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MAN OF LISTS

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I should have suspected.

After I finished reading Robert Hilburn’s Top 100 Songs of 1985, I was shocked (“The Top Albums: Assessing the Real Pop World,” Jan. 19).

First of all, I thought the whole list was a joke--reading something written by a “non-existing” music critic. But the last and most shocking item was that Bobby Hilburn listed a surprise album released in 1964 by the Beatles, “Meet the Beatles.”

How can an album make a Top 100 List of the past year after 21 years have passed since its original release? Is this man alive or dead? Or is he still living in the ‘60s?

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JORGE ELIAS

Calexico

Neither. According to a reliable Calendar editor who claims to have spoken to Hilburn recently, the insertion of the Beatles LP was a test to see who was paying attention.

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