Gobs of forgotten soul in Casey's first hour:
The Tempts at #35 with "Hey Girl (I Like Your Style)", followed by the Ohio Players' "Ecstasy" debuting at 34 -- it will drop to 42 the next week, then pop back up to 35! Most unusual. The Chi-Lites are back-seat drivers in a car of love with their fantabulous "Stoned Out of My Mind" at 30. And the J-5 leap from 40 to 29 with "Get it Together" -- but they'll end up peaking at 28. "Get up off your high horse", indeed. And Johnny Taylor (the natch'ral wailer) gives us the lovely "I Believe in You (You Believe in Me)".
But it's pseudo-soul that provides the biggest "WTF?" of the show: Cross Country (who?) doing a teeth-grindingly white cover of "In the Midnight Hour". I totally don't remember this one; per Whitburn they're all former members of the Tokens. (Gaz, if you've never heard the Tokens' "She Lets Her Hair Down", seek it out -- a fine Four Seasons imitation and another song that began as a commercial; shampoo iirc).
Couple of "bubbling under" notes: We just missed hearing both Gaz fave "Summer (The First Time)" and Art Garfunkel's sublime "All I Know", which will debut next week, and Deodato's "Rhapsody in Blue", just-missing the 40 at its peak of #41. And debuting at #99, Jackson Browne's "Redneck Friend"; about six weeks ahead of the For Everyman LP, it would only get to #85, and Jackson wouldn't chart another single until "Here Come Those Tears" in early '77.