Friday at 19:221 day There was great music in the chart in October 1994 and then there was 'Sure'. Understandably rather forgotten in Take That's discography.
Friday at 20:511 day Yeah Sure is definitely the weakest of the TT singles in that era, not very memorable Edited Friday at 20:521 day by Jaz13music
Friday at 23:381 day Total yawnfest from Take That, an example of how an act so huge and untouchable can release any old dross and get a #1 with it.
Yesterday at 09:231 day Bland and with a rubbish video to boot, it makes their cover versions sound great in comparison. It's stuff like this that made me annoyed with Gary Barlow first time round. He had no quality control whatsoever when he had 2 budding co-songwriters he could have been training up to take the slack and they don't get any slacker than this. Bottom rung for me.
Yesterday at 10:151 day …and there falls the other track I really hate. I didn’t like Take That at all at the time but I can in retrospect see that they had some decent songs… but Sure ain’t one of them, beyond average and feels like it goes on forever
Yesterday at 10:321 day Yeah this would probably be bottom two for me too. One of their weakest, total b-side territory at best and it definitely wasn't Gary playing to his stregnths.
Yesterday at 12:311 day This is one of those that would be bottom two for me as well, a complete non-event of a song that disappeared down the chart very quickly by 1994 standards. The other one is still to come.
23 hours ago23 hr Author Mariah Carey’s version of Without You is definitely a strong cover, adding a powerful female perspective and vocal intensity to the classic arrangement made famous by Harry Nilsson. The song was originally written by Badfinger and first appeared as an album track on their 1970 album "No Dice". Although the original version was never released as a major hit single, Nilsson’s 1971 interpretation transformed it into a worldwide #1 hit and one of the defining ballads of the era.Mariah’s 1994 cover stayed very faithful to Nilsson’s arrangement but showcased her incredible vocal range and emotional delivery, helping it become a massive international success. It reached #1 in the UK and became the first of her three UK chart-toppers. While I still prefer Nilsson’s timeless version overall, Mariah’s take is a very good one in its own right, and I’d rate it a solid 7/10. From this point on, I really enjoy all #1's.
20 hours ago20 hr Ken Lee...That's the other one which would be bottom two for me, she has the voice for it but completely oversings it. Fortunately, a much better Mariah hit of that year would also reach #1, even if it would take 26 years to get there.
9 hours ago9 hr Not a Mariah favourite for me either but it's nice enough. She has so many great originals that it was a quirk for a long time that her only UK No.1s were two covers. Glad that was corrected a few years ago.
7 hours ago7 hr NIlsson's version is the classic, emotion bordering on hystrionics but staying on the right side. Genius. Took an OK original and made it into a tortured ballad like no other. Mariah's is way too much trying to outdo Harry (which didnt work for me) and lacks the class she displayed on Dream Lover. Sometimes less is more. As Harry had died earlier in the year I'll take this to be a tribute to the man - but it's still my least fave chart-topper track of the year, sorry! She will though, be back with an absolute classic at christmas, and she wrote it herself, followed by a total banger in 1995 in Fantasy. Either of those should have topped the charts of the time!
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