Showing posts with label dec. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dec. Show all posts

Saturday, 11 October 2014

The Top 30 Best Selling UK Singles Part 2

Please see Part 1 here!

Part 2: 20 – 1

20. Imagine – John Lennon
Imagine if John hadn’t been killed. This song might genuinely have forever been condemned to being a poor performer in the charts. Not even a released single when it first surfaced (1971), it then only made number 6 in 1975 before the mourning of a nation revived it in 1980 to become one of his best loved compositions. Another track that has become a Christmas / New Years anthem due to the timing and circumstances of its 1980 release.

19. Happy – Pharrell Williams
This one will continue to rise up the list as it’s still in the charts at the time of writing. A remarkably simple effort from Pharrell in creating a track that is popular whether you’re aged 3 or 93… and all done without the help of Robin Thicke or Nile Rodgers. Clap your hands.

18. Last Christmas / Everything She Wants – Wham!
Possibly the greatest number 2 ever (don’t!), possibly one of the best Christmas songs ever and possibly the slickest remix ever (check out the Last Christmas Pudding Mix). In fact the only disappointment for me is that Everything She Wants wasn’t released elsewhere in the year in it’s own right as that song is just so Wham! at their best.

17. (Everything I Do) I Do It for You – Bryan Adams
Yet another song carried along by the success of a hit film. Overplayed? Perhaps, but not quite worn out like I will Always Love you has become. You can’t knock 16 weeks at number 1 though, so well played to the Canadian Canadian.

16. Believe – Cher
Wow! Cher’s voice on this. Not done using a vocoder as was originally thought, but by rigging an auto tune machine to warp 3 sets of her vocals. Innovative. And then Madonna did it.
My main memory of this is going to an awful nightclub in Crawley, West Sussex and hearing it played four or five times an hour. Strong song with a good video too.

15. Evergreen – Will Young
An early effort of the yearly X-Factor song that reduces the once revered Christmas chart to a farce every year. Nothing against Will Young, but he did far, far better songs after this one.

14. I Want to Hold Your Hand – The Beatles
The song that really broke the Beatles into the American market. Not many better intros to a song than heard on this zippy belter.

13. Barbie Girl – Aqua
Novelty songs – you gotta love ‘em eh!? Well no not always. It’s harmless, poppy fun, but I’m not over bothered with it. Aqua could do a job though, and I politely refer you to Turn Back Time, as heard in the soundtrack to Sliding Doors. See!? Get a song in a movie and it’s a sure fire chart scorcher.

12. I Just Called to Say I Love You – Stevie Wonder
Now if this ‘ode’ had come out nowadays, would it have been a hit? Would it be renamed?
Maybe: I Just Texted 2 Say I luv U - LOL

11. Unchained Melody – Robson & Jerome
There must be a million different covers of this song, and whilst R&J (a bit like an old version of Ant & Dec) did their best, no-one is gonna convince me that the Righteous Bros effort isn’t the definitive cover.

10. Mary's Boy Child – Oh My Lord – Boney M
And into the top ten we go. Again, the Christmas sales probably helped this one make the list, and I suppose if you can rework a traditional slumber seasonal carol into a pseudo Christmas Disco multi million seller, then you must be doing something right. Oh My Lord indeed.

09. Love Is All Around – Wet Wet Wet
Another cover, another song from a movie soundtrack, so obviously another multi million seller. In fact ‘The Wets’ might have sold even more, but they actually ordered the cessation of production of units whilst they were still at number 1. Apparently this was because they didn’t want to condemn the song to the over played graveyard (too late)
More likely they didn’t want the embarrassment of being replaced at the top by Whigfield’s Saturday Night

08. She Loves You – The Beatles
Now we’re cooking. 18 weeks in the top 3 alone, and this included TWO different spells at number one, with a few weeks gap in between hitting the summit. No other song in chart history has had quite the storyline that the chart run of She Loves You has. The tragedy is that the version we all know is in fact a splice of more than one recording and is the reason why when the Remastered Stereo albums box set was released, SLY was one of the only songs not actually presented in crisp stereo. This for me is singularly the saddest tale in the history of the British charts. Still, it didn’t put millions off buying the song I suppose!


07. Rivers of Babylon / Brown Girl in the Ring – Boney M
Controversy klaxon. This was another double A-side (though originally was a plain old A and B-side), yet you never hear ‘Brown Girl…’ played on the radio. Like ever.
Is there a race reason behind this? A bit of research suggest it’s nothing of the kind, and is based on a West Indian children’s song – a bit like Ring of Roses, which has its own history. As a child, I loved singing and dancing to it, and still prefer it any day to the original A-side. So dammit DJ’s of the UK, show ME a motion and play it more often!

06. Relax – Frankie Goes to Hollywood
Like many people possibly, I had no idea what the lyrics to this belter were referring to at the time of release, but does it really matter? Songs inferring sex have been around since the Edison Phonograph. Mary had a little Lamb indeed.
In fact well over half the songs in this top 40 have at least subtle sexual overtones (or undertones), so get over yourselves and be happy and gay.

05. You're the One That I Want – John Travolta & Olivia Newton-John
Wow a second entry from the same film. I’m running out of characters, so see Summer Nights blurb from Part1!

04. Mull of Kintyre – Wings
As a child I think this came on to my radar before I knew who The Beatles even were.
I like to imagine Lennon hearing about this song the day before it was released…
The Lennon Diaries, Thursday November 10th 1977:
‘Pfft – Just heard about Macca’s latest! ROTFL… Bagpipes and a beach in Scotland? Good luck with that pal. Gear fab, gear fab’

03. Bohemian Rhapsody – Queen
It’s hard to knock this one, but I’m still not sure about combining two chart runs (1975 & 1991) to elevate it up the list. I wasn’t keen on Queen until poor young Freddie passed on, but their music was everywhere in the aftermath of his death and one couldn’t help but admire what they’d contributed to British music. When clubbing at The Event II (blimey another RIP!) nightclub in Brighton in the 90’s, this was frequently referred to as the club’s ‘anthem’. I’m still not convinced by this, but maybe it was helped by the additional tie in with the film ‘Wayne’s World’. Let the head banging commence.

02. Do They Know It's Christmas? – Band Aid
Just when you thought we’d done Christmas to pieces, along comes the biggest one of them all.
What’s not to like? Always likely to remain a classic at Christmas, and that’s a good thing. It won’t be a popular view, but I liked the 1989 SAW version too. Not keen on the Band Aid 20 version though, as even I could’ve done Bono’s line better than he did. It’s all going to charity though so we can’t knock it.. and then there was Band Aid 30...
#feedtheworld

01.   Candle in the Wind 1997 – Elton John
Elton John’s music was heard everywhere for weeks after the death of Diana PoW, and upon his performance of the rewritten song at her funeral, the inevitable charity release followed. They couldn’t make enough copies of the single fast enough. I remember eventually buying it about a month after its release, simply because it was sold out everywhere.
The funeral version differs slightly and is better in my opinion (and you’ve had enough of those lately), but the irony is that Diana herself might have preferred another of Elton’s songs given the choice, as she had cited his early single ‘Your Song’ as one of her all time favourites.

So what are the themes in this list to guarantee a huge seller?
·        Christmas
·        Movie soundtrack
·        Sex
·        …and – rather morosely – death.

And what one don’t they play on the radio? The children’s song

So I’ll leave you with this final thought:

Go download baby and Show Me Your Motion



XxX

Tuesday, 23 September 2014

Those 'Child of the 90's' lists...!!!

Well following on from my 'Child of the 80's' blog, along came a request from my lovely cousin to do a 90's review...How could I decline!?

These are not so prevalent as the 80’s ones, so with a little spousal help, a few have been added!

You know you're a child of the 90's when:

'Race issue' meant arguing about who ran the fastest
Definitely wasn’t me!

Interactive games meant going to the park to play with friends
RIP playing at the park

"Talk to the hand" was enough said
“As you do…”

You remember when Billie Piper was a pop star
Yeah I’m sure there’s a misnomer there somewhere

An android was a robot and tablets were medication
Why do we still call it ‘dialling a number’?

You remember Ant and Dec when they were PJ and Duncan, and thought Donna Air was ‘all that’
Nah I’m not sure she was ever ‘all that’

It wasn't odd to have two or three best friends
I reckon the group of 6 or 7 I was in were all good friends – only took one argument to break it up though!

Playing Super Nintendo was the hardest thing ever
PS1/2/3/4 – same argument for me!

TFI Friday was as wild as your weekend got
Danny Baker doesn’t fail at anything.

You remember when Blue Peter presenters were squeaky clean
They’re all at it you know…

You screamed at the dopey contestants in The Crystal Maze
Jeebus some of the klutzes on that programme. Richard O’Brien’s calm exterior deserved an Oscar

You wanted your dying moments to be constructed by Shakespears Sister
She used to look a lot less scary

If you had a million dollars, you could do pretty much what you liked with Demi Moore
Even get a Dudley Moore haircut ©F.R.I.E.N.D.S

You believed NO NO, NO-NO NO NO, NO-NO NO NO, NO NO THERE’S NO LIMIT
5 weeks at #1, following Whitney’s ‘I Will Always Love You’ – which had been #1 for 10 weeks. Some of us had a limit – and it was definitely breached.

You could do ‘The Macarena’ and ‘Saturday Night’ move by move – and repeat
No but I could Moonwalk on the right surface with the right shoes

You debated with your friends how Rose could have saved Jack
The most memorable scene in Titanic for me was seeing Mr.Soft walking the decks during one of the CGI long distance shots:



You could recite the intro to ‘Never Ever’ by heart
I tried and tried but just couldn’t bring myself to like these girls. They just weren’t the Spice Girls

Speaking of which, you could ‘zig-a-zig-ah’
I think I loved all of them at various stages… but always Emma the most
I queued up for 3 hours to get that. In Virgin Megastore Brighton (RIP)

You rejoiced that Julia Roberts made prostitution a fun thing
Not with those armpits

You can sing the rap to ‘The Fresh Prince Of Bel Air’
Absolutely, and it’s even more poignant now

You went to the cinema every week and Kevin Costner was in everything
Or Hugh Grant for that matter...

You remember when it was actually worth getting up early on a Saturday to watch cartoons
What is it with cookery programmes on Saturday mornings these days!!!???

You took plastic cartoon lunch boxes to school. With Capri Suns.
I necked 5 of these in a row a few of years ago. Top Tip: Don’t do it.

Most men dismissed Take That as rubbish
Oh how times have changed

You wore lime green all summer in 1996
Who didn’t?

You played and/or collected ‘Pogs’
No but I knew a man who did.

You rented Videos for £2.50, and DVD sounded like an illness.
Before even DVDs we had CD-i.
No really - click and view: CD-i
  
We called local radio stations to request songs. And would listen to them through our Walkmans
One of the best inventions ever.

If you couldn’t get an answer from Sabrina, Clarissa would Explain it All
You see Miley? Not all child stars went on the same rites of passage as you

School trips were better than family holidays
Because there was snogging probably!

Natalie Imbruglia from Neighbours could actually sing
Which was good because before that I was Torn

Speaking of which you used to run home at lunch break to get ahead of the game with Neighbours
Two words: Rachel Friend – sounds like she could have been in another show…