Showing posts with label Yello. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yello. Show all posts

22 July 2022

Week commencing 22 July 1991

Among this week in 1991's new ARIA singles chart entries below number 100, we have three acts who would never land a top 100 hit in Australia, and two who would never trouble the top 100 again.  Shall we take a look?
 
Lonnie Gordon: serving looks but not hits.
 
Top 150 debuts:
 
Number 136 "Out of My Head" by Degenerates
Peak: number 126
Peak date: 29 July 1991
Weeks in top 150: 4 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 136-126-133-136
 
Degenerates were an Australian band for whom I can gather little information about.  I can tell you, however, that the three-piece group consisted of Jamie Durrant on vocals/guitar, David Klenjans on drums, and Julien Chick on bass.  The trio only released one album Play Dinosaur, in June 1992, on which this track does not appear.
 
An interesting thing I discovered while researching this band is that a version of "Out of My Head" originally appeared as the second track on an EP titled Out of My Head released by the band The Xentrix (I assume that is pronounced 'eccentrics') in 1987.  However, none of the 1991 line-up of Degenerates was in that band.  At that point in time, the track's writing credits were given to P. Watts/D. Gillard, who were both in The Xentrix.

Robert Mackay, who was also in The Xentrix, went on to form a band called Degens with Jamie and David from Degenerates.  They released another version of "Out of My Head" in November 1989, which missed the ARIA top 150.

Robert was not in Degenerates, but nonetheless another version of the song was recorded and released, this time with writing credits going to Watts/Gillard/Durrant.  I guess it was third time lucky for the song becoming a (very minor) 'hit' of sorts.
 
We will see Degenerates again in 1992, but before then, they released another single, "Crazy World", in November 1991, which missed the top 150.
 

 
Number 133 "Pop Goes the Weasel" by 3rd Bass
Peak: number 122
Peak date: 29 July 1991
Weeks in top 150: 5 weeks
Top 150 chart run: 133-122-142-(out for 2 weeks)-134-(out for 1 week)-141
 
"Pop Goes the Weasel" was the lead single from American hip-hop trio 3rd Bass' second album Derelicts of Dialect (number 118, August 1991).  The group formed in Queens, New York in 1987, disbanding in 1992.  "Pop Goes the Weasel" was the only 3rd Bass release to register on the ARIA top 150 singles chart.
 
Internationally, "Pop Goes the Weasel" peaked at number 64 in the UK in June 1991, number 29 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in August 1991, and number 17 in New Zealand in September 1991. 

"Pop Goes the Weasel" performed better on the Australian Music Report singles chart, where it reached number 88.
 
The track prominently samples Peter Gabriel's "Sledgehammer" (number 3, June 1986), and lyrically takes aim at the increasing commercialisation of rap music in the early 1990s, with artists such as MC Hammer and Vanilla Ice crossing over into the mainstream.  Henry Rollins portrays Vanilla Ice, lecturing the class, in the music video embedded below.
 

 
Number 145 "Gonna Catch You" by Lonnie Gordon
Peak: number 145
Peak date: 22 July 1991
Weeks in top 150: 2 weeks
Known chart run: 167-145-(out of top 150 for 1 week)-148
Weeks on chart: 4 weeks
 
We last saw American singer Lonnie Gordon in February 1991.  Since then, Lonnie had parted ways with Stock Aitken Waterman, and had teamed up with the team behind Black Box, whose Dreamland album belatedly topped the ARIA albums chart in March 1991, ten months after its release.  Lonnie had also undergone quite a radical makeover, ditching her crimped long dark locks for a short bleached hairstyle more reminiscent of Yazz.  Lonnie has maintained this look ever since, and has commented herself that she looks "like a drag queen" when asked about her popularity with gay audiences.

Overseas, "Gonna Catch You" peaked at number 32 in the UK in May 1991, number 27 in the Netherlands in August 1991, number 37 in France in September 1991, and number 79 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in September 1991.
 
Within Australia, "Gonna Catch You" was most popular in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 115 on the state chart.
 
Lonnie's pairing with Black Box really was a match made in heaven, with Lonnie providing actual diva vocals, and, combined with her palatable image, there was no need to hire French models to lip sync.  Why "Gonna Catch You" was not a huge commercial success, I do not know.  A lack of promotion was one factor for the single failing to take off in Australia - I only knew of its release when seeing the cassingle in the shops.  I finally heard part of the song when it was used as background music on the Sophie Lee-hosted What's Up Doc? when leading to a commercial break.  I recognised the voice and then it clicked that it was Lonnie's new single.

"Gonna Catch You" also appeared on the soundtrack for Vanilla Ice's flop movie Cool As Ice.
 
"Gonna Catch You" eventually appeared on Lonnie's second - and final to date - studio album Bad Mood, which was released in 1993, but does not appear to have been issued locally.  Bad Mood also contained a new remix of Lonnie's 1990 hit "Happenin' All Over Again" (number 33, August 1990), for which a new video was filmed to promote the single's 1993 release in North America.  Comparing both videos, you would not think it was the same person singing, as Lonnie looks so different in both of them.
 
Lonnie will visit us again in 1996, but before then, she appears as an uncredited featured artist in 1993.
 

 
Number 150 "Come Alive" by Orchestra JB
Peak: number 150
Peak date: 22 July 1991
Weeks in top 150: 1 week
Top 150 chart run: 150
 
One reason I write these chart recaps is that it forces me to listen to music that I would otherwise not hear, which occasionally leads to me discovering some gems.  This is one of them - or so I think.

Orchestra JB was an alias of British DJ and musician Jimmy Brown.  For this track, Lydia Steinman provides vocals - though I am not sure if she both sings the chorus and performs the spoken verses, as they sound like different voices to me.

Internationally, "Come Alive" peaked at number 296 (number 178 on the compressed chart) in the UK in September 1992.
 
I had never heard of this song until getting hold of these charts.  It is one of my favourite discoveries from the 101-150 section of the ARIA chart.

"Come Alive" is lifted from the only Orchestra JB album Tambourine Fever.

 
 
Bubbling WAY down under:
 
Number 186 "Rubberbandman" by Yello
Peak: number 156
Peak date: 12 August 1991
Weeks on chart: 5 weeks

We last saw Swiss duo Yello in July 1989.  "Rubberbandman" was the lead single from the pair's seventh studio album Baby (number 73, August 1991).
 
Internationally, "Rubberbandman" peaked at number 58 in the UK in June 1991, number 9 in Switzerland in July 1991, and number 29 in Germany in 1991.
 
Domestically, "Rubberbandman" performed strongest on the Western Australia state chart, where it reached number 135.
 
Coincidentally, Yello's 1980 debut album Solid Pleasure, which did not chart anywhere else, spent a solitary week on the ARIA albums chart at number 146 this week in 1991, with Baby debuting at number 134 above it.

I first heard "Rubberbandman" in the early 2010s when it popped up on a UK monthly promo VHS compilation I was digitising, The Video Pool.  I actually laughed when I first heard the track/saw the video, due to the way Yello singer (if he can be called that) Dieter Meier said the lyrics, "Do I know why I'm in love with you?", with characteristic weird vocal effects; but I like the song.

Yello would not grace the ARIA singles chart again until the end of 1995.  In the interim, they had another two charting albums in Australia: the compilation Essential (number 148, December 1992), and their eighth studio album Zebra (number 197, January 1995), which spawned no charting singles here.

 
 
Next week (29 July): Five top 150 debuts plus one bubbling WAY down under entry.

< Previous week: 15 July 1991                                       Next week: 29 July 1991 >

17 July 2020

Week commencing 17 July 1989

Excluding the original release of one of this week's new entries, 5 of the 6 debuts (not counting the Bubbling WAY down under entry - though that too would qualify) charted no higher than number 61 anywhere in the world.  Furthermore, four of the tracks I write about this week didn't chart anywhere else - on a real chart, I mean.  Yay for Australia giving these flops a go!  Let's take a look at this week's entries:

Yello: Of course I'd be lying if I said I didn't want to wear a bear suit in a music video.

Top 150 debuts:

Number 133 "Shakin' the Tree" by Youssou N'Dour & Peter Gabriel 
Peak: number 131
Peak date: 14 August 1989
Weeks in top 150: 7 weeks 
Chart run: 133-132-142-142-131-135-141
Weeks on chart: 7 weeks

Five years before his breakthrough duet hit with Neneh Cherry, Senegalese singer Youssou N'Dour made his Australian singles chart debut with another duet; this time with Peter Gabriel, who we last saw on the chart in 1987.  "Shakin' the Tree" was lifted from N'Dour's album The Lion.  It would also become the title of Gabriel's 'greatest hits' collection released the following year (albeit as Shaking the Tree) - although the title track wasn't exactly a chart 'hit' anywhere, with number 61 in the UK being its highest chart placing anywhere that I am aware of.  Youssou N'Dour will join us again in 1994.  Peter Gabriel will next join us in 1991.


Number 136 "Planet Texas" by Kenny Rogers
Peak: number 129
Peak date: 7 August 1989
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks
Chart run: 166-(off chart for 2 weeks)-136-140-137-129-140-146
Weeks on chart: 7 weeks

The recently-departed Kenny Rogers was last on the Australian singles chart in 1985 with "Real Love", a duet with Dolly Parton.  "Planet Texas" was the lead single from his album Something Inside So Strong, which peaked at number 133 on the ARIA albums chart in June 1989.  Interestingly, this single did not chart anywhere else (I do not count the US and Canadian Country charts as real charts). We will see Kenny again in 1990.


Number 144 "Crescendo" by Tim Finn
Peak: number 120
Peak date: 24 July 1989
Weeks in top 150: 8 weeks 
Chart run: 144-120-127-124-127-134-138-144
Weeks on chart: 8 weeks

Tim had scored four solo top 40 singles in Australia; the largest of those being 1983's "Fraction Too Much Friction", which peaked at number 8.  The second single from Tim's self-titled album, "Crescendo" followed up his number 27-peaking "How'm I Gonna Sleep" from earlier in the year.  "Crescendo" did not chart anywhere else, and Tim would never again score another solo top 40 hit in Australia.  Tim will join us again in 1990.


Number 148 "Of Course I'm Lying" by Yello
Peak: number 123
Peak date: 14 August 1989
Weeks in top 150: 12 weeks 
Chart run: 158-(off chart for 1 week)-148-(off chart for 1 week)-148-147-123-132-134-133-138-138-130-142-140
Weeks on chart: 13 weeks

Swiss duo Dieter Meier and Boris Blank formed Yello in 1979.  The pair landed their first 'hit' on the Australian chart in 1985, when "Vicious Games" reached number 51 in September of that year.  "Oh Yeah", Yello's biggest hit by far in Australia, peaked at number 9 in September 1988.

"The Race", the first single lifted from Yello's sixth studio album Flag (number 94, February 1989), spent three consecutive weeks at its peak of number 56 in September 1988.  The album's second single, "Tied Up", was issued in Australia in March 1989, but failed to chart.
 
"Of Course I'm Lying", the third single from Flag, is a song about how much you love when your partner lies to you... and is just the kind of thing only Yello would think of doing.
 
"Of Course I'm Lying" fared much better in the UK, where it peaked 100 places higher, at number 23.  The single also performed stronger on the Australian Music Report chart, where it peaked at number 86.
 
On the ARIA state charts, "Of Course I'm Lying" performed strongest in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 61.   The single did not make the top 100 on any of the four other ARIA state charts.
 
Despite its low peak in Australia, "Of Course I'm Lying" had one of the longer chart runs for a single peaking outside the top 100, spending 12 weeks within the top 150.  Yello are still going, and released a new single just recently.
 
We will see Yello next in 1991.


Number 149 "Roadhouse Blues" by The Jeff Healey Band
Peak: number 146
Peak date: 24 July 1989
Weeks in top 150: 2 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 149-146

Lifted from the movie Road House, starring Patrick Swayze, "Roadhouse Blues" followed up The Jeff Healey Band's top 150 'hit' "Angel Eyes" from a mere month ago.   This is another one that doesn't seem to have charted anywhere else, other than on Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks chart (which I don't consider a real chart).  "Roadhouse Blues" had greater success on the Australian Music Report chart, where it peaked at number 97.  We will see another song from the movie bubble down under in just over a month.  The Jeff Healey Band will join us for a third time in October 1990.


Number 150 "Rock On” (Shep Pettibone Remix)" by David Essex
Peak: number 150
Peak dates: 17 July 1989 and 31 July 1989
Weeks in top 150: 2 weeks 
Top 150 chart run: 150-(out for 1 week)-150

Later in July 1989, Michael Damian's cover version of this David Essex track from 1973 reached number 55 on the ARIA singles chart.  Here we have the original, with a remixed version by Shep Pettibone, to update it for the late 1980s.  David's original version of "Rock On" peaked at number 8 on the Kent Music Report chart.  This remixed version of "Rock On" also charted in the UK, where it peaked at number 93 in March 1989.  David Essex was last on the Australian singles chart in 1987 with "Mywanwy" (number 40, September 1987).



Bubbling WAY down under:

Number 158 "(He's Got) The Look" by Vanessa Williams
Peak: number 158
Peak date: 17 July 1989
Weeks on chart: 1 week

We saw Vanessa Williams back in April, with her first Australian chart 'hit' "Dreamin'", and here she was with the follow-up... locally, anyway.  "(He's Got) The Look" was actually released before "Dreamin'" in the US, where it reached number 10 on the R&B chart (again, not a real chart in my book) in October 1988, and seems to have not charted anywhere else.  We will see Vanessa next in 1991.



Next week (24 July): Among the seven new top 150-peaking entries next week, we have not one, but two singles that peak at number 101, and one that peaked at number 102!  There is also one bubbling WAY down under debut.  You can also follow my posts on facebook.

< Previous week: 10 July 1989                                                  Next week: 24 July 1989 >