Jump to content

Robbie

Members
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Robbie

  1. Robbie posted a post in a topic in UK Charts
    That Petrol Emotion had 7 top 75 entries, with their biggest hit being 'Big Decision', which reached #43 in April 1987. A great act if you're into 80s music iXAfWKOgo2Q
  2. That makes it even worse! Who on earth is doing their "research"?
  3. From reading the rest of the OCC article it is clear that by "This makes it (Barbie) the first film soundtrack in UK chart history to land three Top 5 singles simultaneously" the OCC mean "having three tracks inside the top 5 at the same time" rather than "having three tracks enter the top 5 at the same time". For example: In neither example did all three records enter the top 10 in the same week. Simply, the OCC (and Alan Jones, one of them is copying what the other wrote, even down to using the word "trifecta" in the article) got it wrong as one of them forgot that three singles from Grease were inside the to 5 for two weeks running.
  4. Robbie posted a post in a topic in UK Charts
    I've checked this one out and it seems as if the OCC have got Shakin' Strevens mixed up with... Whitney Houston and Brandy! On the R&B chart dated 23/04/05 'The Greatest Hits' by Whitney Houston should be at #22, not 'The Collection' by Shakin' Stevens. In fact the whole chart is wrong, it appears another albums chart has been incorrectly listed as the Hip Hop and R&B Albums chart https://www.officialcharts.com/charts/offic...rt/20050417/115 The same mistake happens the following week. #29 on the R&B Albums chart should be 'The Best Of' by Brandy. Again, the OCC have listed the wrong chart under R&B https://www.officialcharts.com/charts/offic...rt/20050424/115 I don't know what chart the OCC have published for those two weeks under Hip Hop and R&B Albums. It's not the main albums chart (as it contains compilation albums), it's not the Combined Albums chart (which contains both artist and compilation albums) as the albums are in the wrong order compared to the main chart and it's not vinyl albums. I did wonder if it was a CD albums chart but the main albums charts by this point were largely a CD albums chart and again there are some differences.
  5. Robbie posted a post in a topic in UK Charts
    It seems that the OCC website is being relaunched, or at least revamped, next month along with the OCC itself also getting a refreshed brand identity. Other than that I don't know anything further about what this involves. I guess it's a case of "watch this space"...
  6. It's a good article although it contains a couple of factual errors: Streaming data was first included in the album chart count in March 2015 and not June 2014 as stated in the article. The comment in the article about one physical sale equalling 150 song streams is wrong. The conversion ratio is 1 physical sale = 1,000 streams aggregated from a maximum of the 16 most streamed tracks on the album.
  7. Robbie posted a post in a topic in UK Charts
    Radio 1 banned the record the week it climbed 35-6 so it never got played when it was at #1. The next time Radio 1 played the record, at least on a chart show, was on the best selling singles of the year chart show at the end of December 1984.
  8. Robbie posted a post in a topic in UK Charts
    Sold out again!
  9. Robbie posted a post in a topic in UK Charts
    It's a bit messy but it's the best I can do using copy and paste UK Radio Airplay Top 50 TW LW SALE POS ARTIST/TITLE/LABEL CORP GROUP PLAYS TREND STNS IMPACTS TREND 1 1 1 Miley Cyrus Flowers RCA SME 7,046 +1% 247 82.47 -1% 2 2 33 Sam Smith... I'm Not Here To Make Friends Capitol UMG 4,303 +7% 216 52.23 -9% 3 3 Lizzo Special Atlantic WMG 2,714 +81% 194 51.86 +17% 4 4 40 Lewis Capaldi Forget Me EMI UMG 4,801 +1% 212 40.52 +3% 5 5 17 Taylor Swift Anti-Hero EMI UMG 4,226 -4% 221 34.72 -4% 6 7 Freya Ridings Weekends Good Soldier IND 3,425 +9% 188 32.56 +2% 7 6 15 Mimi Webb Red Flags Epic SME 4,026 +4% 199 31.3 -5% 8 8 14 Pink Trustfall RCA SME 3,435 +11% 214 30.92 -1% 9 11 34 Meghan Trainor Made You Look RCA SME 4,139 -4% 206 30.69 +1% 10 9 Lizzo 2 Be Loved (Am I Ready) Atlantic WMG 3,839 -3% 186 28.96 -5% 11 NEW 18 Niall Horan Heaven Capitol UMG 1,801 - 153 28.78 - 12 14 Ed Sheeran Celestial Asylum WMG 3,690 -3% 202 27.73 -1% 13 RE Ellie Goulding Like A Saviour Polydor UMG 1,220 +10% 102 26.9 +230% 14 16 19 Pink Never Gonna Not Dance Again RCA SME 2,947 -10% 173 26.38 +2% 15 26 Gorillaz Ft Adeleye Omotayo Silent Running Parlophone WMG 340 +52% 23 25.09 +28% 16 28 2 PinkPantheress Boy's A Liar Warner WMG 1,247 +79% 131 23.65 +30% 17 20 Sugababes Today Sugababes IND. 205 -5% 29 23.25 -1% 18 18 27 Joel Corry & Tom Grennan Lionheart (Fearless) Atlantic WMG 3,819 -3% 178 23.11 -6% 19 NEW Jake Shears Too Much Music Mute IND. 157 +202% 23 23.08 +4,501% 20 17 55 Lewis Capaldi Pointless EMI UMG 3,447 -3% 215 22.79 -10% 21 21 3 SZA Kill Bill RCA/Top Dawg SME 1,539 -2% 128 22.54 -4% 22 10 16 Cian Ducrot I'll Be Waiting Polydor UMG 2,499 +2% 195 21.53 -29% 23 27 Becky Hill & David Guetta Remember Polydor UMG 1,814 +1% 159 19.99 +7% 24 15 7 Coi Leray Players Uptown/Republic UMG 1,017 -19% 146 18.89 -28% 25 24 72 Tom Grennan Here Insanity SME 2,168 +50% 188 18.85 -8% 26 12 22 Taylor Swift Lavender Haze EMI UMG 1,872 -9% 125 18.57 -36% 27 31 10 Raye Ft 070 Shake Escapism Human Re Sources IND 2,450 +19% 151 18.4 +11% 28 29 25 Metro Boomin, The Weeknd & 21 Savage Creepin' Republic UMG 1,334 -5% 135 18.23 +3% 29 34 45 The Kid Laroi & Justin Bieber Stay Def Jam/RCA SME/UMG* 1,802 -1% 148 17.77 +11% 30 19 Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds Easy Now Sour Mash IND. 783 +2% 82 17.64 -28% 31 22 Lady Blackbird Woman BMG IND. 311 -70% 71 16.22 -28% 32 23 Anne-Marie Sad Bitch Atlantic WMG 1,748 -4% 111 15.09 -30% 33 33 6 Harry Styles As It Was Columbia SME 2,029 -2% 224 15. -8% 34 13 8 Tiësto & Tate McRae 10:35 Atlantic/Ministry Of Sound WMG 2,710 -20% 201 14.45 -50% 35 42 Paramore Running Out Of Time Atlantic WMG 138 +103% 13 13.93 +5% 36 41 Jax Jones Ft MNEK Where Did You Go? Polydor UMG 1,967 -8% 194 13.79 +2% 37 NEW 67 Jax Jones & Calum Scott Whistle Polydor UMG 2,012 +111% 133 13.27 +52% 38 25 24 David Guetta & Bebe Rexha I'm Good (Blue) Parlophone WMG 1,944 -27% 194 13.25 -33% 39 38 Wet Leg Angelica Domino IND. 278 +17% 44 13.1 -6% 40 35 Dermot Kennedy Kiss Me Island UMG 2,433 -4% 154 12.9 -18% 41 40 Sam Ryder Put A Light On Me Parlophone WMG 597 +124% 71 12.46 -9% 42 39 Harry Styles Late Night Talking Columbia SME 2,087 -1% 205 12.39 -10% 43 NEW 13 Libianca People 5K SME 479 +19% 58 11.9 +36% 44 45 Sabrina Carpenter Nonsense Island UMG 675 +14% 70 11.51 +1% 45 37 21 Venbee & Goddard Messy In Heaven Columbia SME 1,233 -10% 122 11.34 -20% 46 NEW 26 The Kid Laroi Love Again RCA SME 895 +28% 80 11.29 +18% 47 43 Arlo Parks Weightless Transgressive IND. 296 +12% 52 11.13 -11% 48 32 73 KSI Ft Oliver Tree Voices Atlantic WMG 1,054 -29% 120 11.09 -33% 49 NEW Bruce Springsteen Nightshift Columbia SME 28 +600% 9 10.95 +224% 50 RE Joel Corry Ft MNEK Head & Heart Asylum/Perfect Havoc WMG 1,180 +15% 171 10.92 +28% UK TV Airplay Top 50 TW LW ARTIST/TITLE/LABEL CORP GROUP/PLAYS /TREND/STNS 1 1 Raye Ft 070 Shake Escapism / Human Re Sources IND 276 +10% 8 2 3 Miley Cyrus Flowers / RCA SME 221 +10% 8 3 2 SZA Kill Bill / RCA/Top Dawg SME 211 - 7 4 39 PinkPantheress Boy's a Liar / Warner WMG 197 +153% 7 5 5 Central Cee Let Go / Central Cee WMG 192 +5% 8 6 6 Mimi Webb Red Flags / Epic SME 191 +6% 7 7 7 Sigala & MNEK Radio / Ministry Of Sound SME 191 +7% 7 8 8 Stormzy Hide & Seek / 0207/Merky UMG 169 -1% 8 9 24 Pink Trustfall / RCA SME 166 +50% 8 10 19 Taylor Swift Lavender Haze / EMI UMG 165 +22% 7 11 13 Meghan Trainor Made You Look / RCA SME 164 +9% 7 12 4 Rema &... Calm Down / Jonzing Worldwide/Mavin UMG 157 -15% 7 13 11 Oliver Tree & Robin Schulz Miss You / Atlantic WMG 156 -7% 8 14 9 Tiësto & Tate McRae 10:35 / Atlantic/Ministry Of Sound WMG 156 -8% 7 15 14 Lewis Capaldi Pointless / EMI UMG 153 +3% 8 16 10 Joel Corry & Tom Grennan Lionheart (Fearless) / Atlantic WMG 148 -11% 8 17 22 Freya Ridings Weekends / Good Soldier IND 148 +21% 6 18 45 The Kid Laroi Love Again / RCA SME 139 +88% 7 19 15 David Guetta & Bebe Rexha I'm Good (Blue) / Parlophone WMG 138 -3% 8 20 23 Cian Ducrot I'll Be Waiting / Polydor UMG 138 +14% 7 21 17 Taylor Swift Anti-Hero / EMI UMG 133 -6% 8 22 NEW Lizzo Special / Atlantic WMG 133 +156% 6 23 16 Sam Smith... I'm Not Here To Make Friends / Capitol UMG 127 -11% 5 24 34 Anne-Marie Sad B!tch / Atlantic WMG 118 +39% 5 25 12 Venbee & Goddard Messy In Heaven / Columbia SME 117 -28% 6 26 20 KSI Ft Oliver Tree Voices / Atlantic WMG 117 -11% 5 27 25 Alok &... Work With My Love / B1/Ministry Of Sound SME 116 +5% 6 28 29 Libianca People / 5K SME 115 +11% 6 29 21 Bugzy Malone & TeeDee Out Of Nowhere / B-Somebody IND. 109 -11% 4 30 30 Anne-Marie & Aitch Psycho / Asylum/Major Tom's WMG 108 +5% 7 31 31 Headie One Martin's Sofa / Relentless SME 102 - 7 32 26 Rita Ora You Only Love Me / BMG IND. 98 -10% 5 33 27 Sub Focus & Dimension Ready To Fly / EMI UMG 93 -15% 5 34 18 FLO Cardboard Box / Island UMG 89 -34% 5 35 38 Lewis Capaldi Forget Me / EMI UMG 87 +9% 7 36 33 Nathan Dawe & Talia Mar Sweet Lies / Atlantic WMG 86 -9% 5 37 28 Eliza Rose &... B.O.T.A. / Warner/X One House WMG 84 -22% 7 38 48 Coi Leray Players / Uptown/Republic UMG 83 +19% 3 39 44 Jvke Golden Hour / JVKE IND. 82 +11% 6 40 46 Pink Never Gonna Not Dance Again / RCA SME 81 +13% 7 41 RE Zara Larsson Can't Tame Her / Black Butter SME 81 +37% 3 42 NEW Nathan Dawe & Bru-C Ft... Oh Baby / Atlantic WMG 79 - 5 43 NEW Tom Grennan Here / Insanity SME 78 +26% 4 44 40 Miguel Sure Thing / Jive SME 75 -4% 3 45 47 OneRepublic I Ain't Worried / Interscope UMG 73 +3% 5 46 41 Sam Smith, Koffee & Jessie Reyez Gimme / Capitol UMG 72 -6% 7 47 32 Harry Styles As It Was / Columbia SME 71 -28% 7 48 50 Oxlade Ku Lo Sa / Columbia SME 71 +9% 4 49 43 Metro Boomin, The Weeknd & 21... Creepin' / Republic UMG 70 -7% 3 50 49 George Ezra Green Green Grass / Columbia SME 69 +6% 7 from Music Week Chart Pack
  10. Gnarls Barkley - Crazy -N4jf6rtyuw
  11. 'Heartbeat/Tragedy' by Steps. I recall 'Heartbeat' being the promoted side in the run-up to Christmas 1998 (along with a video with snowy scenes) with 'Tragedy' being the main side after Christmas. 'Tragedy' was the promoted side that took the record to number 1.
  12. They flipped the single over on Boxing Day which was very clever marketing. 'Everything She Wants' was even given a remix which made it a much better track. I think it was a day or two after that when I bought the single. I know it was sometime between the Christmas and New Year. The remix was also enough to get the single to number 1 on the NME singles chart.
  13. Some of the TV music channels stopped playing Christmas music on Christmas Day evening. I tuned into a number of stations after 8pm and it was largely top 40 type non-Christmas countdowns. Many years ago, it was still common to hear Christmas songs into January but that was back when not that many charted each year and there wasn't wall to wall Christmas music (this is pre-digital days). 1995 was an odd one because both Mariah Carey ('All I Want For Christmas Is You') and Bon Jovi ('Please Come Home For Christmas') re-entered the top 75 just before Easter! I assume some record shop chain was selling off cheap CDs. Going back to the 1970s and 1980s the likes of 'Merry Xmas Everybody' by Slade, 'Lonely This Christmas' by Mud, 'Do They Know It's Christmas?' by Band Aid and 'Last Christmas' by Wham! were still charting into February. The last two did have a reason though and the Wham! single was flipped in favour of 'Everything She Wants'. I'll probably listen to a few Christmas songs between now and New Year but only my absolute favourites. The problem with the charts being full of Christmas songs and radio playing Christmas songs in a way that was unheard of 20 or so years ago is that I'm bored of hearing the same Christmas songs day in day out.
  14. It wasn't in the same way that the singles number 1 was but it was something much bigger than it has been in recent years. For one thing, sales used to be massive. Plus people used to talk about how many albums had sold over over 100,000 copies in Christmas week. It used to be close to 20 albums.
  15. Slipped disc: The decline of CD sales and the Christmas No.1 album by Andre Paine Taylor Swift’s Midnights is this year’s Christmas No.1 album, following a chart contest with Cliff Richard and Michael Buble. At one point, it looked as if Midnights’ streaming total in the past week might be higher than its physical performance, something that has never happened for a Christmas No.1 album. In the event, physical made up 53.9% of Midnight’s weekly total, which is still by far the lowest ever share for a Christmas No.1. Wth CD sales diving in 2022, based on Music Week research, the longstanding tradition of physical music in the festive period is now looking uncertain. The Christmas No.1 single is still a mainstream media story even with the dominance of LadBaby in recent years. But the chart-topping album has become less of an event in the streaming era. In years gone by, securing the top spot in the albums chart with big numbers in the week of Christmas was a sign of a surefire hit, either from a chart mainstay of that year or a strategic Q4 release in the run-up to Christmas. Last year, despite becoming her first LP available on DSPs from release, Adele’s 30 still registered 62,083 physical sales in chart week 51 (out of a total of 70,813 - Official Charts Company) to retain the No.1 position for Christmas. During the final week of 2021’s gifting season, its physical sales increased from the prior week. The final weeks of Q4 have traditionally been a time when physical music could make its mark on the albums chart, even amid the ongoing switch to DSP consumption. But 2022 shows signs of being the year that streaming - already dominant in terms of consumption throughout the year - finally ends that end-of-year boost for physical. With no album managing to top 20,000 chart sales in the past week, Taylor Swift was able to cruise back to the summit for a third non-consecutive week at No.1 with Midnights. The album became this year’s Christmas chart-topper by registering a further 17,109 sales, including 9,216 physical copies, 7,690 from streams and 203 downloads. Its total stands at 404,600 after just two months. While that caps off a triumphant year for Taylor Swift, it does raise questions about the physical music market at Christmas and the long-term future of CD amid an accelerating decline for the format. Only one album (Cliff Richard’s Christmas With Cliff at No.2 - 15,837 sales) sold in excess of 10,000 physical copies in the past week. According to Official Charts Company data for the year up to week 50 (ending December 15), CD sales were down 18.9% year-on-year. That compares to a year-on-year decline of 10.5% (to 14 million) for the format during the whole of 2021. Physical represented 29% of the albums market in the past week compared to 28.2% in the prior week. A year ago, physical was at 37.2% of the albums market in the week leading up to Christmas. Back in 2016, almost 50 million CDs were sold, and Christmas was the period when sales peaked. Michael Buble’s Christmas reached No.1 with 317,114 copies sold in seven days in the run-up to December 25 in 2011. In 2015, Adele’s 25 (then not available to stream) sold a staggering 449,970 copies in a week. Of course, the market has since shifted to a consumption model, but weekly sales in the run-up to Christmas were still topping 100,000 as recently as 2017 (Eminem’s Revival at No.1 and Ed Sheeran’s Divide at No.2 both made six figures). In the last five years, physical has been on the wane but the Christmas No.1 album was still above 50,000 physical copies for that key week in 2018 (The Greatest Showman), 2019 (Rod Stewart’s You’re In My Heart) and 2021 (Adele). There was a credible challenge this year from three festive releases, new and old, by Cliff Richard, Michael Buble and Andrea, Matteo & Virginia Bocelli. But without the usual retail boost, the two 2022 releases - Christmas With Cliff and the Bocellis’ A Family Christmas - were unable to make up the ground. As the week progressed, Swift’s main threat appeared to be from Buble’s 11-year-old Christmas album, which was powered by streams (84.3%) and ultimately made No.3. SZA’s SOS, which finished at No.4, does not even have a physical edition. While fewer big albums dropping late in the year could explain the slower market performance in the past week, the difference was not just at the top of the chart. In Christmas week 2021 and 2020, four of the Top 5 albums topped 10,000 physical sales, while in 2019 each of the Top 5 albums surpassed 20,000 weekly physical sales. It’s also notable that big festive releases of recent years, such as LPs from Robbie Williams and Gary Barlow, have not returned to the chart in 2022. The chart-topping Together At Christmas from 2020 by Michael Ball & Alfie Boe did manage to stage a revival this year, but only as high as No.51. The duo are in the Christmas week Top 20 with new release Together In Vegas. Part of the problem is the lack of availability of CD, a remarkably good value gifting option at this time of year. But record stores now give over much more floor space to vinyl, while many supermarkets have stopped selling music completely or limited it to select titles. Warner Music ingeniously got around this problem by packaging Cliff Richard’s Christmas With Cliff in a magazine format that could be stocked in supermarkets. Vinyl has made a big impact in Q4 with key releases from Taylor Swift, Harry Styles and Arctic Monkeys. But with prices increasing - £30 is common for an LP - the format is not likely to be an impulse buy for the Christmas shopper looking for the right gift. In the latest issue of Music Week, ERA’s Kim Bayley noted the rise in prices for vinyl. “Great products which deliver high perceived value will always sell,” she said. “During the Christmas gifting season, we can expect more demand. But value and price need to be aligned. “We recognise that costs are rising for all parts of the industry, but there is a risk that if vinyl costs rise too much it may inevitably affect demand, in particular from younger, less affluent audiences.” In the latest issue, we crunch the Q4 numbers for the first eight weeks of the quarter that shows vinyl unit sales up by 7.4% year-on-year. But, as this Christmas week has shown, it’s been a bumpy quarter and vinyl is not set to grow at the same rate as last year, when sales soared by 10.6% for the 12 months. In terms of value, however, there has been a significant increase, which is good news for retailers and labels. According to Official Charts Company data up to week 50 in 2022, vinyl retail value is up 10.5% year-on-year. As well as consumers’ ability to absorb rising prices, there have been concerns about production capacity and supply issues. But if that has held back growth of vinyl at retail, there are hopes the situation could be improving. “The production of vinyl remains an issue, but there has been a massive improvement on the situation in the last 12 months,” HMV and Fopp MD Phil Halliday told Music Week. “There’s certainly an opportunity for growth in 2023, most notably on catalogue, where some segments have been significantly impacted over the last 18 months.” Subscribers can read the full story on vinyl and Q4 here. Christmas No.1 album weekly sales 2022 Taylor Swift - Midnights (17,109 - 9,216 physical copies) 2021 Adele - 30 (70,813 - 62,083 physical copies) 2020 Paul McCartney - McCartney III (33,079 - 30,557 physical copies) 2019 Rod Stewart - You’re In My Heart (71,330 - 68,015 physical copies) 2018 The Greatest showman (68,606 - 55,025 physical copies) from musicweek.com
  16. Robbie posted a post in a topic in UK Charts
    'Watching The Detectives' by Elvis Costello is excellent. Indeed his entire singles output from 1977 to 1980 is very good. During that time he also produced the first Specials album (which is also very good). The band have been in the news today following the death of lead singer Terry Hall.
  17. Robbie posted a post in a topic in UK Charts
    There were phenomenal sales all round on both the singles and albums charts that week: SINGLES 502672 Rage Against The Machine 450838 Joe McElderry 61677 Lady Gaga 52605 Peter Kay 40742 3OH!3 38438 Robbie Williams (6) 36232 Cheryl Cole (7) 34094 Rihanna (8) 33337 Journey (9) 32517 Black Eyed Peas (10) 26571 Ke$ha (11) 24404 X Factor Finalists (12) 23415 Alicia Keys (13) 22243 George Michael (14) 21556 Chuckie & LMFAO (15) 19687 Timbaland (16) 18859 Cheryl Cole (17) 18457 Pogues (18) 18278 Jason Derulo (19) 17775 Chipmuink (20) 16449 Mariah Carey (21) 12865 Leona Lewis [sCYHO] (29) 12382 Saturdays (30) 11280 Miley Cyrus (31) 10062 Alexandra Burke [bH] (36) 9519 Leona Lewis [Happy] (38) 9250 Pet Shop Boys (40) 7286 Luther Vandross (48) 4051 The Glee Cast (75) ALBUMS 352612 Susan Boyle 251843 Michael Buble 143804 Black Eyed Peas 136480 Lady Gaga 131161 JLS 111599 Robbie Williams (6) 109730 Snow Patrol (7) 102750 Westlife (8) 100994 Leona Lewis (9) 100355 Take That (10) 97177 Will Young (11) 92114 Queen (12) 85938 Rod Stewart (13) 85059 Cheryl Cole (14) 74450 Paolo Nutini (15) 74009 Michael Jackson (16) 69076 Alicia Keys (17) 63492 Soldiers (18) 49896 Alexandra Burke (19) 47660 Rihanna (20) 37570 Beyonce (27) 36781 Paul McCartney (28) 16149 Cliff Richard & The Shadows (53) COMPILATIONS 195748 NOW 74 (1) (Total Sales: 819,850)
  18. The top 16 are inside the main top 40. It will be interesting to see how many are inside the main top 40 both next week and the following (Christmas chart) week. Given when Christmas Day falls there will still be Christmas records in the New Year chart also.
  19. Robbie posted a post in a topic in UK Charts
    I've not seen one but I imagine it would be quite a lengthy list, especdially for the early years of the charts where competing versions of songs were often in the top 20 at the same time as the original version.
  20. Robbie posted a post in a topic in UK Charts
    #100 for Christmas week 1991 definitely isn't there as the chart isn't available. 1992 and 1993 are in the thread at https://www.ukmix.org/forum/chart-discussio...ts-thread/page9
  21. Robbie posted a post in a topic in UK Charts
    'Don't You (Forget About Me)' had an extended chart run in 1985 and 1986 due to it being featured in the film "The Breakfast Club". The single sold over 60,000 copies in 1986 alone.
  22. Robbie posted a post in a topic in UK Charts
    1965 was the first year. A late broadcast too, at 10.35pm https://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/schedules/servi...ndon/1965-12-25
  23. Robbie posted a post in a topic in UK Charts
    'All Stuck Up' by Hooray and the Henrys was the follow up to the probably-equally-ghastly 'Sloane Rap' by Rupert and the Rupettes on the same label. I can't find a video for that one. Both acts appear to be an offshoot of The Firm, who had a number 1 in 1987 with 'Star Trekkin''.
  24. Robbie posted a post in a topic in UK Charts
    The other thing that worked in favour of 'River' was that it was being streamed heavily during a successful promotional campaign for Amazon Prime. This was off the back of AP obtaining exclusive rights to show two rounds of Premier League football during December 2019, one in early December and one over the Christmas / New Year period. Amazon Prime ran a promotional campaign that month where a user could sign up for a free month of AP, watch a lot of free football and have access to Amazon Music for free too - with streams counting as premium streams for chart purposes. Apparently Amazon had around 2.5 million extra subscribers to its Prime service that month. I was one of them. There were prominent ads for the Christmas music playlists and 'The River' was usually the first or second song to be played (which is why I gave up listening to the Christmas playlists).
  25. They were never given at all back in the 1970s or indeed for much of the 1980s. It's only since Alan Jones started to quote some of them in his chart analysis columns in Music Week from 1991 onwards that they became known to the public. Even then he didn't give much at all until the 2000s.