Showing posts with label Tom Petty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Petty. Show all posts

30 September 2022

Week commencing 30 September 1991

I can't find a theme uniting this week in 1991's new entries that peaked outside the Australian top 100, so let's just dive straight in.
 
The Prodigy: Australia wasn't ready for the Prodigy experience in 1991.
 
Top 150 debuts:
 
Number 122 "I Can't Wait Another Minute" by Hi-Five
Peak: number 112
Peak date: 7 October 1991
Weeks in top 150: 5 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 122-112-117-123-123
 
American R&B vocal quintet Hi-Five formed in 1989.  Their debut Australian single, "I Like the Way (The Kissing Game)", topped the US Billboard Hot 100 for one week in May 1991, and scraped into the ARIA top 50, peaking at number 47 in July 1991.
 
"I Can't Wait Another Minute" was the follow-up release, lifted from the band's debut album Hi-Five (number 102, July 1991).  The track was written and produced by Eric Foster White, who also wrote Whitney Houston's "My Name Is Not Susan".

Internationally, "I Can't Wait Another Minute" peaked at number 8 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in August 1991.

I heard this one several times on the American Top 40 radio show, and while I don't have a particular fondness for 90s R&B vocal groups, "I Can't Wait Another Minute" is one song from the genre that I enjoy.
 
As too often seems to be the case with teen pop stars, two members of Hi-Five have died at a relatively young age since the band's heyday.
 
The group's lead vocalist Tony Thompson died in 2007, aged 31, after inhaling a fatal amount of freon from an air conditioning unit.
 
Roderick "Pooh" Clark was paralysed from the chest down following a car accident in 1992, soon after the band's second album Keep It Goin' On (number 130, November 1992) was released.  He died in April 2022, aged 49.
 
We will next see Hi-Five in 1992.
 

 
Number 134 "Into the Great Wide Open" by Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers
Peak: number 112
Peak date: 14 October 1991
Weeks in top 150: 7 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 134-123-112-121-116-117-122
Weeks on chart: 8 weeks
 
Tom Petty last joined us in December 1989 as a solo artist, and with side project Traveling Wilburys in April 1991.

Following these releases, Tom regrouped with his regular backing band The Heartbreakers.  "Into the Great Wide Open" was the title track and second single from the band's eighth studio album Into the Great Wide Open (number 28, August 1991).  It followed "Learning to Fly" (number 44, August 1991).
 
Internationally, "Into the Great Wide Open" peaked at number 92 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in November 1991, number 48 in the Flanders region of Belgium in November 1991, and number 54 in Germany in January 1992.  It's interesting - to me, anyway - that "Into the Great Wide Open" peaked almost two months earlier in Australia than anywhere else.
 
Within Australia, "Into the Great Wide Open" was most successful in Western Australia, where it reached number 82.
 
Listening to this track for the first time as I write this post, it's another obvious Jeff Lynne songwriting collaboration/production.  My dad liked Electric Light Orchestra and Traveling Wilburys - though, oddly, did not delve into Tom's separate work that I recall - so, I can pick a Jeff Lynne song anywhere.
 
Tom will next grace our presence in 1993.
 
 
 
Number 136 "The Quiet's Too Loud" by Lamont Dozier and Phil Collins
Peak: number 136
Peak date: 30 September 1991
Weeks in top 150: 5 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 136-142-137-140-141
 
While researching this track, which I had not heard (or heard of) before, I was intrigued that there was an early 90s Phil Collins single (of sorts) that a. I did not know about (given how much radio loved him at the time), and b. I can find no record of it charting anywhere else!

Lamont Dozier was one third of the legendary Holland-Dozier-Holland songwriting and production trio, who were behind many of the songs released on the Motown record label.

Lamont (since I prefer to be on a first-name basis with others) had previously collaborated with Phil on "Two Hearts" (number 13, February 1989), with its unmistakable Motown sound, for the Buster soundtrack (number 35, March 1989).
 
"The Quiet's Too Loud" appears on Lamont's Inside Seduction album, which was released in Australia in August 1991 but missed the ARIA top 150.
 
Lamont is another one (we seem to be on a roll this week...) who recently died.  He passed on 8 August 2022, aged 81.
 
While Lamont will not have another solo top 150 'hit', we shall next see Phil Collins with Genesis in 1992, and as a solo artist in 1993.
 

 
Number 143 "Silver Thunderbird" by Marc Cohn
Peak: number 107
Peak date: 14 October 1991
Weeks in top 150: 9 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 143-146-107-110-111-115-115-126-126
 
American singer-songwriter Marc Cohn released his debut single, "The Heart of the City", on a minor label in 1986, but it failed to chart anywhere.  There is also no trace of it on YouTube.

Skip forward five years, and Marc landed a decent-sized hit with his first major label single "Walking in Memphis" (number 11, August 1991).  I am surprised to learn that "Walking in Memphis" did not top the US Billboard Hot 100, but 'only' peaked at number 13 on it in June 1991.
 
"Silver Thunderbird" was the second single lifted from Marc's debut album Marc Cohn (number 31, September 1991).  It was less-successful than its predecessor, both locally and internationally, peaking at number 28 in Ireland in August 1991, number 54 in the UK in August 1991, number 63 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in September 1991, and number 87 in Germany in March 1992.
 
It's quite possible I heard this one at the time, given how keen radio was to play "Waking in Memphis", but I have no recollection of it.  The song is decent enough, but perhaps not sufficiently different from "Walking to Memphis" to stand out.
 
Marc would never trouble the ARIA top 100 again, but will bubble under it on a few occasions, with the next one being in 1992.


 
Bubbling WAY down under:
 
Number 160 "Feel Every Beat" by Electronic
Peak: number 156
Peak date: 14 October 1991
Weeks on chart: 5 weeks

On paper, English 'supergroup' Electronic should be a band I like a lot.  Its members consist of New Order's Bernard Sumner, Johnny Marr - formerly of The Smiths, and (occasionally) Pet Shop Boy Neil Tennant.  I like all three of those acts to an extent (Pet Shop Boys and New Order more so than The Smiths), but I've never delved into Electronic beyond the singles, and only really know and like the two singles they did with Neil Tennant, "Getting Away with It" (number 40, July 1990) and "Disappointed" (released in Europe in 1992, but oddly not issued in Australia - although I caught the video on rage as a new release, despite being their highest-peaking single in the UK).

I did see/hear "Feel Every Beat" at the time, along with the previous Electronic single "Get the Message" (number 71, June 1991), but couldn't tell you how either went if my life depended on it.  Not to say they're necessarily bad songs - they just don't... stick in your mind like most Pet Shop Boys or New Order singles from this era did, and to be honest, I find them a tad boring, and not nearly as good as the collaborations the group did with Neil Tennant.

"Feel Every Beat" appeared on the first Electronic album Electronic (number 42, July 1991).  Internationally, the single peaked at number 39 in the UK in September 1991.
 
Domestically, "Feel Every Beat" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 130.
 
Electronic will join us again in 1996.  Before then, we'll see New Order again in 1994 and The Smiths in 1992.



Number 161 "Charly" by The Prodigy
Peak: number 161
Peak date: 30 September 1991
Weeks on chart: 6 weeks

Essentially the brainchild of Liam Howlett, English dance/rave band The Prodigy formed in Essex in 1990.  "Charly", their debut single, samples dialogue from a 1970s BBC public information cartoon about not talking to strangers, Charley Says, where the Charley in question is an animated cat.

With 'rave' music spawning several top 10 hits in the UK In 1991, it's little surprise that "Charly" peaked at number 3 there in September 1991.  The single also reached number 9 in Ireland.

Closer to home, "Charly" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 86.

The commercial success of "Charly" resulted in several 'copycat' rave songs that sampled children's TV shows, including, notably, Smart E's "Sesame's Treet" (number 6, September 1992), which was the first (and really only) of its kind to take off in Australia.  We'll see another one of these 'toytown techno' rave songs bubble WAY down under in 1992.
 
The Prodigy, meanwhile, would have to wait until 1994 for their commercial breakthrough in Australia, with "No Good (Start the Dance)" (number 45, July 1994) and "Voodoo People" (number 24, November 1994) becoming top 50 hits.  The band would land a major, enduring hit in Australia with "Breathe" (number 2, March 1997), which spent 24 consecutive weeks in the top 10 (a mammoth run in the pre-streaming era).

A different mix of "Charly" appears on The Prodigy's debut album Experience (number 163, January 1997), which peaked on the ARIA albums chart more than 4 years after its release.  The album initially debuted at number 245 in December 1992.

I first became aware of The Prodigy through listening to the UK Chart Attack radio show in 1992.  Australia was not ready for their sound in 1991-2, which is a shame, as I quite like the band's early singles.

The Prodigy will next join us in 1992.
 


Number 169 "You Are the Way" by The Primitives
Peak: number 169
Peak date: 30 September 1991
Weeks on chart: 1 week

English indie pop band The Primitives formed in Coventry in 1984.  While the group landed four top 40 singles in the UK, only one of their releases dented the top 100 in Australia - the single "Way Behind Me" (number 91, January 1989).
 
"You Are the Way" was the second and final Primitives singles to dent the ARIA chart.  The track was the lead single from the band's third studio album - their only one to chart in Australia - Galore (number 156, February 1992).
 
"You Are the Way" found greater, though still only modest, success in the UK, where it reached number 58 in August 1991.
 
Within Australia, "You Are the Way" performed strongest in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 152.

I hadn't heard this one before.



Number 173 "Come on and Dance" by Hi Tek 3 featuring MC Shamrock
Peak: number 173
Peak date: 30 September 1991
Weeks on chart: 4 weeks

Belgian production trio Hi Tek 3 landed a top 5 hit in Australia with "Spin That Wheel" (number 5, July 1990), which featured Ya Kid K - who came to fame with Technotronic - on vocals, and was featured in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie.

"Come on and Dance" was the follow-up release, featuring MC Shamrock on vocals.  The single peaked at number 88 in the UK in December 1990.  I am not sure why the Australian release was delayed for so long.

Domestically, "Come on and Dance" peaked highest in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 130.

I don't recall hearing this one at the time, though the bassline seems vaguely familiar.  It was Hi Tek 3's final charting entry in Australia.



Next week (7 October): Two new top 150 debuts and six bubbling WAY down under entries.

< Previous week: 23 September 1991                              Next week: 7 October 1991 >

04 December 2020

Week commencing 4 December 1989

Now in the final month of 1989, the chart year is drawing to a close, with this week's chart being the third-last one for the year.  Unusually, of the ten songs I write about this week, I only knew two of them at the time - and they are both from the bubbling WAY down under section.  At least one of this week's new entries does not have a music video, and two of the songs I write about were not even on YouTube until creating this post!  Shall we take a look?
 
Olivia Newon-John: The charts weren't the only thing she was on the 'fringe' of in 1989.
 
Top 150 debuts:
 
Number 108 "The Arms of Orion" by Prince with Sheena Easton
Peak: number 108
Peak date: 4 December 1989
Weeks in top 150: 10 weeks
Chart run: 165-108-121-115-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-124-126-118-115-117
Weeks on chart: 11 weeks
 
Prince, under the pseudonym Alexander Nevermind, first collaborated with Sheena Easton through writing the infamous "Sugar Walls" (number 87, June 1985), recorded for her A Private Heaven album (number 88, March 1985).  The pair then recorded a duet, "U Got the Look" (number 90, October 1987) for Prince's Sign "☮︎" the Times album (number 20, May 1987).  While neither of these collaborations had much chart success in Australia, both reached the top 10 of the US Billboard Hot 100.

"The Arms of Orion" was released as the third single from Prince's Batman soundtrack (number 4, July 1989), without an accompanying music video, which probably hindered its chart success.  The single performed stronger on the Australian Music Report singles chart, where it peaked at number 88.  "The Arms of Orion" also peaked at number 36 on the Billboard Hot 100 in December 1989, and number 27 in the UK during the same month.

Within Australia, "The Arms of Orion" performed equally-strongest in New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory and Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 77 on the state charts.  However, despite peaking highest in the two most-populous states, it didn't boost the single into the top 100, as it peaked  peaked eight weeks apart on both state charts.
 
While I saw this single in the shops, I never heard the song until looking it up on YouTube out of curiosity a few years ago.  That is, unless it is featured in the 1989 Batman movie, which I saw at the cinema, but can barely remember anything about (was there actually a plot?).

Sheena will pay us another visit in 1991, and Prince will join us again in 1996.
 
 
 
Number 114 "The Time Warp (PWL Remix)" by Damian
Peak: number 114 
Peak date: 4 December 1989
Weeks in top 150: 7 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 114-125-130-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-116-128
 
The original version of "The Time Warp", by The Rocky Horror Picture Show Original Cast, like the 1975 film that spawned it, had a 'rocky' start, eventually peaking at number 3 in December 1980, spending 15 weeks in the Australian top 10.  Damian, hailing from Manchester in the UK, in a similar fashion, kept re-releasing his version of the track until it became a hit - well, in the UK, anyway.  Originally peaking at number 94 in the UK in September 1986 (after debuting on the chart in March of the same year), it was re-recorded and re-released as "The Time Warp II" - having two separate chart runs between December 1987 and September 1988, peaking at number 51 there in January 1988.  Finally, Damian's version of "The Time Warp" was remixed by Pete Hammond at PWL (home of hit-makers extraordinare Stock Aitken Waterman), and his Midas touch propelled the single to number 7 in the UK, for two weeks in September 1989.  Phew!

In Australia, we got "The Time Warp II", released in November 1988.  The PWL remix of "The Time Warp" was released locally in early November 1989.  Judging by the embedded music video, Damian moonlighted as a clown/stilts walker.   Sadly, he died from cancer in 2017, aged 52.



Number 123 "Our Children's World" by Oz Art for Ozone
Peak: number 123 
Peak date: 4 December 1989
Weeks in top 150: 10 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 123-130-127-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-143-140-134-140-141
 
This track was (obviously) a charity record, by an ensemble of Australian artists - presumably to raise funds for environmental causes.  Artists participating in this project included: Andy McLean (21 Guns), Brian Canham (Pseudo Echo), David Janz (Janz), Grace Knight (Eurogliders), Jim Keays (Masters Apprentices), John Swan (Swanee), Juno Roxas (Roxus), Lisa Edwards, Lisa Schouw (Girl Overboard), Matthew De La Hunty (Tall Tales & True), and Wendy Stapleton (Wendy & The Rocketts).  I have no recollection of hearing this track before, so lack of exposure/promotion might have been a problem.  Like almost all charity records, it kind of... sucks.

Going by the rear sleeve used as an image still for the (audio-only) video below, there was a music video filmed for this one - but no-one has yet uploaded it to YouTube.
 
 
 
Number 133 "Pretending" by Eric Clapton
Peak: number 106 
Peak dates: 18 December 1989 (chart repeated 25 December 1989 and 1 January 1990), 8 January 1990 and 25 January 1990
Weeks in top 150: 11 weeks
Chart run: 133-119-106-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-106-107-110-106-114-133
Weeks on chart: 11 weeks

Up until now, Eric had placed eight singles within the top 100 on the Australian singles chart, with the biggest of those being "I Shot the Sheriff" (number 11, November 1974).  "Pretending" was the lead single from his Journeyman album (number 27, December 1989).  "Pretending" performed better on the Australian Music Report singles chart, where it peaked at number 85.  "Pretending" peaked at number 55 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in December 1989, and at number 96 in Eric's native UK in July 1990.
 
In Australia, "Pretending" was most popular in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 46 on the state chart.  The single peaked within the top 100 on all five state charts, but this was not enough for it to dent the national top 100.
 
Eric will join us again in 1990.
 
 
 
Number 134 "Good Love" by Zan
Peak: number 134 
Peak date: 4 December 1989
Weeks in top 150: 9 weeks 
Chart run: 176-134-140-143-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-142-139-146-139
Weeks on chart: 10 weeks

Zan, real name Suzanne Abeyratne, was co-lead vocalist in the Australian band I'm Talking, who placed five singles in the Australian top 40 between 1985 and 1986, with the biggest of those being "Do You Wanna Be?" (number 8, June 1986).  Of the singles the band released, Zan only sang lead on one of them, "Holy Word", which peaked at number 9 in September 1986.
 
I'm Talking bubbled under on the Kent Music Report's list of singles receiving significant sales reports beyond the top 100 with "How Can It Be", which reached fifth place on the list in November 1986.
 
I'm Talking disbanded in 1987, prompting both of its vocalists - Zan and Kate Ceberano - to launch solo careers.  Zan's debut single, "It's Your Move", peaked at number 82 in April 1989, and this was its follow up.  On the state charts, "Good Love" performed strongest in Western Australia, where it reached number 104.
 
Zan released one further solo single, "Nobody Else", in January 1991, but it failed to chart.

As this song was not previously on YouTube, I've had to resort to uploading the video below, which is just the audio of the 12" mix - the only version I was able to source.



Number 141 "Radar Love" by White Lion
Peak: number 117
Peak date: 8 January 1990
Weeks in top 150: 10 weeks
Chart run: 151-(off chart for 1 week)-141-142-133-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-117-120-139-129-129
Weeks on chart: 11 weeks

A cover version of the Golden Earring classic (number 10, September 1974), "Radar Love" was released as the second single from the Danish/American band's third album, Big Game (number 119, August 1989), and became their third single to bubble under in 1989, after we saw the band debut in May.  White Lion's version of the track peaked at number 59 on the US Billboard Hot 100.

Locally, "Radar Love" performed strongest in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 77.

White Lion will join us one more time, in 1991.
 


Number 142 "Guitar Concierto de Aranjuez" by Tommy Emmanuel
Peak: number 138
Peak date: 18 December 1989 (chart repeated 25 December 1989 and 1 January 1990)
Weeks in top 150: 8 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 142-146-138-(chart repeated for 2 week Xmas break)-139-141-142
 
Guitar maestro Tommy Emmanuel's first foray onto the Australian charts came in 1988, when the album Up from Down Under peaked at number 48 in July 1988.  "Guitar Concierto de Aranjuez" was a version of "Concierto de Aranjuez", composed in 1939 by Spanish composer Joaquin Rodrigo, and lifted from Tommy's Dare to Be Different album (number 13, August 1990).  Tommy will join us again in 1990.

 
 
Bubbling WAY down under:
 
Number 155 "Free Fallin'" by Tom Petty
Peak: number 155 (in 1989); number 59 in 2017
Peak dates: 4 December 1989 (1989 chart run); 9 October 2017 (2017 chart run)
Weeks on chart: 40 weeks (1989 and 2017 chart runs combined)
 
Sometimes, some of an artist's most well-known songs are not their biggest chart hits, and here we have a prime example of that, with Tom Petty's "Free Fallin'".  Despite peaking at number 7 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in January 1990, becoming his biggest hit there, "Free Fallin'" stalled outside the top 150 in Australia in 1989.  Tom's biggest chart hits in Australia had been "I Won't Back Down" (number 16, July 1989), and, with The Heartbreakers, "Refugee" (number 24, May 1980) and their duet with Stevie Nicks, "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around" (number 10, September 1981).
 
"Free Fallin'" was lifted as the third single from Tom's Full Moon Fever album (number 13, June 1989), following "I Won't Back Down" and "Runnin' Down a Dream" (number 68, September 1989).

Following Tom's death in October 2017, "Free Fallin'" re-entered the ARIA singles chart, and peaked at number 59 during the same month.  "Free Fallin'" was Tom's highest-peaking single to re-enter the ARIA chart in the week following his death, placing higher than "I Won't Back Down" at number 78 in the same week.  This would suggest that "Free Fallin'" could now be regarded as being Tom's 'signature' track in Australia, despite its low peak of number 155 in 1989.

Tom will next join us in 1991.

 
Number 165 "London Nights" by London Boys
Peak: number 165
Peak date: 4 December 1989
Weeks on chart: 1 week 

London Boys nudged the lower end of the top 150 back in September, and here they were with the second single lifted from their The Twelve Commandments of Dance album (number 137, August 1989) in Australia.  "London Nights" fared much better in the UK, where it became the duo's highest-charting single, peaking at number 2 in July 1989.  London Boys will visit us again in 1992.
 
 
 
Number 178 "Reach Out for Me" by Olivia Newton-John
Peak: number 153 
Peak date: 15 January 1990
Weeks on chart: 2 weeks

Here's one I hadn't heard before.  As Olivia explains during the spoken intro to the embedded music video, this one was written for her daughter, Chloe, who was almost 4 years old at this point.  Olivia recorded an album of children's songs, Warm and Tender (number 109, February 1990), from which this track is lifted.  "Reach Out for Me"'s two weeks on the chart were non-consecutive, with the single re-entering and reaching its peak in mid-January 1990.  Disregarding the US Billboard Adult Contemporary chart (which I don't consider a 'real' chart), Australia was the only place this single charted.

Olivia will next visit us in 1992.




Next week (11 December): a quieter week, with three new top 150 entries, and one bubbling WAY down under debut.  You can also follow my posts on instagram and facebook.
 
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