Jason Maloney reviews
V o l u m e # 3 4 Chart Date: 22nd September 1979 Online Date: 24th September 2004
of Gary Numan
The outgoing #1, We Don’t Talk Anymore by Cliff Richard, swapped places with Cars after a month at the top. It was Cliff’s first UK #1 since 1968, and ended the decade on a high note after the least successful period of his career. The single’s success also meant he had reached #1 in the 1950s, 1960s and now 1970s. Subsequently, that sequence would be extended to include the 1980s (Mistletoe & Wine), 1990s (Saviours Day) and, remarkably, even the 21st Century’s first decade (courtesy of The Millenium Prayer).
The Bellamy Brothers
The records at #4 and #5 were also on the up; The Bellamy Brothers’ If I Said You Had A Beautiful Body Would You Hold It Against Me climbed 3 places from #7, while Love’s Gotta Hold On Me by Dollar rose from #9. The Crusaders’ Street Life, which introduced the vocal talents of Randy Crawford to the public, slipped from #5 to #6 and B.A. Robertson‘s former #2 smash Bang Bang was falling from #3 to #7. Highest of 7 new entries to the chart was Message In A Bottle by The Police at #8. The following week it would topple Cars from the #1 spot. Their next two official releases (not including the mutil-single Six Pack which hit #17) would also reach the very top.
Knocking on the door of the Top 20 were Secret Affair (up 6 to #21 with Time For Action) and Racey, whose Boy Oh Boy (peaking at #22) proved a far less popular single than its predecessor, the #2 hit Some Girls. Two bands widely acknowledged as among the finest British singles acts of the past 30 years were also moving up towards the upper half of the chart; the debut Madness single The Prince had debuted at #37 the previous week and now soared 14 places to #23, while Slap & Tickle by Squeeze moved up 7 places from its entry position of #32 but despite following a brace of seminal #2 singles in the shape of Cool For Cats and Up The Junction it eventually went no higher than #24.
A pair of non-movers at #28 and #30 for the UK Subs (Tomorrow’s Girls) and Gerry Rafferty (Get It Right Next Time) bookended the second-highest entrant of the week, Michael Jackson‘s Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough at #29. The single went on to hit #3 and effectively kickstarted his sensational run of success through the 1980s and 1990s. Other newcomers to the chart included The Jags’ Back Of My Hand at #34, Status Quo‘s future Top 5 smash Whatever You Want at #35 and one of Donna Summer‘s less popular releases Dim All The Lights at #38.
Page Content copyright © Jason Maloney, 2004.
Reviewer of movies, videogames and music since 1994. Aortic valve operation survivor from the same year. Running DVDfever.co.uk since 2000. Nobel Peace Prize winner 2021.