![]() ![]() “Dancin’ (On a Saturday Night),” Flash Cadillac & The Continental Kids, 1974 “Saturday Night’s Alright for Fighting,” Elton John, 1973 “Saturday Morning Confusion,” Bobby Russell, 1971 “Come Saturday Morning,” The Sandpipers, 1969 “Saturday Night at the World,” Mason Williams, 1969 “I’ve Got Five Dollars and It’s Saturday Night,” George Jones and Gene Pitney, 1965 “Saturday Night at the Movies,” The Drifters, 1964 “Another Saturday Night,” Sam Cooke, 1963 “Jukebox Saturday Night,” Nino and the Ebb Tides, 1961 “Lonely Saturday Night,” Don French, 1959 “That’s What I Love About Sunday,” Craig Morgan, 2005 “Raining on Sunday,” Lighter Shade of Brown, 2003 “Sunday Morning,” Earth, Wind & Fire, 1993 “On a Sunday Afternoon,” Lighter Shade of Brown, 1991 “Saturday Night, Sunday Morning,” Thelma Houston, 1979 “Like a Sunday in Salem (The Amos & Andy Song),” Gene Cotton, 1978 “Like a Sunday Morning,” Lana Cantrell, 1975 “Another Park, Another Sunday,” The Doobie Brothers, 1974 “Sunday Morning Sunshine,” Harry Chapin, 1972 “Sunday Morning Coming Down,” Johnny Cash, 1970 “(One of These Days) Sunday’s Gonna’ Come on Tuesday,” The New Establishment, 1969 “Sunday Mornin’ Comin’ Down,” Ray Stevens, 1969 “Will You Be Staying After Sunday,” The Peppermint Rainbow, 1969 “(The Puppet Song) Whiskey on a Sunday,” The Irish Rovers, 1968 “Sunday Mornin’,” Spanky and Our Gang, 1968 ![]() “Pleasant Valley Sunday,” The Monkees, 1967 “Sunday Will Never Be the Same,” Spanky and Our Gang, 1967 “Sunday and Me,” Jay & The Americans, 1965 “A Sunday Kind of Love,” Jan & Dean, 1962 “Never on Sunday,” Don Costa and His Orchestra and Chorus, 1960 “Sunday Barbecue,” Tennessee Ernie Ford, 1958 Here are all 83 day-of-the-week songs found in Billboard’s archives. The days of the week actually appeared in MLDb’s song titles in the exact same order of frequency, from Sunday all the way down to Thursday. For consistency’s sake, we compared our findings with the contents of the Music Lyrics Database, an online repository of more than 20,000 songs. Popular Music Hasn’t Been This White Since 1981īut the Billboard charts are a relatively limited sample of songs that were, by definition, mainstream hits in the United States. ![]()
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