Showing posts with label Dusty Springfield. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dusty Springfield. Show all posts

06 August 2021

Week commencing 6 August 1990

Unusually, there are only ten new top 150 entries for the entire month of August 1990, and five of those debut this week!  Luckily, there are also eight debuts from August 1990 peaking outside the top 150 I am aware of, to help flesh this month's posts out a little bit.
 
Before delving into this week's new entries, I must point out that I somehow overlooked a single that bubbled under in 1989!  I have now added it (a song by Steve Earle) to the relevant weekly chart recap post, and also to the 1989 chart year in review post.
 
Let's take a look at this week's batch of new entries.

The Cockroaches: If at first you don't succeed... reinvent yourself as the most-successful children's band.


Top 150 debuts:

Number 118 "Too Tough" by Ten Wedge
Peak: number 118
Peak date: 6 August 1990
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 118-122-126-129-130-130
 
In a Bubbling Down Under first, I went to the effort of tracking down and speaking to the lead singer of Australian band Ten Wedge, Pat Powell, to gather some information about the group, as there wasn't much I could find online.  Pat Powell (lead vocals), Mike Scott (rapper) and Nick Ferris (bass, backing vocals and involved with the band's live production) formed Ten Wedge in late 1988.
 
Nick had previously been part of the band Flotsam Jetsam, who placed two singles within the Australian top 100: "Distraction" (number 90, August 1986) and "Power" (number 76, August 1987).  Additionally, Flotsam Jetsam's "100% One Second Love" reached second place on the Kent Music Report's list of singles receiving significant sales reports beyond the top 100 in November 1985.
 
Pat emigrated to Australia from West Germany in 1981, and soon found work as a backing vocalist, working with artists such as INXS, Jenny Morris, v. Spy v. Spy, and Michael Hutchence's side project Max Q.  Pat was hired as a backing vocalist for Kylie Minogue's first live concerts in Australia in 1990 as part of the Enjoy Yourself Tour, and accompanied Kylie on the tour's European and Asian legs.
 
Ten Wedge performed at Adelaide's first major dance party, Warehouse One.  During their tenure, the band supported acts such as Redhead Kingpin and Technotronic on tour.  We saw Ten Wedge bubble under previously in May 1989 with their only other commercial release.  One thing I didn't notice until now is that "Too Tough" originally appeared as the B-side of that single, "Me and Mrs Jones".  Ten Wedge did not record an album.

Those of you who were around and old enough to remember the late 80s/early 90s in Australia will recall that radio at the time would not touch anything dance, rap or r&b with a barge pole.  Had Ten Wedge received radio support, their releases no doubt would have performed better on the chart.  Pat told me that the first Ten Wedge single, "Me and Mrs Jones", received some recognition in New Zealand, where the record-buying public always seemed to be more open to 'black' music than Australia was during that era.

Ten Wedge disbanded in 1991.  Pat later went on to be part of the group Lovetown, and is in the Melbourne Ska Orchestra, who landed a top 40 album in Australia in 2016 with Sierra Kilo Alpha (number 38, May 2016).



Number 125 "The Other Kind (Back Out on the Road Again)" by Steve Earle and The Dukes
Peak: number 111
Peak date: 27 August 1990
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 125-112-117-111-127-138

American singer-songwriter Steve Earle scored a number 23 single in Australia with "Copperhead Road" in February 1989; his only single to make the ARIA top 100.  We also saw Steve bubble under with the follow-up release in April 1989.

"The Other Kind (Back Out on the Road Again)" (phew, what a title!) was the lead single from Steve's album The Hard Way (number 28, August 1990).  For this album, he was backed by the band The Dukes - not to be confused with the early 90s Australian band of the same name.
 
"The Other Kind..." peaked at number 29 in Canada, number 42 in New Zealand in August 1990, and number 88 in the UK in June 1990.  For what it's worth (not much, if you ask me), it also reached number 37 on the US Billboard Mainstream Rock Airplay chart in April 1990.

I didn't expect to know this song, but the chorus seems vaguely familiar.



Number 135 "Hope" by The Cockroaches
Peak: number 126
Peak date: 27 August 1990
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks
Chart run: 151-135-128-132-126-135-129
Weeks on chart: 7 weeks

Founded in 1979, Australian band The Cockroaches had to wait five years before landing their first top 100 single on the Australian chart.  Between 1984 and 1989, the band placed 9 singles within the Australian top 100, with their biggest hit being "She's the One" (number 9, May 1987).
 
The Cockroaches also bubbled under twice on the Kent Music Report's list of singles receiving significant sales reports beyond the top 100, with "My Whole World's Fallin' Down" reaching fifth place on the list in August 1985, and "Another Night Alone" reaching sixth place on the list in February 1986.

The Cockroaches' second studio album Fingertips (number 32, October 1988) yielded three ARIA top 100 singles: "Hey What Now!" (number 28, August 1988), "You and Me" (number 44, October 1988), and "Permanently Single" (number 99, December 1988).  The non-album single "Another Saturday Night" reached number 83 in September 1989; the band's final top 100 entry.

"Hope" was the lead single from The Cockroaches' third studio album Positive (number 121, July 1991).  While "Hope" missed the national top 100, it peaked within the top 100 on three of the five state charts, only missing out in Victoria/Tasmania and Western Australia.  "Hope" performed strongest in Queensland, where it reached number 75.

If a music video was filmed for "Hope", it has not been uploaded to YouTube.  The clip embedded below is a performance of the song on Hey Hey It's Saturday.

We will see The Cockroaches again in 1991, but before then, they released another single in November 1990, "Here Comes That Feeling", which failed to chart.
 
Two members of The Cockroaches, Anthony Field and Jeff Fatt, formed the children's music group The Wiggles in 1991.  Other members of the band provided musical support for The Wiggles, and some Cockroaches songs were re-written to suit the children's music genre.  The Wiggles were rated Australia's top-earning entertainers in Australia for four consecutive years during the mid-late 2000s decade.



Number 147 "Heaven Give Me Words" by Propaganda
Peak: number 105
Peak date: 10 September 1990
Weeks in top 150: 9 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 147-146-(out for 1 week)-143-112-105-110-118-130-(out for 1 week)-140

German synth-pop band Propaganda scored five top 40 singles in Germany between 1984 and 1990, with the biggest of those being "Dr. Mabuse", reaching number 7 in June 1984.  The band were signed to ZTT Records, founded by Trevor Horn, who was once in The Buggles - best known for "Video Killed the Radio Star" (number 1, December 1979), and became known for his intricate production of tracks such as ABC's "The Look of Love" (number 7, October 1982) and Frankie Goes to Hollywood's "Relax" (number 5, March 1984).
 
Trevor Horn also produced "Dr. Mabuse", which was the group's only previous single to register on the Australian chart; albeit on the Kent Music Report's list of singles receiving significant sales reports beyond the top 100, where it reached fifth place in September 1984.
 
Propaganda's biggest hit in the UK, "Duel" (number 21, June 1985), was covered by Mandy Smith on her only album Mandy (number 144, December 1988).
 
"Heaven Give Me Words" was the lead single from Propaganda's belated second studio album 1234 (number 114, September 1990).  The single reached number 36 in the UK in May 1990, number 40 in Germany in June 1990, number 43 in the Netherlands in June 1990, and number 13 in Sweden in June 1990.
 
"Heaven Give Me Words" performed stronger on the Australian Music Report singles chart, where it reached number 97.

Propaganda split in 1990, but reformed in 2005.



Number 150 "Hard Luck Story" by 21 Guns
Peak: number 129
Peak date: 13 August 1990
Weeks in top 150: 2 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 150-129

Australian band 21 Guns bubbled under in March 1990 with a single that, coincidentally, peaked at number 129, matching the peak of this follow-up.  As with the last single, this one was sung by one-time Countdown Revolution co-host Andy McLean.

I actually remember this track, as it spent some time on the aimed-at-teenagers, listener-voted radio countdown show Top 8 at 8, which aired in my state (Victoria) on Triple M - not that it helped "Hard Luck Story"'s chart fortunes; a 'hard luck story' indeed!
 
Listening to this now, I can't help but think that the verses are slightly reminiscent of Bon Jovi's "Livin' on a Prayer" (number 3, May 1987), starting with the same name of teenager/young adult followed by the troubles they are facing formula.

The band released one further single, "I Believe", which missed the top 150.  An album, 21 Guns (number 140, August 1990), was also released.  The group then presumably split.  Interestingly, the album fetches upwards of $200 on discogs.com now!



Bubbling WAY down under:

Number 153 "Velouria" by Pixies
Peak: number 153
Peak date: 6 August 1990
Weeks on chart: 1 week
 
We first saw Pixies last October.  "Velouria" was the lead single from the band's third album Bossanova (number 68, September 1990).

Elsewhere, "Velouria" peaked at number 28 in the UK in July 1990, number 17 in Ireland in August 1990, and number 29 in New Zealand in August 1990.  "Velouria" also reached number 4 on the US Billboard Alternative Songs chart.

On the ARIA state charts, "Velouria" performed strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 144.

As with the music video for their previous chart entry, the video for "Velouria" is another notable one - this time for consisting solely of 23 seconds of footage of the band in a quarry, slowed down to last for the duration of the song.  The reason this video happened at all was due to UK TV program Top of the Pops only airing songs in the top 40 that have music videos (if the band cannot appear live on the show).  However, Top of the Pops did not end up airing the video embedded below.

We will see Pixies again in November 1990.



Number 167 "What Ya Wanna Do?" by Ice-T
Peak: number 167
Peak date: 6 August 1990
Weeks on chart: 1 week

We saw Ice-T in November 1989 with his first single to chart in Australia, and here he is with the second, although it was the third single released in Australia from The Iceberg/Freedom of Speech... Just Watch What You Say! (number 81, February 1990).  In between, "You Played Yourself" was issued locally in April 1990, but failed to chart.

Interestingly, "What Ya Wanna Do?" does not appear to have charted anywhere else.

Ice-T will next join us in 1991.
 


Number 169 "Reputation" by Dusty Springfield
Peak: number 164
Peak date: 13 August 1990
Weeks on chart: 3 weeks
 
"Reputation" was the third single lifted from Dusty's Reputation (number 144, September 1990) album, following "Nothing Has Been Proved" and "In Private", which we have seen previously.   Unlike those two singles, "Reputation" was produced by Andy Richards, rather than the Pet Shop Boys.
 
"Reputation" peaked at number 38 in the UK in June 1990, number 29 in Germany in June 1990, number 44 in the Netherlands in July 1990, and number 33 in the Flanders region of Belgium in June 1990.
 
On the ARIA state charts, "Reputation" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 128.

A fourth single from the Reputation album, "Arrested by You", was released in Australia in October 1990 - oddly, three weeks before its UK release - but failed to chart.  "Arrested by You" peaked at number 70 in the UK in December 1990.

We will see Dusty again in 1995.



Number 170 "Pineapple Face" by Revenge
Peak: number 170
Peak date: 6 August 1990
Weeks on chart: 1 week
 
I remember reading an article on New Order in UK pop magazine Number One in 1990, following the release of "World in Motion..." (number 21, August 1990) - which became their only UK number one single.  In the article, they asked the band what their future plans were, and if my memory is correct, they didn't really have a clear answer, other than they would probably be taking a break for a while.  That turned out to be true, with New Order only releasing one studio album during the 1990s - 1993's Republic (number 5, May 1993), on which there is speculation that it was largely a solo project of lead singer Bernard ("Barney") Sumner, with the other band members having minimal input, after Barney became 'difficult' to work with, and tension between Barney and the band's bassist, Peter Hook.
 
Revenge was a side project of Peter Hook's, collaborating with Davyth Hicks, also known as Dave Hicks and Chris Jones.  Future Peter Hook project band Monaco member David Potts would joined the group for live performances.
 
"Pineapple Face" was the lead single from the album One True Passion, which was released locally in August 1990 but did not chart.  Internationally, "Pineapple Face" peaked at number 155 (number 109 on the compressed chart with exclusions below number 75) in the UK in May 1990.  If Wikipedia is correct, the single also made the top 10 on the meaningless US Billboard Dance Club Songs chart, and the Modern Rock Tracks chart, but I am unable to verify this due to the Billboard site being difficult to navigate (and they also seem to change the URL's for specific pages every couple of years).

On the ARIA state charts, "Pineapple Face" performed strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 161.

While this would be the only Revenge release to chart in Australia, we will see Peter Hook again as part of New Order in 1991, and in another side project of his in 1997.
 


Next week (13 August): Unusually, there is only one new top 150 debut next week.  There are, however, four bubbling WAY down under entries to help flesh things out.

< Previous week: 30 July 1990                                      Next week: 13 August 1990 >

30 April 2021

Week commencing 30 April 1990

Among the new entries this week in 1990 are three return artists, two artists whom we shall never see again on the chart, and one group whom - as far as I know - only ever placed one single on the Australian chart.  One interesting thing about this week's debuts is that they all enter in the bottom 10 positions of the top 150.  Let's take a look at them.
 
Paul Carrack's about to retire from the battlefield that is the ARIA singles chart.
 
 
Top 150 debuts:
 
Number 141 "Zobi La Mouche" by Les Negresses Vertes
Peak: number 120
Peak date: 7 May 1990
Weeks in top 150: 7 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 141-120-127-128-122-141-140
 
Les Negresses Vertes were a French band whose name translates as either 'Green Black Girls' or 'Fresh Black Girls'.  It was a term of abuse hurled at the band following their first live concert - green is the colour of the garbage collector uniforms in France, and most of the band were people of colour.  "Zobi La Mouche" translates as 'Zobi the fly'.  The band's sound merges accordian with acoustic guitar, and is not the sort of thing you typically find on the Australian singles chart.

Despite hailing from Paris, I cannot find evidence of this single charting in France.  It did, however, make the UK chart, where it peaked at number 93 in July 1989, and the Dutch chart, where it peaked at number 78 in September 1989.

I recall seeing the black and white music video for "Zobi La Mouche" on Video Hits, when they used to play selections from the Australian Music Report top 100 chart, as well as Hit Predictions and Classic flashback clips, on Saturday morning.  "Zobi La Mouch" peaked at number 100 on the Australian Music Report singles chart.  One thing I didn't remember is the open-mouthed kiss between the lead singer and another man 30 seconds into the video.

Les Negresses Vertes lead singer Helno (real name Noël Rota) died in 1993 from a heroin overdose, aged 29.
 

 
Number 146 "Everything" by Jody Watley
Peak: number 143
Peak date: 7 May 1990
Weeks in top 150: 2 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 146-143
Weeks on chart: 5 weeks
 
Jody graced our presence last August with "Friends", the second single from her Larger Than Life album (number 96, May 1989), and here she is with the third single lifted from it.  As I wrote last time, I can't understand why Jody did not have much greater success on the Australian charts.  Like "Friends", I heard this one on the Top 8 at 8 radio program on Triple M (supposedly voted for by listeners), but I had not seen the music video until now.
 
"Everything" performed much better in Jody's native US, where it peaked at number 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 in January 1990.  The single flopped in the UK, peaking at number 74 in February 1990.  Within Australia, "Everything" performed best on the Western Australian state chart, where it peaked at number 118.

A fourth single from Larger Than Life, "Precious Love", was released in the US, making number 87 there in March 1990, but was not issued in Australia.

Jody will never make the top 150 ARIA singles chart again in her own right, but will bubble WAY down under on a few more occasions, with the next time being in 1994.
 
 
 
Number 147 "True Blue Love" by Lou Gramm
Peak: number 147
Peak date: 30 April 1990
Weeks in top 150: 2 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 147-(out for 1 week)-150
Weeks on chart: 5 weeks
 
Foreigner lead singer Lou Gramm (real name Louis Grammatico) had placed two solo singles within the Australian top 40: "Midnight Blue" (number 8, May 1987) and "Just Between You and Me" (number 31, March 1990).  "True Blue Love" was released as the second single from his Long Hard Look album (number 56, March 1990).  At this point, Lou was still a member of Foreigner, though not for long, as he would leave the group in May 1990.  Gramm would rejoin Foreigner in May 1992.

"True Blue Love" found greater success on the US Billboard Hot 100, where it peaked at number 40 in March 1990.  The single peaked at number 98 on the Australian Music Report singles chart, 49 places higher than its ARIA peak.  On the state charts, "True Blue Love" performed strongest in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it peaked at number 103.

"True Blue Love" was Lou's final solo single to chart in Australia.
 


Number 148 "In Private" by Dusty Springfield
Peak: number 136
Peak dates: 14 May 1990 and 21 May 1990
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks
Chart run: 148-149-136-136-144-145
Weeks on chart: 6 weeks
 
We saw Dusty bubble under in June 1989, and here she is with the belated second single from her then yet-to-be-released album Reputation (number 144, September 1990).  As with the previous single, "In Private" was another track written and produced by the Pet Shop Boys, together with Julian Mendelsohn on co-producing duties.

"In Private" gave Dusty back-to-back top 20 hits in the UK, peaking at number 14 there in December 1989.  The single reached the top 10 in Sweden, the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany, and peaked within the top 20 in Ireland.
 
Unfortunately, this excellent track was another flop for Dusty in Australia.  "In Private" performed strongest on the New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory state chart, where it peaked at number 107.

To my ears, it sounds like Pet Shop Boys were going for a Motown-esque sound updated for the late 80s with the instrumental backing track for "In Private", not unlike Brother Beyond's "The Harder I Try" (number 78, May 1989), or indeed the verses of Neil Tennant's side project Electronic's "Getting Away with It" (number 40, July 1990).  Of course, Dusty's unmistakable blue-eyed soul voice gives the song that extra special something.

Dusty will next visit us in August.
 
 
 
Number 149 "Battlefield" by Paul Carrack
Peak: number 141
Peak date: 14 May 1990
Weeks in top 150: 2 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 149-(out for 1 week)-141
Weeks on chart: 3 weeks
 
Paul Carrack bubbled under back in November 1989, and he returns this week with the second single from his Groove Approved album (number 116, January 1990).  "Battlefield" did not chart anywhere else, and as with Paul's previous single, "Battlefield" performed strongest on the South Australia/Northern Territory state chart, where it peaked at number 114.
 
"Battlefield" would become Paul's last solo single to register on the Australian chart.  He would, however, place another album on the ARIA chart, with Blue Views peaking at number 247 in April 1996.  Paul also provides vocals on a couple of Mike & The Mechanics tracks that we will see in years to come, with the first occasion being in 1991.

"Battlefield" was co-written by Paul with long-time friend Nick Lowe, whose biggest hit in Australia - "Cruel to Be Kind" - interestingly peaked at number 12 in Australia, the UK and the US in 1979.  We shall see Nick bubble under in his own right in June 1990.
 
 
 
Next week (7 May 1990): three new top 150 debuts and two bubbling WAY down under entries.

< Previous week: 23 April 1990                                        Next week: 7 May 1990 >

05 June 2020

Week commencing 5 June 1989

Four of this week's ten new entries are songs that did not register on any other 'real', sales-based chart, to my knowledge.  That's quite a feat, considering that only one of those four acts is Australian.  The other theme rippling through this week's entries is 'veteran' (as in, they'd been around for at least five years, which is a long time in chart years) acts giving it another go, or a new go as a solo act.  Let's take a look at what was bubbling down under this week in 1989:

Dusty Springfield: Having no hits for almost two decades does not always "prove" your career is over.

Top 150 debuts:

Number 144 "Tears Run Rings" by Marc Almond
Peak: number 128
Peak date: 19 June 1989
Weeks in top 150: 5 weeks 
Chart run: 158-144-134-128-133-133
Weeks on chart: 6 weeks

Hot off the heels of his recent number 24 duet with Gene Pitney, "Tears Run Rings" became Marc's first truly solo chart 'hit' in Australia.  He had, of course, had a major hit in 1981-2 as one half of Soft Cell - and a newly-recorded version of that would give Marc a number 93 'hit' in 1991, though credited to Soft Cell/Marc Almond.  Marc also scored a number 34 hit with Bronski Beat in 1985, on a cover version medley of "I Feel Love", which has been dubbed "the gayest record ever made".  But this was as good as it got for Marc in his own right down under.  He had more success with this track in the UK, where it peaked at number 26 in September 1988.
 
"Tears Run Rings" was lifted from the album The Stars We Are (number 123, May 1989).  Another single from the album, "Only the Moment", was released in Australia in August 1989, but failed to chart.
 
In Australia, "Tears Run Rings" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 105.
 
We will next week Marc in 1991.

 

 
Number 145 "Nothing Has Been Proved" by Dusty Springfield
Peak: number 145
Peak date: 5 June 1989
Weeks in top 150: 1 week
Top 150 chart run: 145
Weeks on chart: 5 weeks

Dusty, real name Mary Isobel Catherine Bernadette O'Brien (phew!), had major chart success in the 1960s, including in Australia.  Her chart fortunes had all but dried up by the early 70s, though, and her last solo top 40 hit in Australia was 1970's "What Good Is I Love You?"  That all changed in 1987, however, when Pet Shop Boys rescued her from obscurity, with an unlikely pairing on the number 22 hit (number 2 in both the UK and US) "What Have I Done To Deserve This?"  Continuing the partnership, Pet Shop Boys produced half of Dusty's 1990 album Reputation, from which this track was eventually lifted.  While generally not a movie fan, to my ears, "Nothing Has Been Proved" sounds like it could have been a Bond theme; and my impression wasn't too far off the mark, as the song was recorded for and played over the closing credits of the 1989 British film Scandal, about a political scandal involving the Conservative Party in 1963.  The single had more success in the UK, where it peaked at number 16, and gave Dusty her first solo top 40 single since 1970.  "Nothing Has Been Proved" also peaked at number 10 in Ireland, number 52 in Germany in April 1989, number 26 in the Netherlands in April 1989, number 24 in the Flanders region of Belgium in April 1989, and number 33 in New Zealand in May 1989.
 
In Australia, "Nothing Has Been Proved" was most popular in Western Australia, where it reached number 106.
 
We will see Dusty bubbling down under again in 1990.  Of course, Dusty sadly passed away from breast cancer in 1999, aged 59.


Number 148 "I'm On To You" by  Hurricane
Peak: number 148
Peak date: 5 June 1989
Weeks in top 150: 1 week 
Top 150 chart run: 148

Perhaps one factor leading to heavy metal's decline in the early 1990s was that the market was fairly saturated with similar acts by this point.  Enter Hurricane into the fray, with their first Australian chart 'hit', with a song that failed to register on any other chart (real chart, I mean) as far as I can tell, including the Billboard Hot 100 in the group's homeland.  Parent album, Over the Edge, fared slightly better on the Billboard 200, reaching number 92.  It's not something I would normally listen to, but I have to admit that the "na na na na na na" hook is catchy.  Hurricane will visit us again in 1991.


 
 
Number 149 "No Matter What" by Swingshift
Peak: number 126
Peak dates: 26 June 1989 and 24 July 1989
Weeks in top 150: 11 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 149-145-139-126-136-144-139-126-128-139-143

Swingshift were an Australian band, and this single - their only release listed on discogs.com - appears to have been issued on a small independent record label, Top Shelf Recordings.  Only one other title, from another band, is currently listed on the Top Shelf Recordings record label page on the site.

Despite being issued on an independent label, "No Matter What" was promoted though a TV advertising campaign, as evident on the embedded video below.

Unfortunately, nobody has uploaded the music video for the song, or the full audio for the track, so the snippet in the ad below is all you can hear of the song.  I have no recollection of hearing "No Matter What" before.
 
Swingshift started out as a Cold Chisel covers band, and Dave Leslie from the group went on to later join the group Baby Animals.



 
Number 150 "Everything That Comes Around" by Mick Jones
Peak: number 150
Peak date: 5 June 1989
Weeks in top 150: 1 week 
Top 150 chart run: 150

Mick is (not was!) the guitarist in Foreigner, and remains the band's only remaining founding member.  Oddly, this track didn't chart (at least, not within the top 100) in his native UK, or anywhere else, for that matter, as far as I am aware.  To date, this song's parent album, the imaginatively-titled Mick Jones, remains his only solo release.



Bubbling WAY down under:
 
Number 152 "Move Closer" by Tom Jones
Peak: number 152 
Peak date: 5 June 1989
Weeks on chart: 2 weeks
 
Veteran Welsh singer Tom Jones burst onto the charts in the mid-1960s, with hits such as "It's Not Unusual".  Tom made a surprise comeback with "Kiss" (number 8, February 1989), teaming up with The Art of Noise, earlier in the year.

"Move Closer" was a cover version of a song written and originally performed by Phyllis Nelson that peaked at number 15 in Australia in November 1985.  Phyllis sadly passed away in 1998, aged 47, from breast cancer.  Tom's version of "Move Closer" was lifted from his At This Moment (number 92, November 1990) album.  Internationally, the single peaked at number 49 in the UK in April 1989.

Within Australia, "Move Closer" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 99.

We will next see Tom in 1991.


 
Number 158 "Romance (Love Theme From Sing)" by Paul Carrack & Terri Nunn
Peak: number 158
Peak date: 5 June 1989
Weeks on chart: 1 week

Another track that didn't chart anywhere else on a 'real' chart (no, the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart does not count in this instance!) is this 'love theme' (doncha love how 80s that expression is?) duet between Paul Carrack and Terri Nunn.  Paul had been somewhat of a chameleon on the Australian charts, with his first taste of chart success coming as lead vocalist of Ace with 1975's "How Long" (number 63), a song that went on to be covered by many artists.  Paul then went on to have four of his own solo hits during the 1980s, with 1987's "When You Walk in the Room" reaching number seven.  More-recently, Paul had just scored a number one single in Australia singing lead on Mike + The Mechanics' "The Living Years".  Phew!  Terri Nunn was the lead singer in synth-pop band Berlin, who had scored four top 40 hits in Australia between 1984 and 1987, with Top Gun soundtrack hit "Take My Breath Away" easily being the biggest of those, peaking at number two.
 
On the state charts, "Romance..." performed strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 149.
 
We will see Paul bubble under again a couple of times over the next year, but this would be Terri's only solo Australian chart 'hit' as far as I am aware.

 
 
Number 164 "That's the Way Love Is" by Ten City
Peak: number 164
Peak date: 5 June 1989
Weeks on chart: 1 week
 
American r&b/house act Ten City hail from Chicago.  "That's the Way Love Is", lifted from their debut album Foundation (released in Australia in May 1989, did not chart), was their debut Australian release, and their only single to chart locally.
 
"That's the Way Love Is" found greater success internationally, reaching number 8 in the UK in January 1989, number 11 in Ireland, number 23 in the Netherlands in April 1989, number 18 in West Germany in April 1989, number 21 in the Flanders region of Belgium in April 1989, and number 24 in New Zealand in May 1989.  Within Australia, "That's the Way Love Is" performed strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 153.


 
Number 166 "You Make Me Work" by Cameo
Peak: number 166
Peak date: 5 June 1989
Weeks on chart: 1 week

American funk band Cameo formed in 1974.  Their first, and only, taste of chart success in Australia came with "Word Up" (number 6, March 1987), and the album Word Up (number 75, April 1987).

"You Make Me Work" was the lead single from Cameo's thirteenth studio album Machismo (number 148, February 1989).  The single was released locally in January 1989, but took almost four months to register its solitary week on the chart.

Internationally, "You Make Me Work" peaked at number 74 in the UK in October 1988, and number 85 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in November 1988.  Within Australia, the single performed strongest in Queensland, where it reached number 147.

We shall next see Cameo in 1990.


Number 167 "Make No Mistake" by Keith Richards
Peak: number 167
Peak date: 5 June 1989
Weeks on chart: 1 week
 
Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards released his first solo album Talk Is Cheap (number 15, October 1988) in 1988, led by the single "Take It So Hard" (number 95, December 1988).

"Make No Mistake" was Keith's second solo single in Australia.  Internationally, "Make No Mistake" peaked at number 213 (number 142 on the compressed chart) in the UK in May 1989.  Domestically, "Make No Mistake" performed strongest in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 139.

We will next see Keith in 1992.


 
8 Next week (12 June): five debuts within the top 150, plus three bubbling WAY down under entries.  As always, you can also follow my posts on facebook.


< Previous post: 29 May 1989                                           Next post: 12 June 1989 >