I think it's repeated late tomorrow on BBC 4...enjoy

Here they are, some of them really suprised me some of the ones on that list.olgitgooner wrote:So. What where the top ten richest songs?
Probably made a sh1t load of money when P Diddy murdered it.DB10GOONER wrote:Can't believe the highest place song by the Police is ‘Every Breath You Take’!Wouldn't even put it in their top ten songs. Was it used for advertising maybe? That why it earned so much?
Bastard Rodders!!rodders999 wrote:Probably made a sh1t load of money when P Diddy murdered it.DB10GOONER wrote:Can't believe the highest place song by the Police is ‘Every Breath You Take’!Wouldn't even put it in their top ten songs. Was it used for advertising maybe? That why it earned so much?
topgoon wrote:Here they are, some of them really suprised me some of the ones on that list.olgitgooner wrote:So. What where the top ten richest songs?
No.1 is not the Stevie Wonder song but the one that's sung on peoples actual birthday![]()
The sisters who came up with it back in the late 19th century had the sense to copyright it, so anytime you hear it in a film or on the radio, their trust to this date gets royalties.....shared with Warner Chappell who bought a %age of the rights.
Another odd one is that Brown Eyed Girl is the most played song onn America radio to date ever, yet Van Morrisson because of the way his agreement for the song was done when he wrote it, he gets so little in royalties that it's next to nowt![]()
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Anyway here's the list
10. ‘The Christmas Song (Merry Christmas To You)’, Mel Torme/Nat King Cole.
9. ‘Pretty Woman’, Roy Orbison.
8. ‘Every Breath You Take’, The Police.
7. ‘Santa Claus Is Coming To Town’, John Frederick Coots and Haven Gillespie.
6. ‘Stand By Me’, Ben E. King / Jerry Leiber, and Mike Stoller
5. ‘Unchained Melody’, Alex North and Hy Zaret/The Righteous Brothers.
4. ‘Yesterday’, The Beatles.
3. ‘You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’, The Righteous Brothers.
2. ‘White Christmas’, Irving Berlin.
1. ‘Happy Birthday To You’, Patty Hill and Mildred J. Hill/Warner Chappell.