Showing posts with label Sinéad O'Connor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sinéad O'Connor. Show all posts

30 November 2024

Week commencing 30 November 1992

A minor theme I noted running through this week in 1992's new entries peaking outside the top 100 is that three of them are cover versions, and another three are remixes or re-recordings of an artist's previous work.

Before we take a look, I have updated the following previous posts:

* 6 May 1991 - with new bubbling WAY down under entry from D.J.H. featuring Stefy;
* 9 September 1991 - with new bubbling WAY down under entry from D.J.H. featuring Stefy.

Mariah Carey: her top 100 run of hits was over this week in 1992.

Top 150 debuts:

Number 127 “Who Needs Love (Like That)” (Remix) by Erasure
Peak: number 120
Peak dates: 7 December 1992 and 4 January 1993
Weeks in top 150: 8 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 127-120-129-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-120-137-124
Weeks on chart: 9 weeks

We last saw English pop duo Erasure a mere four weeks ago.

"Who Needs Love Like That" (minus brackets) was Erasure's debut single in 1985, peaking at number 55 in the UK in September of that year.  The single was issued locally in October 1985, but failed to make a dent on the chart.
 
"Who Needs Love (Like That)" - now with added brackets, was remixed (the single version titled the Hamburg Mix) and released as a single to promote Erasure's first compilation album Pop! The First 20 Hits (number 122, November 1992).  In keeping with the drag theme of their recent "Take a Chance on Me" video, Andy and Vince appear as frocked dancers in the music video for the 1992 version of “Who Needs Love (Like That)”. 

The 1992 version of "Who Needs Love (Like That)" peaked at number 10 in the UK in November 1992, number 8 in Ireland in November 1992, number 31 in Sweden in November 1992, number 27 in Germany in December 1992, and number 18 in Austria in December 1992.

Locally, "Who Needs Love..." was most popular in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 94.

I first heard this one on the UK Chart Attack radio show, and caught the video as a new release on rage.
 
We will next see Erasure in 1994.



Number 130 “If It’s Over” by Mariah Carey
Peak: number 115
Peak date: 11 January 1993
Weeks in top 150: 9 weeks
Chart run: 130-124-126-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-127-115-126-130
Weeks on chart: 9 weeks

American singer-songwriter Mariah Carey burst onto the scene in 1990 with her debut single “Vision of Love" (number 9, September 1990), and her debut album Mariah Carey (number 6, February 1991), which spawned four US Billiboard Hot 100 number one hits.  At this point in 1992, Mariah had notched up eight consecutive top 100 singles in Australia, with only "Can't Let Go" (number 63, January 1992) falling short of the top 50.  My favourite Mariah single is "Someday" (number 44, April 1991), though I prefer the original album version to the New Jack Swing remix used in the music video.
 
"If It's Over" was originally a studio track on Mariah’ second album Emotions (number 8, October 1991).  It was one of the tracks Mariah performed for her MTV Unplugged (number 7, August 1992) set on 16 March 1992.  "If It's Over" received a limited single release in the Netherlands, Japan and Australia as the second single from MTV Unplugged, following "I'll Be There" (number 9, August 1992).
 
Internationally, "If It's Over" peaked at number 80 in the Netherlands in December 1992.
 
In Australia, "If It's Over" performed strongest on the Western Australia state chart, where it reached number 87.
 
While we won't see Mariah again in this region of the chart (I have no intention of continuing these posts into the 2000s), she had numerous lower-charting singles from the late 2000s onwards, including "Obsessed" (Remix) (number 258, August 2009), "Infinity" (number 108, May 2015), and “GTFO” (number 360, September 2018).  Interestingly, the European-only single from Mariah's debut album, "There's Got to Be a Way" EP (number 4059, August 2020) also charted in Australia during the streaming era.



Number 131 “Tell Me Why” by Genesis
Peak: number 110
Peak date: 11 January 1993
Weeks in top 150: 13 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 131-131-124-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-116-110-115-118-(out for one week)-140-143-132-147
Weeks on chart: 18 weeks

Between 1978 and 1992, English group Genesis amassed 16 Australian top 100 singles, starting with "Follow You Follow Me" (number 16, September 1978).  Their biggest hit in Australia was "Invisible Touch" (number 3, July 1986).  "Land of Confusion" (number 21, February 1987), also from the Invisible Touch (number 3, July 1986) album, is my favourite Genesis single.

"Tell Me Why" was issued as the fifth and final single from the fourteenth Genesis studio album We Can't Dance (number 8, July 1992).  It followed "No Son of Mine" (number 29, November 1991), "I Can't Dance" (number 7, March 1992), "Hold on My Heart" (number 63, July 1992), and "Jesus He Knows Me" (number 56, September 1992).  "Tell Me Why" was the last Genesis single to feature Phil Collins on lead vocals.  Phil quit the group in March 1996.

Internationally, "Tell Me Why" peaked at number 37 in the Netherlands in December 1992, number 51 in Germany in December 1992, number 27 in France in February 1993, and number 40 in the UK in February 1993.  The UK release of the single was postponed to make way for the live version of "Invisible Touch" from the group's The Way We Walk Volume One: The Shorts (number 37, December 1992) live album.

In Australia, "Tell Me Why" was most popular in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 74 on the state chart.

We'll next see Genesis, minus Phil, in 1997.  We'll see Phil solo next in 1993.



Number 138 “Thunderbirds Are Go!” by F.A.B. featuring MC Parker
Peak: number 135
Peak dates: 11 January 1993 and 18 January 1993
Weeks in top 150: 12 weeks 
Chart run: 185-138-139-140-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-138-135-135-144-142-143-149
Weeks on chart: 13 weeks 
 
Here's an interesting one.  "Thundebirds Are Go!" was released internationally in 1990, and received a 12" vinyl release in Australia in October 1990 on dance music label Colossal Records.  Its 1992 Australian release, on cassingle and CD single, was through BMG Records.  But, more interesting than that, a snippet of "Thunderbirds Are Go!" charted in Australia in 1991, as one of the tracks sampled on Megabass' “Time to Make the Floor Burn” (number 40, April 1991) megamix.  You can hear the "Thunderbirds Are Go!" sample from around 3:57 minutes into the video embedded in the previous sentence.  As you might expect, the track samples the theme song and audio from the 1960s British science fiction TV series Thunderbirds, which made use of electronic marionette puppetry.  While I was never really a Thunderbirds fan, I do recall catching part of a few episodes when they aired at 6:00 a.m. on Saturday morning here in the late 1980s.
 
Internationally, "Thunderbirds Are Go!" peaked at number 5 in the UK in July 1990, and at number 50 in the Netherlands in September 1990.

In Australia, “Thunderbirds Are Go!” was most popular in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 87 on the state chart.

I remember reading about this track in UK pop magazine Number One in 1990, but didn't hear the full song until it appeared on a UK VHS compilation I picked up in the late 2000s.
 


Number 141 “Don’t Cry for Me Argentina” by Sinéad O’Connor
Peak: number 138
Peak date: 7 December 1992
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 141-138-139-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-150
Weeks on chart: 8 weeks

Irish singer-songwriter Sinéad O'Connor last graced our presence in 1990.

"Don't Cry for Me Argentina", a cover version of the Evita musical song originally recorded by Julie Covington (number 1 for seven weeks in May-June 1977), was the second single issued from Sinéad's covers album Am I Not Your Girl? (number 17, October 1992), following "Success Has Made a Failure of Our Home" (number 37, September 1992).
 
Internationally, Sinéad's version of "Don't Cry for Me Argentina" peaked at number 31 in the Flanders region of Belgium in November 1992, number 53 in the UK in December 1992, and number 44 in the Netherlands in December 1992.
 
Locally, "Don't Cry for Me Argentina" was most popular in Queensland, where it reached number 111 on the state chart.
 
We'll next see Sinéad in 1993.



Number 148 “Suspicious Minds” by Dwight Yoakam
Peak: number 129
Peak date: 4 January 1993
Weeks in top 150: 10 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 148-135-136-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-129-131-132-139-135

American singer-songwriter, actor and film producer Dwight Yoakam released his debut album in 1986.  He made his first appearance on the Australian chart in 1988, with his third studio album Buenos Noches from a Lonely Room (number 91, October 1988).  He also charted locally with the appropriately-titled compilation album Just Lookin' for a Hit (number 141, November 1989), and his fourth studio album If There Was a Way (number 147, January 1991).

"Suspicious Minds", a Mark James cover version, better known recorded by Elvis Presley (number 1 for 2 weeks in December 1969 on the Go Set chart) and Fine Young Cannibals (number 6, April 1986), was Dwight's first - and only - top 150 single in Australia.  The track does not appear on Dwight's fifth studio album This Time (number 121, April 1993), but was recorded for the Honeymoon in Vegas soundtrack (number 46, November 1992).

Internationally, Dwight's version of "Suspicious Minds" peaked at number 31 on the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in December 1992, and at number 35 on the US Billboard Country Airplay chart in December 1992.
 
Dwight would eventually score a commercial breakthrough in Australia in 1996 with the Gone album (number 17, February 1996).
 


Number 149 “Walking in London” by Concrete Blonde
Peak: number 142
Peak date: 7 December 1992
Weeks in top 150: 2 weeks 
Known chart run: 210-149-142
Weeks on chart: 6 weeks

We last saw American band Concerete Blonde in 1989.  Since then, they landed a major breakthrough hit in Australia with “Joey” (number 2, August 1990).  They followed that up with the minor hit “Caroline” (number 39, October 1990), which is my favourite single of theirs, and an excellent cover version of Leonard Cohen’s “Everybody Knows” recorded for the movie Pump Up the Volume soundtrack (number 74, January 1992), which oddly did not chart when released as a single locally in November 1990.

Concrete Blonde returned in 1992 with their fourth studio album Walking in London (number 18, March 1992).  “Walking in London” was issued as the album’s third single, following "Ghost of a Texas Ladies' Man" (number 31, March 1992) and "Someday" (number 72, July 1992).
 
I could not find evidence of the "Walking in London" single charting elsewhere.  Locally, "Walking in London" was most successful in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 119.
 
We'll next see Concrete Blonde in 1994.



Number 150 “Wicked As It Seems” by Keith Richards
Peak: number 136
Peak date: 4 January 1993
Weeks in top 150: 8 weeks 
Chart run: 150-149-137-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-136-141-138
Weeks on chart: 8 weeks

We last saw Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards in 1989.

"Wicked As It Seems" was the lead single from Keith's second solo studio album Main Offender (number 96, November 1992).  Internationally, "Wicked As It Seems" peaked at number 3 on the US Billboard Mainstream Rock Airplay chart in January 1993.

Locally, "Wicked As It Seems" performed strongest in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 101 on the state chart.

We'll next see Keith in 1993.



Bubbling WAY down under:

Number 153 “I Am What I See” by Single Gun Theory
Peak: number 153
Peak date: 30 November 1992
Weeks on chart: 12 weeks 
 
Australian electronic group Single Gun Theory formed in Sydney in 1986.  They experienced their first state of chart success with the single "From a Million Miles" (number 64, March 1992).  "I Am What I See" was issued as the second and final single from their second studio album Millions, Like Stars in My Hands, Daggers in My Heart, Wage War (number 41, February 1992).  The single performed strongest in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 130 on the state chart.

We shall see Single Gun Theory again in 1995.



Number 167 “Even Better Than the Real Thing” (Remixes) by U2
Peak: number 167
Peak date: 30 November 1992
Weeks on chart: 1 week 

We last saw Irish band U2 in 1989.

The original version of "Even Better Than the Real Thing" (number 11, July 1992) was issued as the fourth single from U2's seventh studio album Achtung Baby (number 1, November 1991).  While I have questioned ARIA separating remix singles from the main release on the singles chart in 1992, the Perfecto Remix of "Even Better Than the Real Thing" (embedded below), which received its own music video, charted separately in the UK, where it reached number 8 in July 1992 (peaking higher than the original, which reached number 12 in June 1992), and at number 10 in Ireland in July 1992 (the original reached number 3 there in June 1992).
 
The remixed version of "Even Better Than the Real Thing" also registered on the US Billboard Dance Club Songs chart, where it reached number 27 in September 1992, and at number 35 on the US Billboard Dance Singles Sales chart in October 1992.
 
In Australia, "Even Better Than the Real Thing" (Remixes) performed strongest in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 143 on the state chart.
 
U2 would bubble under again in 2006 with the Wide Awake in America EP (number 145, March 2006), which was led by the live track "Bad".



Number 168 “Come on Boy” by DJ Herbie
Peak: number 161
Peak date: 14 December 1992 (chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)
Weeks on chart: 12 weeks 

DJ Herbie was an alternative name for D.J.H., whom we last saw bubble under with Stefy in 1991.

I cannot find evidence of "Come on Boy" charting elsewhere.  The single performed best on the Western Australia state chart, reaching number 95.  "Come on Boy" peaked considerably higher nationally on the Australian Music Report singles chart, where it reached number 97.
 
This would be DJ Herbie's only charting release under that name in Australia.



Number 173 “Ashes to Ashes” by The Wallflowers 
Peak: number 156
Peak date: 8 March 1993
Weeks on chart: 15 weeks 

Like most people, I was not aware of The Wallflowers, led by Bob Dylan's son Jakob Dylan, until their hit “One Headlight” (number 14, September 1997) in 1997.  The band formed in Los Angeles in 1989.
 
"Ashes to Ashes", which is not a cover of the David Bowie song of the same name, was lifted from the band's debut album  The Wallflowers (number 154, March 1993).

I cannot find evidence of this one charting elsewhere.  Locally, “Ashes to Ashes” was most popular in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 144 on the state chart.

We shall next see The Wallflowers in 1996.



Number 192 “Reach for the Sky” by Firehouse
Peak: number 192
Peak date: 30 November 1992
Weeks on chart: 1 week 

American band Firehouse graced our presence a mere week ago!
 
"Reach for the Sky" was issued as the second single in Australia from the band's second album Hold Your Fire (number 180, October 1992).  Internationally, "Reach for the Sky" peaked at number 83 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in July 1992, where it was the first single from the album.

In Australia, "Reach for the Sky" was most popular in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 175 on the state chart.

I hadn't head this one before; I liked the verses more than the chorus.  The music video is typical of high-budget rock band videos from the early 90s, with skydiving and shots of bungee jumping.

This would be Firehouse's final charting single in Australia.  They had a later low-charting album, though, with Lowflows: The Columbia Anthology ('91-'93) (number 1083, July 2012).



Number 212 “24 Hours a Day” by Nomad
Peak: number 212
Peak date: 30 November 1992
Weeks on chart: 2 weeks 

We last saw British house duo Nomad in June 1992.  "24 Hours a Day" is a cover version of a song originally recorded by L.J. Johnson in 1979.  Internationally, their version of the track peaked at number 61 in the UK in November 1992.

Locally, "24 Hours a Day" performed strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 184.

This was Nomad's final new single; though they released two later remixes of "(I Wanna Give You) Devotion" (number 37, August 1991) in the UK in 1995 and 2003.



Next week (7 December): Three top 150 entries and one bubbling WAY down under debut.

26 November 2021

Week commencing 26 November 1990

All of this week in 1990's top 150-peaking debuts spent at least 7 weeks on the chart, so it's another week where all of the new entries had above average chart longevity for singles peaking outside the top 100.  Let's take a look at them.
 
Billy Idol: sitting idly outside the top 100
 
Top 150 debuts:
 
Number 106 "Give It Up" by ZZ Top
Peak: number 106
Peak date: 26 November 1990
Weeks in top 150: 9 weeks
Chart run: 106-115-112-119-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-112-123-127
Weeks on chart: 9 weeks
 
Formed in Texas in 1969, up until this point in 1990, ZZ Top had placed ten singles on the Australian chart since 1974.  Their biggest hit in Australia was "Legs" (number 6, October 1984), the only one to make the top ten.

"Give It Up" was issued as the second single in Australia from ZZ Top's tenth studio album Recycler (number 27, November 1990).  It followed "Doubleback" (number 41, July 1990), which was also featured in the film Back to the Future Part III.

Internationally, "Give It Up" peaked at number 69 in Germany in December 1990, and number 79 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in February 1991.
 
On the ARIA state charts, "Give It Up" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 65.
 
"Give It Up" peaked higher on the Australian Music Report singles chart, reaching number 94.
 
We shall next see ZZ top in April 1991.


 
Number 108 "Three Babies" by Sinéad O'Connor
Peak: number 108
Peak date: 26 November 1990
Weeks in top 150: 7 weeks
Chart run: 108-116-114-110-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-116
Weeks on chart: 7 weeks
 
Sinéad O'Connor first paid us a visit in February 1989, with her second single to register on the Australian chart.  Since then, she scored a massive hit with "Nothing Compares 2 U" (number 1, February 1990), which was the highest-selling single of 1990 in Australia.

"Three Babies" was issued as the fourth and final single from Sinéad's second album I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got (number 1, March 1990), counting the earlier release of "Jump in the River" (number 134, April 1989).  It followed "The Emperor's New Clothes" (number 20, September 1990).
 
Internationally, "Three Babies" peaked at number 19 in Sinéad's native Ireland in October 1990, number 42 in the UK in October 1990, and reached the top 30 in the Netherlands and Switzerland, and the top 40 in the Flanders region of Belgium.

On the ARIA state charts, "Three Babies" performed strongest in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 65.
 
On the Australian Music Report singles chart, "Three Babies" peaked at number 89.
 
I've heard "Three Babies" a couple of times before, but can never remember how it goes.  I think it's a nice song, but it just doesn't stand out as hit single material.

We shall next see Sinéad in 1992.
 
 
 
Number 114 "Can't Help Falling in Love" by Julio Iglesias
Peak: number 106
Peak date: 17 December 1990 (chart repeated 24 December 1990 and 31 December 1990)
Weeks in top 150: 9 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 114-121-116-106-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-107-118-118
 
Julio Iglesias made an appearance as a featured artist on my first chart recap, in January 1989.  Up until this point in 1990, Julio had placed seven singles on the Australian chart, with four of those being duets.  Julio's biggest single in Australia was "To All the Girls I've Loved Before" (number 4, May 1984), a duet with Willie Nelson.

"Can't Help Falling in Love", as you might have guessed from the title, is a cover version of the Elvis Presley song that UB40 took to number 1 in Australia in July 1993.  It was the first single released from Julio's covers album Starry Night (number 13, February 1991).

Julio's rendition of "Can't Help Falling in Love" does not appear to have charted anywhere else, rather interestingly.
 
The video embedded below is taken from a live show from 1991, where you can see Julio performing the song.  You can listen to the studio recording of "Can't Help Falling in Love", which doesn't sound a whole lot different, here.

Julio will join us again, with another duet, in 1994.
 

 
Number 129 "Heaven" by The Chimes (re-release)
Peak: number 103 (original release: number 62)
Peak date: 10 December 1990 (original release: 19 March 1990 and 2 April 1990)
Weeks in top 150: 7 weeks (original release: 14 weeks); 21 weeks total
Chart run: debuted 5 February 1990: 135-72-77-73-64-82-62-76-62-77-71-79-99-117. Re-entered 26 November 1990: 129-104-103-120-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-115
Weeks on chart: 21 weeks

We first saw The Chimes bubble under back in September 1990.  "Heaven", issued as the second single from The Chimes (number 16, August 1990), originally peaked at number 62 in Australia in March 1990, bettering its peak of number 66 in the band's native UK in December 1989.

"Heaven" was re-released in the UK in September 1990, reaching a new peak of number 24 the following month.  It seems the Australian record company followed suit in giving the single another go; but, sadly, this time "Heaven" stalled just outside the top 100, peaking 41 places lower than it did initially.

One country "Heaven" was a hit in was New Zealand, where it reached number 5 in May 1990.

The late 1990 re-issue of "Heaven" peaked at number 25 in Ireland in October 1990, and number 40 in the Netherlands in November 1990 (after originally peaking at number 34 there in February 1990).

"Heaven" peaked on all five ARIA state charts with its January 1990 release, performing strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 39.

The Chimes will join us for one last time in January 1991.



Number 144 "The Blue Heeler" by James Blundell
Peak: number 127
Peak date: 3 December 1990
Weeks in top 150: 7 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 144-127-141-143-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-133

Australian country singer James Blundell's debut album James Blundell (number 68, April 1989) made an appearance in the ARIA top 100, but "The Blue Heeler", the second single issued from his second album Hand It Down (number 50, September 1990), was James' first single to register in the top 150.  It followed "Age of Grace", released in July 1990.

A third single from Hand It Down, "Time on His Hands", was belatedly released in September 1991, but missed the top 150.

James would eventually land a major hit in Australia with "Way Out West" (number 2, April 1992), a duet with James Reyne.

James will join us again in 1995.



Number 148 "Prodigal Blues" by Billy Idol
Peak: number 109
Peak date: 7 January 1991
Weeks in top 150: 8 weeks
Chart run: 148-139-110-112-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-109-110
Weeks on chart: 8 weeks
 
Up until this point in 1990, English singer Billy Idol had placed 15 singles on the Australian top 100, with six of those reaching the top 10.  His biggest hit in Australia, surprisingly, was "To Be a Lover" (number 3, December 1986).  Interestingly, Billy landed a top 40 hit in Australia (and the US), with "Hot in the City" (number 18, December 1982), nearly two years before his first UK top 40 hit.

"Prodigal Blues" was the third and final single from Billy's fourth studio album Charmed Life (number 11, May 1990).  It followed "Cradle of Love" (number 10, May 1990) and "L.A. Woman" (number 34, September 1990).
 
Elsewhere, "Prodigal Blues" peaked at number 47 in the UK in December 1990.
 
Within Australia, "Prodigal Blues" was most successful in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 71 on the state charts.  On the Australian Music Report singles chart, "Prodigal Blues" peaked at number 92.
 
Billy survived a major motorcycle accident in February 1990, which temporarily rendered him unable to walk.  All scenes of him in the "Cradle of Love" music video, subsequently, were shot from the waist up.

I remember seeing the "Prodigal Blues" single in the shops, but don't think I heard the song until catching the video on rage in October 1991.
 
While we won't see Billy again, he scored another (very) low-charting single in Australia with The Roadside EP (number 2566, September 2021).  Billy also had albums peaking outside the top 100 in Australia with Greatest Hits (number 237, June 2001), Classic Albums: Billy Idol/Rebel Yell (number 401, August 2011), and Happy Holidays (number 931, December 2021).


 
Bubbling WAY down under:
 
Number 156 "Lies" by En Vogue
Peak: number 156
Peak date: 26 November 1990
Weeks on chart: 2 weeks
 
American vocal quartet En Vogue landed a top 5 hit in the US, the UK and New Zealand with their debut single "Hold On".  In contrast, "Hold On" only reached number 64 in Australia in October 1990.  Interestingly, "Hold On" performed much better on the New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory state chart than in other states, where it reached number 31 (vs. no higher than 78 on any of the other four state charts).

"Lies" was the second single lifted from En Vogue's debut album Born to Sing (number 146, November 1990).  Surprisingly, "Lies" was a relative flop in the US, reaching a peak of number 38 there in October 1990.  "Lies" also underperformed in the UK, peaking at number 44 in July 1990, and in the Netherlands, where it reached number 42 in November 1990.

On the ARIA state charts, "Lies" performed strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 146.
 
A third and final single from Born to Sing, "Don't Go", was released in Australia in April 1991, but failed to chart.  The group's third single in the US and UK, "You Don't Have to Worry", was not released in Australia.

En Vogue would score a couple of minor top 40 hits in Australia with "My Lovin' (You're Never Gonna Get It)" (number 36, August 1992) and "Free Your Mind" (number 39, January 1993), from their second album Funky Divas (number 66, March 1993).
 
Ignoring Salt 'N' Pepa's "Whatta Man" (number 2, March 1994), on which they sing the chorus, En Vogue would have to wait until 1997 to land their first, and only, major hit in Australia in their own right, with "Don't Let Go (Love)" (number 3, March 1997).

We will next see En Vogue in 1997.
 

 
Number 157 "Dig for Fire" by Pixies
Peak: number 157
Peak date: 26 November 1990
Weeks on chart: 1 week 
 
Pixes have joined us on two prior occasions to date, in October 1989 and August 1990.

"Dig for Fire" was the second and final single released from Pixies' third studio album Bossanova (number 68, September 1990).

"Dig for Fire" peaked at number 62 in the UK in November 1990, number 27 in Ireland in November 1990, and at number 11 on the US Billboard Alternative Songs chart.

On the ARIA state charts, "Dig for Fire" performed equal-strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory and Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 150.

The music video for "Dig for Fire", embedded below, segues into another track from Bossanova, "Allison".

Pixies will next grace our presence in August 1991.


 
Next week (3 December): Six new top 150 debuts and three bubbling WAY down under entries.
 
< Previous week: 19 November 1990                             Next week: 3 December 1990 >

06 February 2020

Week commencing 6 February 1989

These days, it's not that unusual for album tracks to chart if they're from a new album released by a popular artist.  Back in late 80s, the charts were the exclusive domain of proper singles, with the occasional EP or double A-side.  Flop singles that weren't later re-released in the hope of becoming hits the second time around would sometimes get a second lease of life by being recycled as B-sides for later singles.  One such track debuts in the top 150 this week.

Sinéad O'Connor had to make do with modest chart peaks before conquering the world in 1990.

Top 150 debuts:

Number 115 "World to Me" by Huey Lewis & The News
Peak: number 113
Peak date: 13 February 1989
Weeks in top 150: 7 weeks
Chart run: 115-113-116-134-127-134-127
Weeks on chart: 7 weeks

The third consecutive single release by Huey Lewis & The News to contain the word "world" in its title, 'World to Me' followed the number 22-peaking "Perfect World", and "Small World", which failed to chart at all in Australia.  I suspect that the latter probably bubbled under, if the chart had gone further than number 100.  All three tracks are lifted from the group's fifth studio album Small World (number 21, October 1988).

Internationally, "World to Me" peaked at number 92 (number 84 on the compressed chart) in the UK in December 1988.

In Australia, "World to Me" performed strongest in Queensland, where it reached number 70 on the state chart.

We will next see Huey Lewis & The News in 1991.


Number 131 "Quit This Joint" by Martin Kaye
Peak: number 131
Peak date: 6 February 1989
Weeks in top 150: 1 week 
Chart run: 131
Weeks on chart: 1 week 

When I wrote this post, the video embedded below (which isn't a music video or live performance) had received just 19 views on YouTube since its upload in September 2017.  From that, I can conclude that Martin was Australian, not widely known, and not remembered too well.  He doesn't even have a page on discogs.com.  Googling "martin kaye" "quit this joint" yields a grand total of three search results.  I assume that this post will become the fourth!

I can tell you, however, that "Quit This Joint" was most popular in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 84 on the state chart.


Number 139 "Want My Love" by Jabulani
Peak: number 104
Peak date: 20 March 1989
Weeks in top 150: 9 weeks 
Chart run: 139-145-120-130-128-116-104-109-114 
Weeks on chart: 9 weeks

Unfortunately, I can't tell you much about this one, as it's not on YouTube, and I can't find it anywhere to listen to online.  I can post the single sleeve, though, which I have done below.  They may be a South African group.  "Want My Love" was much more popular in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 45 on the state chart, than elsewhere.  The single peaked outside the top 100 on all other state chart.


Number 142 "Talk to Your Daughter" by Robben Ford
Peak: number 108
Peak date: 27 February 1989
Weeks in top 150: 9 weeks 
Chart run: 152-142-135-(off chart for 1 week)-108-110-121-115-115-134-130 
Weeks on chart: 10 weeks

I was expecting this to be a female artist, going by the name.  The sleeve below and higher-register-for-a-man voice didn't make it clearer to me, but Wikipedia tells me that Robben is indeed a man.  It also tells me that he has collaborated with lots of big, important artists - everyone from George Harrison, to Joni Mitchell, and even Rick Springfield and Kiss!  This track is from Robben's Talk to Your Daughter (number 79, January 1989) album.

On the state charts, "Talk to Your Daughter" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 63.



Number 145 "Walk on Water" by Eddie Money
Peak: number 126
Peak date: 20 February 1989
Weeks in top 150: 8 weeks
Chart run: 154-145-144-126-127-137-131-136-129
Weeks on chart: 9 weeks

The recently-departed Eddie Money didn't have a whole lot of chart success in Australia, with 1978's "Baby Hold On" (number 19, August 1978) being his only top 40 hit.  The closest he came again was in 1986 with "Take Me Home Tonight" (number 46, November 1986).

Internationally, "Walk on Water" peaked at number 9 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in December 1988, number 10 in Canada, and number 157 (number 128 on the compressed chart) in the UK in January 1989.

Locally, "Walk on Water" was much more popular in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it peaked at number 32 on the state chart, than elsewhere.  The single peaked outside the top 100 on the other four state charts.

Eddie would be back with another top 150 'hit' next year.



Number 148 "Jump in the River" by Sinéad O'Connor
Peak: number 134
Peak date: 10 April 1989
Weeks in top 150: 7 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 148-(out for 6 weeks)-143-141-134-139-142-135
Weeks on chart: 9 weeks

Sinéad had her first taste of Oz chart success in 1988 with "Mandinka", but follow-up single "I Want Your (Hands on Me)" failed to chart.  Released locally on 12 December 1988, 'Jump in the River' didn't appear on the first chart that extended beyond number 150, last week.  Sinéad was quite prolific with side-projects such as soundtracks and duets during this era, and this track was lifted from the Married to the Mob soundtrack - coincidentally, the same album from which the Debbie Harry track that debuted last week was taken.  "Jump in the River" was included on Sinéad's second album, I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got (number 1, March 1990), over a year later.  'Jump in the River' was also used as the B-side for her 1990 mega-hit, "Nothing Compares 2 U".

Internationally, "Jump in the River" peaked at number 29 in Ireland in October 1988, and number 86 (number 81 on the compressed chart) in the UK in October 1988.

Domestically, "Jump in the River" performed strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory, where it reached number 108 on the state chart.

Sinéad will join us next in 1990.


Number 149 "Twins" by Philip Bailey/Little Richard
Peak: number 116
Peak date: 6 March 1989
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 149-(out for 3 weeks)-116-133-133-127-128 
Weeks on chart: 8 weeks

From the soundtrack to the 1988 movie of the same name, Twins (number 115, March 1989), starring Danny DeVito and Arnold Schwarzenegger, this track has that classic mid-late 80s 'soundtrack' sound to it.

Internationally, "Twins" peaked at number 95 (number 82 on the compressed chart) in the UK in March 1989, number 16 in the Netherlands in April 1989, and number 30 in the Flanders region of Belgium in May 1989.

On the state charts, "Twins" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 81.

Bubbling WAY down under:

Number 159 "Was There Anything I Could Do?" by The Go-Betweens
Peak: number 159
Peak date: 6 February 1989
Weeks on chart: 2 weeks
 
Aussie band The Go-Betweens formed in Brisbane in 1977.  Despite being fawned over by critics, the band never landed major commercial success in Australia, with "Streets of Your Town" (number 68, October 1988) being their highest-charting single and its parent album 16 Lovers Lane (number 48, October 1988) being their highest-charting album.  They almost experienced their first taste of chart success in Australia in 1983.

"Was There Anything I Could Do?" was the second single issued from The Go-Betweens' sixth studio album, the aforementioned 16 Lovers Lane.
 
Internationally, "Was There Anything I Could Do?" peaked at number 193 (number 143 on the compressed chart) in the UK in October 1988.
 
Domestically, the single performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 83 on the state chart in December 1988 (debuting before the national chart extended beyond number 100).

The Go-Betweens split in December 1989, and eventually reformed in 2000, before splitting again in 2006.  We will see them again in 2000.  But before then, co-lead vocalist Grant McLennan will bubble under in 1993, and the female members of the group will form a band which we'll also see bubbling under in 1993.


Next week (13 February): there are unusually no new top 150 debuts for singles peaking within the 101-150 region of the chart!  There are, however, three bubbling WAY down under entries to write about.

Also: you can also follow my posts on facebook at https://www.facebook.com/bubblingdownunder/

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