TopPop

Earth and Fire on the TopPop stage
Show presenter Ad Visser and dance troupe leader Penney de Jager

TopPop was the first regular dedicated pop music TV show in the Dutch language area. Dutch broadcaster AVRO aired the programme weekly, from September 22, 1970 to June 27, 1988.[1] Presenter Ad Visser hosted the show for its first fifteen years. The creator and original director of TopPop was Rien van Wijk. Many other directors followed: Egbert van Hees, Geert Popma, Henk Renou, Chris Berger, Jessy Winkelman, Wim van der Linden, Bert van der Veer and Charly Noise. Although TopPop was inspired by British music programme Top of the Pops, it had its own character.

The show's main approach was to let music artists mime to their latest hit record in the TopPop studio. However, most music acts in the Dutch pop charts were foreign to the Netherlands, and frequently not available for a performance in the studio. If this was the case, it was sometimes possible for the TopPop camera crew to meet the artist at another location. Consequently, artists were filmed around the world, including Tom Browne in a studio in New York, David Cassidy at the airport in Schiphol, and Barry White at his home in Los Angeles. If there was no way to feature the artists on the show, their promo video would be played - if one existed. Prior to the 1980s these were not routinely created.
If all else failed there was a fourth option, that the show frequently had to resort to. During many episodes of TopPop, hit songs were played to a dance routine by dancer and choreographer Penney de Jager and her troupe, frequently in outfits that she had also thought up. When music videos became more common on television, the popularity of TopPop decreased and the programme was stopped in 1988. TopPop was chosen as the programme of the century in a poll in 2000 by Televizier.

For many Flemish and Dutch viewers, TopPop was the primary source of information about pop music. TopPop compiled its own hit chart, based on viewers' top-ten lists, sent in on postcards, from 1970–1974, from 1978–1982 and from February 23, 1986 to July 10, 1988. However, it used the Dutch National Hitparade, a sales based list, from 1974–1978 and 1982–1986.

In the last show of each year, the complete Top 10 of the year was broadcast. There were performances by studio guests and there were polls among viewers on the most popular artist, group and DJ. Looking back on the past year 1976, Ad Visser and Krijn Torringa were sitting behind a desk in an office which made it a parody of Van Oekel's Discohoek (translation: Van Oekel's Disco Corner). This absurd programme was itself a parody of TopPop.

In 1977, Iggy Pop refused to mime; he stormed dramatically and unexpectedly into the studio floor. The rest of the time Iggy spent his time writhing on the floor, miming his hit single and destroying some plants that had been put on the floor as decoration. Iggy's performance on TopPop is regarded as the breakthrough of punk in the Netherlands.

The famous archive of performances can be viewed online.[2][3]

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to AVRO's TopPop.