Billboard Hot 100 | Top 5 – Week of October 3, 1960
The Billboard Hot 100 for the week ending October 3, 1960 showed Connie Francis holding the #1 position with “My Heart Has A Mind Of Its Own.” After already topping the chart earlier in the year with “Everybody’s Somebody’s Fool,” Francis was now proving that she was one of the most dependable pop hitmakers of 1960.
Sam Cooke climbed to #2 with “Chain Gang,” giving the chart one of its strongest soul-pop crossover records of the year. Larry Verne moved to #3 with the comedy novelty hit “Mr. Custer,” while Chubby Checker slipped to #4 with “The Twist,” still one of the most culturally important records in America.
Jimmy Charles and The Revelletts remained at #5 with “A Million To One,” keeping doo-wop heartbreak in the upper chart. Just below the Top 5, The Drifters made a major move with “Save The Last Dance For Me,” climbing to #6 and clearly heading toward an even bigger chart moment.
The week of October 3, 1960 captured a chart packed with movement: Connie Francis at #1, Sam Cooke pushing soul closer to the top, The Drifters rising fast, Chubby Checker still driving the dance craze, and novelty records continuing to hold major chart power.
Top 5 Songs (October 3, 1960)

1. “My Heart Has A Mind Of Its Own” – Connie Francis
Connie Francis remained at #1 with “My Heart Has A Mind Of Its Own,” continuing one of the strongest female pop runs of 1960.
The song worked because its title expressed a simple emotional conflict: the mind knows a relationship is over, but the heart refuses to listen.
Francis delivered the lyric with polished control and clear emotion, giving the record both elegance and heartbreak.
Its continued success confirmed that Connie Francis was not just having a good year — she was one of the defining pop voices of 1960.
2. “Chain Gang” – Sam Cooke
Sam Cooke climbed to #2 with “Chain Gang,” one of the most powerful soul-pop records of the year.
The song’s work-song rhythm, memorable call-and-response feel, and Cooke’s smooth lead vocal gave it a sound that stood apart from the rest of the Top 5.
Cooke blended rhythm-and-blues feeling with pop accessibility, helping push soul music closer to the center of mainstream radio.
By this week, “Chain Gang” had become one of Sam Cooke’s most important crossover hits.

3. “Mr. Custer” – Larry Verne
Larry Verne climbed to #3 with “Mr. Custer,” one of the biggest novelty hits of the fall.
The record used spoken comedy, character voices, and a humorous historical setup centered around General Custer and the Battle of Little Bighorn.
Its success showed that novelty songs were still a powerful part of the Hot 100 in 1960.
After “Alley-Oop” and “Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polkadot Bikini,” “Mr. Custer” continued the year’s strong run of funny, character-driven records.

4. “The Twist” – Chubby Checker
Chubby Checker slipped to #4 with “The Twist,” but the record remained one of the most important songs in America.
The song had already reached #1, and its simple dance steps were spreading rapidly through television dance shows, teen parties, and school events.
Written by Hank Ballard, “The Twist” became a cultural force through Checker’s version, which made the dance easy for mainstream audiences to embrace.
Even as it moved down the chart, its influence was still growing far beyond radio rankings.
5. “A Million To One” – Jimmy Charles and The Revelletts
Jimmy Charles and The Revelletts held the #5 position with “A Million To One,” a dramatic doo-wop ballad built around heartbreak and longing.
The record’s pleading vocal and group harmony backing gave it the emotional style that made doo-wop ballads so powerful for teenage listeners.
Its continued strength showed that vocal-group ballads still had a strong place on the Hot 100 in 1960.
“A Million To One” added another layer of romantic drama to a Top 5 that already included pop heartbreak, soul, novelty, and dance music.
More Weeks at #1 for “My Heart Has a Mind of Its Own”
This song spent multiple weeks at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100. Explore each chart week below:
🎂 What Was the #1 Song on Your Birthday?
If you were born during the week ending October 8, 1960, this was your birthday song:
🎵 My Heart Has a Mind of Its Own by Connie Francis
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Billboard Hot 100 Top 10 – Week of October 3, 1960
- My Heart Has A Mind Of Its Own – Connie Francis
- Chain Gang – Sam Cooke
- Mr. Custer – Larry Verne
- The Twist – Chubby Checker
- A Million To One – Jimmy Charles and The Revelletts
- Save The Last Dance For Me – The Drifters
- It’s Now Or Never – Elvis Presley With The Jordanaires
- Walk — Don’t Run – The Ventures
- So Sad (To Watch Good Love Go Bad) – The Everly Brothers
- Theme From The Apartment – Ferrante & Teicher
The Drifters Were Moving Toward a Major Takeover
The Billboard Hot 100 for October 3, 1960 showed Connie Francis still holding #1, but The Drifters were becoming one of the most important stories on the chart.
“Save The Last Dance For Me” climbed to #6, bringing elegant vocal-group pop and Atlantic rhythm-and-blues polish into the upper chart. The song’s rise made it clear that The Drifters were moving toward one of their biggest national hits.
Sam Cooke’s “Chain Gang” also reached #2, strengthening the soul crossover presence on the chart. At the same time, Chubby Checker’s “The Twist” remained a cultural force, while Larry Verne’s “Mr. Custer” proved novelty records still had strong commercial power.
The week of October 3, 1960 remains a strong snapshot of early fall radio — polished female pop, soul crossover, novelty comedy, dance-craze rock-and-roll, doo-wop heartbreak, vocal-group elegance, Elvis, instrumental guitar rock, and movie-theme pop all sharing one Top 10.
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