Showing posts with label Bassheads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bassheads. Show all posts

01 March 2025

Week commencing 1 March 1993

A loose theme running through this week's new entries peaking outside the top 100 in 1993 is that several of the acts only had one real 'hit' in Australia... during their lifetimes, anyway (read on to see what I mean) - whether that means one top 40 hit or one top 100 'hit'.  Of course, as usual, there are also a couple of acts who never landed a top 100 single in Australia.  Before we take a look, I have updated the following previous post:
 
* 20 May 1991: with new bubbling WAY down under entries from Not Drowning, Waving and Bob Marley and The Wailers.
 
Bob Marley: exodus from the top 100.
 
Top 150 debuts:
 
Number 110 "Get Me" by Dinosaur Jr.
Peak: number 106
Peak date: 8 March 1993
Weeks in top 150: 4 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 110-106-112-112
Weeks on chart: 13 weeks
 
American rock band Dinosaur Jr. formed in Massachusetts in 1984.  The band were originally named Dinosaur, but had to change their name for legal reasons.  The group first hit the Australian chart with their fourth studio album, and first major label release, Green Mind (number 108, April 1991).
 
"Get Me" was the lead single from the fifth Dinosaur Jr. album Where You Been (number 45, May 1993).  Internationally, "Get Me" peaked at number 44 in the UK in November 1992, and number 39 in Sweden in December 1992.
 
In Australia, "Get Me" was most popular in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 77 on the state chart.
 
I don't recall hearing this one before, but see that I have a copy of the video recorded from rage in my collection, so I must have heard it previously.
 
Dinosaur Jr. would only land one top 100 single in Australia, "Feel the Pain" (number 61, September 1994).
 
We'll next see Dinosaur Jr. in May 1993.
 

 
Number 121 "Hell Hoping" by The Welcome Mat
Peak: number 121
Peak dates: 1 March 1993 and 8 March 1993
Weeks in top 150: 4 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 121-121-141-141
 
We last saw Sydney band The Welcome Mat in 1991.  Since then, they placed the 6-track EP Spare (number 81 on the albums chart, June 1992) within the ARIA top 100 albums chart.
 
"Hell Hoping" was the lead single from the band's debut album Gram (number 107, April 1993).  I didn't recognise this one by title, but the chorus sounds familiar.
 
Like Dinosaur Jr. above, The Welcome Mat would only score one top 100 single in Australia, with "Hey! Illusion" (number 91, June 1996).
 
We shall next 'welcome' The Welcome Mat to the 101-150 region of the chart in May 1993.
 

 
Number 129 "The Great Pretender" (Malouf Mix) by Freddie Mercury
Peak: number 127
Peak date: 22 March 1993
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks
Chart run: 129-133-129-127-136-136
Weeks on chart: 6 weeks
 
Zanzibar-born but England-based singer Freddie Mercury needs no introduction, as the front man of the band Queen, whom we last saw in 1992.  Freddie's solo work, however, is less well-known.  Freddie landed his first 'hit' on the Australian chart with his first solo single "Love Kills" (number 56, November 1984), which he recorded with Giorgio Moroder for the Metropolis soundtrack album.
 
"I Was Born to Love You" (number 19, June 1985), the lead single from Freddie's first and only solo album proper released during his lifetime, Mr. Bad Guy (number 38, June 1985), was his biggest solo hit in Australia, and his only solo single to dent the top 40 here.  Freddie's duet with Spanish opera singer Montserrat, "Barcelona" (number 42, August 1992), came close, following its re-release to coincide with the 1992 Olympics held in Barcelona.  That single originally peaked at number 85 in Australia in December 1987.  Its parent album Barcelona (number 200, August 1992) also charted, albeit very lowly, in Australia following its re-release.
 
"The Great Pretender" (number 54, May 1987) was originally released in 1987, as a non-album single, peaking just outside the top 50 in Australia.  The song was originally recorded by The Platters in 1955.  Elsewhere, the 1987 release of "The Great Pretender" peaked at number 4 in the UK in March 1987, number 2 in Ireland in March 1987, number 11 in the Netherlands in April 1987, number 5 in New Zealand in April 1987, number 6 in the Flanders region of Belgium in April 1987, number 26 in West Germany in May 1987, and number 14 in Sweden in May 1987.
 
Freddie first displayed symptoms of HIV infection in 1982, and was diagnosed with AIDS in April 1987, shortly after the original release of "The Great Pretender".  Due to the negative stigma carriers of the disease face, and not wanting media intrusion into his life, Freddie kept his diagnosis secret until shortly before his death from AIDS-related illness in November 1991, aged 45.  The press, however, had already begun to speculate that he might have the disease in 1986.
 
"The Great Pretender" was remixed by Brian Malouf for inclusion in the film Night and the City.  The track also appeared on a compilation of Freddie's solo material, The Freddie Mercury Album (number 114, January 1993), released posthumously.  Internationally, the 1992 remix of "The Great Pretender" peaked at number 15 in Switzerland in December 1992, number 21 in the Netherlands in January 1993, number 38 in Germany January 1993, number 36 in New Zealand in January 1993, number 28 in the Flanders region of Belgium in January 1993, number 26 in Austria in January 1993, number 29 in the UK in January 1993, and number 13 in France in February 1993.
 
Domestically, the remix of "The Great Pretender" performed strongest in Queensland, where it reached number 107 on the state chart.
 
We'll next see Freddie in October 1993.
 
 
 
Number 134 "Honey Love" by R. Kelly and Public Announcement
Peak: number 123
Peak date: 8 March 1993
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 134-123-133-129-131-126
 
American R&B group Public Announcement were formed by Chicago-born Robert Kelly in 1991.  Their debut single, "She's Got That Vibe" (number 28, July 1992), credited to R. Kelly and Public Announcement, spent 36 weeks in the ARIA top 150, despite its modest peak of number 28.  "Honey Love" was the second single lifted from their debut album Born into the 90's (number 146, June 1992).
 
As you were probably aware, "R." was convicted for sex trafficking involving minors in 2019, and was sentenced to 31 years in jail.  If you listen closely to the lyrics of "She's Got That Vibe", you will hear the lyric 'Little cute Aaliyah's got it', in the section where "R." lists off the names of a bunch of different girls who have 'got it'.  Aaliyah, whose debut album Age Ain't Nothing but a Number (number 148, August 1994) was produced by R. Kelly, would have been all of 12 years old when "...Vibe" was recorded.  Charming.  Aaliyah was illegally married to Robert in August 1994, when she was 15 years old.  Of course, the 'marriage' did not last long.
 
Now, back to the music, internationally, "Honey Love" peaked at number 52 in the Netherlands in May 1992, number 39 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in July 1992, and number 146 (number 97 on the compressed chart) in the UK in August 1992.  The song also charted on several US Billboard genre-specific charts, reaching number 1 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart in June 1992, number 2 on the R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart in June 1992, number 10 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles Sales chart in July 1992, number 40 on the Dance Singles Sales chart in July 1992, and number 42 on the Radio Songs chart in August 1992.
 
I don't recall hearing "Honey Love" at the time.  I much prefer the groovier R&B sound of "She's Got That Vibe" to the sappy ballad sound of "Honey Love".  It's interesting to see that neither music video appears on an official YouTube channel.  I am guessing the record label cancelled R. Kelly after his conviction in 2019.
 
We'll next see R. Kelly solo in 1996, and Public Announcement without R. in 1998.
 

 
Number 135 "When It All Comes Down" by Blazing Salads
Peak: number 135
Peak date: 1 March 1993
Weeks in top 150: 4 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 135-145-150-143
 
Perth-born Brian Cadd and English-born Australian singer Glenn Shorrock united to release an album under the name of Blazing Salads.  The self-titled Blazing Salads (number 130, May 1993) album would become their only album release.  "When It All Comes Down" was issued as the first single from the album.  While a music video for the track, if it exists, has not been uploaded to YouTube, you can view a live vocal performance of the track here.
 
Brian Cadd's first charting single was in 1971, "Show Me the Way" (number 17 on the Go Set singles chart, March 1971).  Brian's biggest hit was "Ginger Man" (number 16 on the Go Set singles chart, November 1972).  Between 1971 and 2003, Brian placed 12 singles on Australian top 100.
 
Glenn Shorrock is best known as the lead singer in Little River Band, between 1975 and 1982, and 1987 and 1996.  Glenn had five solo Australian top 100 singles between 1979 and 1983; the highest charting of those was "We're Coming to Get You" (number 6, October 1983), recorded for the America's Cup.
 
We shall see Blazing Salads again in April 1993.
 

 
Number 144 "Is That It" by Seven Stories
Peak: number 115
Peak date: 31 May 1993
Weeks in top 150: 20 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 144-139-140-133-144-138-133-140-127-124-127-128-127-115-120-122-131-140-134-143
Weeks on chart: 24 weeks
 
We last saw Adelaide band Seven Stories in 1990.  "Is That It" was the lead single from their second and final studio album Everything That You Want (Nothing That You Need) (number 99, August 1993).
 
While the single peaked outside the top 100, it spent a mammoth 20 weeks in the top 150, tying it with the second-highest weeks in the top 150 tally for a single peaking between number 101-150, between January 1989 and December 1998 (the latest date I currently have for these charts).  "Is That It"'s 20 week tally in the top 150 ties it with Lowen & Navarro's "Walking on a Wire" from 1990, and is only bettered by Clouds' "Cloud Factory", also from 1990, which amassed 21 weeks in the top 150.
 
On the state charts, "Is That It" performed strongest in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 27.  The single's next-highest state chart peak was number 73 in Victoria/Tasmania, and it peaked outside the top 100 on the remaining three state charts.
 
"Is That It" peaked higher nationally on the Australia Music Report singles chart, where it reached number 89.
 
I am not sure whether I knew this one at the time or not, but it sounds vaguely familiar.
 
We shall see Seven Stories once more, in July 1993.
 

 
Bubbling WAY down under:
 
Number 173 "Your Town" by Deacon Blue
Peak: number 158
Peak date: 22 March 1993
Weeks on chart: 8 weeks
 
We last saw Scottish band Deacon Blue in 1991.  "Your Town" was the lead single from the band's fourth studio album Whatever You Say, Say Nothing (number 161, May 1993).
 
Internationally, "Your Town" peaked at number 14 in the UK in November 1992, number 28 in Ireland in December 1992, and number 20 in the Netherlands in February 1993.
 
Domestically, "Your Town" was most popular in Western Australia, where it reached number 120 on the state chart.
 
I didn't hear this one at the time, but it was on a VHS compilation I digitised in the early 2010s.  I like it.  My copy of the video is embedded below, as I could not find an upload of the video for the regular single/7" version on YouTube, and this was blocked when I tried uploading it to one of my channels.  In its place, an extended Club Mix video for "Your Town" appears on the band's official channel, which you can view here.
 
We'll next see Deacon Blue in 1994.
 

 
Number 175 "Don't Stop" by K-Klass
Peak: number 175
Peak date: 1 March 1993
Weeks on chart: 1 week
 
Welsh/English dance group K-Klass last joined us in 1992.
 
Unlike the last single, "Don't Stop" appears on K-Klass's debut album Universal (number 140, May 1994).  Internationally, the single reached number 32 on the UK singles chart in November 1992.
 
Locally, "Don't Stop" was most popular in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 155.
 
I hadn't heard this one before, but like it.  I think it could have charted much higher if had received proper promotion.
 
We'll see K-Klass one more time, in 1994.
 


Number 184 "Who Can Make Me Feel Good?" by Bassheads
Peak: number 184
Peak date: 1 March 1993
Weeks on chart: 2 weeks
 
We last saw English house duo Bassheads in 1992.  "Who Can Make Me Feel Good?" was the third single lifted from their debut and only album C.O.D.E.S. (number 232, November 1993).  Second single, "Back to the Old School", was released locally in August 1992, but did not chart.
 
Internationally, "Who Can Make Me Feel Good?" peaked at number 38 in the UK in November 1992.  In Australia, the single was most popular in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 168 on the state chart.
 
Vocals on this track are sampled from Eleanore Mills' "Mr Right" (released in Australia in July 1987, did not chart) from 1987.
 
We'll see Bassheads one more time, in September 1993.
 

 
Number 209 "Why Should I" (Bone Remix Edit)/"Exodus" (Kindread Spirit Mix Edit) by Bob Marley
Peak: number 193
Peak date: 5 April 1993
Weeks on chart: 3 weeks
 
We last saw Jamaican reggae legend Bob Marley in 1991.  Here he is again, this time minus The Wailers... at least on the artist credit on this release.  As discussed in the 1991 post Bob is featured in, linked above, during his lifetime he only managed to place one single within the top 50 in Australia.
 
Before 2Pac seemed to release a barrage of albums after his death, the estate of Bob Marley was doing much the same thing.  Bob scored a hit across Europe, less so in Australia, with a newly-unveiled recording, "Iron Lion Zion" (number 71, October 1992) in 1992, 11 years after his death.  A remixed version of the track was released to promote the 4-disc set Songs of Freedom (number 87, November 1992).
 
The original recording of "Why Should I", from 1971, was not released until 2005 on the Man to Man 4-CD box set (number 232, January 2006).  The song was remixed for the Songs of Freedom collection, and released as the second single from it, together with a remixed version of "Exodus", the lead single from Bob Marley and The Wailers' 1977 album Exodus (number 88, August 1987).  Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer from The Wailers performed backing vocals on the original recording of "Why Should I", which were replaced by vocals from The I-Threes for the remix.  Having heard neither the original nor the remix until writing this post, I have to say I prefer the original.  I have heard the remix of "Exodus" before, and don't think it suits the song.
 
Internationally, the "Why Should I"/"Exodus" single peaked at number 42 in the UK in November 1992, number 30 in Sweden in November 1992, and number 92 in Germany in March 1993.
 
In Australia, the "Why Should I"/"Exodus" single performed strongest in Queensland, reaching number 171 on the state chart.
 
We'll next see Bob Marley, back with The Wailers, in 1995.




Next week (8 March): Seven top 150 entries and five bubbling WAY down under debuts.
 

06 January 2023

Week commencing 6 January 1992

Welcome to my 1992 chart recaps!  1992 was the first year I was a teenager for the whole year, having turned 13 towards the end of 1991.  In 1992, I was in year 8, which is the second year of high school in Victoria.  My memories of 1992 are that it was a good year, both personally and for music.
 
Some particular things I recall about 1992 are getting our first computer at home, getting braces on my bottom teeth, buying my first CD single, and listening to a lot of Shakespears Sister.  I started taking piano lessons in 1992, and continued with these for five and a half years, though only practised the afternoon of my lesson for about the final three years... which is probably one reason I'm now writing blog posts and not giving piano recitals.
 
1992 was the year that I discovered the radio program UK Chart Attack, which I'll no doubt make many references to in my posts for this year.
 
I continued to buy Smash Hits magazine in 1992, although I felt increasingly alienated from its target audience, having zero interest in Beverly Hills 90210 and its spin-off shows - which the magazine seemed to become filled with and, of course, have nothing to do with pop music.  In 1992, I widened my music magazine-reading circle by picking up the free monthly Brashs magazines you could get from their retail outlets.

In 1992, I decided to start collecting the ARIA top 50 chart print-outs available in record stores properly, only missing two or three weeks from the whole year (the last one of those being in February or March 1992) - thanks to my mother dutifully popping into Brashs to pick up the chart during her lunch break on Mondays.  I even asked my mother to not bend the charts, if she could, and she would roll them up and place a rubber band around them to prevent creases.  The things our parents do for us, hey?  Before 1992, I collected the printed charts much more sporadically.
 
What were your memories of 1992?  Were they good or bad?  Join me as we take a look back at songs that flopped on the Australian charts in 1992.  There were 263 singles that peaked in the 101-150 region of the ARIA singles chart in 1992, including two that no-one knows what they are (one of which we'll see this week).  At the time of writing, there are also another 114 singles peaking outside the top 150 that I have chart information for.

Lloyd Cole did not exactly cause a commotion on the Australian charts with his releases.

Top 150 debuts:

Number 142 "So Tell Me Why" by Poison
Peak: number 142
Peak date: 6 January 1992
Weeks in top 150: 2 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 142-146
Weeks on chart: 6 weeks

We last saw hair metal band Poison in March 1991.
 
"So Tell Me Why" was one of four studio tracks included as a bonus on the otherwise live album  Swallow This Live (number 46, December 1991).  I remember seeing the cassingle for this one in the shops, but had not actually heard the song until writing this post.

Internationally, "So Tell Me Why" peaked at number 25 in the UK in November 1991.

Locally, "So Tell Me Why" was most popular in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 114 on the state chart.

I don't normally buy into the lazy 'grunge changed everything' narrative for the 90s, but Poison's brand of metal/rock, combined with their image, was clearly well on the way out by the start of 1992.

That being said, we will see Poison bubble under again in 1993.



Number 144 Unknown Single by Unknown Artist
Peak: number 143
Peak dates: 13 January 1992 and 20 January 1992
Weeks in top 150: 3 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 144-143-143

Like everything else, the ARIA database is not immune from mistakes/errors, and here we have a blank title from an unknown artist that dented the top 150.  Spoiler alert: another such title appears in November 1992.

I asked my contact at ARIA if they could look into this, and, unfortunately, the identity of either song was not able to be determined.  My contact even dug up the old version of the database, and the titles were also blank then!



Number 145 "Boys to Men" by New Edition
Peak: number 134
Peak date: 3 February 1992
Weeks in top 150: 5 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 145-147-135-139-134
Weeks on chart: 7 weeks
 
American r&b vocal group New Edition formed in 1978, when each of its members were teenagers or younger.  Originally a five-piece, the group landed a major international hit in 1983 with "Candy Girl" (number 10, August 1983), which also made its way into the top 10 in Australia.  Unfortunately for the group, that would be their only real hit in Australia... until 1996, when a reformed New Edition released "Hit Me Off" (number 16, September 1996).

In the interim years, Bobby Brown quit the group in 1985 to launch a solo career, and he was replaced by Johnny Gill in 1987.  Of course, the group also spawned the successful careers of Bell Biv DeVoe and Ralph Tresvant.

"Boys to Men", which I assume was the inspiration behind the band name of Boyz II Men, originally appeared on New Edition's fifth studio album Heart Break, released in 1988.  Neither that album nor any of its singles charted in Australia.

"Boys to Men" was issued as a single in late 1991 to promote New Edition's Greatest Hits Volume 1 (number 140, January 1992) compilation album.  The track does not appear to have received a single release in 1988, but I assume was chosen in 1991 given the success of Boyz II Men.
 
I cannot find evidence of "Boys to Men" charting elsewhere.  On the ARIA state charts, the single performed strongest in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 121.
 
This would be New Edition's last single to peak outside the top 100 in Australia.  Two later albums, however, bubbled (well) under: One Love (number 296, November 2004) and Gold (number 479, January 2006).



Number 146 Spin (EP) by The Killjoys
Peak: number 136
Peak date: 27 January 1992
Weeks in top 150: 5 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 146-149-140-136-138

Before researching this track, I had assumed, from the band's name, that The Killjoys might be a pub rock trash metal kind of act.  How wrong I was!

Australian band The Killjoys formed in Melbourne in 1987, with Anna Burley on lead vocals and guitar, and Craig Pilkington on lead guitar and vocals.

The lead track from the EP, "Calling Me On" - which I have embedded the music video for below, has an early 90s female vocal folky/alternative vibe that could have had greater chart success (well, maybe top 75) - perhaps if it had been released after the success of Frente!

The Killjoys had previously charted on the albums chart with Ruby (number 144, February 1991).  Both that and the Spin EP would be the band's only ARIA top 150 entries.



Number 148 "D-O-G Me Out" by Guy
Peak: number 148
Peak date: 6 January 1992
Weeks in top 150: 1 week
Top 150 chart run: 148

We last saw American r&b group Guy in February 1991.
 
"D-O-G Me Out" was lifted from Guy's second album The Future (number 129, February 1991).

Internationally, "D-O-G Me Out" peaked at number 8 on the US Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart in October 1991.  This would be the last Guy single to dent the ARIA top 150.

I don't normally like this sort of music a whole lot, but I thought this track, which I hadn't heard before, wasn't bad.



Number 149 "She's a Girl and I'm a Man" by Lloyd Cole
Peak: number 149
Peak date: 6 January 1992
Weeks in top 150: 1 week
Top 150 chart run: 149

English singer Lloyd Cole came to fame as the named front man of the band Lloyd Cole and The Commotions, who placed five singles on the Australian top 100 across 1985 and 1986.   The band's biggest 'hit' in Australia was "Lost Weekend", which peaked at number 49 in February 1986.  Interestingly, Lloyd Cole and The Commotions placed another three singles on the Kent/Australian Music Report's singles receiving significant sales reports beyond the top 100 lists between 1986 and 1988.

Lloyd embarked on a solo career in 1990, placing one single in the ARIA top 100, with "No Blue Skies" (number 86, April 1990).

"She's a Girl and I'm a Man" was the lead single from Lloyd's second solo album Don't Get Weird on Me Babe (number 108, November 1991).

Internationally, "She's a Girl..." peaked at number 55 in the UK in August 1991, and number 27 in Sweden in October 1991.

"She's a Girl and I'm a Man" would become Lloyd's final ARIA top 150 entry.



Number 150 "Is There Anybody Out There?" by Bassheads
Peak: number 140
Peak date: 10 February 1992
Weeks in top 150: 5 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 150-(out for 1 week)-148-149-143-140
Weeks on chart: 10 weeks

Bassheads were a British house duo hailing from Wirral.  "Is There Anybody Out There?" was their debut single, and appeared on their debut and only album C.O.D.E.S. (number 232, November 1993).
 
Internationally, the single peaked at number 5 in the UK in November 1991, number 10 in Ireland in November 1991, number 19 in the Netherlands in February 1992, number 47 in the Flanders region of Belgium in February 1992, and number 48 in New Zealand in March 1992. 

In Australia, "Is There Anybody Out There?" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 104.
 
This track would be Bassheads' only top 150 entry in Australia, but we will see them bubble WAY down under again on two more occasions in 1993.



Next week (13 January): A mere two top 150 debuts, joined by two bubbling WAY down under entries.

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