
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F8C8pyuOO5U
Top of the Pops was the show to watch if you liked pop music. It ruled the charts. An early appearance would rocket your record way up the charts. Usually, of course, you had to be somewhere in the charts to start with, just to be considered. That was the point of the show. It reflected the charts, but also influenced the sales of records. It is difficult to remember my earliest memory of the show. Most memories are from the 70's. However an earlier one that sticks out, is Little Children by Billy J Kramer and the Dakotas. Funnily enough, it was their first hit, not written by Lennon/McCartney. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4GxEcYI09eI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AKs43dHBSWA


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RIoBi1U-ASo
There were other music tv shows. One of which was a classical music quiz, where a team of celebrity "experts" answered a bunch of questions. One round included the team having to identify a piece of music that the host played on a dummy piano. It was amazing how many times they got it. I loved the show, but was useless at it. I very rarely got anything right. I did once recognise a piece from Bach's Magnificat, my favourite classical piece ever.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bo1x-62WmrI

called The Spinners [not the Detroit ones]. I used to watch and enjoy it, but the tall guy would really annoy me by getting the audience to sing along by saying the words quickly at the start of each line. That really bugged me and still does. Fortunately I had Steeleye Span, an electric folk band, with the wonderful Maddy Prior on vocals. Their show was a must see for me. Can't find any individual tracks of the show, but this will suffice. Thomas The Rhymer is still one of my favourites.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gyQy-ixV36A
Country music is now a big part of my listening experience. Part of the reason is a canadian singer called George Hamilton IV. He had a show on the BBC for a while. A gentle voice, very relaxed.
Early Morning Rain is a Gordon Lightfoot song, but I had George's version before I heard the original. The first version is usually the one you stick to, original or not.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nU-Ks-ES5bA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b5aQ2dLzzXs
In the early sixties a very strange show appeared and became quite popular and influential. Juke Box Jury had David Jacobs, the host, play records on a juke box, while a live audience and a panel of celebrity judges sat and listened, then voted it a hit or a miss. In the absence of video, you would watch the reactions of a very calm audience and a very stiff jury. The one with David McCallum is especially weird. It did have a kickass theme tune by the John Barry Seven, titled Hit or Miss. Yes, that John Barry. He of the James Bond theme tunes fame. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Whk-v90b3Rg

some of the wonderful music stars they had on. People like Elton John, Rita Moreno, John Denver. However, the one song that sits at the top of my favourite Muppet tunes, is Rainbow Connection as sung by Kermit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kaxoaKwx8tU
A huge once-a-year music show, The Eurovision Song Contest came to be loved and ridiculed at the same time. The ridicule came a little later, as the show opened up and let judges, and then voters, see the acts as they were performing. In the early days, there was just a panel of judges in each country, who listened and voted, without seeing the acts and sometimes without prior knowledge of the song. My first memory of seeing the contest was in 1967 when Sandie Shaw won with an atypical, for her, song, called Puppet on a String. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4xnzPnyyWbY
Next time, science fiction and music.
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