Showing posts with label Candy Harlots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Candy Harlots. Show all posts

03 August 2024

Week commencing 3 August 1992

I had a request from a reader to include chart runs, so I have added them for this week for the top 150 entries, and will continue to do so.  However, given how time consuming it would be, I may not get around to the daunting task of adding them to each of my previous posts.  Anyway, here are this week in 1992's new entries peaking outside the ARIA top 100...
 
Massive Attack weren't exactly "massive" on the Australian charts in 1992.
 
Top 150 debuts:
 
Number 115 "I Wanna Sing" by Sabrina Johnston
Peak: number 115
Peak date: 3 August 1992
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks
Chart run: 210-115-136-130-133-146-142
Weeks on chart: 7 weeks
 
American singer Sabrina Johnston scored her first, and biggest, Australian hit with her debut single "Peace" (number 24, March 1992). She followed it up with the equally-good but not as successful "Friendship" (number 64, April 1992).  "I Wanna Sing" was released as the third single from her debut album Peace (number 143, September 1992).
 
Internationally, "I Wanna Sing" peaked at number 46 in the UK in July 1992.
 
In Australia, "I Wanna Sing" performed strongest in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 98 on the state chart.  The single crept into the lower region of the Australian Music Report top 100, where it peaked at number 93.

I first heard this one on the UK Chart Attack radio show.  I remember catching the video on SBS's MC Tee Vee, which was a great source at the time for dance-orientated music videos, with its clifftop scenes.  The chorus backing vocals on "let me sing someone" sounds a little bit like Annie Lennox to my ears, though I know it couldn't be her.

We will see Sabrina again in November 1992, where she shares a single with another artist.
 

 
Number 139 "What Are We Fightin' For" by Candy Harlots
Peak: number 132
Peak date: 10 August 1992
Weeks in top 150: 5 weeks
Chart run: 139-132-137-145-147
Weeks on chart: 5 weeks
 
We last saw Sydney band Candy Harlots in 1991.  Since then, they landed two top 40 hits, with the Foreplay EP (number 17, February 1992) and "Sister's Crazy" (number 37, May 1992).  "What Are We Fightin' For" was issued as the third and final single from the band's only studio album Five Wicked Ways (number 31, May 1992).
 
On the state charts, "What Are We Fightin' For" performed equally-strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory and Queensland, where it reached number 117.
 
I don't recall hearing this one before.  This would be Candy Harlots' last release.  Their lineup changed and they re-named the band Helter Skelter in 1993, and then The Harlots the following year, before disbanding in 1995.
 

 
Number 143 "Walk On" by Sunscreem
Peak: number 143
Peak date: 3 August 1992
Weeks in top 150: 2 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 143-149
Weeks on chart: 4 weeks
 
We last saw English band Sunscreem in April 1992.
 
While "Walk On" was Sunscreem's debut release in their homeland, it was issued as their second single in Australia, from their debut album O₃ (number 73, March 1993).
 
Internationally, "Walk On" peaked at number 94 (number 86 on the compressed chart) in the UK in November 1991.
 
Domestically, "Walk On" was most popular in Queensland, where it reached number 126.
 
I wasn't aware of this one at the time, though I wasn't familiar with Sunscreem until their next single, "Love U More" (number 30, March 1993), which initially debuted at number 166 on 14 September 1992 and crept into the top 150 for one week at number 141 the following week, before dropping out and re-entering at number 144 on the last chart of 1992, eventually making its way up to number 30 three months later.

We shall next see Sunscreem in January 1993.
 

 
Number 144 "Safe from Harm" by Massive Attack
Peak: number 132
Peak date: 17 August 1992
Weeks in top 150: 5 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 144-140-132-148-141
Weeks on chart: 8 weeks

English band Massive Attack formed in Bristol in 1988.  While they would not chart until March 1991 in Australia, with the single "Unfinished Sympathy" (number 95, June 1991), on which the band's name was temporarily changed to just Massive due to the Gulf War conflict, their signature sound of dissonant chords can be heard on Neneh Cherry's "Manchild" (number 58, July 1989), which was co-written by Massive Attack's Robert Del Naja, better known as 3D.

"Safe from Harm" was originally released in Australia in July 1991, as the second single from Massive Attack's debut album Blue Lines (number 69, July 1991).  It entered the chart at number 166 on 26 August 1991, but did not climb into the top 150 until its re-release locally in late July 1992.  In the interim, Massive Attack (just) placed a single within the ARIA top 50, with "Be Thankful for What You Got" (number 49, June 1992), accompanied by a rather risqué music video.
 
As with "Unfinished Sympathy", which is arguably one of the best records of all time, "Safe from Harm" (just as good, in my opinion) features the vocal talents of Shara Nelson, whose voice is not dissimilar from Aretha Franklin's.  The music video portrays Shara climbing a staircase in a tall apartment block at night, encountering several dodgy characters... with one eerily waiting outside her apartment at the end.
 
Internationally, "Safe from Harm" peaked at number 25 in the UK in June 1991, number 33 in Germany in July 1991, number 18 in the Netherlands in July 1991, number 23 in Austria in July 1991, and number 15 in Switzerland in August 1991.  It also registered on several meaningless US Billboard charts, reaching number 28 on the Alternative Airplay chart in September 1991, number 35 on the Dance Club Songs chart in September 1991, and number 32 on the Dance Singles Sales chart in October 1991.
 
In Australia, "Safe from Harm" performed strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 109.
 
We will next see Massive Attack in 1995, but, before then, Shara Nelson will appear on her own several times, starting in 1993.
 

 
Number 145 "Sensual Motion" by S-Witch
Peak: number 135
Peak date: 31 August 1992
Weeks in top 150: 7 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 145-143-142-139-135-139-149

We last saw Australian act S-Witch in 1991.
 
As I write this post, I am waiting on someone to (hopefully) send me an audio rip of this track.  I have not as yet heard the song, so cannot say much about it.  I will hopefully be able to update this post with the audio soon...  This would be S-Witch's final top 150 chart entry.
 
 
 
Number 149 "Spanish Horses" by Aztec Camera
Peak: number 143
Peak date: 24 August 1992
Weeks in top 150: 3 weeks
Known chart run: 173-149-148-(out)-143
Weeks on chart: 8 weeks

We last saw Scottish band Aztec Camera in 1990.
 
"Spanish Horses" was the lead single from the band's fifth studio album Dreamland (number 146, June 1993).  Internationally, "Spanish Horses" peaked at number 52 in the UK in July 1992.

Within Australia, "Spanish Horses" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 107.
 
I hadn't heard this one before.  This would be the final Aztec Camera single to chart in Australia, although they had later charting albums with Frestonia (number 187, April 1996) and Original Album Series (number 956, September 2011).
 
 
 
Bubbling WAY down under:
 
Number 154 "Motorcycle Emptiness" by Manic Street Preachers
Peak: number 151
Peak date: 24 August 1992
Weeks on chart: 4 weeks
 
Welsh band Manic Street Preachers last joined us in June 1992.
 
"Motorcycle Emptiness" was issued as the final single from the band's debut album Generation Terrorists (number 182, April 1992).  Overseas, the single peaked at number 17 in the UK in June 1992, number 21 in the Netherlands in September 1992, number 35 in the Flanders region of Belgium in September 1992, and number 35 in New Zealand in October 1992.

Domestically, "Motorcycle Emptiness" was most popular in Queensland, where it reached number 127.

While I think I have heard/seen the music video for this one before, I couldn't recall how the song went, but enjoyed it.  It has that signature 'Manics' sound I am familiar with.

The Manics will next join us in November 1992.


 
Number 159 "Get Together" by Beatfish
Peak: number 159
Peak date: 3 August 1992
Weeks on chart: 7 weeks
 
Australian duo Beatfish last graced our presence in March 1992.
 
"Get Together", issued as the band's fourth single, was not lifted from their debut, and only, album Beatfish (number 79, November 1991); but, rather, was a new track - presumably recorded for a second album that never eventuated.

This time, vocal duties were handled by Mentals As Anything member Martin Plaza.

Listening to this track as I write this post, musically it sounds not dissimilar to The Style Council, to my ears.  It's much more laid back than Beatfish's earlier singles.  It's not bad, but doesn't exactly scream commercial success in 1992... hence the number 159 peak.

On the state charts, "Get Together" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 129.

Presumably, James and Martin disbanded Beatfish soon after this release, as it would be their last one together.  We shall see Martin Plaza solo in 1994, and with Mental As Anything in 1995.
 

 
Number 171 "Take Me" (The Prodigy Mix) by Dream Frequency featuring Debbie Sharp
Peak: number 162
Peak date: 14 December 1992 (chart repeated 21 December 1992 and 28 December 1992)
Weeks on chart: 8 weeks
 
English-American duo Dream Frequency/Debbie Sharp last joined us in June 1992.
 
I have a feeling that ARIA didn't yet quite know what to do with multi-part releases on the chart, as e.g. we had separate listings for a certain artist I don’t wish to promote on this blog with a single that topped the chart in late 1991, and the Clivillés & Cole Remixes single of the same track charted separately a few months later. This time, we have The Prodigy Mix of Dream Frequency's "Take Me" charting separately from the regular release of "Take Me" (number 62, September 1992), which debuted at number 165 the following week, on 10 August 1992.  To confuse matters, the Prodigy Mix of "Take Me" appears as track 2 on both the CD and cassette single formats.  Presumably, this release is the 12" vinyl single, on which this mix is the lead track.  We last saw The Prodigy in June 1992.
 
"Take Me" was the second single released from Dream Frequency's debut album One Nation (number 160, January 1993).  Internationally, the single peaked at number 39 in the UK in April 1992, and at number 22 in Ireland during the same month.

In Australia, "Take Me" (The Prodigy Mix) performed strongest in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 118.  The regular version of the single was much more popular in South Australia/Northern Territory than elsewhere, reaching number 13 on the state chart.  Its next-highest state chart peak was number 37 in Western Australia.

We shall see Dream Frequency on one more occasion, in 1994.
 

 
Number 194 "Straight Talk" by Dolly Parton
Peak: number 194
Peak date: 3 August 1992
Weeks on chart: 2 weeks
 
Country legend Dolly Parton last joined us as part of a duet in 1990.  Dolly's biggest chart hit in Australia was her duet with Kenny Rogers, "Islands in the Stream" (number 1 for one week in December 1983).  Surprisingly, one of Dolly's best-known songs, "Jolene", stalled at number 99 on the Australian Kent Music Report singles chart in July 1974.
 
"Straight Talk" was lifted from the soundtrack album to the movie of the same name, in which Dolly starred.  She also wrote and performed all of the tracks on the album.
 
Internationally, "Straight Talk" peaked at number 81 in the Netherlands in August 1992.  It also peaked at number 64 on the meaningless US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in April 1992.
 
In Australia, "Straight Talk" was most popular in Queensland, where it reached number 158.
 
We shall next see Dolly in 1994.
 

 
Number 206 "Wishing on a Star" by The Cover Girls
Peak: number 181
Peak date: 14 September 1992
Weeks on chart: 7 weeks
 
We last saw The Cover Girls in 1991.

"Wishing on a Star" is a cover version of a Rose Royce single from 1977, which surprisingly does not appear to have been released in Australia, but was in New Zealand.  In more-recent years, part of the song's chorus was interpolated in Soul II Soul's "A Dreams a Dream" (number 27, June 1990).

The Cover Girls released their version of "Wishing on a Star" as the second single from their third studio album Here It Is (number 236, September 1992), more than a year after the first single from the album, "Funk Boutique".  Internationally, the single peaked at number 9 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in July 1992, number 38 in the UK in July 1992, number 6 in the Netherlands in September 1992, number 76 in Germany in September 1992, and number 26 in the Flanders region of Belgium in October 1992.

Locally, "Wishing on a Star" performed strongest in Queensland, where it reached number 156 on the state chart.
 
Embedded below is the video for the single version of "Wishing on a Star".  You can view the video for the extended version here.

This would be The Cover Girls' final single to chart in Australia.
 

 
Next week (10 August): Two top 150 entries and seven bubbling WAY down under debuts.
 
< Previous week: 27 July 1992                              Next week: 10 August 1992 >

16 September 2022

Week commencing 16 September 1991

Three of the eight songs I write about from this week in 1991 had multiple releases in Australia, which is unusual.  Shall we take a look?
 
Gloria Estefan: anything for a re-release.
 
Top 150 debuts:
 
Number 118 "Anything for You" by Gloria Estefan (1991 release)
Peak: number 118
Peak date: 16 September 1991
Weeks in top 150: 30 weeks (28 weeks 1988-89 chart run; 2 weeks 1991 chart run)
1988 chart run: Debuted 25 July 1988 94-52-37-24-21-11-18-16-16-13-16-21-22-25-21-31-34-35-40-50-63-77-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-77-84-86-98
1991 chart run: 118-123
Weeks on chart (1988-89 and 1991 chart runs combined): 32 weeks
This single peaked at number 11 on 29 August 1988 when released a Gloria Estefan and Miami Sound Machine single.  Combining its 1988-89 and 1991 chart runs, "Anything for You" spent 32 weeks on the chart.
 
We last saw Gloria Estefan in May 1991.

I am not sure why "Anything for You" (number 11, August 1988), which was originally credited to Gloria Estefan and Miami Sound Machine, was given a re-release in Australia in 1991 as a solo Gloria Estefan single.  Does anyone reading this know why?  The original release had been a decent-sized hit a mere three years prior, and Gloria had since released two new albums.  Her then-current album, Into the Light (number 9, November 1991), charted reasonably well - although none of the singles from it peaked higher than number 56 locally.  Hmm... maybe I just answered my own question about why "Anything for You" was re-released.

"Anything for You" originally appeared on the Gloria Estefan and Miami Sound Machine album Let It Loose (number 88, November 1988), which was re-issued as Anything for You (number 92, June 1989) after the belated international success of the the latter album's title track.  Three other singles from the Let It Loose album charted in Australia: "Rhythm Is Gonna Get You" (number 54, August 1987), "1-2-3" (number 99, December 1988), and "Can't Stay Away from You" (number 60, June 1989).

The 1991 Australian release of the "Anything for You" single contained two previous Gloria 'hits' as B-sides: "Get on Your Feet" (number 98, October 1990) and "Seal Our Fate" (number 112, May 1991).
 
"Anything for You" peaked at number one on the US Billboard Hot 100 for two weeks in May 1988, number 10 in the UK in October 1988, number 2 in the Netherlands in March 1989, and number 5 in the Flanders region of Belgium in April 1989.
 
Within Australia, the "Anything for You" single was most-successful on the New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory and South Australia/Northern Territory state charts, where it reached number 6 during its original 1988-89 chart run.
 
Gloria will next join us in 1992.
 

 
Number 120 "Danger" by Candy Harlots (1991 EMI release)
Peak: number 107
Peak date: 21 October 1991
Weeks in top 150: 12 weeks 
Chart run: 120-108-110-122-116-107-115-108-127-116-125-128
Weeks on chart: 12 weeks
 
Glam metal/hard rock band Candy Harlots formed in Sydney in 1987.  "Danger" was the band's debut single, released independently in April 1990.  You can view the music video for the 1990 version here.
 
After signing to EMI, "Danger" was re-recorded, with beefier production, and issued as the band's first major label release.  While the single peaked outside the ARIA top 100, it spent a respectable 12 weeks inside the top 150.

To complicate matters further, "Danger" appeared as a track - branded the 'El Dorado Version' - on the EP Foreplay, which became Candy Harlots' first release to break into the ARIA top 50, peaking at number 17 in February 1992.

"Danger" went on to appear on Candy Harlots' debut - and only - studio album Five Wicked Ways (number 31, May 1992).
 
We'll next see Candy Harlots in 1992.
 

 
Number 122 "Do What You Want" by 2 in a Room
Peak: number 120
Peak date: 23 September 1991
Weeks in top 150: 5 weeks 
Top 150 debuts: 122-120-125-128-130
Weeks on chart: 6 weeks

Another single with a complicated release history (that seems to be the theme this week) is this one from American hip-hop, freestyle, and hip house duo 2 in a Room.  The pair landed a major hit in Australia in early 1991 with "Wiggle It" (number 3, 1991).
 
"Do What You Want" was originally released in Australia, on 12" vinyl only, in April 1990.  You can view the music video filmed for the original release of the single here.  The first release of "Do What You Want" peaked at number 19 in the Netherlands in February 1990.
 
Following the release of "Wiggle It" and "She's Got Me Going Crazy" (number 72, April 1991), "Do What You Want" was remixed and re-issued.  The new single version of "Do What You Want" was remixed by C & C Music Factory, and a video I made by just re-syncing the original video to this mix is embedded below.  This release reached number 9 on the US Billboard Dance Club Songs chart in September 1991.

On the state charts, "Do What You Want" performed strongest in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 99.

A version of "Do What You Want" appears on 2 in a Room's album Wiggle It (number 45, March 1991).  It was the only track retained from their earlier The Album Vol. 1 release in the US and some parts of continental Europe in 1989-1990.  However, a primitive instrumental version of "Wiggle It", titled "As It Grooves", also appeared on The Album Vol. 1.

We shall next see 2 in a Room in 1995.
 
 
 
Number 143 "It's a Shame" by S-Witch
Peak: number 105
Peak date: 14 October 1991
Weeks in top 150: 8 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 143-135-124-108-105-116-124-122
 
Australian group S-Witch were Alston Koch, whom we saw as Alston in November 1990, Michelle Farrugia, and Tambi Fernando.  Their songs were written by Alston and Tambi, and produced by Tambi.  I suspect that Michelle's role was largely to stand there and look pretty/make the visual aspect of the group more palatable, and she doesn't get many lines on the song (if that's even her singing, says cynical me...).

"It's a Shame" was the first of three S-Witch singles released, one per year, between 1991 and 1993.  The single narrowly missed the ARIA top 100, but peaked at number 99 on the Australian Music Report singles chart.  S-Witch did not release an album.

I would not have been aware of S-Witch at the time had it not been for this song's inclusion on the Hitz 4 U '92 compilation album, released in late 1991.  That became the sixth CD I ever purchased, after getting my first CD player for my birthday in November 1991.  Things were getting desperate when these various artists 'hits' compilation albums had to include songs that missed the top 100.

We will next hear from S-Witch in 1992.
 

 
Number 147 "The Dalai Lama" by Damien Lovelock
Peak: number 115 
Peak date: 18 November 1991
Weeks in top 150: 12 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 147-134-133-126-127-130-131-134-130-115-127-134

Damien Lovelock sang lead vocals in Australian band The Celibate Rifles, whom we have seen bubble under on three occasions so far, with the most-recent of those being in May 1990.

"The Dalai Lama" was Damien's first solo single... released under his full name!  He had previously released a version of "Disco Inferno" in April 1990, under the name of just Lovelock - it missed the top 150.

"The Dalai Lama" was was the first - and only - single from Damien's second, and last, solo studio album Fishgrass (number 147, December 1991).  I hadn't heard this one before; I don't particularly like it.
 
Damien went on to become a sports journalist and a yoga teacher.  He died from cancer in August 2019, aged 65.
 
While we won't see Damien as a solo artist again, he will return with The Celibate Rifles next in December 1991.



Number 150 "Twist and Shout" by Deacon Blue
Peak: number 130
Peak date: 23 September 1991
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks
Chart run: 150-130-142-141-138-137
Weeks on chart: 6 weeks

We last saw Scottish band Deacon Blue in June 1991.
 
"Twist and Shout" was the second single lifted from the band's third studio album Fellow Hoodlums (number 148, August 1991).  Internationally, the single peaked at number 10 in the UK in August 1991, and at number 13 in Ireland.

Within Australia, "Twist and Shout" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 64.  Each Deacon Blue single since "Wages Day" (number 79, May 1989) peaked higher in Western Australia than on the other state charts, up until their next charting release.
 
Deacon Blue's next single "Closing Time" was issued locally in November 1991, but did not chart in Australia.  Following this, their previous charting 'hit', "Your Swaying Arms", was re-issued in February 1992. 
 
We will next see Deacon Blue in 1993.


 
Bubbling WAY down under:
 
Number 163 "This Time Make It Funky" by Tracie Spencer
Peak: number 163
Peak date: 16 September 1991
Weeks on chart: 1 week
 
American singer Tracie Spencer was a mere 14 years old when she landed her biggest hit, and only single to dent the ARIA top 100, "This House" (number 87, June 1991).  But Tracie actually released her first album in 1988, aged just 11.  I became familiar with "This House" through listening to the American Top 40 radio show - it's one of my favourite early 90s r&b/new jack swing tracks.  "This House" reached number 3 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in March 1991.

"This Time Make It Funky" was the second single released in Australia from Tracie's second studio album Make the Difference (number 151, August 1991).  The single peaked at number 54 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in June 1991, and at number 48 in New Zealand in August 1991.

On the ARIA state charts, "This Time Make It Funky" was most successful in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 155.
 
I think I heard this one at the time, possibly catching the video on Coca-Cola Power Cuts, but it was a bit different to how I remembered it.

Tracie will join us one more time, but not until 1999.
 
 
 
Number 185 "Step to Me (Do Me)" by Mantronix
Peak: number 185
Peak date: 16 September 1991
Weeks on chart: 1 week
 
Mantronix last graced our presence in February 1990.  Since then, they released two singles in Australia that did not chart: "Take Your Time" (released in July 1990) and "Don't Go Messin' with My Heart" (May 1991).

"Step to Me (Do Me)", with Angie Stone on vocals, was the second single lifted from the group's fifth and final studio album The Incredible Sound Machine (released in Australia in July 1991, did not chart).  Internationally, the single peaked at number 59 in the UK in June 1991.

Domestically, "Step to Me..." peaked highest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 165.
 
I hadn't heard this one before.  It's not bad.
 
This was the last Mantronix single to chart in Australia.
 

 
Next week (23 September): Another six top 150 debuts, and three bubbling WAY down under entries.

< Previous week: 9 September 1991                                    Next week: 23 September 1991 >