| TOP OF THE POPS has fallen off its platform boots and is heading for the great tape archive in the sky. Altogether now. It's Thursday night, it's BBC One. Enter an irrepressibly enthusiastic man with a Kevin Keegan haircut. Duh duh di duh duh duh duh, duh duh di duh duh duh duh. Once the Top of the Pops theme tune, a re-working of some bike-revving old Led Zep track, was the definitive sound of pop culture. But after 42 years, it's time to switch off the music. But the show's demise has been a gradual fade-out rather than a chord-crunching finale, much like an aging rocker playing to an emptying hall. For the music landscape has changed and TOTP - like that aging rocker - now appears out of place. A singles chart show in an era where singles charts have lost their relevance. A 30-minute weekly showcase up against 24/7 music channels. But there's no denying it gave us good times. Younger readers might rub their eyes in disbelief, but in TOTP's heyday there were only three television channels. Even for those who thought it awful, it was a must-see. When there were no DVDs, no videos, no internet, there was almost no other way of seeing what a band looked like (apart from seeing them live).  Crazy guys being crazy together | And its awfulness was part of its charm. Bands mimed. Decent bands made it obvious they were miming. And the presenters looked like they'd been dressed by people having acid flashbacks. Being a chart show, there were the strangest juxtapositions - a crooning suntan in flares followed by sulking suburban punks, watched by the same shuffling girls in pencil skirts. Even when credibility-conscious bands like the Clash and the Arctic Monkeys refuse to play, it's a Top of the Pops story - the equivalent of turning down an OBE. For the story of pop is interwoven with the show. The kaleidoscopic explosion of glam rock arrived about the same time as colour TV, and pop videos eventually overtook Legs & Co "interpreting" the music when a band couldn't be there. But after a four-decade run - almost as long as a prog rock guitar solo - it's all over for the great warhorse of pop television. No flowers. Just wear them in your hair. Add your tributes using the form below. And another one bites the dust. L Towner, Tregaron, West Wales Those were the days my friend - oh yes those were the days Norma Whelan, Wallingford UK Stop of the pops James, Lancaster Music was my first love and it will be my last modern music killed me but don't forget my past Jim Logan, Bathgate Now......then, Now......then! Nick Hill, Prestatyn Top of the Flops? Danie Jones, Cambridge, England Mimefield cleared Kevin, Great Ayton, UK Pops taken a hit Gary Morrow, Glasgow Pop has eaten itself. csrster, Denmark Too old to rock and roll and too old not to die! Lynn, Lewes Lip synching from view. Anthony, London Vinyly left us. Mike Brimacombe, Devon Download killed the video star Callum, London, UK Ashes to ashes, funk to funky Andrew, Manchester As Jim Morrison once said "This is the end Beautiful friend This is the end My only friend, the end" Andrew, Portsmouth Popped off Simon, St Albans, UK Pops sickle Candace, New Jersey, US Their final countdown Stephen Buxton, Coventry, UK, thelbiq.co.uk I really can't be bothered to go through the whole "Ashes to ashes, dust to dust..." speech. Does anyone mind if I mime it? S Brass, Huddersfield, West Yorkshire
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