Banner Graphic, Volume 19, Number 282, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 August 1989 — Page 7

‘Right Here Waiting’ at No. 1 is Richard Marx’s popular single

By The Associated Press The following are the top record hits and leading popular compact discs as they appear in next week’s issue of Billboard magazine. Copyright 1989, Billboard Publications, Inc. Reprinted with permission. HOT SINGLES 1. “Right Here Waiting” Richard Marx (EMI) 2. Our Own” Bobby Brown (MCA) 3. “Batdance” Prince (Warner Bros.) 4. “So Alive” Love and Rockets (RCA) 5. “Once Bitten Twice Shy” Great White (Capitol) 6. “Cold Hearted” Paula Abdul (Virgin) 7. Like It” Dino (4th & B’Way) 8. “Lay Your Hands On Me” Bon Jovi (Mercury) 9. “Don’t Wanna Lose You” Gloria Estefan (Epic) 10. “Toy Soldiers” Martika (Columbia)-Gold (More than 500,000 singles sold.) TOP LP’S 1. “‘Batman’ Soundtrack” Prince (Warner Bros.) 2. Tough” New Kids On the Block (Columbia)-Platinum (More than 1 million units sold.) 3. “Repeat Offender” Richard Marx (EMI)Platinum 4. “The Raw and the Cooked” Fine Young Cannibals (1.R.5.)-Platinum 5. “Full Moon Fever” Tom Petty (MCA)-Platinum 6. Be Cruel” Bobby Brown (MCA)Platinum 7. Your Girl” Paula Abdul (VirgiePlatinum 8. “Girl You Know It’s True” Milli Vanilli (Arista)Platinum 9. “Walking with a Panther” L.L. Cool J (Def Jam) 10. “Twice Shy” Great White (Capitol)-Platinum COUNTRY SINGLES 1. “Timber I’m Falling in Love” Pattv Loveless (MCA) 2. in the South” Shenandoah (Columbia) 3. “Are You Ever Gonna Love Me” Holly Dunn (Warner Bros.) 4. “Love Has No Right” Billy Joe Royal (Atlantic America) 5. Way the Wind Blows” Southern Pacific (Warner Bros.) 6. Still Crazy” Vem Gosdin (Columbia)

‘Twins’ twice the fun as top rental

By The Associated Press The following are the most popular videocassettes as they appear in next week’s issue of Billboard magazine. Copyright 1989, Billboard Publications, Inc. Reprinted with permission. VIDEOCASSETTE RENTALS 1. “Twins” (MCA) 2. Rotten Scoundrels” (Orion)

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Manager_ ~ <; In appreciation for the past 50 years TOWN EDGE MOTORS will do- '! ' > nate ‘25 to a local charity or organization for each new or used vehicle ! • ( i sold In 1989, each month a different organization is selected. This <' i' month 15... < f ], SUGAR CREEK SWIM CLUB. SCSC was organized In 1969 and offers a ]» ( > comprehensive competitive swimming program for boys and girls <! • [ aged six and older and is a not-for-profit organization that operates on 1 • !i a fixed budget. Unlike many sports, no one ever sits the bench regar- ] ’ ; of their age.

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7. “I Wonder Do You Think, of Me” Keith Whitley 8. “More Than a Name on a Wall” The Statler Bros. (Mercury) 9. “This Woman” K.T. Oslin (RCA) 10. “Never Givin’ Up on Love” Michael Martin Murphey (Warner Bros.) ADULT CONTEMPORARY SINGLES 1. “Right Here Waiting” Richard Marx (EMI) 2. Wanna Lose You” Gloria Estefan (Epic) 3. “The End of the Innocence” Don Henley (Geffen) 4. “Soul Provider” Michael Bolton (Columbia) 5. “If You Don’t Know Me By Now” Simply Red (Elektra) 6. Time I Know It’s For Real” Donna Summer (Atlantic) 7. “Sacred Emotion” Donny Osmond (Capitol) 8. “My One Temptation” Mica Paris (Island) 9. “Trouble Me” 10,000 Maniacs (Elektra) 10. Game” Swing Out Sister (Fontana) BLACK SINGLES 1. Batdance” Prince (Warner Bros.) 2. in the Way” Stephanie Mills (MCA) 3. “Two Wrongs” David Peaston (Geffen) 4. Our Own” Bobby Brown (MCA) 5. “They Want Money” Kool Moe Dee (Jive) 6. No Crime” Babyface (Solar) 7. Vesta (A&M) 8. “Spend the Night” The Isley Bros. (Warner Bros.) 9. “It Isn’t, It Wasn’t, It Ain’t Never Gonna Be” Aretha Franklin & Whitney Houston (Arista) 10. Got Our Own Thang” Heavy D. & The Boyz (Uptown) TOP POP COMPACT DISCS 1 .“Full Moon Fever” Tom Petty (MCA) 2. Soundtrack” Prince (Warner Bros.) 3. End of Innocence” Don Henley (Geffen) 4. Raw and the Cooked” Fine Young Cannibals (IRS) 5. Offender” Richard Marx (EMI) 6. Both Ways” Gloria Estefan (Epic) 7. Man’s Zoo” 10,000 Maniacs (Elektra) 8. Shy” Great White (Capitol) 9. Your Girl” Paula Abdul (Virgin) 10. Step” Stevie Ray Vaughan & Double Trouble (Epic)

3. “The Accidental Tourist” (Warner) 4. to America” (Paramount) 5. Liaisons” (Warner) 6. The Return” (CBS-Fox) 7. Accused” (Paramount) 8. “Alien Nation” (CBS-Fox) 9. “My Stepmother Is An Alien” (RCA-Columbia) 10. Last Temptation of Christ” (MCA)

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State Road 32 East, Crawfordsville

Disco diva retires to rock

NEW YORK (AP) Summer ruled as the disco queen of the music world. But she turned in her tiara once breakdancing outhustled the hustle. Summer made headlines in 1980 by signing with the newly-formed Geffen record label, whose founder, David Geffen, had successfully promoted Jackson Browne, the Eagles and Joni Mitchell. IT SEEMED LIKE a perfect match. Summer was coming off a phenomenal string of hit singles, including “Bad Girls,” “On the Radio” and “Hot Stuff.” Geffen was a widely respected executive who also signed Elton John, Neil Young and John Lennon. But something went wrong. Summer’s first record for Geffen, “The Wanderer,” went gold, but her sales later fell off. By the mid-’Bos, she was seeking her release from the label. “It wasn’t working,” she recalled in a recent interview. “It wasn’t that we hated each other, it just wasn’t working. They didn’t really have the facilities to promote someone like me. It was frustrating.” HER MAJOR SUCCESS of the decade came in 1983 with the album “She Works Hard for the Money.” The title track was a Top 10 smash, an anthem for working women. When she completed work on “Another Place and lime,” Geffen refused to release it So she signed with Atlantic Records, and “This Time I Know It’s for Real,” the debut single, soon reached the Top 10. The album, recorded in London, was produced and written by the team of Mike Stock, Matt Aitken & Peter Waterman, who have also worked with Rick Astley and Bananarama. “THE GUYS WHO produced me are very commercial minded, much more than I am,” she said. “As an artist and a writer you tend to want to do what you want to do. There’s a time you need to be commercial. That’s the whole object: to sell records, enough to be on a label. You need somebody to kind of monitor your sense of creativity.” Summer, who was bom in 1948 in Boston, became the soloist in her church choir by age 10. “There was no question I would be a singer, I just always knew. I had credit in my neighborhood; people would lend me money and tell me to pay it back when I got famous.” SHE BEGAN CASHING in with “Love to Love You Baby,” a No. 1 hit in 1975 that helped open the disco era. For the next four years, she was everywhere. Eight singles in the Top 10, three reaching No. 1. But Summer was never comfortable with the disco queen label. Musically, she began to change in 1979 with “Hot Stuff,” which had a tough rock ’n’ roll beat

BOULEVARD MALL NORTH ENTRANCE ON SOUTH BOULEVARD (Crawfordsville) 1985 Olds Cutlass Clerra 4 dr. gray 1987 Dodge Dakota p/u with shell, blue 1985 Olds Cutlass Cierra Wgn, blue 1985 Chev. SlO Blazer, 4X4, silver 1984 Chrysler sth Ave, 4 dr., silver 1987 Dodge D 250, p/u, red 1984 Mercury Cougar, 2 dr, red 1986 Fora Fl5O p/u, red 1984 Mercury Topaz, 4 dr, white 1984 Ford Custom Van, charcoal 1984 Buick Century, 4 dr, cream 1988 Pontiac 6000,4 dr, blue 1985 Plymouth Horizon, 4 dr, tan 1984 Ford Custom Van, brown 1984 Chev. Celebrity, 4 dr, green 1986 Olds Cutlass, 2 dr, red 1982 Mercury Cougar, 2 dr, brown 1987 Olds 88,4 dr, green 1983 Chev. Cavalier Wgn, brown 1986 Dodge Shelby HB, blk/silver 1983 Ford Escort Wgn, blue 1984 Chev. Impala Wgn, blue 1984 Mazda GLC, 4 dr, red 1985 Chev. Z2B Camara, blk. 1984 Dodge Charger HB, brown 1984 Olds 88 Wgn, blue 1988 Dodge WSO 4X4. red 1985 Olds 98,4 dr, gray PLUS mm mghhhssr 1989-9011-Horizon, 4 dr, blue 1989-9016 Reliant LE, 4 dr, charcoal 1989-9706 -Voyager SE, turbo 1989-9216 Aries ,4 dr, LE, Cordovan 1989-9711 -Dodge Dakota, p/u, bl./silver 1989-9205 Daytona HB, red 1989-9260 -Spirit, 4 dr, blue 1989-9012 Horizon, 4 dr, red 1989-9715-Dodge DIOO p/u, red 1989-9247 Dynasty LE, 4 dr, blk cherry

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DONNA SUMMER

Never liked disco queen label • “I GREW UP on rock ’n’ roll,” said Summer, who • later covered a Bruce Springsteen song, "Protec- • tion.” J And who would have guessed that the voice be- • hind so many dance floor hits secretly longed for a ‘ house in the country? ! “When I was a kid, I studied agriculture,” said* Summer, who lives with her husband, Bruce Sudano, and three daughters on a California farm. “I WANTED TO do agriculture. I always had a sense of wanting to live on a farm, just being free to; walk and have no people around. I wanted to have a: space where I didn’t have to be anything for! anybody.” Summer is anxious to attract a young audience, but concedes that today’s kids would rather dance to Madonna. So what happened to the kids who danced to “Bad Girls” in 1979? “They’re having kids,” Summer said, “and I’m going to hope their kids are buying records."

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