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Bubbling Down Under: Jude Cole
Showing posts with label Jude Cole. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jude Cole. Show all posts

24 September 2021

Week commencing 24 September 1990

Of this week in 1990's seven new top 150 entries, only one is from an artist we have seen previously.  Let's take a look.

Julee Cruise: floppin' back outside the chart
 
Top 150 debuts:
 
Number 129 "Rockin' Back Inside My Heart" by Julee Cruise
Peak: number 107
Peak date: 15 October 1990
Weeks in top 150: 9 weeks (7 weeks 1990 chart-run; 2 weeks May 1991 re-entry)

American singer Julee Cruise is best known for her musical contributions to the television series Twin Peaks.  Her 1989 debut album Floating into the Night (number 21, April 1991) consisted of tracks that were recorded for various David Lynch projects, including the 1986 film Blue Velvet, the 1990 stage play Industrial Symphony No. 1: The Dream of the Broken Hearted, and Twin Peaks.  "Rockin' Back Inside My Heart" was used for the latter two.

"Falling" (number 1, April 1991), another track from Floating into the Night, was used as the theme song for Twin Peaks, and gave Julee a major international hit, reaching the top 20 across Europe, and topping the Australian singles chart for one week in April 1991.

"Rockin' Back Inside My Heart" did not bring Julee the same level of success, registering its only significant chart peak in Ireland, where it reached number 18 in February 1991.  In the UK, "Rockin' Back Inside My Heart" peaked at number 66 in March 1991.

In Australia, "Rockin' Back Inside My Heart" peaked just outside the top 100.  I suspect the single may have performed better had it been released after Twin Peaks commenced airing in Australia, on 18 February 1991.  On the Australian Music Report singles chart, "Rockin' Back Inside My Heart" peaked slightly higher, at number 94.

Following the success of "Falling", "Rockin' Back Inside My Heart" re-entered the top 150 for two non-consecutive weeks in May 1991, reaching number 139.

Julee would eventually land another minor 'hit' on the Australian chart, when she paired up with B(if)tek on a cover version of Cliff Richard's "Wired for Sound", which reached number 82 in May 2000.



Number 138 "Time for Letting Go" by Jude Cole
Peak: number 118
Peak date: 12 November 1990
Weeks in top 150: 11 weeks
Weeks on chart: 12 weeks

Jude bubbled under in May 1990, and here he is with the second single from his A View from 3rd Street (number 114, July 1990) album.

Like Jude's last single, this one seems vaguely familiar to me, though I didn't think I would know it.  Chalk it up to being the kind of music Australian FM radio stations of the time loved.  Presumably this received airplay - not that it helped its commercial success.

"Time for Letting Go" was a bigger hit in Jude's homeland, reaching number 32 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in October 1990.  The single also performed stronger on the Australian Music Report chart, where it reached number 93.

On the ARIA state charts, "Time for Letting Go" was much more popular in South Australia/Northern Territory than elsewhere, where it peaked at number 51.  Its next-highest state chart peak was number 92 in Queensland.

We won't see Jude again, but he landed a number 59 'hit' with "Start the Car" in November 1992, which was similarly much bigger in South Australia/Northern Territory than elsewhere (number 18 in South Australia/Northern Territory vs. its next-highest state chart peak of number 49 in Victoria/Tasmania and Queensland).


 
Number 139 "The History of Western Civilisation" by TISM
Peak: number 117
Peak date: 19 November 1990
Weeks in top 150: 10 weeks
Weeks on chart: 10 weeks
 
TISM, an acronym of This Is Serious Mum, were a Melbourne band for whom the identity of its members - thanks to their penchant for wearing balaclavas - was essentially unknown.
 
"The History of Western Civilisation" was the band's first single to register on the Australian top 150.  The song humourously deals with the perceived undesirability of coming from the western suburbs of (presumably) Melbourne - but it could equally be applied to Sydney.  "The History of Western Civilisation" is lifted from the band's second album Hot Dogma (number 86, October 1990).  While I can appreciate the wit of this track's lyrics, musically, this is not my favourite TISM song.
 
"The History of Western Civilisation" was most popular in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 87.

TISM will join us again in 1993, and would have to wait until 1995 to land their first ARIA top 100 single.



Number 143 "Beyond Your Wildest Dreams" by Lonnie Gordon
Peak: number 104
Peak date: 22 October 1990
Weeks in top 150: 7 weeks
Weeks on chart: 8 weeks

American diva Lonnie Gordon emigrated to London in 1985.  In the ensuing years, she released a few underground dance records, providing guest vocals on Quartz Lock's "Love Eviction" in 1988, and Simon Harris' "(I've Got Your) Pleasure Control" - the latter reached number 60 in the UK in July 1989.  Lonnie also released "It's Not Over (Let No Man Put Asunder)", which peaked at number 91 in the UK in September 1989, under her own name.

"It's Not Over..." led to Lonnie performing the song on Pete Waterman's The Hitman and Her TV show.  Coincidentally, Lonnie had been wanting to work with Stock Aitken Waterman since shortly after arriving in the UK.  This wish became reality when SAW offered a song to her, "Happenin' All Over Again", which reached number 4 in the UK in February 1990, number 3 in Ireland, and went top 40 across Europe.

Lonnie's first solo release in Australia, "Happenin' All Over Again", took four months to climb to its eventual peak of number 33 in August 1990.  The single spent 20 weeks in the top 100, which is nothing to be sneezed at, despite its moderate peak.

In the UK, there was a six month gap between "Happenin'..." and Lonnie's follow-up SAW-produced single "Beyond Your Wildest Dreams".  In the interim, SAW's Midas touch on the UK chart was fading significantly, with only Kylie and Jason achieving consistent top 10 success for the production trio - and even then, they were no longer scoring number ones.
 
Smash Hits magazine even published an article titled 'Are Stock Aitken Waterman Down the Dumper?!' in December 1990, in which Pete Waterman opines than "Beyond Your Wildest Dreams" flopped (it peaked at number 48 in the UK in August 1990) because "ballads just don't do well that time of year."  Er, right...

"Beyond Your Wildest Dreams" sounds perhaps a little too sophisticated and 'mature' for the tastes of the audience SAW were usually courting, which is probably largely why it bombed.  But the trio were definitely no longer perceived as being 'cool' by 1990, and it didn't help that nearly every single they released in 1989 made the top 10 in the UK.  The only way for them was down.

"How Could He Do This to Me", a much more-upbeat song Lonnie recorded with SAW but remained unreleased until 2009, was apparently scheduled for a single release before it was scrapped in favour of "Beyond Your Wildest Dreams".

"It's Not Over...", "Happenin' All Over Again" and "Beyond Your Wildest Dreams" all eventually appeared on Lonnie's If I Have to Stand Alone (number 173, April 1991) album, which had a limited release in Europe, Australasia, and Japan.  The album, oddly, was not released in the UK until a remastered, expanded edition was released in 2009.  The If I Have to Stand Alone album did not chart anywhere else but in Australia.

On the ARIA state charts, "Beyond Your Wildest Dreams" performed strongest in Victoria/Tasmania, where it reached number 76.  The single narrowly missed the top 100 nationally, despite registering within the top 100 on three of the five state charts.

Lonnie would never score a second top 100 hit in Australia, but we shall see her bubble under again on several occasions in the coming years, with the next one being in February 1991.



Number 146 "Wanna Be the Man" by Earth, Wind & Fire featuring M.C. Hammer
Peak: number 146
Peak date: 24 September 1990
Weeks in top 150: 1 week

American band Earth, Wind & Fire scored six top 100 singles on the Australian chart between 1975 and 1982, with three of those reaching the top 20.  Their biggest hit in Australia, "Boogie Wonderland", peaked at number 5 in July 1979.  Their last chart entry locally was "Let's Groove" (number 15, March 1982).

"Wanna Be the Man" is lifted from the band's fifteenth studio album Heritage, which was released in Australia in March 1990, but missed the top 150.  The album's title track was issued locally during the same month, and also missed the top 150.
 
For "Wanna Be the Man", Earth, Wind & Fire teamed up with rapper M.C. Hammer, who had recently scored a major hit with "U Can't Touch This" (number 1, July 1990).  Not that it helped them re-gain chart success - the single reached number 46 on the US R&B chart (not a 'real' chart in my book) and did not chart anywhere else.  Oops.
 
Earth, Wind & Fire did manage to score one further minor 'hit' in Australia, with "September '99" (number 94, September 1999).   Other acts who covered or sampled Earth, Wind & Fire's songs had more success than the band on the Australian charts during the 1990s, including Black Box's "Fantasy" (number 3, February 1991), CDB's "Let's Groove" (number 2, November 1995), Past to Present's "September" (number 42, October 1996), and Stretch & Vern present Maddog's "I'm Alive" (number 65, May 1997) - which samples "Boogie Wonderland".

We shall see M.C. Hammer again in 1991.



Number 147 "Never Get Enough" by Antoinette
Peak: number 147
Peak date: 24 September 1990
Weeks in top 150: 1 week

Antoinette Lovell Patterson, known as just Antoinette, hailed from The Bronx, New York.  "Never Get Enough" was the lead single from the then 20-year-old rapper's second album Burnin' at 20 Below, although this single was her first - and only - Australian release.

Antoinette's first appearance on record came in 1987, when she contributed a track to a compilation released by Hurby Azor, who wrote and produced Salt 'N' Pepa's hits from this era.  Spinderella from Salt 'N' Pepa appears on "Never Get Enough", and in the music video.  Pepa raps on the track, too, but does not appear in the video.
 
Antoinette does not appear to have achieved notable commercial success on any chart, with her only chart entries being on the subsidiary (and not 'real' charts, in my opinion) Billboard charts - namely the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and Hot Rap Songs charts.  The ARIA singles chart could be the only sales-based chart Antoinette registered on, with this release!



Number 149 "Dangerous Sex" by Tackhead
Peak: number 149
Peak date: 24 September 1990
Weeks in top 150: 1 week

The Wikipedia page for Tackhead describes them as an "industrial hip-hop" group, and I am just going to leave it at that.  Although the group's origins are in New York, English 'singer' (I put that in inverted commas, as he doesn't really 'sing'... or rap, for that matter) Gary Clail, who scored a minor hit in Australia with "Human Nature" (number 38, August 1991), "would shout and rant over Tackhead's live playing" (thanks, Wikipedia).  Gary can indeed be heard doing that a couple of times over the top of this track.  Gary features more-prominently on Tackhead's "Reality" from 1988.

From what little I've heard of Tackhead's music, it does not sound like the sort of thing that typically charts.  I'm guessing this track must have received airplay on Triple J and similar 'youth'/non-commercial radio stations.  Interestingly, the only other place Tackhead charted was in New Zealand, when "The Game (You'll Never Walk Alone)" reached number 34 in June 1989.

Tackhead will not make another appearance in the top 150, but we shall see Gary Clail in 1991.

Next week (1 October): Six new top 150 debuts, plus two bubbling WAY down under entries.

< Previous week: 17 September 1990                                Next week: 1 October 1990 >

14 May 2021

Week commencing 14 May 1990

This week's new entries are an odd bunch.  Among them we have a band and a solo artist who started out in the 1970s but have only recently scored their first chart hits in Australia, three acts who would only score one top 150 'hit', one act who would only score one top 150 'hit' and one bubbling WAY down under 'hit', and a veteran artist who scored her biggest hits in her mid 40s.  Shall we take a look?

Tina Turner: look me in the charts!
 
Top 150 debuts:
 
Number 139 "Wonderful Life" by The Celibate Rifles
Peak: number 138
Peak date: 4 June 1990
Weeks in top 150: 6 weeks
 
"Wonderful Life" was the third top 150-peaking 'hit' from Australian band The Celibate Rifles' Blind Ear album (number 85, July 1989), following "Johnny" in March 1989, and "O Salvation" in June 1989.  This single took its time to register in the top 150, having been released in late March 1990, as a double 7".  "Wonderful Life" was also issued on cassingle, but as this format is not currently listed on discogs, I cannot confirm that it too was a double release.

The Celibate Rifles, who never scored a top 100 ARIA singles chart entry, will next grace our presence at the end of 1991.
 

 
Number 142 "Nick of Time" by Bonnie Raitt
Peak: number 142
Peak date: 14 May 1990
Weeks in top 150: 1 week
Weeks on chart: 3 weeks
 
American blues singer/songwriter and guitarist Bonnie Raitt released her first album in 1971, but landed her first album on the Australian chart when Nick of Time (number 58, April 1990) crept into the ARIA top 150 albums chart in September 1989.  Eight months later, the title track - released locally in February 1990 - would belatedly scrape into the top 150 singles chart for a solitary week.
 
Nick of Time was Bonnie's tenth studio album, and was her major commercial breakthrough in the US, where it topped the Billboard 200 albums chart in April 1990, and was certified 5 times platinum.
 
"Nick of Time" was the second single from the album issued locally, released in early February 1990.  The single debuted at number 161 on 12 March 1990, but took until now to crack the top 150.  We also saw Bonnie bubble WAY down under with the album's first single in September 1989.
 
As with the album, "Nick of Time" performed stronger in the US, peaking at number 92 there in May 1990.  The single also peaked at number 67 in the Netherlands in June 1989, number 82 in the UK in April 1990, and number 73 in Germany in June 1990.
 
On the ARIA state charts, "Nick of Time" peaked highest in Western Australia, where it reached number 103.

Bonnie would eventually break into the ARIA top 100 singles chart when "Something to Talk About" peaked at number 57 in November 1991.  But before then, Bonnie will join us again next week, with another track from the Nick of Time album!



Number 143 "Baby, It's Tonight" by Jude Cole
Peak: number 106
Peak date: 25 June 1990
Weeks in top 150: 13 weeks 
Weeks on chart: 13 weeks
 
American Jude Cole released his debut album Jude Cole in 1987.  "Baby, It's Tonight" was the lead single from his second album, A View from 3rd Street (number 114, July 1990).

I wasn't expecting to know this song, but it sounds familiar to me.  Presumably, it received some airplay in Melbourne.  Alternatively, I may have heard it on the American Top 40 radio program, as the single peaked at number 16 there in June 1990.
 
On the state charts, "Baby, It's Tonight" performed strongest in South Australia/Northern Territory, where it reached number 46.  The single also fared better on the Australian Music Report singles chart, where it reached number 79.  Jude would break into the ARIA top 100 singles chart in 1992 with "Start the Car" (number 59, November 1992) - his only single to do so.  Before then, Jude will bubble under again in September 1990.
 

 
Number 145 "Drag My Bad Name Down" by The 4 of Us
Peak: number 121
Peak date: 28 May 1990
Weeks in top 150: 8 weeks
 
The 4 of Us hail from Northern Ireland.  "Drag My Bad Name Down", which peaked at number 79 in the UK in March 1990 and number 6 in Ireland, was their sole ARIA top 150 entry.  This one is another that I must have heard at the time, despite not recognising the artist name or song title, as it sounded familiar to me when I picked up a VHS compilation it was on around 2012.



Number 146 "Going Back to My Roots" by FPI Project featuring Sharon Dee Clarke
Peak: number 143
Peak date: 11 June 1990
Weeks in top 150: 3 weeks
 
Despite seeing this title listed in the UK chart in imported pop magazine Number One at the time, I don't think I've actually heard this track before.  Instantly recognisable is the James Brown "woo! yeah!' sample that was ubiquitous on dance tracks around this time.
 
This track was released as "Rich in Paradise" or "Going Back to My Roots "Rich in Paradise"" in most European countries, but the title was pared back to just "Going Back to My Roots" on the Australian pressing.  To add to the confusion, there were two versions of the track released - one with vocals by Sharon Dee Clarke, as embedded below, and one which was more instrumental in nature, with vocals by Paolo Dini (I assume the latter was the "Rich in Paradise" version).
 
Sharon Dee Clarke would later go on to sing for Nomad, whose biggest hit was "(I Wanna Give You) Devotion" (number 37, August 1991), and whom we will see bubble under next year.
 
"Going Back to My Roots" was originally recorded by Lamont Dozier in 1977.  This version of the track peaked at number 9 in the UK in January 1990, and also reached the top 10 in Germany, Switzerland and Austria.
 


Number 147 "Gotta Lambada" by Absolute
Peak: number 147
Peak date: 14 May 1990
Weeks in top 150: 1 week
 
The risqué lambada dance, originating in Brazil, was a brief 'craze' in Australia and elsewhere at the end of the 1980s/early 1990, thanks to Kaoma's "Lambada" (number 5, April 1990), which showcased the dance in the music video.
 
To cash in on the fad, two movies about the lambada - Lambada: Set the Night on Fire and The Forbidden Dance - were filmed.  "Gotta Lambada" was recorded for the former.  However, unlike the Kaoma track, "Gotta Lambada" sounds more like a generic early 90s US r&b pop track than something originating from Brazil.
 
We will see another lambada-related track bubble under next week.



Number 149 "Look Me in the Heart" by Tina Turner
Peak: number 111
Peak date: 4 June 1990
Weeks in top 150: 8 weeks
Weeks on chart: 9 weeks
 
Up until this point, Tina Turner, real name Anna May Bullock, placed 15 solo singles on the Australian top 100 chart, including two duets (not with Ike), and two number ones.
 
"Look Me in the Heart" was issued as the fourth and final single in Australia from Tina's Foreign Affair album (number 15, October 1989), following "The Best" (number 4, October 1989), "Steamy Windows" (number 34, January 1990), and "I Don't Wanna Lose You" (number 59, February 1990).

Tina previously had two solo singles released locally that missed the top 100: "Show Some Respect" (February 1985), which reached first place on the Kent Music Report 'singles receiving significant sales reports beyond the top 100' list in March 1985, and "Two People" (November 1986).

"Look Me in the Heart" fared better in France, where it reached number 44 in March 1990, and in the UK, where it peaked at number 31 in August 1990.
 
On the ARIA state charts, "Look Me in the Heart" performed strongest in Queensland, where it reached number 88.  Despite missing the top 100 nationally, "Look Me in the Heart" peaked within the top 100 on four of the five state charts, with  New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory being the only exception.

Tina will next visit us in late 1991 - an unusual pattern that seems to be emerging this week.



Bubbling WAY down under:

Number 151 "Love Don't Come Easy" by The Alarm
Peak: number 151
Peak date: 14 May 1990
Weeks on chart: 1 week
 
Welsh band The Alarm bubbled under in October 1989, and here they are with their second - and final - appearance on the Australian singles chart, with another track from their Change album (number 155, December 1989).

"Love Don't Come Easy" performed better in the UK, peaking at number 48 there in February 1990.



Next week (21 May): A bumper week with ten new top 150 entries and three bubbling WAY down under debuts, including one from the artist who released the first album I ever bought.

< Previous week: 7 May 1990                                               Next week: 21 May 1990 >