Everything posted by DanChartFan
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RIP Kenny Rogers
And finally his biggest UK hit. Lucille - number 1 in 1977 with 14 weeks on chart. Wvr5Z0NsDm8
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RIP Kenny Rogers
His 2 biggest hits were both charttoppers, so I've tie-broken by number of weeks on chart, so that makes #2 Coward Of The County - number 1 in 1980 with 12 weeks on chart rpnmfbLiRng
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RIP Kenny Rogers
At #3 is the one were his solo career began Ruby, Don't Take Your Love To Town - with First Edition - number 2 in six different weeks in 1969 and 1970 4EJGZt3X6uU
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RIP Kenny Rogers
At #4 is probably the first hit anyone would name if they were asked to name a Kenny Rogers hit. BTW the linked video is the last time he ever performed it with Dolly. Islands In The Stream - with Dolly Parton - number 7 in 1984 7RLpfLFuTkI
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RIP Kenny Rogers
His 5 biggest hits are all Top 10 hits. At #5 Something's Burning - number 8 in 1970. LK4-apKI_Xc
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RIP Kenny Rogers
And at #6 Lady - number 12 in 1980 uy24j2KbTq4
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RIP Kenny Rogers
His 7th biggest hit in the UK is probably one of his most loved ones here nowadays, so it's strange it isn't higher. The Gambler - number 22 in 1985 7hx4gdlfamo
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RIP Kenny Rogers
And at #8 We've Got Tonight - with Sheena Easton - number 28 in 1983 zjolx06SfQM
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RIP Kenny Rogers
His 9 biggest hits were all Top 40, and here is #9 Daytime Friends - number 39 in 1977 L7uvZ7sBPaw
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RIP Kenny Rogers
Inside Kenny Rogers top 10 now, and his tenth biggest hit was She Believes In Me - number 42 in 1979 PjWcMLFdNLU
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RIP Kenny Rogers
At #11 Eyes That See In The Dark - number 61 in 1983 gS4Kq_Kx-Oc
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RIP Kenny Rogers
His 12th biggest hit was Christmas Without You - with Dolly Parton - number 88 in 1984 YMysXLZKsqM
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RIP Kenny Rogers
Kenny Rogers is one of those artist where everyone knows and loves at least one of his songs. Sadly the BBC are reporting the breaking news of his death at 81 from natural causes, so I thought I'd countdown his UK hits, and apparently he only had 13 that made the UK charts in the first place, so here's #13. What About Me - with Kim Carnes and James Ingram - number 92 in 1984 JRp8QgFmfiE
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One Week Wonders in the UK Chart
The One Week Wonders - Episode 143 We start with two former members of Adam and The Ants, Gary Tibbs and Chris Merrick Hughes, under the guise Merrick and Tibbs, who had their only week of chart action in this guise at #95 on w/e 26th February 1983 with Call Of The Wild. z60DOS515r8 Next up is a Basildon based pop band called the Pinkees, who released four singles in 1982 and 1983. The second single, Danger Games, not only made the chart but peaked at #8. Their only other single to chart was their fourth and final one, I'll Be There, which had one week at #87 on w/e 5th March 1983. dAw1VQgIbl4 And we end this episode with Pal Of My Cradle Days by Scottish singer Valerie Dunbar. She was at #91 on w/e 19th March 1983. Ann Breen had entered the chart with the same song a month before, and was at a peak position of #69 in the same week, eventually notching up 17 weeks on chart accross 5 runs in 1983 and 1984. Unfortunately I wasn't able to find a youtube video, or any other online video, for Valerie's version, but Spotify to the rescue, so I can at least link to an audio version.
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One Week Wonders in the UK Chart
The One Week Wonders - Episode 142 First up for this episode is American duo Yarbrough and Peoples, aka Calvin Yarbrough and Alisa Peoples. Their UK chart debut was back in the last week of 1980, with Don't Stop The Music, which went on to reach #7. This is their second charting single in the UK, Heartbeats, which was at #91 on w/e 19th February 1983, which happens to be the week of my birth! NsC4Oa0rKlQ Next is Leisure Process, who were experiencing their only week of UK chart action at #93 in the same week with Cash Flow. 9sIG9ALShyc Finally for this episode we have David, or to give her her full name Virginia David, who was previously a vocalist for the band Sailor of Glass Of Champagne fame. Here she attempts a solo career with Am I Normal? at #98 in the same week as the other two songs, but it would be her only week of solo UK chart action. tyWPChIR9ss
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Impact of coronavirus on music industry
The fizzy drinks that were popular in the 70s and 80s, or the unpleasant Mexican lager that, to make it half palatable, you have to drink through half a lime wedged on the neck of the bottle?
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One Week Wonders in the UK Chart
The One Week Wonders - Episode 141 We start this episode with The Undertones, who were at #97 on w/e 29th January 1983 with The Love Parade. w0-9vFeP3nk Next up is Sensitive by Mick Karn, which was at #98 the same week, and was his chart debut. H2_JKFlRQWw Finally we have a TV tie-in single. The Boys From The Black Stuff was a five part Alan Bleasdale written series following a group of five Liverpudlian tarmac layers who had found themselves unemployed and were trying to find ways to eke out a living. The main character followed was Yozzer, played by Bernard Hill, whose catchphrases were 'Gis a job" and "I can do that!". The series was transmitted on BBC2 between Sunday 10th October 1982 and Sunday 7th November 1982. BARB were publising Top Tens by channel at this point, rather than the Network Top 20 of old, so the viewing figures can be found: Episode 1 - Unknown as not in the top 10 (but less than 3.4m people) Episode 2 - 4.45m (tied in 10th place with M*A*S*H) Episode 3 - 4.85m (4th place for BBC2, only Kenny Everett, Smiley's People and Horizon are ahead now) Episode 4 - 4.50m (now in tied 9th, but the other programme in the tie, and three above it are International Snooker coverage specific to this week) Episode 5 - 3.90m (still 9th, despite no International Snooker clogging the chart this week) The single is credited to Yosser's Gang and is called Gis A Job. It had one week at #100 on w/e 29th January 1983. Mzde4LVwE_I
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Impact of coronavirus on music industry
I hope The Knack let them use My Sharona "Ooh it makes my body rock, my body rock, ooh you know you'll never stop, m-m-m my corona!" Sorry I know it's dark humour which won't appeal to everyone, and my thoughts are very much with every person and family affected, but I've found myself singing these alterntive lyrics I made up to this song during my last week in self-isolation (precautionary at this stage, due to a cough, no other symptoms and no diagnosis or anything).
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One Week Wonders in the UK Chart
The One Week Wonders - Episode 140 There were no more one week wonders in 1982, and the repeated chart over christmas and new year doesn't throw up any bonus two week wonders, so we move on to the week ending 8th January 1983, and the first Gallup Top 100. The 76-100 wasn't a straight sales based listing, as singles that would be in that section but had been consistently dropping in sales and position were excluded to allow more upcoming hits to appear in that section. Nonetheless I've decided to embrace the full Top 100 at this point as it brings with it ever more obscure singles, and obscurity, whilst still technically charting, was the whole point of this thread. It will seem a little strange when we hit the point in 1991 when there is no public access to the full top 100, and it will make my research harder if I try to reinstate the 100 at the point when I can get them from ukmix (I think Sept 92?), rather than at the point in 1994 when they are returned on the OCC website, but the former issue is unavoidable, and as for the latter I'll cross that bridge when I get to it. We start by ignoring Snowman Melody by The Snowmen, which the OCC site shows at #57, as on closer inspection that turns out not to be a new release by them bu instead to actually be Xmas Party which had already been in the charts for the previous three weeks. We therefore start this episode with Nevada and In The Bleak Mid Winter at #71, which represents the only week of UK chart action for both that specific act, and the christmas carol in general. XsXDJxbH3UA We would then be listening to Loch Lomond by Runrig, which was at #86, were it not for the fact that a re-recorded, but fundamentally similar, version was issued to benefit Children In Need 25 years later in 2007 and reached #9. We therefore instead move to #92 and So Close To Me by Julio Iglesias. qvtlIxw-vzQ And finally the first ever top 100 gives us our first one week wonder to spend its only week on chart at #100. It's Ozzy Osbourne with a live version of Symptom Of The Universe, a Black Sabbath track from a few years previously, though it wasn't a charting single as a Black Sabbath track. 69RDJ38edR0
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One Week Wonders in the UK Chart
The One Week Wonders - Episode 139 We begin by correcting a third mistake I have made in the space of a week. Episode 137 should have begun with an EP called Don't Bring Me Down, which contained four live tracks, two by The Exploited, and two by Anti-Pasti. The EP was at #70 on w/e 5th December 1981. #NB The linked video, featuring the full EP, contains strong language throughout. Do not hit play if it is likely to offend you# _336Wvdsf-A Returning to 1982 again we carry on from where we left off last time. First up The Mood who were at #74 on w/e 30th October 1982. WkQhTWqpSoQ And concluding this episode with Gary Numan's former backing band Dramatis, who had previously been given equal billing with Gary on the #33 hit Love Needs No Disguise in late 1981, and now a year on, in w/e 13th November 1982 they had one week at #57 with I Can See Her Now. Maybe it's just me, but when the guitar kicks in it suddenly sounds similar to Poison by Alice Cooper, which was released a few years later. bykTcZddJiQ
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One Week Wonders in the UK Chart
Oops sorry, the mistakes seem to be coming from me thick and fast this week. There is also a song I completely missed out a couple of episodes back that I have to mention in the next episode too.
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One Week Wonders in the UK Chart
The One Week Wonders - Episode 138 We start this episode with the only week of UK chart action for Grand Prix, with Keep On Believin' at #75 on w/e 27th February 1982. nzoEYAL7uts In 1982 German singer Nicole won the Eurovision Song Contest with Ein Bisschen Frieden (A Little Peace), which then became a UK #1. The follow up, Give Me More Time, spent a single week at #75 in w/e 21st August 1982. ZxGhfhajAxQ Finally we have the first solo single for Robert Plant, following the disbanding of Led Zeppelin in 1980. Burning Down One Side was at #73 on w/e 9th October 1982. n_7abjQe3J0
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One Week Wonders in the UK Chart
The One Week Wonders - Episode 137 Another Xmas, another repeated chart to cover a non-compiled one, and two more singles become two week wonders in the weeks ending 26th December 1981 and 2nd January 1982. Fogwell Flax and Ankle Biters from Freehold Junior School were at #68 with One Nine With Santa, whilst Johnny Mathis and Gladys Knight had a version of When A Child Is Born at #74. d-303miG0P4 d14OOfuDCGA Our first proper one week wonder in this episode is Tara's Theme from Gone With The Wind by the Rose Of Romance Orchestra, which was at #71 on w/e 9th January 1982. Unfortunately as with a previous BBC music release, The Theme from Henry VIII, I can't find any trace of this exact version of Tara's theme anywhere online, so feel free to let me know if you can find video or audio of it online anywhere. If you use the OCC site to research these one week wonders you'd be forgiven for thinking the next one was Groove Baby Groove by the Stargazers, which according to the site had one week at #57 on w/e 6th February 1982. However I believe, after further research, that it was actually tied at #56 with Flashback by Imagination, then the following week one of those tied records was at #61 before climbing the week after that to #56. The OCC website shows the weeks at #61 and #56 as being the last two weeks for Imagination, but I'm fairly sure that the wrong record from the original tie has been credited with those two weeks, and that actually Groove Baby Groove had three weeks on chart. Moving on we then have Vice Squad with Out Of Reach, which was at #68 on w/e 13th February 1982, and was their only week of chart action. m0LNKUiE0HQ And we end this episode with Brandi Wells' only week of UK chart action with Watch Out at #74 on w/e 20th February 1982. J74EXRqf6hA
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One Week Wonders in the UK Chart
The One Week Wonders - Episode 136 On 24th August 1980 Slade found themselves unexpectedly playing the 20th Reading Festival, after Gary Moore’s G-Force and Ozzy Osbourne’s Blizzard Of Oz had both pulled out of the line-up. It proved to be the stimulus for a revival of the band’s fortunes. The performance was recorded by the BBC, and Tommy Vance began to play the recordings on his show, creating a demand for them, so they were soon released on EPs. The first, Alive At Reading, entered the charts on w/e 18th October 1980, and peaked at #44. The second one was called The Xmas Ear Bender, which charted for one week on w/e 27th December 1980 at #70, and contained three more tracks, Merry Xmas Everybody, Okey Cokey and Get Down And Get On It. The third of those tracks was a genuine Reading performance, but Okey Cokey was their 1979 studio recording with audience noise added to fit the other two tracks on the EP. Merry Xmas Everybody was a mere 40 seconds long, and was the result of the band challenging the crowd at Reading to sing the song. Yes they literally recorded their audience then sold the recording back to them! Anyway the chart books don’t bother to mention the EP, and merely list the entry as ‘Merry Xmas Everybody (re-recording)’, albeit credited to Slade and The Reading Choir (the latter being a jokey name for the crowd). The EP was a two week wonder, as the xmas chart was repeated to fill the gap due to no new chart being compiled for the following week, so it is at best a bonus here. ZMcoe-TKJfo L5lZaxFFlHA The first proper one week wonder for this episode is by Cloud, who were at #72 on w/e 31st January 1981 with the double a-side All Night Long/Take It To The Top, which was there only single to chart. 3L_Kge3rgGI 3v-n3sU5gts The we have 999 with Obsessed, which was at #71 on w/e 16th May 1981. -p5TFsUbR0A And finally for this episode we have The Modettes with Tonight, which was at #68 on w/e 18th July 1981. AQQEZqX8E5Q
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One Week Wonders in the UK Chart
The One Week Wonders - Episode 135 We start this episode with the only week of UK chart action for Charlie Harper, whose Barmy London Army was at #68 on w/e 19th July 1980. 6hH1UeksYk4 Next up is Stretchin Out by Gayle Adams, which was at #64 on w/e 26th July 1980. Just over four years later, in October 1984, she reached #86 with I'm Warning You. OeWvZuXU-lU And we end this episode with The Zoo by The Scorpions, which was at #75 on w/e 20th September 1980. They would go on to have a #2 hit with Wind Of Change in 1991. X27IfAgzhTY