This Week in Music History: November 17th, 2025

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Happy Monday from 93.7 BOB FM! It’s time for your weekly rewind, and this week in history (November 10th through 16th) gives us huge album debuts, a classic comeback, and the story of how a legendary Beatle lost a bet to Elton John!

 

November 16, 1974: The Bet That John Lennon Lost

 

This is one of the most famous stories in rock history! On November 16, 1974, John Lennon earned his first and only solo #1 hit in the US during his lifetime with “Whatever Gets You Thru The Night.”

  • The Deal: Lennon had a friendly bet with Elton John (who played piano and sang backing vocals on the track). Elton was so confident the song would hit #1 that he made Lennon promise to join him on stage if it did.

  • The Show: Lennon kept his word, making a surprise appearance at Elton John’s Madison Square Garden show on November 28th—what would be John Lennon’s final major public performance. Backstage after the show, Lennon reunited with Yoko Ono after a period of separation.

 

November 10, 1973: Elton John’s Magnum Opus Hits #1

 

The same week Lennon reached the top, his collaborator, Elton John, was celebrating a massive achievement. On November 10, 1973, Elton John’s double-LP masterpiece, Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, hit #1 on the Billboard 200 album chart, where it would stay for eight weeks.

  • Timeless Hits: The album is a treasure trove of classics, including the title track, “Candle in the Wind,” “Bennie and the Jets,” and “Saturday Night’s Alright for Fighting,” and remains his best-selling studio album worldwide.

 

November 16, 1985: A City Built on Rock and Roll

 

On November 16, 1985, Starship—the latest incarnation of the band that started as Jefferson Airplane—reached the #1 spot on the Billboard Hot 100 with the massive anthem, “We Built This City.”

  • A Brand New Era: The hit marked the band’s first #1 under the new Starship name, a feat the previous versions (Jefferson Airplane and Jefferson Starship) never achieved. The song is an unmistakable defining track of the mid-’80s pop-rock sound.

 

This Week’s #1 Hits

Date
Artist
Song Title
Context / BOB Fact
Nov 17, 1979
Commodores
“Still”
Lionel Richie-penned ballad that became the group’s second #1 hit.
Nov 19, 1977
Debby Boone
“You Light Up My Life”
Massive chart-topping ballad that spent 10 weeks at #1.
Nov 21, 1970
The Partridge Family
“I Think I Love You”
The TV family’s only #1 single, featuring David Cassidy on vocals.
Nov 23, 1974
Barry White
“You’re the First, the Last, My Everything”
White’s second US #1 hit of 1974, defining the ’70s Soul sound.
Nov 23, 1985
Mr. Mister
“Broken Wings”
The first of two consecutive #1 singles for the pop-rock band.

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