most folks are now familiar with the story of how the teenage Vee was recruited to replace Buddy Holly, the Big Bopper and Richie Valens at the concert they were scheduled to perform when they were killed in the plane crash. Within 18 months of this bittersweet introduction to the "big time", as it were, Vee was an up-and-coming recording star in his own right with hits like "Devil or Angel" and "Rubber Ball". "Run to Him" was the second biggest hit of his career, the follow-up recording to his biggest hit, the Number One "Take Good Care of My Baby".

Essentially, Vee was yet another victim of the British Invasion in 1964. He had his last big hit, the Number Three "Come Back When You Grow Up", in 1967. By the early 1970s, he was working the oldies circuit and according to his website, is now sampling "retirement living" as of late 2011.
9. A song written by Bobby Russell and recorded by a couple of artists was a Number Two hit for one of them in 1968. In the lyric, he points out a number of things his wife does to make him feel ultra-special. Then he asserts "And if that's not lovin' me, then all I've got to say" are things like "it don't rain in Indianapolis in the summertime" or "it don't snow in Minneapolis when the winter comes". What was the title of this hit?

Answer: Little Green Apples

"Little Green Apples" was first recorded by Roger Miller. It would be his last entry on the Hot 100 chart peaking at Number 39 in March, 1968. Then, another version was recorded by a jazz/R&B singer named O.C. Smith. It steadily climbed the charts before stalling at Number Two in October, unable to unseat The Beatles' "Hey Jude" which was right in the middle of a nine week run at Number One.

Smith entered the music industry in the mid-1950s after graduating from University and serving a stint with the U.S. Air Force. Primarily a jazz vocalist, he performed with the likes of Sy Oliver and Horace Heidt before fronting Count Basie's band for several years in the early 1960s. He switched gears in the middle of the decade, going solo and orienting himself more into R&B. He was just about to abandon music when he finally achieved charting success with the Number 40 "The Son of Hickory Holler's Tramp". He followed that up with "Little Green Apples" for which he earned a Grammy for Song of the Year. Although he continued his recording career right into the 21st Century, he never was able to replicate the success he had with this hit. In 1985, he founded and became pastor of the City of Angels Church of Religious Science in Los Angeles and balanced his music career and pastoral work until his passing in 2001.
10. In 1961, the Dovells had a Number Two hit with "Bristol Stomp". Len Barry was the lead singer of the group and when he went solo a few years later in 1965, his biggest hit recording was doomed to the same fate. Name it with help from this sampling of the lyric. "A-B-C Fallin' in love with you was easy for me And you can do it, too, it's easy Like takin' candy from a baby"

Answer: 1-2-3

Len Barry (nee Borisoff) was born and raised in Philadelphia and never gave thought to a musical career when growing up. His ambition was to play baseball. Nevertheless, he helped form and sang lead for the Dovells in the late 1950s and following the completion of his obligatory military service, rejoined the band and reveled in the success of "Bristol Stomp". Choosing to go solo and turning from straight rock to blue eyed soul, he scored this Number Two hit but subsequent recordings in 1966 came nowhere close to that level of success. Thereafter, he continued to record until the mid-1980s without any chart action at all, performed live on the oldies circuit then focused on song composition and production work. At present (2012), it seems that he is now retired from show business altogether.

"I Hear a Symphony" by the Supremes spoiled Barry's hopes for the elusive Number One.
Source: Author maddogrick16

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor agony before going online.
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Related Quizzes
This quiz is part of series Those Number Two Hits:

All these hits fell one rung short from achieving Number One status. These are their stories.

  1. We're Number Two! - VOL I Average
  2. We're Number Two! - VOL II Average
  3. We're Number Two! - VOL III Average
  4. We're Number Two! - VoI. IV Average
  5. We're Number Two! - Vol. V Average
  6. We're Number Two! - Vol VI Average
  7. We're Number Two! - Vol VII Average
  8. We're Number Two! Vol. VIII Average
  9. Number Twos - Volume IX - Master's Edition Average
  10. We're Number Two - Volume X - The End Average

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