TOTP 1989 – the epilogue

With 1988 having been retrospectively positioned as a year when a seismic change happened in the UK’s musical landscape bringing with it the huge sinkhole that was house music opening up and swallowing youth culture whole, what would the aftermath be? Would 1989 be more of the same or would another transformative movement appear to shake things up yet again? On reflection I would have to say that, for the majority of the year, it was all a bit of a let down. There was very little change and the status quo (not Francis Rossi and co!) was mainly preserved with some very unchallenging acts and songs ruling the charts. Stock, Aitken and Waterman accounted for over a third of the UK’s total No 1 records for the year (7 out of 18) and when they weren’t at the top of the charts we had the utterly dispicable and inexplicable sales phenomenon that was Jive Bunny and the Mastermixers clogging up the charts placing them alongside Gerry and the Pacemakers and Frankie Goes To Hollywood as the only acts (at that point) to have their first three releases go to No 1. What the Hell was going on?!

We did see some previous chart sensation return with the likes of Wet Wet Wet, Bros and erm…Curiosity Killed The Cat back in the Top 40 with new material but none managed to match their previous heights I would suggest. Certainly in the case of Bros, they managed not only to shed a band member but also layers of their popularity to a new and emerging menace from across the pond – the appropriately named New Kids On The Block. Only Madonna truly showed her superstar credentials by returning in a maelstrom of publicity and controversy (and more importantly huge sales) with her “Like A Prayer” album after her gap year of ’88.

Of the list of No 1s below, I bought one (a charity record but not Band Aid II) and liked hardly any. Of the new acts to achieve a chart topper, only Soul II Soul and Lisa Stansfield had any credibility in terms of being able to consolidate on having a No 1 record and build themselves a career of longevity I would argue. On reflection, it’s a very piss poor collection of chart toppers, possibly one of the worst of the decade I would posit.

Chart date
(week ending)
SongArtist(s)
7 JanuaryEspecially for YouKylie Minogue and Jason Donovan
14 January
21 January
28 JanuarySomething’s Gotten Hold of My HeartMarc Almond with Gene Pitney
4 February
11 February
18 February
25 FebruaryBelfast ChildSimple Minds
4 March
11 MarchToo Many Broken HeartsJason Donovan
18 March
25 MarchLike a PrayerMadonna
1 April
8 April
15 AprilEternal FlameThe Bangles
22 April
29 April
6 May
13 MayHand on Your HeartKylie Minogue
20 MayFerry ‘Cross the MerseyThe ChristiansHolly JohnsonPaul McCartney
Gerry Marsden and Stock Aitken Waterman
27 May
3 June
10 JuneSealed With a KissJason Donovan
17 June
24 JuneBack to Life (However Do You Want Me)Soul II Soul featuring Caron Wheeler
1 July
8 July
15 July
22 JulyYou’ll Never Stop Me Loving YouSonia
29 July
5 AugustSwing the MoodJive Bunny and the Mastermixers
12 August
19 August
26 August
2 September
9 SeptemberRide On TimeBlack Box
16 September
23 September
30 September
7 October
14 October
21 OctoberThat’s What I LikeJive Bunny and the Mastermixers
28 October
4 November
11 NovemberAll Around the WorldLisa Stansfield
18 November
25 NovemberYou Got It (The Right Stuff)New Kids on the Block
2 December
9 December
16 DecemberLet’s PartyJive Bunny and the Mastermixers
23 December
30 December
Do They Know It’s Christmas?Band Aid II

Hits We Missed

We didn’t miss any episodes of TOTP this time around as every show was repeated by BBC4 hence there weren’t many Top 40 entries that we missed. Indeed, they seem to play any old shite including niche stuff like W.A.S.P. at every available turn. However, I have found a few that I think we missed that made the charts but didn’t get the TOTP producer green light to appear on the show…

Goodbye Mr Mackenzie – The Rattler

Peak UK Chart Position: No 37

Haling from Bathgate, Edinburgh (as referenced in The Proclaimers hit “Letter From America”), Goodbye Mr Mackenzie first came to my attention with their eponymous debut single in 1988 which could and perhaps should have been a Top 40 hit but it peaked at No 62. Also piqued though was my attention so when “The Rattler” came down the line (to paraphrase its lyrics) in early 1989, I took note.

A re-release of a very early recording from three years prior and made before they signed to major record label Capitol, it took the band into the Top 40 (just) after a 4 week preamble. For me, it should have been a much bigger hit with its ‘rattling boy’ refrain and rootsy rock sound. Sadly, despite debut album “Good Deeds And Dirty Rags” achieving a very respectable No 26 chart placing, “The Rattler” would prove to be their commercial zenith. Moving across EMI from Capitol to Parlaphone as they began recording their second album in Berlin probably didn’t help and after the first two singles from it failed to chart, Parlophone refused to release the album. A further change of label enabled it to finally be released but by this time (1991), all momentum was lost.

Keyboardist and backing vocalist Shirley Manson would eventually leave the group and end up fronting 90s grunge popsters Garbage to huge commercial success. That pop footnote looked like being the thing that Goodbye Mr Mackenzie would be most remembered for but they reformed in 2019 against all odds (including one member having MS) to perform a number of shows (sans Manson) culminating in a sold out gig at Glasgow Barrowlands.

ABC – One Better World

Peak UK Chart Position: No 32

By the end of the decade, ABC had already achieved one successful comeback but pulling off a second proved to be too big an ask. After their sensational debut album “The Lexicon Of Love” had swept all before them, the band had come up with a second album in “Beauty Stab” that I loved but which the majority of their fan base had decidedly rejected. After haemorrhaging two band members and returning as cartoon characters for third album “How to Be a … Zillionaire!”, it looked like the game was up. However, they returned to form in 1987 with “Alphabet City” and attendant hit single “When Smokey Sings” bringing back glories of old.

By 1989 however, they were starting to seem irrelevant against the explosion of dance music and needed something special to bring them back to public awareness so they adopted an ‘if you can’t beat them, join them’ attitude and released a dance album of their own in “Up”. It tanked hideously peaking at No 58 on the album chart.

Lead single “One Better World” though wasn’t half bad – I liked its positive message and jagged house style back beat. Martin Fry and Mark White also went out of their way to embrace the late 80s house look – all pastel coloured clothes and floppy hair (White’s in particular is a perfectly sculpted example of young raver locks). “One Better World” remains ABC’s last Top 40 hit to date.

Duran Duran – Do You Believe In Shame?

Peak UK Chart Position: No 30

I’d kind of lost the plot and any lingering will with Duran Duran by this time to the point that I don’t really remember this single at all. It was actually the third and final track to be lifted from their 1988 album “Big Thing” and it turns out that there was more to it than I first imagined. Unfortunately, it’s all negative….

Firstly, there was a successful legal challenge made over its similarity to the song “Suzie Q” by Dale Hawkins which was made famous by Creedence Clearwater Revival and The Rolling Stones. Duran Duran denied any deliberate plagiarism and insisted it was all down to an unintentionally similar basic blues progression. Listening to the Creedence Clearwater Revival version, you can see why the courts found in favour of the plaintiff.

Secondly, the band’s waning chart fortunes weren’t helped by the revelation that the CD single format of the track had an overlong playing time that disqualified it from chart sales. The CD single was recalled and the issue rectified before being reissued a few days later but it meant that for several days during its initial promotion, the CD was unavailable in shops.

The video for “Do You Believe In Shame?” was the usual arty nonsense we’d come to expect from the band by this point with references to Andy Warhol, a falling dominoes sequence and Nick Rhodes and John Taylor looking all gaunt and gothic. Simon Le Bon on the other hand looks like a Hell’s Angel reject with a hairstyle that the possession of which should have been tantamount to a criminal offence.

The Jesus And Mary Chain – Blues From A Gun

Peak UK Chart Position: No 32

As the end of the decade came into sight, The Jesus And Mary Chain were starting to become Top 40 regulars. After a number of near misses at the start of their career, they had scored five consecutive Top 30 hits since their breakthrough EP “Some Candy Talking” in 1986. “Blues From A Gun” made it six on the spin and was the lead single from their much panned third album “Automatic”.

I wasn’t a die hard fan by any stretch of the imagination but I could appreciate their doomy yet melodic indie rock noise and I distinctly remember having this single in my hands in a record shop in Worcester (possibly Magpie Records) but it didn’t quite make it to the counter for purchase. Great song title though.

Arthur Baker & The Backbeat Disciples – The Meesage Is Love

Peak UK Chart Position: No 38

Legendary US DJ and producer Arthur Baker didn’t just work with some of the biggest names in music – I’m thinking Hall & Oates, Pet Shop Boys, Afrika Bambaataa and New Order for a start – but he also dabbled in releasing records under his own name (albeit he didn’t actually do any singing on them). Using the umbrella term Arthur Baker And The Backbeat Disciples, he released a number of tracks between 1989 and 1992 including “The Message Is Love” featuring the sumptuous vocals of Al Green. A Top 10 hit in four other countries, it got lost in the Xmas rush over here hence it only just breaking into the Top 40.

There was also an album called “Merge” that featured a host of guest artists including ABC, Andy McCluskey of OMD and Jimmy Sommerville in addition to the aforementioned Reverend Green. I liked this one so much I actually bought it (on cassette single no less).

N.B. Not to be confused with Al Green’s duet with Annie Lennox on 1988’s “Put A Little Love In Your Heart” from the movie Scrooged.

Hits That Never Were

It turns out that I hardly bought any of 1989’s hit singles that appeared on TOTP and I was left with having to find multiple ways to say so at the end of each blog post – you can only say ‘nope’, ‘nah’ or just a basic ‘no’ so many times. It seems I was more interested in songs that didn’t make the Top 40. Here are a few that I either bought, convinced me to buy the parent album or just caught my ear…

1927 – That’s When I Think Of You

Peak UK Chart Position: No 46

Asked to name an Australian rock band, no doubt many of us would come up with one of INXS, AC/DC or Crowded House as our answer. If we were being really clever and pedantic, maybe The Bee Gees or if we were looking for a cheap laugh then possibly Men At Work. 1927 though? Surely a pointless answer.

For a while though back in 1989, they looked like they had a shot at the big time with a five times platinum album in their own country in “…ish” – shocking title by the way – and a No 6 hit there as well with debut single “That’s When I Think Of You”. I’m not sure how I became aware of this song but it was very much my kind of thing at the time – bit of melodic rock with a great key change at the song’s finale. It reminded me of “Your Love” by English rockers The Outfield who made it big in the States but never amounted to much back home.

Just like their more successful countrymen INXS, 1927 also had siblings in their line up in the brothers Bill and Garry Frost. That’s where the similarities end though as they were unable to build on that initial success and they split in 1993 although a version of 1927 was still going as recently as 2019 (and that’s far too many years in one sentence).

Danny Wilson – Never Gonna Be The Same

Peak UK Chart Position: No 69

After showing steely commitment to their act throughout ’87 and ’88 by releasing and therefore promoting “Mary’s Prayer” three times before it became a hit, Virgin Records couldn’t pull a second rabbit out of the hat for Danny Wilson when it came to the next stage of their career. Despite having already secured a Top 40 hit in the calendar year in “The Second Summer Of Love”, the rest of ’89 became a sorry tale of missed chances and diminishing returns for the band.

“Never Gonna Be The Same” was the second single to be released from their excellent “Bebop Moptop” album and was a perky pop tune about a very non -perky subject, that of the break up of a relationship. What was clever about the lyrics though was that it also referenced not just the main protagonists but also those associate members, the collateral damage of when a relationship ends – the siblings and family members and friends who also have to come to terms with things having changed irrevocably. As Gary Clark sings:

Tell your brother and your sister ray
That I probably won’t be round again
But I’d always give them the time of day
Tho it’s never gonna be the same

None of that seemed to strike a chord with the UK’s pop fans though who were still enthralled by Italo House or whatever specific genre of dance music was flavour of the month at that time and so a perfectly weighted piece of pop was consigned to the musical dustbin. Apparently Virgin struggled to find enough airplay for the song given that Radio 1 especially seemed inescapably gripped in a dance music fever. Tossers.

For my part, I bought the album on the strength of this single so my conscience is clear.

It Bites  – Still Too Young To Remember

Peak UK Chart Position: No 66 (1990 reissue No 60)

Perennial members of the Hits That Never Were gang, this year’s entry from It Bites was the lead single from their “Eat Me In St Louis” album which saw them follow a much harder rock direction than previously. Gone were the overblown noodling of their prog-rock influences and in came shorter, more direct guitar orientated songs aimed at breaking the US market. The band backed this up with a full on, all out hard rocker look – long hair, leather jackets and in the case of keyboard player John Beck, a Slash style top hat.

“Still Too Young To Remember” was a great song I thought. An interesting mix of guitar riffs, intricate melodies and plaintive vocals, I could even forgive the seedy lyric “there’s a woman in my head, she should be in my bed”. Despite Record label Virgin’s best efforts, the single stalled at No 66. Subsequent singles from the album faired even worse (“Sister Sarah” made No 79 whilst “Underneath Your Pillow” crashed out at No 81). Desperate to not let their endeavours be in vain, Virgin returned to “Still Too Young To Remember” and re-released it in 1990. Its peak position of No 60 was the final nail in the coffin. Amid tension strewn recording sessions for their fourth album, the band announced in November 1990 that lead singer Francis Dunnery had left the band.

It Bites recruited a new singer but despite two band name changes (including the dreadful Navajo Kiss), they quietly split in 1991 before reforming in 2003. After several line up changes, they seemed to have finally given up the ghost in 2019.

The Call – Let The Day Begin

Peak UK Chart Position: No 42

This single was massively championed by Simon Mayo I seem to remember. He had a habit of doing this. He did the same for “Street Tuff” by Double Trouble and the Rebel MC and who could forget his campaigns to make a hits out of Andy Stewart’s “Donald Where’s Your Troosers?” and Monty Python’s “Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life”? Cheers for that Simon!

Anyway, this was one of his better calls (excuse the pun) I would suggest. I always thought this lot were Irish but it turns out that The Call were from Santa Cruz, California. Maybe my flawed perception of their non-celtic roots comes from their close alliance to Scottish rock gods Simple Minds for whom The Call opened on some of their tours. Indeed, the similarity between “Let The Day Begin” and the former’s “Waterfront” had to be ran by Jim Kerr for fear of plagiarism claims but Jim was cool with it (perhaps the only time in his life he was ever cool some might say – not me though). Listen to the intro of “Let The Day Begin” and close your eyes and you could well believe you were listening to the opening bars of “Waterfront”. Bizarrely, when Simple Minds covered the song for their their 2014 album “Big Music”, they made it sound nothing like “Waterfront”.

The song was also covered by Los Angeles-based rockers Black Rebel Motorcycle Club as one of their band members was the son of Michael Been who sadly died of a fatal heart attack in 2010. Despite not being a big hit in either the UK or the US, the song continued to have a life of its own when it was used by Al Gore to soundtrack his ultimately unsuccessful 2000 presidential campaign against George W. Bush.

Viewed retrospectively from 2020, lead singer Michael Been reminds me of the character of Father Stack from enduring 90s sit com Father Ted. Not sure The Call would have been on Father Stack’s playlist of banging house tunes though…

Spandau Ballet – Be Free With Your Love

Peak UK Chart Position: No 42

If they weren’t sure before, then they must have been by this point. For Spandau Ballet, their 80s ride of success was pulling into a final and full stop. The game was up. It was all over. After the failure of “Raw” to make the Top 40 the previous year, the band really needed the next single to be a hit. Their album “Heart Like A Sky” hadn’t been released at the same time as “Raw” but was held back until September of ’89 – were the record company nervous? Probably. They would undoubtedly have liked, nay needed, a hit single to promote it and put all their chips on “Be Free With Your Love” – a much more radio friendly sound than its predecessor with its free wheeling, joyous chorus and samba style middle eight. Yes, this was just the ticket you could almost her the record company big wigs saying.

Sadly for the band, it was all too little to late. Their imperial phase had ended long ago together with Duran Duran, Culture Club and the other new pop big hitters. It probably died the day that Wham! played their The Final concert in ’86. Also too late was Gary Kemp’s mullet hair. Yes, after years of resisting the urge to follow suit with his fellow band mates, he finally grew his hair long at the back just as the rest of them had cut it all off. This visual representation of the split between the band would play out in a much more sinister way in the courts in the 90s when the rest of the band (except brother Martin) sued Gary Kemp for songwriting royalties.

Sadly, I was one of the few that was still keeping the Spandau faith and bought “Be Free With Your Love”. I think I was trying to convince myself that I was still 15 and not the 21 year old having to face up to working out what to do with my life. That’s my excuse anyway. Two more singles were released from “Heart Like A Sky” but neither got higher than No 94 in the charts.

The River Detectives – Chains

Peak UK Chart Position: No 51

There seemed to be a fair few Scottish groups around the end of the decade all jostling for a shot at chartdom. I’m not talking those established stars who had already made it like Deacon Blue, Wet Wet Wet and Aztec Camera but those who wished to follow in their footsteps. Like who? Well, off the top of my head there were The Big Dish, The Silencers and Love and Money (of whom more later). And this lot. The River Detectives were a folk rock duo hailing from Craigneuk, North Lanarkshire who briefly built up some momentum surrounding themselves with the release of their debut album “Saturday Night Sunday Morning” which scored a respectable No 51 in the album charts.

Four singles were released from the album but the one I knew best was “Chains”, a lovely piece of jangly guitar pop (the intro even has a whiff of The Stone Roses about it) and a chorus with such a whopper of a hook that no river detectives were required to provide evidence of its existence. Sadly the single could only match its parent album in terms of chart placings and I lost track of The River Detectives after that despite them leaving a trail of clues to be followed in the form of follow up album “Elvis Has Left The Building” in 1992. They carried on into the new millennium before finally calling it a day in 2009 leaving behind one of the unsolved mysteries of 80s pop – namely why “Chains” wasn’t a huge chart hit.

Love and Money – Up Escalator

Peak UK Chart Position: No 79

Ah yes, the aforementioned Love And Money. I’d first heard of this lot in 1986 when their debut single “Candybar Express” gained some traction via consistent airplay on Radio 1. Sadly it failed to make the Top 40. Despite debut album “All You Need Is…” being produced by Duran Duran’s Andy Taylor, that also failed to make any impression on the UK record buying public.

Undeterred, they returned with sophomore album “Strange Kind Of Love” in 1988 with an even more stellar list of contributors including Toto’s drummer Jeff Porcaro and Steely Dan’s Donald Fagen with the whole thing overseen by the latter’s producer Gary Katz. It racked up 250,000 sales world wide and yet still they were unable to buy a hit single in the UK. It wasn’t for the lack of trying. Four radio-friendly singles were released from the album and I liked them all but my favourite was the final one “Up Escalator” with its slinky back beat and biting chorus.

Despite releasing another fine album in 1991’s “Dogs In The Traffic” including the terrific single “Winter”, the band couldn’t break through the chart barrier that prevented them from becoming mainstream pop stars. They broke up in 1994 before reforming in 2011 and are still headed up by lead singer James Grant who, back in the day, had a quiff to rival Morrissey’s.

Ellis, Beggs And Howard – Big Bubbles, No Troubles

Peak UK Chart Position: No 41

Unfairly dismissed at the time due to his background, this Nick Beggs project saw the ex-Kajagoogoo bassist and occasional Chapman Stick player collaborate with the titular Simon Ellis (keyboards) and Austin Howard (vocals) to fashion a wonderfully eclectic yet musically proficient sound that was lost on many of the UK’s music fans. For those of us that did stumble upon it, we were richly rewarded.

“Big Bubbles, No Troubles” was the debut single that was initially released in 1988 when it topped out at No 59 but it was reactivated 8 months later when it couldn’t have gone closer to breaking into the Top 40 by peaking at that most unfortunate of chart positions No 41. It’s got an almost filthy sounding funk vibe going on which brings to mind Prince allied to some very strong vocals from Austin Howard who on reflection, was Seal before there ever was a Seal.

Their album “Homelands” was one of the 80s best kept secrets. Wildly varied in style from riff laden rock to their own twisted version of Motown to sensitive world music ballads. If those sound like unfathomable descriptions, it’s because I don’t quite have the words to describe them. Two further tracks were released as singles (“Bad Times” and “Where Did Tomorrow Go”) but neither got any higher than No 98. The basis of a second album was recorded but never finished but was eventually made available under the title ‘Ellis Beggs and Howard – The Lost Years Vol 1’ as a digital only release years later via Beggs’ website.

Simon Ellis opted to pursue a much more out and out pop career after the band split writing hits for the likes of The Spice Girls, S Club & and Westlife whilst Beggs has continued to work in music on various and varied projects including a reformed Kajagoogoo in 2004. As for Austin Howard, he suffered from a rare form of cancer in 1991 but recovered to return to the music industry with rock band Ruff As Stone in 2011.

Terry, Blair And Anouchka – Missing

Peak UK Chart Position: No 75

I’m not sure that I knew about this song until the early 90s when I was working for Our Price and I bought a CD called “Terry Hall : the collection” and it was on there. I was aware that there had been this group (or possibly collective is a better word) called Terry, Blair and Anouchka and that the titular Terry was indeed Mr Hall but I never heard any of their stuff at the time.

“Missing” was the lead single from their “Ultra Modern Nursery Rhymes” album and it does indeed have a nursery rhyme quality to it and that’s not a criticism. It manages to combine a whimsical even chirpy sound to some relentlessly miserable lyrics about a couple going through a separation leading to divorce. Quite a feat but then Terry always has been a gifted songwriter in every phase of his career. I love the unusual way that he changes the lyrics of the chorus around constantly rather than having a static text so we get…

the kids are crying
the dog is dying
and I just got the flu

and…

the snow is falling
it’s christmas morning
it might as well be June

Very simple but they work perfectly. What I didn’t know until now is that Anouchka is Anouchka Grose who is listed in Wikipedia as being a Lacanian psychoanalyst and a member of the Centre for Freudian Analysis and Research. Wow! I’m guessing she didn’t write those lyrics otherwise they would have been much more deep and academic in nature.

The Terry, Blair and Anouchka project folded not long after its inception. Terry continued to record some phenomenal work either as a solo artist, collaborating with others like Dave Stewart for Vegas and of course with a reactivated The Specials who scored a No 1 album in “Encore” in 2019. The previously unmentioned Blair went onto form Oui 3 who had some brief chart success in the mid 90s.

Tin Machine – Under The God

Peak UK Chart Position: No 51

The late 80s had not been kind to David Bowie. His 1987 “Never Let Me Down” album had been critically panned and under performed commercially. As the decade closed, he was left feeling disillusioned with trying to make music for the fans he had acquired after the mainstream success of “Let’s Dance” rather than the music he wanted to make himself. His remedy was to go in a completely different direction and form a band. And not a band playing remakes of “Let’s Dance” but one which would turn out some heavy rock sounds that weren’t always the most easy to listen to.

Tin Machine comprised the unconventionally named Reeves Gabrels and the Sales brothers Tony and Hunt as well as Bowie himself. I remember there being a lot of commotion about the coming of Tin Machine and not all of it was positive. To me, a lot of the negative reaction seemed to be that people didn’t much like David Bowie with a beard which he had grown for the project but I’m sure the inkies music press had much more valid reasons for their caution. The style of music being peddled didn’t suit a lot of his fan base of which lead single “Under The God” was a prime example. Too rough and heavy seemed to be the main criticism but time has been kinder to the project with critical revisits declaring them ahead of their time and trailblazers for the likes of Nirvana and the grunge explosion.

As for Bowie himself, he was very keen to point out that Tin Machine were a band and not his band and that all four members had equal input and should receive equal levels of publicity. Yeah, that was never going to happen David. And me? What did I think? Nah, far too noisy for my liking.

Tin Machine lasted for two years and two albums before dissolving.

One 2 Many – Downtown

Peak UK Chart Position: No 43

It wasn’t just Simon Mayo who could use his Radio 1 profile to champion a specific song or two. Mark Goodier was at it as well in 1989. He even put his name to an album full of songs that he shouted up as being quality tunes. I should know, I bought the thing. It was smugly entitled “The Hit List: cuts above the rest”. Its sleeve notes included this arse clenchingly pompous statement from Goodier:

The Hit List is for the discerning music lover. It is a unique collection of sharp songs from bands who are right at the cutting edge of today’s music.

And I fell for this crap! Shame on me! And who pray were these bands at the cutting edge of today’s music? Why, there was Wet Wet Wet, Texas and erm….Waterfront?? OK, it’s easy to criticise in hindsight and with a good 30 odd years worth of perspective to confirm your opinions but I’m not sure Marti and the lads were ever considered cutting edge were they? And as for Waterfront…to be fair though, there were some decent bands and tunes on there such as the aforementioned Love And Money, The Beautiful South and the much loved but cruelly unrewarded commercially indie rockers House Of Love.

Goodier (I’m presuming these were his words) saw fit to pontificate some more with individual sleeve notes for each track. They really are quite insufferable and sycophantic. Here’s his view on The Alarm’s “Sold Me Down The River”:

If ever a band deserve huge success, it’s The Alarm. Mike Peters leads the group who never fail to deliver a stunning live set and a very strong album – this song is a fine example from their latest album Change.

There’s more. What do you think about Wet Wet Wet Mark?

The Wets are a good example of how much a group can achieve if they possess real talent. In five years they have gone from being unsigned to one of Britain’s best live bands. “Sweet Surrender” was the curtain raiser for their recent “Holding Back The River” album.

Oh OK. My favourite though is his take on And Why Not?

Not many groups start their career in the top 40 with their debut single, but it is nothing less than And Why Not? deserve. They may be young but they’re a musical force to be reckoned with as you’ll hear on their album “Move Your Skin“.

Yeah that prediction didn’t pan out too well.

There was another artist on “The Hit List” that I wanted to reference in One 2 Many. Goodier loved this lot and their catchy song “Downtown” (nothing to do with Petula Clark by the way). They hailed from Norway and one of their number had toured with A-ha as the keyboardist. However, it’s not the “Take On Me” hitmakers influence that can be heard on “Downtown” but the unmistakeable sound of one trick pony Bruce Hornsby on the piano riff. It wasn’t actually Bruce who played on it but the Bee Gees keyboard guy who were recording an album in the studio next door. He was asked to add a flourish to the song that was reminiscent of “The Way It Is”. He didn’t let them down (town) with a textbook copycat solo.

Originally released in 1988 it peaked at No 65 in the UK but was reissued the following year when it was a No 37 hit on the US Billboard Hot 100. Despite huge airplay support, it just missed the Top 40 again and before you could say ‘Who’s round is it?’, One 2 Many had split. And what did Goodier’s sleeve notes have to say about them? This:

Downtown” was a huge turntable hit – in its time, one of the most played records on the radio. It was also an American number 1 and started a promising career for One 2 Many

It wasn’t an American No 1 and it didn’t start a promising career – an epic fail there Mark.

The Bible – Honey Be Good

Peak UK Chart Position: No 54

Bringing together a few different strands of the Hits That Never Were section come The Bible, surely the most tipped band for superstardom of the whole decade who never actually had a Top 40 hit – not for the want of trying though as we shall see. The first connection is that they were also on “The Hit List” album with Goodier reserving perhaps his most pompous of sleeve notes comments for them:

Loved by true music fans, The Bible still wait for the hit they deserve. Their self-titled album contains many outstanding songs – including “Honey Be Good”.

True music fans Mark? As opposed to those of us labouring under the impression that we like music but are in fact fooling ourselves with the falsehood of our preferences? Talk about elitist!

Luckily for me, I passed Goodier’s true music fan test as I did like The Bible, having first come across their single “Graceland” a couple of years before. To be fair, it was hard to avoid that single as it was eventually released three times, including one last failed attempt by their record label to make it a hit in May 1989 when it peaked at No 51. Three months later they released “Honey Be Good” (itself a re-release I think). When that avoided the Top 40 by 14 places, things started to go horribly wrong. According to Wikipedia, in scenes that would have been deemed to ridiculous for a comedy movie, the band flew to Germany to perform “Honey Be Good” on a music TV show which turned out to be a talent show and found themselves competing against a man calling himself Mr Gadget who wore a spinning bow tie with lights on it. Against all laws of probability, they lost and the humiliation proved too much and the band split.

They reformed briefly in the 90s and created another link to the Hits That Never Were section by writing an album with former Danny Wilson front man Gary Clark. Since 2011 they have been active on the live music circuit mainly doing concerts to celebrate release anniversaries of their back catalogue.

Norman Cook featuring Lester – For Spacious Lies

Peak UK Chart Position: No 48

This one was a bit confusing. Officially released under his own name but featuring vocalist Lester Noel, “For Spacious Lies” would ultimately end up on the Beats International debut album “Let Them Eat Bingo”. Norman was clearly having a bit of an identity crisis around this time, something that would stay with him into the 90s with his Fatboy Slim alter ego.

“For Spacious Lies” was much more in a pop vein than the dance output that Cook would make his name on and remains therefore somewhat of a anomaly in his canon. Including the memorable line ‘and Freedom’s just a song by Wham’, its joyous horns and Spanish guitars are juxtaposed with a rather more heavy lyrical subject matter of living through a cynical world built on lies and corruption.

Come the new decade, Cook would formalise his songs under the banner of Beats International with his previous hit “Blame It On The Bassline” joining “For Spacious Lies” on that project’s album. After scoring a huge No 1 with “Dub Be Good To Me”, a re-release of “For Spacious Lies” was issued under the Beats International moniker but only in France.

Les Negresses Vertes – The Fly (Zobi La Mouche)

Peak UK Chart Position: No 93

This lot were truly bonkers or seemed so to me at least. Categorising them proved difficult for the music press but they had a go anyway coming up with the likes of ‘gypsy punk’ and ‘world folk’ but no amount of description could have prepared me for “Zobi La Mouche”. A quite extraordinary noise full of energy, humour and erm…a fair amount of accordion. Lead singer Helno’s voice had something of John Lydon about it on reflection – sadly he would die from a heroine overdose just four years on from this.

The chaotic brew that Les Negresses Vertes served up proved too unpalatable for most of the UK audience who preferred the flamenco sound of fellow French musicians The Gipsy Kings but the band carried on after Helno’s death and into the new millennium but by then their style had drifted off into a more ambient dub concoction. I’m sure I had a promo copy of one of their singles once upon a time from my Our Price days though I’m not sure I ever played it more than once. I must dig it out one day and give it another spin.

Baby Ford – Children Of The Revolution

Peak UK Chart Position: No 53

And finally, just to prove that I wasn’t totally out of step with what was popular in 1989, a dance tune I quite liked. Admittedly, it’s based on 70s glam rock anthem “Children Of The Revolution” by T-Rex which I already knew and liked but this was, well…evolution for me, of a kind.

I didn’t know anything about Baby Ford at the time nor do I know much about them now (I haven’t bothered to check out their Wikipedia entry) but this track has stuck with me over the years. I think it was the ‘B-b-b-b-b-ump and griiiind’ scratched hook in the intro that made me notice it. Where did I first hear this? No idea. A club? Possibly, but if it was released after I’d left Sunderland Poly then probably not as my lack of finances seriously curtailed my club going habits. Would it have been played on daytime radio? Again possibly but I have no memory of hearing it on the airwaves. I guess sometimes you just get music that inexplicably drifts into your life and just as inexplicably stays there for the duration. This is one of mine.

1989 – their year in the sun

Big Fun

The Stock, Aitken and Waterman Jackson 5 …except there were only three of them. Three of these berks was more than enough though as they stank out the TOTP studio with their rancid version of “Blame It On The Boogie” and the woeful SAW original “Can’t Shake The Feeling” on multiple occasions. They rustled up a couple more middling hits into 1990 (including one for charity with stablemate Sonia) but thankfully for all our sakes then fucked off forevermore.

Jason Donovan

The Stock, Aitken and Waterman David Cassidy, our Jase was already a well known face on UK TV screens thanks to his starring role as Scott Robinson in Aussie daytime soap Neighbours. After fictional and briefly real life love interest Kylie Minogue struck gold with some insanely catchy SAW tunes the year before, it made sense to wheel out Donovan to exploit the teenage girl market while he was still hot property. Four Top 5 hits in the calendar year including two back to back No 1s laid the foundations for him to secure the best selling album of 1989 in the UK with his “Ten Good Reasons” debut.

It couldn’t last though and his popularity started to wane as the world moved onto the ghastly New Kids On The Block to fill up the poster space on their walls into the new decade. A final hurrah with 1991’s chart topper “Any Dream Will Do” from the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat in which he starred in the West End rather aptly brought down the curtain on his brief but brightly burning time as a bona fide pop star.

Sonia

The Stock, Aitken and Waterman Cilla Black, the diminutive scouse firecracker leapt to fame when she secured a No 1 record with her very first single in this year. Plucked from obscurity by Pete Waterman who seemed to be trying to convince us all that he was some sort of pop music King Midas, Sonia looked like she could scarcely believe her luck whenever she performed on TOTP. Despite notching up a string of Top 40 hits into the early 90s, she never got anywhere near that coveted top spot again.

That ignominious route to career resurrection that is the Eurovision Song Contest salvaged one final Top 20 hit for her before it was off to the graveyard of reality TV when she appeared alongside Todd Carty, Tony Blackburn, Colin Baker and Sherrie Hewson in Channel 5’s Celebrity 5 Go Caravanning.

Black Box

The autumn of ’89 was completely owned by Black Box and their ubiquitous “Ride On Time” No 1 single. Six weeks at the top and the best selling single of the year in the UK, these flag wavers of the Italo House phenomenon were hot property. Yes, there had been that controversy over who actually did the singing on the record (it wasn’t striking French fashion model Katrin Quinol who did all the promotional performances) but I’m guessing the clubbers dancing themselves into a frenzy over this huge tune cared not a jot.

Though certainly not a one hit wonder (they actually clocked up a further six chart hits between 1990 and 1991), they were never more in sync with the zeitgeist than in 1989.

A version of the act were still releasing music as recently as 2018.

Jive Bunny And The Mastermixers

As bizarre as it was heinous, this fluctuation in the pop music time continuum was staggering in its audacity and in its simplicity of concept. Quite how the nation was fooled into giving some DJs from Rotherham three consecutive No 1 records in return for a cut and past montage of 50s songs fronted by a shitty animated rabbit remains one of the great unsolved mysteries. How? Why? Who f**king bought the records? These questions are yet to be answered.

In my mind, Jive Bunny disappeared as soon as Christmas 1989 was over but Wikipedia tells me that they had another three hits the following year but thankfully I have blitzed them from my memory. If we have learned anything from this horrible experience it is that sometimes you really cannot trust the Great British public to do the right thing.

London Boys

They came, they saw, they mimed to some camp as tents Euro pop whilst performing back flips and they conquered the charts. One of the oddest sensations of the year, Edem Ephraim and Dennis Fuller briefly dominated the charts with back to back Top 5 hits and were clearly favourites of the TOTP producers who were only too glad to repeat book them for the show. I guess they did bring a sense of spectacle with them but the music was dire.

Tragically, the pair were killed in 1996 when their car was hit by a drunk driver in the Eastern Alps in Austria.

Last Words

I probably didn’t think so back then, but on reflection, 1989 seemed very much like killing time until the 80s were done – just treading water awaiting the new decade and all that it may bring with it. Yes, there was the Italo House phenomenon which helped to establish the dance music explosion of the previous year but there weren’t many exciting new acts and genres in this year. Obviously there were some notable exceptions like The Stone Roses, De La Soul and Soul II Soul but if Gene Pitney could have a No 1 then that tells you an awful lot about 1989.

There was an awful lot of ‘as you were’ going on with the likes of Erasure, Simply Red and Kylie Minogue all maintaining their chart runs (to varying degrees). There were also some major comebacks in the offing with Fine Young Cannibals returning with a massive hit album and re-inventing themselves as huge stars in America whilst 1989 also saw three established female stars back in the charts in a big way in Madonna, Cher and Tina Turner. There were also some solid innings from reliably classy acts like Depeche Mode, The Cure and REM.

Classic rock music was represented this year by Bon Jovi who consolidated on their global commercial breakthrough although they were seriously challenged in the popularity stakes by Guns N’ Roses who were The Rolling Stones to their Beatles. Hoary old 70s rocker Alice Cooper pulled off a surprisingly successful resurrection but Queen’s return after three years away sounded dreadful to me on the whole.

And so we turned our backs on the 80s and looked towards the 90s. What delights (or disappointments) would the new decade hold?

Disclaimer

I make no claim to the rights of this show and all ownership and contents including logos and graphics belongs totally to the BBC or copyright holder(s).

All opinions on the music and artists featured are my own. Sorry if you don’t agree.

TOTP 13 JUL 1989

It’s mid July in the long, hot Summer of 1989 and TOTP has a new co-host making her debut on the show. Jakki Brambles had actually been a Radio 1 DJ for a whole year before she got her shot on TOTP having presented the weekday early evening show initially before progressing to the drivetime show and finally replacing Gary Davies in the lunchtime slot. I also have definite memories of her working with Simon Mayo on his breakfast show after replacing Sybil Ruscoe as the weather and travel reporter.

I wasn’t a fan possibly due to her conscious decision to brand herself as Jakki with two ‘k’s and an ‘i’. Could she have been any more 80s?! At the end of her time at Radio 1, she relocated to San Francisco to try her hand at American broadcasting and decided to adopt the rather more mature and professional looking Jackie spelling of her name. Following a move to Los Angeles, she became GMTV’s showbiz reporter and eventually returned to these shores to become one of the Loose Women.

She’s been paired with Bruno Brookes for her TOTP debut, let’s see how it went….

…ah, the lesser spotted Danny Wilson are in the studio. Probably very much seen as being of the same ilk as The Kane Gang, Love & Money and Deacon Blue (sometimes rather lazily labelled as ‘sophisti-pop’), the Dannys also had a bit of quirkiness about them I always thought which ensured that they didn’t take themselves too seriously. Take for example “The Second Summer Of Love”, written on a short break between promotional interviews by Gary Clark as a joke after some friends of his had gotten into the acid house rave scene that the press had given the label the second summer of love. Originally just a-minute-and-a-half long, the band’s US label bosses heard something in it that they thought would make an airplay hit and asked the trio to expand it. A bridge and harmonica solo were added and suddenly they were back in the charts (though not in the US where ironically it was never released as a single). My point remains though that the track wasn’t consciously composed as a hit single, they were a bit more organic than that.

I stated in my last post that parent album “BeBop Moptop” was most likely to be found in charity shops these days but I’ve just checked and it is now on Spotify (it wasn’t until very recently) so fill your boots. All it requires now is the deluxe re-issue treatment on Cherry Red Records…

As for their performance here, I’m not sure why the other two guys (Kit Clark and Ged Grimes) were instrument less and wearing white gloves but, not for the first time in this blog, it reminded me of this…

Some weird segue shit from Bruno Brookes next as he thanks the audience at home for staying in to watch their ‘favourite rock show and all that’….’favourite rock show’ Bruno? I’m pretty sure to was a pop music show  – the clue’s in the title. Yes you could sometimes get rock acts on like Guns N’ Roses and Bon Jovi but the premise of the show was that it was based around the national charts that were a broad church to say the least and certainly not just rock orientated. Ok, well let’s test Bruno’s theory and see how many genuine rock acts are featured on the show then starting with…

Bette Midler with “Wind Beneath My Wings”! Well, you can’t get much more rock chick than Bette can you?! Apparently ‘The Divine Miss M’ wasn’t too jazzed about the song initially. In a Times interview from 2009 she said:

“It’s really grown on me. When I first heard it, I said, ‘I’m not singing that song,’ but the friend who gave it to me said, ‘If you don’t sing it I’ll never speak to you again’, so of course I had to sing the damned song. Whatever reservations I might have had I certainly don’t have any more.”

Not surprising really as it gave her a US No 1 record and the country’s 7th best selling single of the whole year.

Eighteen years later, some tosser from London’s Burning jumped on the Robson and Jerome bandwagon, released his own version of the song and bagged himself a no 3 hit…

OK, eyes down for a Bruno Brookes rock act….and we have No 22 which is De La Soul with “Say No Go”. Hmm, I’m not sure a hip hop trio who were a driving force behind the jazz rap movement could really be described as rockers do you Bruno? Oh and look at him gurning and saying “Real funkyyyy!” behind Jakki Brambles as she introduces them. Dickhead.

Parent album “3 Feet High and Rising”, with its fluorescent flowers artwork and cartoony text, introduced the world to the group’s concept of ‘D.A.I.S.Y. Age’ which was meant to symbolise a withdrawal from the prevalent gangsta rap image of the times. And what did ‘D.A.I.S.Y. ‘ stand for? According to Wikipedia it was an acronym standing for “da inner sound, y’all” which sounds far more hip than Bruno Brookes’ “Real funkyyyy!” description.

“Say No Go” peaked at No 18.

This is a really bizarre video and probably the wrong side of creepy as well. Unbelievably, Michael Jackson was still releasing tracks from his “Bad” album as singles some two years after it first came out! Indeed, “Liberian Girl” was the ninth to be pulled from it (although it wasn’t released in the US). For me, it was an absolutely nothing song, devoid of any substance or interest. Even the Swahili phrase at the song’s beginning is a load of baloney as Swahili is not spoken in Liberia. The star studded video only substantiated my opinion as, for me, it was just one almighty distraction from what was basically a substandard song.

I’m not going to list all the celebrities included in the video (I’m sure you’ll be able to name most of them yourselves) but there is something distinctly unsettling about the fact that Jacko essentially cast himself in the role of voyeur, especially given everything we now know about him subsequent to 1989. I hate all the sycophantic applauding and “Michael , we love you!” shouts from the ensemble as he reveals himself (as it were) at the denouement. Just excruciating.

“Liberian Girl” was Jackson’s final single of the 80s and peaked at No 13 in the UK.

My friend Robin described the next act to me recently as a ‘quintessential 80s coffee table wankfest’. I make him right on this one. Waterfront were just paint-by-numbers pop pap weren’t they? “Cry” was their only UK chart hit (it was a much bigger deal in the US as Jakki advises in her intro) but thankfully for all our sakes, despite releasing a string of other singles, none of them got anywhere near the Top 40.

Oh and doesn’t the lead singer look like the flashy, male chauvinist Kirk St Moritz character from 80s sitcom Dear John? See him at 0.45 seconds into the clip below and judge for yourself…

The never ending saga of Gloria Estefan’s nomenclature trundles on until the very end of the decade it seems. I’ve written many times about the convoluted tale of quite when and how Gloria lost her Miami Sound Machine without ever really getting to the bottom of it and now another twist. Apparently “Don’t Wanna Lose You” was the first official solo release by Gloria being the lead single from her also debut solo album “Cuts Both Ways”. I’m sure some of her previous recent releases didn’t have the Miami Sound Machine brand attached to them though. Certainly when she performed “Can’t Stay Away From You” on TOTP she did so entirely solo and without backing. Oh whatever. All I do know is that there is no way that Gloria could be considered a rock act therefore denying any grist to Bruno Brookes and his rock mill nonsense.

“Don’t Wanna Lose You” is a nice enough ballad I suppose but for me it didn’t stray too far from the original blueprint of Gloria’s catalogue of romantic love songs. Previous hits “Anything For You” and “Can’t Stay Away From You” sounded just the same to me. They even all included ‘you’ as the last word in the title! Talk about formulaic! Her fans around the world didn’t seem to mind though. “Don’t Wanna Lose You” was a No1 song in the US and a Top 10 hit over here with the album going platinum in both territories.

So we all knew what Paul Heaton and Dave Hemingway had been doing since the demise of The Housemartins due to The Beautiful South’s immediate impact on the charts with “Song For Whoever” but what about Norman Cook? The cheeky faced bassist reappeared with one MC Wildski (not to be confused  – as I did – with Janet Street Porter’s ex-boyfriend Normski) and a very danceable tune called “Blame It On The Bassline”.

Norman was taking his new career in a totally different direction to his old bandmates with samples a plenty woven into the basic premise of “Blame It On The Boogie” by The Jacksons. For me, it worked pretty well but could any of us have foreseen the career in dance music that would take off for Cook at this point? He would of course go onto huge success under an army of aliases and band names including Beats International, Freak Power and most famously Fatboy Slim. Indeed, it was reported in 2008 that he held the Guinness World Record for the most Top 40 hits under different names! Makes the whole Gloria Estefan / Miami Sound Machine saga look like very small fry indeed.  “Blame It On The Bassline” was the only release to be promoted under his own name and yet confusingly, it turned up on the debut album by his collective Beats International called “Let Them Eat Bingo”. It peaked at No 29. 

The video was a bit of knockabout fun with some very random famous faces in it including Janice Long, Tom ‘Lofty’ Watt and most bizarrely Arsenal footballer Paul Davis.

Despite her wonderful, critically regarded legacy, Kirsty MacColl only ever had seven Top 40 hits …and three of those were “Fairytale of New York”! “Days” was the fourth of those and was of course a cover of The Kinks 1968 track. I remember being surprised that this was a hit at the time, not because it wasn’t any good (it certainly was) but because, ignoring her Xmas renaissance moment with The Pogues, she hadn’t been anywhere near the charts for over four years. Her lack of commercial success is absolutely criminal – so many good songs, so few sales.

The video is very Mary Poppins but kind of suits her wistful treatment of the song. “Days” peaked at No 12, exactly the same position that the original achieved. A Smash Hits article of the time led with the headline ‘So who is this woman who looks like Madge from Neighbours?!?’. It’s not the first time that the publication had been less than reverential to a huge talent but this really did show a lack of knowledge, if not by the editorial team but at least on behalf of their readership. Not a headline that has aged well.

Right, a check on how Jakki B’s TOTP debut is going. Is it me or does that not seem to be an awful lot of chemistry between her and Bruno? The Kinks reference at the end of Kirsty’s video seems a bit frosty to me. Onwards though and from Jakki B to Jazzi P who is the featured artist on the new LA Mix single“Get Loose”. I’ve got very little to say about this one, mainly because I can’t remember it. Not my thing at all but I did learn the other day that apparently the ‘LA’ part of the act’s name is nothing to do with Los Angeles and is actually the initials of founding member Les Adams. You can see why they didn’t go with Les Adams Mix which sounds like the resident DJ at a working men’s club disco night. 

A non sensical intro from Bruno Brookes next…. 

“All this running around we’re doing here like nobody’s business but there’s a very good reason for it now because we’ve got the best view of the new entry at number 33, here comes Simply Red‘. OK, I’ll go with it Bruno…yet instead of cutting to Hucknall et al in the studio, we get the official video! Eh? Why would you need to run about in the studio to get to the gantry to watch a  pre recorded video? Yes, it is essentially a basic performance of the song on a stage but it’s not the TOTP stage. Weird. 

“A New Flame” was indeed the title track of the band’s latest album as Jakki Brambles informs us and of all the singles released from it, I thought this was the best for what it’s worth. When I say ‘best’ I of course mean ‘least objectionable’.

I have a distinct memory of this song which involves the first job I finally managed to get having left Polytechnic a few weeks earlier. Having dejectedly gone to the Job Centre one Friday morning expecting very little, there was a job as an insurance clerk for AA Insurance Services going. I asked for details and was told to get myself to their office that afternoon for an interview. To my amazement I got it and was told to start the following Monday. Some time later as I was walking to work one day, my boss pulled up and gave me a lift to the office. The song that he was playing on his tape deck? “A New Flame” of course. In fact he had the whole album as I could see the cassette case on his dashboard. I knew then that a career with the firm was not for me.

“A New Flame” the single peaked at No 17 but the album was a massive success going 7 x platinum in the UK and being the second best selling album of the whole year.

 

Top 10

10. Prince – “Batdance”

9. Bette Midler – “Wind Beneath My Wings”

8. Bobby Brown – “On Our Own”

7. Gladys Knight – “Licence To Kill”

6. Chaka Khan – “Ain’t Nobody”

5. Pet Shop Boys – “It’s Alright”

4. The Beautiful South – “Song For Whoever”

2. London Boys – “London Nights”

2. Sonia – “You’ll Never Stop Me From Loving You”.

1. Soul II Soul – “Back To Life”: A fourth and final week at the top for Jazzie B  (any relation to Jazzi P?) and the gang. It tuns out that my aforementioned friend Robin (the Waterfront hater) used to know one of the women dancing in the video. They worked together at the BBC. The one in the red top in the jungle setting maybe? That’s nothing though. I was once in the same room as Chesney Hawkes’ drummer.

The play out video is Bobby Brown‘s fourth consecutive hit of the year. “On Our Own” was taken from the soundtrack to Ghostbusters II and was a No 2 smash in the US and a No 4 hit over here. I’ve been very uncomplimentary about Mr Brown in this blog in the past but I have to say I didn’t actually mind this one. I always quite liked the opening lyric ‘Too hot to handle, too cold to hold’.

As with the Michael Jackson and Norman Cook videos earlier, the promo for “On Our Own” features several guest appearances by celebrities including Donald Trump alongside scenes from the movie and of course it means a second appearance on the same show for Dan Ackroyd. Its his third TOTP outing in total though as he was on the USA For Africa “We Are The World” video in 1985. I spent three years at Polytechnic being called ‘Dan’ due to my resemblance to Mr Ackroyd at the time. I can think of worse people to look like I suppose, like Mick Hucknall for example.

P.S. That final count on rock acts on tonight’s TOTP? I’m saying zero.

Order of appearance Artist Song Did I Buy it?

1

Danny Wilson The Second Summer Of Love No but I bought the album Bebop Moptop

2

Bette Midler Wind Beneath My Wings Nope

3

De La Soul Say No Go No but my wife had the album 3 Feet High And Rising

4

Michael Jackson Liberian Girl A big no

5

Waterfront Cry No but I think it was on some Radio 1 Mark Goddier compilation album that I had.

6

Gloria Estefan Don’t Wanna Lose You Nah

7

Norman Cook and MC Wildski Blame It On The Bassline I didn’t but it I had the Beats International album it’s on

8

Kirsty MacColl Days No but its on my Best Of compilation of hers called Galore

9

LA Mix featuring Jazzi P Get Loose Get real more like. No

10

Simply Red A New Flame It’s a no from me

11

Soul II Soul Back To Life No but I think my wife had their album

12

Bobby Brown On Our Own No

Disclaimer

OK – here’s the thing – the TOTP episodes are only available on iPlayer for a limited amount of time so the link to the programme below only works for about another month so you’ll have to work fast if you want to catch the whole show.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m000hbdw/top-of-the-pops-13071989

I make no claim to the rights of this show and all ownership and contents including logos and graphics belongs totally to the BBC or copyright holder(s).

All opinions on the music and artists featured are my own. Sorry if you don’t agree.

Some bed time reading?

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http://likepunkneverhappened.blogspot.com/2019/10/july-12-25-1989.html

TOTP 06 JUL 1989

Now I can’t be sure of the exact date but I’m pretty certain that by early July 1989 my cosseted life as a student had just about come to an end. I was bereft. I had no idea what I was going to do, no career plan and I certainly wasn’t in any rush to start getting on with the rest of my life. Worst of all I had no firm idea when I would see my girlfriend again. She was heading back to Hull whilst I was Worcester bound. I travelled back to my hometown on a coach with the final lap having to be completed by taxi when the coach broke down. And then there I was. Back in my parents house. Back in my childhood bedroom. How had this happened? How had three years whizzed past so quickly?

My immediate aim was to get some sort of employment so I would at least have some money to pay off my overdraft, give my Mum some for housekeeping and fund travelling the length of the country to see my girlfriend at some point. I nearly got a job as a bin man but backed out at the last minute out off by the early starts and also by the scary man with a spider’s web tattooed all over his face in the employment office who was after the same position. I was directionless, cashless and thoroughly unhappy.

Surely there must have been some decent tunes on TOTP on a Thursday night to cheer me up….

…it’s not a good start. The Stock, Aitken and Waterman version of Cilla Black  – other wise known as Sonia – is first up on this particular show. Her Breakers appearance last week has caused her to move all the way up to No 12 whilst becoming at the same time the week’s biggest climber. We all could see what was going to happen here. “You’ll Never Stop Me From Loving You” was bound for the top and those pesky Hit Factory people had inflicted another of their roster of pop puppets upon us  – the UK was seemingly unable to resist. What was her appeal? Was it her perkiness? Was it the catchy piece of pop fluff that was her single? Or was it The Beatles effect of her scouse accent? I never really got it. I could see how Kylie and Jason would appeal to a certain section of the record buying public but Sonia?

And still Stock, Aitken and Waterman weren’t done with manufacturing pop stars. The dreadful Big Fun will be along on these TOTP repeats soon enough. Even worse than that though, they will turn their attention to Cliff Richard and make a dog’s dinner out of the Band Aid record before the year is out.

The next song is decent though. Gladys Knight‘s Bond theme “Licence To Kill” was a worthy addition to the canon I think and of the five Bond songs released in the decade I would rank it probably in the top three and certainly above Rita Coolidge’s “All Time High”  – officially the worst ever UK chart performer of the genre.

It was a different kettle of fish for the film itself though. Unlike Alan Partridge, I’m no Bond aficionado and I don’t think I’ve ever seen Licence To Kill but the perceived wisdom is that it nearly killed off the franchise altogether. Up against that Summer’s blockbusters of Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade and Batman, its gritty realism and the fact that Bond had gone rogue for the first film ever meant that audiences were less than impressed. Whilst UK box office receipts were respectable, across the water it was the least financially successful James Bond film in the US. It would be another six years before the franchise was rebooted with Pierce Brosnan as 007.

From Alan’s Bond party to “Grandpa’s Party” courtesy of Monie Love. Amongst the pretty big names that Monie (real name Simone Johnson) has worked with are Prince, Queen Latifah and Whitney Houston…..

…however, she missed a trick by not hooking up with this fellow. Imagine the mash up they could have made….

There have been a lot of  R’n’B soul singers on these TOTP repeats over the course of the last three and a bit years that I’ve been writing this blog and we haven’t got to the bottom of the barrel yet. Karyn White was only 23 when she hit big with “Superwoman” and was a much bigger deal in the States than over here where she racked up four Top 10 hits including a No 1 in 1991 and won two Grammy awards. In the UK she scored a couple more Top 30 hits but I’m guessing that “Superwoman” is what she is best remembered for on these shores.

Did I like this one? I found it all a bit ‘meh’ to be honest. “Superwoman” peaked at No 11 in the UK.

Some Breakers now beginning with Bette Midler‘s first ever UK Top 40 hit. I didn’t realise until now that “Wind Beneath My Wings” wasn’t actually written for the film Beaches from which Midler’s version is taken but had been composed in 1982 and already been recorded by the likes of Sheena Easton, Lou Rawls, Gladys Knight and the Pips and erm…Roger Whittaker before Bette got her mitts on it.

I caught the film in Newcastle (I think it must have been one of my last trips to the cinema before my time in the North East was up) with my girlfriend and another friend called Bev.  The slightly mawkish tale of two young girls who meet by chance and whose lives are then intertwined over the next 30 or so years to various degrees of relationship and drama was all too much for poor Bev (spoiler alert – there is a sad ending) who cried all the way back to Sunderland on the train.

“Wind Beneath My Wings” has become quite the standard over the years and in a 2002 UK poll was found to be the most-played song at British funerals. It was a No 1 record in the US and a No 5 hit over here.

Ooh this is much better! The return of Danny Wilson! After finally managing to get a hit with “Mary’s Prayer” after three attempts, the trio had lost ground rather when subsequent single releases did diddly squat. After retreating to lick their wounds, they returned a year later with “The Second Summer Of Love” from their sophomore album “Bebop Moptop”. I liked the song immediately but was delighted to find out that the whole album (which I bought on the strength of it) was full of even better tracks. Indeed “The Second Summer Of Love” is probably one of the weaker cuts on it for me. That didn’t detract from it being far better than most of its peers in the Top 40 at the time.

I recall seeing them interviewed about the video and them advising the reporter that they’d had to learn the song backwards so that when the film is shown backwards, they appear to be miming it as normal. A simple trick but quite effective.

“Bebop Moptop” is most likely to be found in charity shops these days I wouldn’t wonder but it really is worth shelling out a couple of quid for if you see it. “The Second Summer Of Love” was the band’s second and last hit peaking at No 23. If there was any justice in the pop world, subsequent singles released from the album “Never Gonna Be the Same” and “I Can’t Wait” would have been massive hits but they weren’t and the band split not long into the next decade with only a couple of brief reunions since.

Another classic song from De La Soul next. “Say No Go” was the follow up to “Me Myself And I” and was taken from the seminal “3 Feet High and Rising” album. A cautionary tale about the use of drugs, it famously samples the Hall and Oates hit “I Can’t Go for That (No Can Do)” as well as a few other tracks. It has maximum ear worm power and sounds as good today as it did back then.

Of course, they weren’t the first to ride on the back of Nancy Reagan’s “Just Say No” anti drugs campaign though….

Rivalling Danny Wilson for my personal favourite song on this TOTP is “Song For Whoever” by The Beautiful South. Five years on from this debut, the band released a Greatest Hits collection called “Carry On Up The Charts” which was so popular that it was claimed that one in seven British households owned a copy. Somehow I didn’t but over the years I seem to have purchased most of the band’s albums as well as seeing them live. In fact I’ve seen The Beautiful South, their second generation version The South, Dave Rotheray offshoot Homespun and Paul Heaton solo. I never managed to see The Housemartins live but I did  once meet their original drummer Hugh Whittaker.

P.S. What was going on with Paul’s hair in this performance?!

Don’t Panic! “It’s Alright”Pet Shop Boys are back! It’s amazing the things you learn researching this blog. For instance, I never knew that this wasn’t actually a Tennant / Lowe original but is in fact a cover. The original was by Sterling Void (no idea). To be fair to Neil and Chris though, they did add an extra verse about environmental issues to it.

I’d also forgotten that this was actually a track on their “Introspective” album and remembered it being a stand alone single which it isn’t. To be fair, it isn’t one of my favourite PSB tracks by a long way. I mean, its not terrible or anything but it kind of washed over me back then and still does a bit today. As for the that striking, baby fest video, Neil Tennant recounted to Spin magazine in 2013 that “We got there, and all the babies were asleep — all the 50 babies. And then one of them cried [and] they all fucking woke up!”. What was that old saying about working with children or animals?

“It’s Alright” peaked at No 5.

I’m guessing that this re-release of “Ain’t Nobody” by Chaka Khan and Rufus was part of her “Life Is a Dance: The Remix Project” album that also gave us the re-release of “I’m Every Woman: earlier in 1989. As with a lot of these re-releases, I don’t recall this one being back in the charts  – my go to memory for this song is definitely the original 1984 version. Apparently this ’89 vintage is the Frankie Knuckles re-mix but it sounds very similar to the original to me.

Chaka looks absolutely sweltering in that outfit she’s gone with for this performance. I can’t work out which would have been heavier, the clothes or her hair. To be fair, the sweating may have been for another reason as she doesn’t look fully compos mentis to me here. Maybe she’d had a very nice time pre-show in the green room.

The ’89 version of “Ain’t Nobody” peaked at No 6 thereby eclipsing the chart performance of the original by two places.

Top 10

10. Guns N’ Roses – “Patience”

9. Cyndi Lauper – “I Drove All Night”

8. U2 – “All I Want”

7. Queen – “Breakthru”

6. Gladys Knight – “Licence To Kill”

5. Pet Shop Boys – “It’s Alright”

4. Prince – “Batdance”

3. London Boys – “London Nights”

2. The Beautiful South – “Song For Whoever”

1. Soul II Soul – “Back To Life”: Another week at the top for a song that has enjoyed numerous accolades and a very respected legacy down the years. Q magazine voted it as No 67 in their 2003 poll “100 Songs That Changed the World” and in 2015 it was voted by the British public as No 18 in ITV’s “The Nation’s Favourite 80s Number One”.

Most significantly though, it was one of the songs included in the Opening Ceremony of the 2012 London Olympics. If you ever wanted to learn those dance moves…

“Voodoo Ray” was a hit in the 80s? I could have sworn that it was a 90s track but no A Guy Called Gerald (amazingly he was actually called Gerald) was a certifiable 80s hit and spent a whole 18 weeks in the charts peaking at No 12. Maybe I’m getting confused with “Infinity (1990’s… Time for the Guru)” by Guru Josh which was a hit in early 1990 despite officially being released in the previous decade (18th December).

One of the most recognisable house records ever made, it wasn’t really my thing but I could appreciate its significance which is made abundantly clear in this clip from 24 Hour Party People. 

Order of appearance Artist Song Did I Buy it?

1

Sonia You’ll Never Stop Me From Loving You Of course not

2

Gladys Knight Licence To Kill Don’t think I did

3

Monie Love Grandpa’s Party Negative

4

Karyn White Superwoman Nah

5

Bette Midler Wind Beneath My Wings Nope

6

Danny Wilson The Second Summer Of Love No but I bought the album Bebop Moptop

7

De La Soul Say No Go No but my wife had the album 3 Feet High And Rising

8

Beautiful South Song For Whoever No but I had the album it was from

9

Pet Shop Boys It’s Alright No but I presume it’s on their Pop Art compilation which I have

10

Chaka Khan and Rufus Ain’t Nobody No

11

Soul II Soul Back To Life No but I think my wife had their album

12

A Guy Called Gerald Voodoo Ray It’s a no I’m afraid

Disclaimer

I make no claim to the rights of this show and all ownership and contents including logos and graphics belongs totally to the BBC or copyright holder(s).

All opinions on the music and artists featured are my own. Sorry if you don’t agree.

Whole Show

Since we’ve all been on lockdown, there are people out there with time on their hands some of whom have recorded the whole TOTP show from the BBC4 repeat and made it available on YouTube. So if you did want to watch the whole thing over…

Some bed time reading?

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TOTP 21 APR 1988

We’re still in April 1988 here at TOTP Rewind. I am in my second year as a student at Sunderland Polytechnic and living in a shared house with four other guys. In the real world outside of my student bubble, two days after this TOTP was broadcast, Liverpool would win the old First Division championship and a day later Luton would beat Arsenal in the League Cup final when that competition was still considered a big deal and not a consolation bauble for the top six clubs. I watched that game  – one of the very few live games shown back then and therefore an event- in my housemate Mark’s room along with the rest of the house as he had a TV. A classic see-saw contest was decided in the last minute by a goal that was set up by, as Brian Moore described it, ‘the cultured left foot of Ashley Grimes’. Always stuck with me that for some reason. Isn’t this supposed to be a blog about 80s pop music and not football though? Indeed, but there is a nice bit of serendipity at play here. Luton’s second goal that day was scored by one Danny Wilson. You see where I’m going with this?

Tonight’s presenters are Simon Bates who turns in a performance worse than Arsenal’s Gus Caesar in that ’88 League Cup final (watch the video for that Danny Wilson goal) and Peter Powell who has done his best to upset my football themed post by turning up dressed as a cricketer. First act tonight are S’Express with “Theme From S’Express” at No 3 on its way to the No 1 spot. Faced with the usual problems of how to make a dance record with lots of samples in it look like a coherent and entertaining performance in the TOTP studio, Mark Moore and pals have gone all 70s funk with leopard print coats, massive winged collars and an impossibly tall black woman (6’2” in her heels according to Bates) with a towering afro…and it just about works.

Huge all over Europe, “Theme From S’Express” was a hit in the dance charts in the US but failed to make any meaningful headway in the Billboard Hot 100 peaking at No 91.

Still promoting his “Faith” album hard is George Michael next. “One More Try” was the fourth of six singles released from it in the UK. A biggish hit over here (No 8) it was huge in the US where it was a No 1. America couldn’t get enough of our George at this time. Four of the singles released from “Faith” went to No 1 over there and his 43 US date “Faith” tour grossed a total of $15 million with Michael performing to over 750,000 fans.

I remember quite liking this one at the time but listening to it today it does seem like quite the plodder and just ever so slightly self indulgent – it’s nearly six minutes in length! The video is all moody lighting and shadowy greyness in keeping with the song’s sombre feel but it just feels a bit laboured to me in comparison to other Michael ballads like “A Different Corner” for example.

A further two singles would be lifted from “Faith” in this country before the year was out.

Oh man! This record! This record!! This will always be with me not least because I used it as a case study for dissertation in my final year at Sunderland Polytechnic. Danny Wilson (that name again) had twice tried to seek a path into the Top 40 with “Mary’s Prayer” prior to this but both previous attempts had fallen short. Their record label Virgin must have had faith in the song though and put it out for a third time when it made it all the way to No 3. I thought this was (and remains) a great record. Just a minute…I’m going to dig out my dissertation and see what I wrote about it…

….blimey there’s loads of it! Hang on again…

…OK, well  my dissertation was about the mechanics of success in the music industry and why sone songs were successful and other’s weren’t. I decided to base my case study of “Mary’s Prayer” around two lines of enquiry:

  • an analysis of the musical composition of the song
  • an analysis of the song’s marketing and promotion

What did I know about musical composition? Nothing at all so I was teamed up with one of the Polytechnic’s music lecturers called Brian who told me all about chord structures, added note chords, song arrangements, key changes and bridge sections. I wrote down everything Brian said and regurgitated it into my dissertation. I actually sound like I know what I’m writing about reading it back. I describe “Mary’s Prayer” as having a ‘basic ballad sound’ with ‘relatively simple chord structure of F, G, G/A and Am…which is always resolved by the calm interval of the perfect 5th.’ Ooh get me! There’s more…

‘The verses are always resolved by the C chord before a major hook is used to lead into the song’s chorus. There is always a piano guitar flourish to denote the end of the verses and start of a chorus and also a slight pause before the voice comes in’

I go on to talk about the song’s lyrics borrowing a lot from Catholic imagery and that deliberate play on the word ‘careless’ (I used to be so careless as if I couldn’t care less).

My conclusion was that this analysis did not define any rigid factors which explain the song’s success. So basically I didn’t know what I was talking about and I hadn’t proved anything. For the record, Brian thought the song was very unremarkable but what did he know.

Analysing the song and the band’s promotion I decided that it was clear that Virgin viewed Danny Wilson as a band with a career ahead of them and that their appeal was definitely in their music rather than their image. Anyone watching their TOTP performance here could have told you that though.

I concluded that I didn’t know why “Mary’s Prayer” was the band’s only success up to that point and that my dissertation had not revealed any radically significant findings. The irony of the whole thing was that a few months after I had submitted my dissertation and left Sunderland Polytechnic, the band finally did have another Top 40 hit single in “The Second Summer Of Love” which reached No 23.

Anyway, all of the above is why this particular single will forever be a part of me which I hope I have demonstrated on this post in a way that I never could prove my point in my dissertation.

This week’s Breakers...

Oh man! This record! This record!! This record…was soooooo bad…and yet its hard to give it the slagging that it so obviously deserves as it was for charity. Even so – it really was the bottom of the shit barrel. Pat & Mick were Capital FM DJs Pat Sharp and Mick Brown but let’s be honest, nobody remembers Mick Brown because he didn’t have Pat Sharp’s ludicrous hair. To be fair, Pat was already known to TOTP audiences as he had appeared as a presenter on the show earlier in the decade but now he was back as a bona fide Top 40 act and God help us all! Now apparently “Let’s All Chant” was originally recorded by the Michael Zager Band and was critically well received on its release in 1978 and was regarded as a classic of the disco era. I wasn’t aware of the original version at the time of Pat & Mick’s abomination and duly dismissed it as absolute crud (and I was right to do so). I just couldn’t stand the ‘Ooh-ah, Ooh-ah’ refrain that ran throughout it and will always associate it with the hordes that assembled down at Lexington Avenue nightclub in Hull which I must have attended back in the day as my wife is from Hull.

I think I obliterated from my memory that Pat & Mick released an annual disco cover version for six years in the name of charity including the likes of “I Haven’t Stopped Dancing Yet” and “Use It Up and Wear It Out” – charity singles, as ever, have a lot to answer for.

I could never get along with this single but my housemate Roy loved it. Will Downing was (and still is) an American R&B singer who is, according to his website, known as ‘The Prince of Sophisticated Soul’ although reading that today was the first time I’ve ever heard him referred to as that. “A Love Supreme” was his take on the celebrated John Coltrane piece but it left me cold. Maybe it was the jazz back story to the song that was the cause as I’m left similarly nonplussed by jazz in all its myriad forms. Most of it is just musical wanking to me.

Not quite but not far off a one hit wonder, “A Love Supreme” was by far Will’s biggest hit here reaching No 14. It was from his self titled debut album and in the intervening thirty years since it was released he has recorded a further twenty albums! That’s an awful lot of wanking.

From the ‘The Prince of Sophisticated Soul’ to the ‘Godfather Of Soul” in one move. I’ve said it before in this blog and I’ll say it again – I just don’t get James Brown. Yes I know – musical heresy and all that! I can’t be doing with all that “take it to the bridge” and ‘you know like a sex machine” stuff and don’t get me started on all the stage theatrics! Oh do fuck off!

He was back in our charts in this year with “The Payback Mix 1988” which jumped on the samples bandwagon that every other song released at this time seemed to be doing. As well as a mash up of a load of his own songs, the track also sampled the likes of Otis Redding and Kurtis Blow. However, the only part that I liked was the intro. Isn’t that sound the same as the one used with the logo for Gerry Anderson’s Century 21’s production company that made all those great puppet series like Thunderbirds and Captain Scarlet?  You know, this one…

Right,now listen to the intro on “The Payback Mix 1988″…

See? I’m sure someone could tell me the exact source for the James Brown sample but I’m really not interested as I really can’t stand James Brown.

For the love of God Bates! Don’t you ever get anything right It’s “She’s Like the Wind” not “She Likes The Wind”! Just unforgivable incompetence. Anyway, this is of course from the soundtrack to one of the biggest films of the decade Dirty Dancing and as well as singing on it, the film’s male lead Patrick Swayze also co-wrote it. It’s actually credited to ‘Patrick Swayze & Wendy Fraser’ with Fraser being his co-writer Stacy Widelitz’s then girlfriend.

I always found it to be a fairly unremarkable soft rock ballad but it was a huge No 3 hit in the US and a reasonable sized No 17 over here. I also have an issue with the fact that, like its fellow soundtrack hit “(I’ve Had) The Time Of My Life”, it’s totally out of synch with the rest of the early 60s songs featured in the film. If I was making a film about the 80s, I wouldn’t have some, I dunno, 90s Britpop tracks in it!

“She’s Like The Wind” wasn’t Patrick’s only foray into songwrtiting. His Wikipedia entry lists another song that he wrote called “Sweet June Farts”! Years later and before his untimely death in 2009, I saw Swayze in a production of Guys and Dolls in London’s West End. He got a tremendous reaction from the audience as he came on stage (including some screams) and he was great in it to be fair.

Jermaine Stewart? Again?! Blimey, his record pluggers were doing him proud. For a very ordinary dance pop record in my humble opinion, “Get Lucky” was getting some decent exposure. Specialist re-issue label Cherry Red Records retrospectively increased the song’s life when it released a deluxe edition of parent album “Say It Again” recently which included the original 12 tracks and twenty additional tracks including four different versions of “Get Lucky”. I’m sorry, I know its a posthumous release so I should show some respect but really, does anybody need that in their lives?

More Simon Bates drivel next. What the fuck is he babbling on about in his introduction here?! “There’s a lady who always has a Summer hit…third time lucky it’s Spring into Summer..at No 6 Hazell Dean in Top Of The Pops with “Who’s Leaving Who”. What?! OK – let’s break this down:

  • Hazell Dean didn’t always have a Summer Hit. She had one four years previous to this. She had not had a hit record since then.
  • Third time lucky? What’s third time lucky? If he’s meaning that she’s finally had a hit after two flops then that is untrue. She released six singles between her last hit “Whatever I Do (Wherever I Go)” and “Who’s Leaving Who” none of which made the Top 40.
  • Spring into Summer? OK April would certainly count as Spring but Summer was way off so why even mention Summer in the first place?

The unfathomable bollocks that Bates spoke on this programme! If that were not enough we then had to endure Peter Powell getting in on the act at the song’s end. ‘It’s a bright, young, fresh hit single…’ he blathers. With the upmost respect to Hazell Dean, I don’t think anyone would have described her or her sound as bright, young and fresh. She was 35 at the time which, admittedly is 16 years younger than I am now, but was probably the older end of the scale for pop stars in an era when the likes of Tiffany, Debbie Gibson and Bros were all teenagers having huge success.

Hazell didn’t seem put off by any of this tripe though and puts in a solid, committed performance as she always did. She was a bit like the James Milner of 80s pop stars in many ways but better looking and not boring. Hmm…not sure that analogy actually works.

Top 10:

10. Michael Jackson and Jackson 5 – “I Want You Back ’88 Remix

9. Bros – “Drop The Boy”

8. Pebbles – “Girlfriend”

7. Bananarama – “I Want You Back”

6. Hazell Dean -“Who’s Leaving Who”

5. Natalie Cole – “Pink Cadillac”

4. Fleetwood Mac – “Everywhere”

3. S’Express – “Theme From S’Express”

2. Climie Fisher – “Love Changes Everything”

1. Pet Shop Boys – “Heart”: I think this is the first time we’ve seen the Nosferatu themed video for this one. Fine actor though he is, I’m not sure the scenes with Sir Ian McKellen as a vampire figure actually add anything to the visual depiction of the song. It’s possible it looked more affecting back then – maybe our expectations of film and TV have grown so exponentially due to technology ‘s advancements that anything from the past looks  – well… a bit shit by comparison I suppose.

Two songs in the Top 10 with the same title! Not the same song though obviously. Whilst Bananarama were peddling their latest Stock, Aitken and Waterman ditty “I Want You Back”, The Jackson 5 or Michael Jackson with The Jackson 5 as it was packaged were tearing it up with “I Want You Back ’88 Remix”. The original 1969 US No 1 is considered one of the most sampled songs in all of hip-hop history having been used over 60 times by the likes of Jay-Z and The Notorious B.I.G. Indeed in 1988, it had featured heavily in Eric B and Rakim’s “I Know You Got Soul” single. Given the renewed interest in the track, I guess it was no surprise that Motown decided to re-release it with a fashionable remix which incorporates their other copycat hit “ABC”. It was also a tie-in with the 30th anniversary of Motown being founded. As with everything in this year though, there was a SAW connection as the remix was produced by the PWL studio’s Phil Harding who coincidentally did some of the remixes for that Jermaine Stewart album re-issue. This blog isn’t just thrown together you know.

The video features the The Jackson 5ive cartoon which ran from 1971-72 and which I can just about remember from my very early childhood days (along with the The Osmonds cartoon).

You cannot deny the irrepressible joy that bursts from this song so I won’t try to. A deservedly recognised classic.

Order of appearance Artist Song Did I Buy it?

1

S’Express Theme From S’Express No but my wife had their album ‘Original Soundtrack’

2

George Michael One More Try No but my sister had the Faith album

3

Danny Wilson Mary’s Prayer Yes! Yes! Yes!

4

Pat & Mick Let’s All Chant No! No! No!

5

Will Downing A Love Supreme No but my housemate Roy had the album I think

6

James Brown The Payback Mix 1988 I took it to the bridge and chucked it over the side – No!

7

Patrick Swayze She’s Like The Wind No but I think my wife had the Dirty Dancing soundtrack

8

Jermaine Stewart Get Lucky Not my bag at all

9

Hazell Dean Who’s Leaving Who No

10

Pet Shop Boys Heart No but I have it on their “Pop Art” collection CD

11

Michael Jackson with The Jackson 5 I want You Back ’88 Remix Don’t think so

Disclaimer

OK – here’s the thing – the TOTP episodes are only available on iPlayer for a limited amount of time so the link to the programme below only works for about another month so you’ll have to work fast if you want to catch the whole show as I can’t find the full programme on YouTube.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m0007778/top-of-the-pops-21041988

I make no claim to the rights of this show and all ownership and contents including logos and graphics belongs totally to the BBC or copyright holder(s).

All opinions on the music and artists featured are my own. Sorry if you don’t agree.

Some bed time reading?

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http://likepunkneverhappened.blogspot.com/2018/04/april-20-may-3-1988.html