Showing posts with label 2 Static. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2 Static. Show all posts

05 November 2021

Week commencing 5 November 1990

The top 150-peaking debuts this week in 1990 were another diverse lot, with metal, rock ballads, country, and... children's television puppets among them.  But before diving in, let me bring to your attention that I have updated last week's post with a newly uncovered bubbling WAY down under entry from Carly Simon.  Let's take a look at this week's debuts.
 
Agro's... chart connection?
 
Top 150 debuts:
 
Number 138 "Holy Wars... The Punishment Due" by Megadeth
Peak: number 138
Peak date: 5 November 1990
Weeks in top 150: 1 week
Chart run: 138
Weeks on chart: 1 week 
 
For some reason, I had thought until now that Megadeth were British, but they actually formed in Los Angeles in 1983.  The band had to wait until 1990 to land their first Australian chart entry, when their version of Alice Cooper's "No More Mr. Nice Guy" reached number 48 in March 1990.

"Holy Wars... The Punishment Due" was the lead single from Megadeth's fourth studio album Rust in Peace (number 47, November 1990).  Internationally, the single peaked at number 24 in the UK in September 1990, and number 12 in Ireland.  "Holy Wars..." did not chart in the band's native US.
 
In Australia, "Holy Wars..." performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 105 on the state chart.
 
Clocking in at over 6 and a half minutes, "Holy Wars..." doesn't exactly scream 'single' to my ears.

Despite forming devil horns above his head in the "No More Mr. Nice Guy" music video, Megadeth lead singer Dave Mustaine is now a born-again Christian, and refuses to perform at festivals where there are bands who may be perceived as being satanic.
 
We shall see Megadeth next in 1995.
 
 
 
Number 140 "I Found Out" by The Christians
Peak: number 140
Peak date: 5 November 1990
Weeks in top 150: 1 week
Chart run: 140
Weeks on chart: 1 week

From born-again Christians, we now go to a band named The Christians; although it is due to the founding members of the band being brothers, with the surname Christian.  We last saw the British band in April 1990.

"I Found Out" was the second single issued from The Christians' second album Colour (number 138, May 1990).  The single peaked at number 56 in the UK in April 1990, number 69 in the Netherlands in May 1990, number 42 in the Flanders region of Belgium in May 1990, and number 22 in France in August 1990.
 
On the ARIA state charts, "I Found Out" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 115.
 
"I Found Out" was The Christians' highest-peaking single on the Australian chart, if we ignore their contribution to the Hillsborough disaster charity single "Ferry Cross the Mersey" (number 45, June 1989).  I remember seeing the band in the UK pop magazine Number One, but never heard any of their music at the time; so, presumably, their Australian success was hindered by a lack of promotion.

We shall next see The Christians in 1993.

 
 
Number 142 "Got the Time" by Anthrax
Peak: number 142
Peak date: 5 November 1990
Weeks in top 150: 1 week
Top 150 chart run: 142

Anthrax formed in New York City in 1981.  Their fourth studio album State of Euphoria peaked at number 82 on the ARIA albums chart in late 1988.  "Got the Time", the first release from the band's fifth album Persistence of Time (number 30, September 1990), was their first single to land within the Australian top 150.

Elsewhere, "Got the Time" peaked at number 16 in the UK in January 1991.

To my surprise, "Got the Time" is a cover version of a song written and originally recorded by Joe Jackson for his 1979 album Look Sharp! (number 20, July 1979).  Joe doesn't seem like the kind of artist a metal band would cover.

Anthrax will join us again in 1993.




Number 143 "I'll See You in My Dreams" by Giant
Peak: number 115
Peak date: 8 April 1991
Weeks in top 150: 15 weeks
Known chart run: 158-143-121-129-142-134.  Re-entered 4 March 1991: 141-137-129-129-127-115-122-126-139-144
Weeks on chart: 18 weeks

American band Giant formed in 1987.  "I'll See You in My Dreams" was their second single released in Australia, following "I'm a Believer" (June 1990, did not chart).  Both tracks are lifted from the band's debut album Last of the Runaways.
 
"I'll See You in My Dreams" was released in Australia in mid-August 1990, and took two and a half months to break into the top 150.  The single had two separate chart runs in Australia, initially peaking at number 121 in November 1990 and spending 5 weeks in the top 150, before re-entering in March 1991, climbing to a new peak of number 115 the following month, and spending another 10 weeks in the top 150.  A reader has informed me that the second chart-run coincided with the song featuring in a scene in the TV series Twin Peaks.

In the band's native US, "I'll See You in My Dreams" reached number 20 in June 1990.  The single also peaked at number 96 in the UK during the same month.
 
In Australia, "I'll See You in My Dreams" performed much stronger in Victoria/Tasmania than elsewhere, where it reached number 56 in April 1991.  Its next-highest state chart peak was number 100 in South Australia/Northern Territory in November 1990.  The single peaked on the remaining three state charts in November 1990, indicating the higher peak reached in 1991 was largely led by sales in Victoria/Tasmania.  On the Australian Music Report singles chart, "I'll See You in My Dreams" peaked at number 82.
 
"I'll See You in My Dreams" was Giant's only charting release in Australia.
 


Number 145 "Love Is Strange" by Kenny Rogers Duet with Dolly Parton
Peak: number 145
Peak date: 5 November 1990
Weeks in top 150: 1 week
Chart run: 145
Weeks on chart: 1 week

Country music legends Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton teamed up for a Bee Gees-penned duet, "Islands in the Stream", which went all the way to number 1 on the Australian chart in December 1983.  Kenny and Dolly paired up again on "Real Love" (number 45, December 1985), with much less success.
 
"Love Is Strange" was the third Kenny and Dolly duet single, and was a cover version of the Mickey & Sylvia song from 1956.  The song was the title track from Kenny's Love Is Strange (number 155, November 1990) album.  While the single was not a commercial success anywhere, it did reach number 21 on the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in September 1990 - if that counts for anything.
 
On the ARIA state charts, "Love Is Strange" peaked highest in Queensland, where it reached number 124.
 
We last saw Kenny in July 1989, and he will join us next in 1995.  Dolly will join us before then, in 1992.
 
 
 
Number 146 "Crying in the Rain" by a-ha
Peak: number 131
Peak dates: 19 November 1990 and 26 November 1990
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks
Chart run: 146-143-131-131-148-150
Weeks on chart: 6 weeks

Norwegian band a-ha burst onto the scene with the international smash hit "Take on Me" (number 1, November) in 1985.  What you may not know, though, is that "Take on Me" had an earlier release, with a different mix and video, in 1984 (though not in Australia).

While a-ha maintained a reasonable level of commercial success in Europe for the better part of a decade, in Australia, they are largely (and inaccurately) considered to be one-hit wonders, with none of their other singles peaking higher than number 19, which "The Sun Always Shines on T.V." reached in February 1986.  A-ha amassed five top 40 singles in Australia, with the last one of those being the Bond theme "The Living Daylights" (number 29, August 1987).  A-ha's last top 100 single in Australia was "Stay on These Roads" (number 56, June 1988).

"Crying in the Rain" was the first single released from a-ha's fourth studio album East of the Sun, West of the Moon (number 122, November 1990).  The song is - unusually, for a lead single from an established act - a cover version, of a song originally recorded by The Everly Brothers.
 
Internationally, "Crying in the Rain" topped the Norwegian singles chart, and peaked within the top 10 in Germany, the Netherlands, and Ireland.  The song was also a top 20 hit in the UK, Austria, France and Belgium.
 
Locally, "Crying in the Rain" performed strongest on the Western Australia state chart, where it reached number 110.
 
I admit that I didn't actually know any of a-ha's songs, other than "Take on Me", until I started following music, and the charts, intently in 1988.  "Touchy!" (released in Australia in October 1988, did not chart) was the second song of theirs I was aware of, after seeing the music video on The Factory.  I didn't hear any of their other music until catching "The Living Daylights" on a repeated episode of Countdown on rage in January 2005.  While I am surprised the band did not enjoy more success in Australia, "Crying in the Rain" is not my favourite song of theirs.

We will next see a-ha in January 1991.
 

 
Number 150 "Living in a Child's Dream" by Agro
Peak: number 150 
Peak date: 5 November 1990
Weeks in top 150: 1 week
Top 150 chart run: 150

For anyone who doesn't know, Agro is/was a puppet, voiced by Jamie Dunn, on Australian children's television during the 1980s and 1990s, on programs such as Wombat and Agro's Cartoon Connection.
 
While sometimes referred to as a talking bathmat, Agro was actually crafted from a puppet of the Muppets character Animal.  Agro's brand of humour was typically more 'adult' than usual for a children's TV show character, as evident in this compilation.  I could not imagine a character like Agro being on children's TV now.

"Living in a Child's Dream" was lifted from the imaginatively-titled The Agro Album (number 44, November 1990).  The song was written by Mick Bower, who was the original guitarist in the Australian band The Masters Apprentices.

My impression is that anyone who bought this single - or the album, for that matter - wasn't getting it for the music itself, but rather, they liked Agro or the single/album sleeve, or thought it might make a nice Christmas present.  I had never heard this song before, or any of Agro's other 'music'.

Despite The Agro Album's modest success, a second Agro album, Agro Too (number 100, December 1990), was released to cash-in on the Christmas market in 1991.


 
Bubbling WAY down under:
 
Number 152 "Feel That Beat" by 2 Static featuring Nasty Cat
Peak: number 152
Peak date: 5 November 1990
Weeks on chart: 1 week

We last saw 2 Static in June 1990.

"Feel That Beat" was the second and final 2 Static single released in Australia, this time featuring Nasty Cat.  This one does not appear to have charted anywhere else.  On the state charts, "Feel That Beat" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 127.
 
I hadn't heard this one until writing this post.  Interestingly, it appears to be where the "dum, dum da da da dum, that's the way you got to go, now put your hands in the air when I say so" lines from Melodie MC's "Dum Da Dum" (number 5, April 1994) and "yo DJ, let's move those feet!" from DJ Darren Briais vs DJ Peewee Ferris' "I Feel It" (number 20, May 1996) were sampled from.

While we will not see 2 Static again, we shall see Martin Boer, who was behind 2 Static, behind another Dutch act, 2 Brothers on the 4th Floor, in 1994.


 
Number 156 "Reckless" by Weddings, Parties, Anything
Peak: number 151
Peak date: 3 December 1990
Weeks on chart: 3 weeks
 
As I write this post, I am slightly confused.  While "Reckless" was issued as a single in its own right, it was also the lead track on Weddings, Parties, Anything's The Weddings Play Sports (And Falcons) EP, which reached number 93 on the ARIA singles chart in November 1990.  My guess is that, perhaps, the six-track EP was more of a mini-album, from which "Reckless" (with a B-side not on the EP) was the single, and ARIA should have placed the EP on the albums chart instead.  But it's certainly strange to have an EP and a single with the same lead track charting simultaneously on the singles chart.
 
We last saw Weddings, Parties, Anything in April 1990, and will next see them in 1994.
 

 
Next week (12 November): The new entries keep coming, with another eight top 150 debuts and one bubbling WAY down under entry.
 
< Previous week: 29 October 1990                                     Next week: 12 November 1990 >

11 June 2021

Week commencing 11 June 1990

Four of this week's seven top 150 debuts registered on the Australian Music Report singles chart, but missed the ARIA top 100.  Let's take a look at them.
 
Kim Wilde: Australia kept her hanging outside the top 100.
 
Top 150 debuts:
 
Number 101 "Don't Be Cruel" (Rapacious Edit) by Bobby Brown
Peak: number 101
Peak date: 11 June 1990
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 101-114-114-110-117-130
 
Bobby was originally part of teen pop group New Edition, whose single "Candy Girl" reached number 10 in August 1983.  Bobby quit the group in 1986, launching a solo career with the King of Stage album, which was not released in Australia.

Bobby's first solo release in Australia, "My Prerogative" (number 40, May 1989), was lifted from his second album Don't Be Cruel (number 5, November 1989), which didn't really take off in Australia until "Every Little Step" (number 8, November 1989) was released.  In the interim, the title track - the original version of "Don't Be Cruel", peaked at number 72 in June 1989.

"Don't Be Cruel" was the lead single from the album in the US and Europe, reaching number 42 in the UK in August 1988, and number 8 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in October 1988.  After "My Prerogative" became a top 10 hit in the UK, a remixed version of "Don't Be Cruel" - the Rapacious Mix, was issued in the UK, reaching number 13 in April 1989.  In Australia, we got this release belatedly in May 1990.
 
This remixed version of "Don't Be Cruel" has the unusual distinction of debuting in the top 150 at number 101... and then not climbing any higher.  It seems Australia preferred the original mix of this track - or fans already owned the album, although I don't recall being aware of this new version of "Don't Be Cruel" at the time. 

This version of "Don't Be Cruel" performed better on the Australian Music Report singles chart, where it peaked at number 90.

Bobby will next join us as a featured artist in 1992, and in his own right in 1995.
 

 
Number 107 "Feel Like Going Home" by The Notting Hillbillies
Peak: number 107
Peak date: 11 June 1990
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 107-110-117-117-121-124
 
The Notting Hillbillies were Mark Knopfler from Dire Straits' side project, although they only recorded one album Missing... Presumed Having a Good Time (number 6, May 1990).  Interestingly, their debut single "Your Own Sweet Way" (number 28, April 1990) performed much better in Australia than it did in their native UK, where it only reached number 76 in March 1990.

This track, which I hadn't heard until now, was sung by band member Brendan Croker.  "Feel Like Going Home" did not chart anywhere else.  It reached number 89 on the Australian Music Report singles chart.

A third single, "Will You Miss Me", was released in Europe, but was was not issued locally.
 

 
Number 125 "Heaven Is a 4 Letter Word" by Bad English
Peak: number 124 
Peak date: 25 June 1990
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks
Chart run: 158-(off chart for 1 week)-125-126-124-127-141-141
Weeks on chart: 7 weeks
 
Fronted by John Waite, who was in The Babys and had a major solo hit with "Missing You" (number 5, October 1984), Bad English formed in 1987, and scored a number 4 hit in January 1990 with "When I See You Smile".

Prior to "When I See You Smile", Bad English released "Forget Me Not", which failed to chart, in August 1989.  Third single "Price of Love" (number 44, April 1990) scraped into the top 50, and this, their fourth release from Bad English (number 12, February 1990), missed the top 100.

On the state charts, "Heaven Is a 4 Letter Word" performed strongest in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 70.  On the Australian Music Report singles chart, "Heaven Is a 4 Letter Word" dented the top 100, peaking at number 98.

We will see Bad English again in 1991.  We will also see lead singer John Waite bubble under on his own in 1991.



Number 128 "Abbatak (The House ABBA Built)" by Donald Wasn't
Peak: number 128
Peak date: 11 June 1990
Weeks in top 150: 1 week
Top 150 chart run: 128

Donald Wasn't, I assume a pun on record producer and Was (Not Was) founding member Don Was's name, were presumably an Australian act.  I say that as only Australian pressings of this - their only single - are listed on discogs.com.
 
It's just as well that Australian music video program rage aired this video during a 'vault' episode in 2020, as without the embedded clip below, I wouldn't have been able to hear the single version of this track.

As for the connection to ABBA... the track contains samples of the piano intro from ABBA's "Dancing Queen" (number 1, September 1976), as well as a few vocal lines of them singing "Fernando" (number 1, April 1976), but that's it.



Number 136 "It's Here" by Kim Wilde
Peak: number 104
Peak dates: 18 June 1990 and 16 July 1990
Weeks in top 150: 8 weeks
Chart run: 136-104-108-109-118-104-126-129
Weeks on chart: 8 weeks

Kim Wilde's Australian chart career started off with a bang, with four consecutive top 10 hits: "Kids in America" (number 5, June 1981), "Chequered Love" (number 6, October 1981), "Cambodia" (number 7, February 1982) and "View from a Bridge" (number 7, July 1982).  But since then, she had only scored one major hit down under - though quite a big one - when "You Keep Me Hangin' On" spent two non-consecutive weeks at number 1 in February and March 1987.

Kim's previous album Close (number 82, November 1988) gave her a career resurgence in her native UK, where three singles lifted from it reached the top 10.  In contrast, only one of those, "You Came", dented the ARIA top 100, peaking at number 34 in November 1988.

Kim previously bubbled under on the Australian chart with "Four Letter Word" in early 1989, and prior to that, "Dancing in the Dark" was ranked first on the Kent Music Report list of singles receiving significant sales reports beyond the top 100 in January 1984.  "Never Trust a Stranger", the third single from Close, registered on the Western Australia state chart at number 74 in December 1988, but did not chart nationally, as it was prior to the ARIA singles chart extending beyond number 100.  The lead single from Close, "Hey Mister Heartache", missed the ARIA chart, but peaked at number 96 on the Australian Music Report singles chart in July 1988.

"It's Here" was the lead single from Kim's seventh studio album Love Moves (number 126, August 1990) - an album my local K-Mart seemed to order in bulk, which was always a bad omen.  Unfortunately for Kim, the Love Moves era was largely a flop for her in the UK, with none of the four singles lifted from the album there reaching the top 40.  Nevertheless, "It's Here" was a top 40 hit for Kim in Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Sweden, Norway and the Flanders region of Belgium.

Locally, "It's Here" performed strongest on the Western Australia state chart, where it reached number 82.  Frustratingly, "It's Here" dented the top 100 on four of the five ARIA state charts (only missing out in South Australia/Northern Territory), but couldn't dent the top 100 nationally.  The single did, however, reach number 92 on the Australian Music Report top 100 singles chart.

One other single from Love Moves, "Can't Get Enough (Of Your Love)", was released in Australia (and, oddly, not in the UK) in August 1990, but failed to chart, despite being aired at least twice on Countdown Revolution.  In contrast, I never heard or saw the video for "It's Here" anywhere at the time.  Go figure.

We shall see Kim next in 1992.



Number 146 "Driving" by Everything But the Girl
Peak: number 146
Peak date: 11 June 1990
Weeks in top 150: 1 week
Top 150 chart run: 146
Weeks on chart: 9 weeks (1990 and 1997 chart runs combined)

Before reinventing themselves as a dance/drum 'n' bass sensation in the mid 1990s, Tracey Thorn and Benn Watt, aka Everything But the Girl, were purveyors of jazz-tinged sophisti-pop.  Although romantically-involved since their university days, the couple's relationship was not publicised, and they did not marry until 2009, after 28 years together.

The duo's first foray into the Australian singles chart came in 1987, when "Don't Leave Me Behind", from their third studio album Baby, the Stars Shine Bright, peaked at number 85 in April of that year.  Their version of "I Don't Want to Talk About It" registered on the Western Australia state chart, but not the national chart, where it reached number 68 in September 1988.

"Driving" was the lead single from the duo's fifth studio album The Language of Life (number 90, April 1990), and peaked at number 54 in the UK in January 1990.  The single first registered on the ARIA chart at the end of February 1990, when it entered at number 152, but took over three months to dent the top 150.  "Driving" performed strongest on the Western Australia state chart, where it reached number 68, matching the state chart peak there for "I Don't Want to Talk About It".
 
Unless you were living under a rock, you would know that Everything But the Girl scored a major hit with the Todd Terry remix of "Missing", which spent six weeks at number 2 on the ARIA singles chart in March and April 1996.  Capitalising on this success, the duo's sound shifted from being largely acoustic to electronic for their next album Walking Wounded (number 11, June 1996).

A change in record label post-"Missing" resulted in "Driving" being remixed by Todd Terry for inclusion on the The Best of Everything But the Girl (number 58, April 1997) compilation, and that version will go on to reach a new peak in early 1997.  But before then, the duo released the single "Take Me" in Australia, which failed to chart, in June 1990.

We will next see Everything But the Girl in 1992.



Number 147 "The Banks of the Bogan" by Norma O'Hara Murphy
Peak: number 147
Peak date: 11 June 1990
Weeks in top 150: 1 week
Top 150 chart run: 147
 
What could be more Australian than a song about bogans?  For those outside of Australia who may not be familiar with the term, 'bogan' in the Australian vernacular loosely refers to an unsophisticated person with unrefined tastes, often associated with lower educational attainment and low socioeconomic status; though that has changed, with the rise of the cashed-up bogan (nouveau riche) in the early 2000s.  A bogan is Australia's version of a chav or white trash.
 
Except this isn't a song about that; it's instead a song about the Bogan River in New South Wales.  Other than that, I can't tell you much about it, other than Norma is an Australian country singer.  This track appeared on Norma's compilation album Norma's Best, which peaked at number 132 in August 1991.



Bubbling WAY down under:

Number 151 "Boy, I'll House Ya" by 2 Static
Peak: number 151
Peak date: 11 June 1990
Weeks on chart: 3 weeks
 
From what I can gather, 2 Static were a Dutch act, and essentially an alias of Martin Boer, who would later form 2 Brothers on the 4th Floor with his brother Bobby Boer.  We shall see that act in 1994.
 
"Boy, I'll House Ya" was the first of two singles 2 Static released in Australia.  The track samples Technotronic featuring Ya Kid K's "Get Up (Before the Night Is Over)" (number 7, April 1990) and Partners Rime Syndicate's "54-46 (That's MyNumber)", which we saw in May 1990.
 
Internationally, "Boy, I'll House Ya" peaked at number 41 in the Netherlands in May 1990.
 
On the state charts, "Boy, I'll House Ya" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 96. 

We shall see 2 Static again in November 1990.



Number 153 "No More Lies" by Michel'le
Peak: number 153
Peak date: 11 June 1990
Weeks on chart: 2 weeks
 
"No More Lies" was the debut single for American r&b singer Michel'le (pronounced "Michelle-ay"), full name Michel'le Toussaint, and reached number 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 in March 1990.  The single also dented the top 30 in New Zealand - who always seemed to be more open to this kind of music than Australia at the time, and crept into the top 80 in the UK.
 
"No More Lies" was lifted from the Michel'le album, which peaked at number 143 on the ARIA albums chart in April 1990.  On the state charts, "No More Lies" performed strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 146.

"No More Lies" was produced and co-written by Dr. Dre, Michel'le's fiancĂ© at the time.  The couple's relationship soon became volatile, however, and Michel'le has since spoken out about Dre severely beating her and even shooting at her with a gun, missing by inches.

One thing you'll notice about Michel'le's speaking voice is that it is much higher-pitched and Minnie Mouse-like than her singing voice on this track.

Follow-up single "Nicety" (a portmanteau of 'nice' and 'nasty') does not appear to have been released commercially in Australia, but peaked at number 29 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in June 1990.

Michel'le's second album Hung Jury was not released until 1998.  She did not place a second single or album on the ARIA chart.


Next week (18 June): Five new top 150 debuts and one bubbling WAY down under entry.

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