Showing posts with label Joe Jackson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Jackson. Show all posts

09 September 2022

Week commencing 9 September 1991

This week in 1991's new batch of songs peaking outside the ARIA top 100 are an interesting bunch.  Among them we have a 'hit single' that wasn't, a song that spent 30 weeks (!) on the chart despite climbing no higher than number 147, and two singles that had two separate chart lives, with slightly different artist credits each time.  We also have two artist names beginning with the letter Z.  Shall we take a look?
 
Zoë trip trip tripped away for 30 weeks outside the ARIA top 100.
  
Top 150 debuts:
 
Number 115 "The Eve of the War" (Ben Liebrand Remix) by Jeff Wayne
Peak: number 112
Peak date: 30 September 1991
Weeks in top 150: 4 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 115-116-122-112
This single peaked at number 118 on 19 March 1990 and spent 8 weeks in the top 150 then, when credited to Ben Liebrand.
 
We saw Dutch DJ and remixer Ben Liebrand chart with this track, where he received the sole artist credit, in February 1990.   This time, for reasons I cannot ascertain, "The Eve of the War" was credited to Jeff Wayne, with a Ben Liebrand Remix tag, although the song is exactly the same as the previous Ben Liebrand release.  The re-release of this track presumably had something to do with the War of the Worlds soundtrack, from which the song is lifted, peaking at number 4 on the ARIA albums chart in September 1991, after originally peaking at number 1 for 7 weeks in October-November 1978.  One thing I just learnt is that this soundtrack was number 1 on the Australian charts when I was born.

The Ben Liebrand remix of "The Eve of the War" peaked at number 9 in the Netherlands in June 1989, number 38 in the Flanders region of Belgium in June 1989, number 3 in the UK in December 1989, and number 3 in Ireland.

To me, this mix of "The Eve of the War" sounds very much like Rock Eisteddfod music.

 
 
Number 117 "Miles to Go" by Nick Barker and The Reptiles
Peak: number 103
Peak date: 23 September 1991
Weeks in top 150: 5 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 117-106-103-121-131
 
Between 1989 and 1991, Australian rock band Nick Barker and The Reptiles placed six singles on the ARIA top 100.  Their version of Steve Harley & Cockney Rebel's "Make Me Smile (Come Up and See Me)" was the only one to dent the top 50, however, reaching number 30 in November 1989.
 
"Miles to Go" was the third single lifted from Nick and the gang's second studio album After the Show (number 33, April 1991).  It followed "Won't Get You Loved" (number 53, April 1991) and "Can't Hold On" (number 84, May 1991).

I don't recall hearing this one before.

We'll next see Nick, solo and credited as just 'Barker' (taking a leaf out of Diesel's book?), in 1994.


 
Number 126 "Promise Me" by Beverley Craven
Peak: number 117
Peak dates: 23 September 1991 and 30 September 1991
Weeks in top 150: 5 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 126-131-117-117-129
Weeks on chart: 10 weeks
 
Sri Lankan-born British singer-songwriter Beverley Craven released her debut album Beverley Craven (number 141, July 1991) in Europe in 1990.  Initially, the album was not a success in the UK, but her debut single "Promise Me" became a top 10 hit in the Netherlands (number 7, October 1990) and the Flanders region of Belgium (number 2, November 1990).
 
After continental European success, "Promise Me" eventually peaked at number 3 in the UK in May 1991, and the album reached number 3 the following month, spending a year on the chart and selling over 600,000 copies.  "Promise Me" would also go on to peak at number 6 in France in June 1991.

In Australia, Beverley's chart success was much more subdued, and "Promise Me" would become her only single to dent the ARIA top 150.  I don't recall hearing this one at the time, but it could have been a hit if it had radio support (which I am assuming it didn't).  "Promise Me" peaked at number 98 on the Australian Music Report singles chart.

"Promise Me" was re-issued in Australia in March 1992, but did not re-enter the top 150.  Beverley released her last album in 2018, and was also treated for breast cancer in the same year.

We shall next see Beverley in 1992.
 
 
 
Number 137 "Hit Single" by Joe Jackson
Peak: number 129
Peak date: 23 September 1991
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks 
Chart run: 137-134-129-131-132-133
Weeks on chart: 6 weeks
 
We last saw English singer-songwriter Joe Jackson in April 1991

The ironically titled "Hit Single", which only charted in Australia - and outside the top 100 at that - was the second release from Joe's eleventh studio album Laughter & Lust (number 57, September 1991).
 
On the state charts, "Hit Single" was the biggest 'hit' in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 110 on the state chart.
 
While "Hit Single" may not have become a hit, Joe embarked on a tour of Australia in September 1991, prompting his 1990 compilation Stepping Out - The Very Best of Joe Jackson (number 13, September 1991) to re-enter the chart and reach a new peak.

"Hit Single" would be Joe's last single to dent the ARIA top 150.
 

 
Number 147 "Senza Una Donna (Without a Woman)" by Zucchero & Paul Young
Peak: number 113
Peak date: 23 September 1991
Weeks in top 150: 8 weeks (1991 release); 14 weeks (1992 release)
Top 150 chart run: 143-144-113-119-121-125-128-130 
Re-entered 25 May 1992: 115-69-65-56-42-47-62-76-66-61-68-71-84-90
Weeks on chart: 17 weeks (1992 release)
This single peaked at number 42 on 22 June 1992, and spent 17 weeks on the chart, when re-released as a Paul Young single in 1992.
 
Italian singer-songwriter Adelmo Fornaciari, better known by his stage name Zucchero Fornaciari - or just Zucchero, began his musical career in 1970, after abandoning his studies to become a veterinarian.  He was part of several bands before launching a solo career in 1982.  We last saw English singer-songwriter Paul Young in February 1991.

"Senza Una Donna", which translates as 'without a woman', was originally recorded solo in Italian for Zucchero's fourth album Blue in 1987.  The track was re-recorded with Paul Young in 1990, with additional lyrics in English, and released as a single the following year.

"Senza Una Donna (Without a Woman)" peaked at number 4 in the UK in May 1991, number 2 in Ireland, number 2 in Germany in June 1991, number 2 in the Netherlands in June 1991, number 1 in the Flanders region of Belgium in June 1991, number 1 in Sweden in July 1991, number 1 in Norway, number 2 in Switzerland in July 1991, number 8 in Austria in July 1991, number 2 in France in August 1991, and number 14 in Canada in December 1991.

"Senza Una Donna..." was initially released as a Zucchero single in Australia, with a solo Zucchero track on the B-side.  The single crept into the Australian Music Report top 100 singles chart, reaching number 97 for one week in September 1991.

The single was re-issued locally in May 1992 to coincide with Paul Young's promotional visit to Australia to promote his best of compilation album From Time to Time: The Singles Collection (number 6, June 1992).  This time, it was treated as a Paul Young release, with two previous Paul Young hits on the CD single: "Everything Must Change" (number 27, February 1985) and "Wherever I Lay My Hat (That's My Home)" (number 9, September 1983).  This mini-Greatest Hits EP, combined with a special $1.95 price for the CD single, enticed enough people to buy "Senza Una Donna (Without a Woman)" for it to reach a much higher peak of number 42, in June 1992.

The re-release of "Senza Una Donna..." also resulted in the Zucchero album peaking at number 141 in July 1992.  On the state charts, "Senza Una Donna..." performed strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 32.

We shall next see Paul Young in October 1991.
 

 
Number 149 "Sunshine on a Rainy Day" by Zoë
Peak: number 147
Peak date: 6 January 1992
Weeks in top 150: 4 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 149-(out for 1 week)-148-(out for 9 weeks)-148-(out for 4 weeks)-147
Weeks on chart: 30 weeks
 
English singer-songwriter Zoë Pollock, known professionally as just Zoë, launched her recording career with "Sunshine on a Rainy Day", a track produced by and co-written with her then-partner Martin Glover (better known as Youth), in 1990.  The 1990 version of the track stalled at number 53 in the UK in December 1990.
 
Following a remix by Mark 'Spike' Stent, "Sunshine on a Rainy Day" was re-released in 1991, together with a new music video (embedded below).  The 1991 release peaked at number 4 in the UK in September 1991, number 9 in Ireland, and number 40 in Sweden in November 1991.  The track was lifted from Zoë's debut album Scarlet Red and Blue (number 193, May 1992).
 
In Australia, "Sunshine on a Rainy Day" had quite a protracted chart life for a single that barely crept into the top 150.  Debuting at number 161 on 27 May 1991, the single took more than seven months to reach its eventual peak of number 147 in early 1992.  Even more unusually, during that time, the single only spent 4 of its 30 weeks on the chart within the top 150, none of which were consecutive.
 
"Sunshine on a Rainy Day" was most-popular in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 51.  The single's staggered chart run was partly due to it peaking at different times on the state charts, reaching its peak in September 1991 in Queensland and South Australia/Northern Territory, December 1991 in Victoria/Tasmania, and January 1992 in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory and Western Australia.

On the Australian Music Report chart, "Sunshine on a Rainy Day" crept into the top 100 in September 1991, peaking at number 93; 54 places higher than its ARIA peak.

Zoë's "Sunshine on a Rainy Day" is one of few singles that have three different music videos filmed for it.  There's the original 1990 version, linked in the first paragraph above, the 1991 video linked below, and a third video filmed for the US release in 1992 here.  There's also a video for the 12" version released in the US - take your pick!

I am a bit surprised that "Sunshine on a Rainy Day" was not a hit in Australia, as it received some airplay - at least in Melbourne, on the supposedly-voted-for-by-listeners Hot 30 Countdown, which I think was hosted by Ugly Phil at the time.

While Zoë's version of the song was technically not a hit in Australia (although its chart longevity blurs the lines a bit), the song would have a second lease of life when recorded by other artists.  Naomi Campbell recorded a version for her 1994 album Babywoman, as did Emma Bunton for her debut solo album A Girl Like Me (number 86, May 2001) in 2001.  Christine Anu landed a number 26 hit in Australia with her version of "Sunshine on a Rainy Day" in June 2000.

Zoë will join us again in 1992.


 
Bubbling WAY down under:
 
Number 155 "Got It Bad" by Keith Urban
Peak: number 155
Peak date: 9 September 1991
Weeks on chart: 3 weeks
 
We last saw Keith Urban in June 1991
 
Keith's third single "Got It Bad" was the second issued from his debut album Keith Urban (number 98, October 1991).  The single performed strongest in Queensland, where it reached number 108.

Regular readers will know that I am not particularly fond of country music, and "Got It Bad" does not sway me.

Keith will next join us in 1997.

 
 
 
Number 168 "I Like It" by D.J.H. featuring Stefy
Peak: number 156
Peak date: 30 September 1991
Weeks on chart: 8 weeks
 
We last saw Italian dance act D.J.H. featuring Stefy in May 1991.
 
As with their last chart entry, "I Like It" samples Aretha Franklin's vocals again.  Internationally, "I Like It" peaked at number 16 in the UK in July 1991, and at number 20 in Ireland in July 1991.
 
In Australia, "I Like It" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 109.
 
While we won't see D.J.H. featuring Stefy again, we will see D.J.H. under a different name in 1992.
 

 
Number 195 "Can You Stop the Rain" by Peabo Bryson
Peak: number 195
Peak date: 9 September 1991
Weeks on chart: 1 week
 
American singer-songwriter Peabo Bryson made his debut on the Australian chart in 1983, dueting with Roberta Flack on "Tonight I Celebrate My Love" (number 10, November 1983), although he had been releasing material since 1975.  His biggest non-duet in Australia was "If Ever I'm in Your Arms Again" (number 20, August 1984).

"Can You Stop the Rain" was the title track from Peabo's fifteenth studio album Can You Stop the Rain (number 188, March 1992).  Internationally, the single peaked at number 52 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in August 1991.
 
Within Australia, "Can You Stop the Rain" performed strongest in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 152.
 
We shall next see Peabo in 1992.
 

 
Next week (16 September): Six top 150 debuts and two bubbling WAY down under entries.
 
< Previous week: 2 September 1991                                   Next week: 16 September 1991 >

29 April 2022

Week commencing 29 April 1991

The only common theme I can identify from this week in 1991's batch of new chart entries peaking outside the ARIA top 100 is that they are all from artists who are not Australian.
 
Before we take a look at this week's new entries, I have updated some earlier posts with the following:

You may also have missed that I resumed my 1981 Kent Music Report beyond the top 100 recaps this week.  These will posted on Wednesdays.

Wilson Phillips: Australia was not in love with their latest single in 1991.
 
Top 150 debuts:
 
Number 138 "You're in Love" by Wilson Phillips
Peak: number 108
Peak date: 27 May 1991
Weeks in top 150: 7 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 138-118-113-117-108-119-115
Weeks on chart: 10 weeks
 
We last saw Wilson Phillips in December 1990.  "You're in Love" was the fourth single lifted from the group's debut album Wilson Phillips (number 7, July 1990), and gave the girls their third US Billboard Hot 100 number one single in April 1991.  The single also peaked at number 3 in Canada in April 1991, and within the top 30 in the UK and Ireland, the top 40 in the Netherlands and the Flanders region of Belgium, and at number 54 in Germany.

In hindsight, I find it interesting that none of the post-"Hold On" (number 2, July 1990) singles from the Wilson Phillips album dented the top 50 in Australia, and three of the album's singles peaked outside the top 100.  Though, as I wrote last time, the Wilson Phillips sound was probably a bit too squeaky clean for the Australian market, one large hit aside.  Furthermore, I only recall hearing "You're in Love" on the American Top 40 radio show.

We'll next see Wilson Phillips in October 1991.
 
 
 
Number 142 "Stranger Than Fiction" by Joe Jackson
Peak: number 119
Peak date: 1 July 1991
Weeks in top 150: 10 weeks 
Chart run: 142-131-134-122-124-122-134-121-122-119
Weeks on chart: 10 weeks
 
We last saw English singer-songwriter Joe Jackson in July 1989.
 
"Stranger Than Fiction" was the lead single from Joe's eleventh studio album Laughter & Lust (number 57, September 1991).  Internationally, the single peaked at number 182 (number 112 on the compressed chart) in April 1991, number 71 in the Netherlands in May 1991, and number 53 in Germany in June 1991.

In Australia, "Stranger Than Fiction" took ten weeks to reach its peak in the top 120, and then fell off the chart the following week.  The single was most popular in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 88 on the state chart.

The music video for "Stranger Than Fiction", embedded below, portrays Joe as being totally disinterested in the 'hot' women, typical of those appearing in male artists' music videos around this time, surrounding him.  Perhaps Joe was dropping some not-so-subtle hints about his own sexuality here.

We shall next see Joe in September 1991.


 
Bubbling WAY down under:
 
Number 167 "Can You Dig It?" by The Mock Turtles
Peak: number 167
Peak date: 29 April 1991
Weeks on chart: 1 week 

English band The Mock Turtles formed in Middleton in 1985.  While not their first single in their homeland, "Can You Dig It?" was the band's debut Australian release, lifted from their first studio album Turtle Soup.

Internationally, "Can You Dig It?" peaked at number 18 in the UK in April 1991, and at number 12 in Ireland during the same month.

In Australia, "Can You Dig It?" was most popular in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 151.  This single was the band's only release to chart in Australia, although two further singles were issued: "And Then She Smiles" (released locally in July 1991) and "Strings and Flowers" (November 1991).

In 2002, Vodafone used "Can You Dig It?" in a TV commercial in the UK.  This led to Norman Cook (of Fatboy Slim, Beats International and The Housemartins fame) remixing the track - though rather subtly, as I could barely distinguish the difference at first (it is mainly the percussion).  The remixed version charted in the UK, reaching number 19 in March 2003.

I can't say with certainty, because I cannot find any reference to it online, but I suspect that the guitar riff from this track is sampled (at a different pitch) on a track from another artist we will see in 1992.



Number 170 "Town without Pity" by Stray Cats
Peak: number 170
Peak date: 29 April 1991
Weeks on chart: 1 week

Stray Cats last graced our presence in February 1991.  "Town without Pity" was the third and final single lifted from the band's sixth studio album Let's Go Faster (number 57, March 1991).  As with the previous single, "Town without Pity" was another Australian-only release.  The song is a cover version of a song originally recorded by Gene Pitney in 1961 for the film Town without Pity.

On the ARIA state charts, "Town without Pity" performed strongest in Queensland, where it reached number 141.

We shall next see Stray Cats in 1992.



Number 186 "Easy Come Easy Go" by Winger
Peak: number 186
Peak date: 29 April 1991
Weeks on chart: 1 week

We last saw American metal band Winger in January 1991.

"Easy Come Easy Go" was the third and final single - and second to chart in Australia - from Winger's second studio album In the Heart of the Young (number 135, September 1991).  The single peaked at number 41 on the US Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in March 1991.

Locally, "Easy Come Easy Go" was most popular in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 168.
 
When it comes to metal, I generally prefer the softer, 'power ballad' side as with Winger's previous single.  I hadn't heard this one before, and while it's not something I would seek out, I find it OK.
 
"Easy Come Easy Go" was Winger's final single to chart in Australia.  They had another charting album, however, with their next album Pull peaking at number 164 in August 1993.
 

 
Number 187 "Remember the Day" by Innocence
Peak: number 187
Peak date: 29 April 1991
Weeks on chart: 2 weeks

We last saw Innocence in February 1991, and here they are with the fifth and final single - and fourth to register a place on the ARIA chart outside the top 100 - from their debut album Belief (number 115, February 1991).
 
"Remember the Day" peaked at number 56 in the band's native UK in March 1991.
 
Within Australia, "Remember the Day" performed strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 169.
 
We will next see Innocence in 1992.
 

 
Next week (6 May): Four new top 150 debuts, although one of these is a song from 1986, and five bubbling WAY down under entries.
 
< Previous week: 22 April 1991                                      Next week: 6 May 1991 >

31 July 2020

Week commencing 31 July 1989

If I'm being perfectly honest, I'm not too enamoured with any of this week's new entries, but think one, maybe two of them are OK (can you guess which ones from reading my comments below?).  But hey, I don't get to choose what the Australian record buying public like, so 'who am I to disagree'?  Let's take a look at what was bubbling down under this week in 1989...

On the Ball: Songs about sport are... not my favourite thing.

Top 150 debuts:

Number 126 "Down to London" by Joe Jackson
Peak: number 126
Peak dates: 31 July 1989 and 14 August 1989
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 126-126-126-129-129-134 
Weeks on chart: 7 weeks

Since 1979, Joe Jackson (not Michael's dad) placed 11 singles in the top 100 in Australia, with the biggest of those being his 1982 hit "Real Men" (number 6), which oddly flopped at number 89 in his native UK.  Joe's third charting single down under in 1989, "Down to London" was actually only the second release from his current album Blaze of Glory (number 31, May 1989), as "(He's a) Shape in a Drape" (number 95, February 1989) was from the Tucker soundtrack, for which he performed the music

Internationally, "Down to London" peaked at number 303 (number 178 on the compressed chart) in the UK in October 1989.

In Australia, "Down to London" was most popular in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 84 on the state chart. 

Despite this floppage, at the time of writing, the "Down to London" video embedded below has received almost a quarter of a million views in 6 years, which isn't too bad at all for a 30+ year-old song that was never a 'hit'.  Joe will visit us again in 1991.

 
 
Number 141 "How Can a Love So Wrong Be Right" by The Seekers
Peak: number 118
Peak date: 21 August 1989
Weeks in top 150: 7 weeks 
Chart run: 141-137-132-118-126-136-142 
Weeks on chart: 7 weeks

The Seeekers are best known - at least from my perspective as someone who wasn't yet born when they were 'big' - for their 1966 number 1 hit, "Georgy Girl", when Judith Durham was on lead vocals.  At this point in time, Julie Anthony was fronting the group.  The last substantial hit The Seekers had in Australia was 1975's "Sparrow Song" (number 7), with yet another lead vocalist, Louisa Wisseling.  Their most-recent singles chart entry, "Building Bridges", peaked at number 68 in May 1989.  Both that and this track were taken from the band's Live On album, which peaked at number 26.

On the state charts, "How Can a Love So Wrong Be Right" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 60 on the state chart.

We'll next see The Seekers in 1993.


Number 147 "Let's Go Broncos" by On the Ball
Peak: number 144
Peak date: 28 August 1989
Weeks in top 150: 3 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 147-(out for 2 weeks)-149-144

I have absolutely zero interest in sport.  I would literally rather watch paint dry than watch a game of football, rugby or whatever sport this is called, played in Queensland.  So you can imagine my enthusiasm when a sporting theme reaches the charts... Thankfully, it didn't happen often.  I can only assume that this single sold much better in Queensland than in any other state, if it was even for sale outside of Queensland.  Curiously, "Let's Go Broncos" peaked much higher on the Australian Music Report chart, at number 78.  I can only assume that they surveyed a wider variety of retail outlets in Queensland than ARIA, or weighted Queensland more heavily.


Number 149 "Make It" by Exploding White Mice
Peak: number 149
Peak: 31 July 1989
Weeks in top 150: 1 week 
Top 150 chart run: 149

I don't know what to say about this track other than it's really not my my kind of music.  Exploding White Mice hailed from Adelaide, and would go on to score a number 96 'hit' locally in July 1990 with "I Just Want My Fun".

 

 
Bubbling WAY down under:

Number 152 "Children of the Revolution" by Baby Ford
Peak: number 152
Peak date: 31 July 1989
Weeks on chart: 1 week
 
Baby Ford, real name Peter Frank Adshead, hails form England.  "Children of the Revolution", a cover version of the T.Rex track (which peaked at number 11 in Australia on the Go Set chart in March 1973), was his third single.  It followed "Oochy Koochy" (released locally in November 1988) and "Chikky Chikky Ahh Ahh" (February 1989) - neither of which charted in Australia.
 
Internationally, Baby Ford's version of "Children of the Revolution" peaked at number 53 in the UK in June 1989, and number 42 in the Flanders region of Belgium in July 1989.
 
In Australia, "Children of the Revolution" performed strongest in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 125 on the state chart.
 
This would be Baby Ford's only charting release in Australia.
 

 
Number 153 "Are You My Baby?" by Wendy & Lisa
Peak: number 153
Peak date: 31 July 1989
Weeks on chart: 1 week
 
Formerly members of Prince's one-time backing band The Revolution, Wendy Melvoin and Lisa Coleman struck out on their own in 1987.  "Are You My Baby?" was the lead single from the duo's second album Fruit at the Bottom, which did not chart in Australia.  The single was the pair's first charting release in Australia.
 
"Are You My Baby?" fared better internationally, reaching the top 20 in the Netherlands and Belgium, and peaking at number 70 in the UK in February 1989.
 
On the ARIA state charts, "Are You My Baby?" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 97.
 
We will see Wendy & Lisa again in 1990.


 
Number 156 "Spirit of the Forest" by Spirit of the Forest
Peak: number 156
Peak date: 31 July 1989
Weeks on chart: 1 week
 
One thing most music fans can agree on is that charity records are almost without exception bad, particularly when they're umpteen unrelated artists assembled for a particular 'cause'.  In this instance, Spirit of the Forest was set up to raise funds for... you guessed it, the rain forest.  Well, environmental causes, more broadly.

Arists featured on the A-side version of "Spirit of the Forest" include Chris Rea, Mr. Mister, XTC, Dave Gilmour from Pink Floyd, Brian Wilson from The Beach Boys, Joni Mitchell, Ringo Starr, Fish, Belinda Carlisle, Deborah Harry, Bonnie Raitt, Kate Bush, Little Steven, Jon Anderson from Yes, Sam Brown, The Escape Club, Olivia Newton-John and Louise Goffin.  While I like several of these artists, I can't say their contribution to this mediocre-at-best song is particularly memorable.

Internationally, "Spirit of the Forest" peaked at number 94 (number 86 on the compressed chart) in the UK in July 1989.

In Australia, "Spirit of the Forest" was most popular in Western Australia, where it reached number 129 on the state chart.
 

 
Number 160 "Atomic City" by Holly Johnson
Peak: number 160
Peak date: 31 July 1989
Weeks on chart: 1 week

The third single lifted from his debut solo album Blast, "Atomic City" did not perform nearly as well as the two prior singles, "Love Train" (number 35, March 1989) and "Americanos" (number 77, June 1989), in Australia.  It also peaked 14 places lower than the number 4 peaks for the two prior singles in the UK.  To my ears, "Atomic City" sounds rather like James Brown's "Living in America", production-wise, but not as good.  Unsurprisingly, both tracks were produced by Dan Hartman, who also co-wrote this, I just learned.  "Atomic City" had greater success in Ireland, where it peaked at number 9, and in Switzerland, where it peaked at number 10.  A fourth single, "Heaven's Here", was lifted from Blast, but was not released locally - presumably due to its low (number 62) UK peak and the lack of chart success "Atomic City" had here.  We will see Holly again in 1991.


Number 162 "Voice of Babylon" by The Outfield

Peak: number 162
Peak date: 31 July 1989
Weeks on chart: 1 week
 
English band The Outfield formed in 1984, but had not, until now, landed a single on the Australian chart, other than bubbling under in May 1986, on the Kent Music Report's list of singles receiving significant sales reports beyond the top 100, with "Your Love".

"Voice of Babylon" was the lead single from The Outfield's third studio album Voices of Babylon (number 145, July 1989).  Both the album and single were the band's only releases to chart in Australia.

"Voice of Babylon" had greater success internationally, reaching number 25 in the US, number 39 in Canada in June 1989, and number 57 in Germany in July 1989.  Interestingly, the band never scored a hit in their homeland, and "Voices of Babylon" was their biggest 'hit' in the UK, despite only peaking at number 78 in May 1989.

 

Next week (7 August): A mere three new top 150 entries, and three bubbling WAY down under under entries.  Among them, we have two veteran acts, and a remix of a 1983 track that didn't become a hit in Australia until 1985.  You can follow my posts on facebook, too.

< Previous week: 24 July 1989                                               Next week: 7 August 1989 >