12 July 2025
Week commencing 12 July 1993
03 February 2023
Week commencing 3 February 1992
13 November 2020
Week commencing 13 November 1989
Bubbling WAY down under:
20 February 2020
Week commencing 20 February 1989
Top 150 debuts:
Another track from his North (number 73, February 1989) album, this gave Connors his second single peaking within the 101-150 region of the Australian singles chart in early 1989. I recapped the first one in the very first chart recap I posted.
On the state charts, "Cyclone Season" was most popular in Queensland, where it reached number 93.
Graeme will join us again in 1993.
With a small number of exceptions, the Australian charts generally weren't ready for this kind of music yet, hence the low peak for one of the more notable acid house tracks from the time. Of note is that the song samples Kelly Charles' "You're No Good for Me" from 1987, which was also prominently sampled on The Prodigy's "No Good (Start the Dance)" (number 45, July 1994) in 1994.
Internationally, "Jack to the Sound of the Underground" peaked at number 14 in the UK in November 1988, number 21 in Ireland in December 1988, number 18 in the Netherlands in December 1988, number 12 in France in December 1988, number 13 in the Flanders region of Belgium in December 1988, number 3 in Switzerland in February 1989, and number 6 in Germany in February 1989.
In Australia, "Jack to the Sound of the Underground" performed strongest in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 80.
There was a 1994 remix of "Jack to the Sound of the Underground" that I rather liked.
Peter Slaghuis, the man behind Hithouse, died in 1991 when his car, traveling at 220km/hour crashed into an oncoming truck. Hithouse will score another top 150 'hit' in 1990.
Due to the way they have been entered onto the ARIA database, this, along with the plain ole Everly Brothers without The Beach Boys version of the track, charted simultaneously for a few weeks, as the same title, so it is technically impossible to know which is which, and which one peaked higher. Given the higher profile of the duet version, I am going to assume that it was this which had the higher peak of the two.
Recently enjoying top 150 'success' with "Liar, Liar", which I recapped in my second top 150 chart post, Debs was back already, but with her old pals in Blondie, in this remixed version of their number 12 hit from 1978, from the Once More into the Bleach (number 47, February 1989) remix album. One thing I didn't know, until now, was that this version was remixed by Danny D of D Mob. I've had to resort to uploading the video below, as it is blocked on YouTube.
Internationally, "Denis (The '88 Remix)" peaked at number 50 in the UK in December 1988.
On the state charts, the 1988 remix of "Denis" performed much stronger in South Australia/Northern Territory than anywhere else, where it reached number 64 (it missed the top 100 on the other state charts).
Next week (27 February): Another five new entries, including a return act, plus three other singles that were bubbling WAY down under.
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