On Thu, 21 Feb 2008 at 21:19:42, Chris Brown <extremespamrice@yahoo.com> wrote in uk.music.charts : I doubt it. Who'd be buying it? Any Beatles fan would long ago have already obtained this track in some format or another. I have it myself on one of their compilation CDs. As have I (and on a compilation LP too, for that matter). A good couple of million people have
"Paul Hyett" <vidcapper@invalid83261.co.uk> wrote in message news:MpivRjDcyxhHFw8$@blueyonder.co.uk... On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 at 22:50:56, Chris Brown <extremespamrice@yahoo.com> wrote in uk.music.charts : Glad to see *somebody* here finally responded to my thread. :) I have to admit there's not a lot to add to it. Also, 'charting' refers to just the top 75 here. In both
Paul Hyett wrote: This seems to be happening more regularly nowadays, thanks to the new rules allowing songs to chart on download without needing a corresponding CD. The most obvious current example is : Phil Collins - In The Air Tonight (Cadburys). Also currently benefiting are : Feist - 1234 (iPod Nano) & KT Tunstall - Suddenly I See (Next), plus one or two others to a lesser
On 21 Sep 2007 in uk.media.tv.misc, Paul Hyett said: This seems to be happening more regularly nowadays, thanks to the new rules allowing songs to chart on download without needing a corresponding CD. The most obvious current example is : Phil Collins - In The Air Tonight (Cadburys). Also currently benefiting are : Feist - 1234 (iPod Nano) & KT Tunstall - Suddenly I See
On Fri, 21 Sep 2007 07:42:00 GMT, Paul Hyett <vidcapper@invalid83261.co.uk> wrote: This seems to be happening more regularly nowadays, thanks to the new rules allowing songs to chart on download without needing a corresponding CD. The most obvious current example is : Phil Collins - In The Air Tonight (Cadburys). Also currently benefiting are : Feist - 1234 (iPod Nano) & KT Tunstall