Sunday, 7 November 2021

Top 30 in 1991 Reviewed: Week 45

Here's my weekly look at the Top 30 from 30 years ago. The plan is for these posts to go out at 17:30 on a Sunday.

Here is the Top 40 in full.

Obviously some of the records will be the same as last week so therefore the review will be the same for these. I've indicated which ones are new so you can skip the others if you read last weeks post.

Once again my opinions are inevitably going to differ from other people, but I'm not trying to convince anyone something is good or rubbish, I'm simply giving my opinion.

So this is the top 30 from this week in 1991 with my verdict on each record:


The 3rd and final Top 40 hit for Julian Lennon which came 6 years after his previous effort. People give Julian Lennon stick for not being John, but with records like this does it really matter? I loved this record at the time and it still sounds great 30 years later. 

Verdict - Good


The 2nd Top 40 hit for Manic Street Preachers having made number 40 with their debut earlier on in the year. The band themselves have since said they don't like "Love's Sweet Exile" and I'm inclined to agree with them. "Repeat" is definitely the better of the two, but it's just alright.

Verdict - Rubbish / OK


The Charlatans probably have the most Top 40 hits in the 90s which I don't remember. This is one of those and I'm sure I will have forgotten it in the next 5 minutes.

Verdict - Rubbish


Aside from their cover of "Good Times", this was the first Top 40 hit for INXS that wasn't written at all by Michael Hutchence. It was written solely by Andrew Farriss who did wrote most of their hits and therefore it's another solid effort. 

Verdict - Good


After Paul Youngs awful cover of their debut hit "Don't Dream It's Over", Crowded House are back in the Top 40 for the first time in 4 years with their 2nd Top 40 hit. It's the lead single from the "Woodface" album. Crowded House are one of those groups I've got to appreciate more later on in life. Their music was different to anything else at the time and although rave music was more my thing than anything else, this is a breath of fresh air when the beats of rave music get a bit too much.

Verdict - Good


It was around this time that I heard "Baby Love" by The Supremes for the first time. This isn't a cover of that record though, it's a cover of a record by Regina. Needless to say the Supremes record with the same title is far far better.

Verdict - Rubbish


This was the first Top 40 hit on All Around the World records. The label has given us some of the most dreadful dance music over the years. This record does sound more commercial than a lot of other dance records at the time, but I do quite like it.

Verdict - Good


This was the final Top 40 hit for Queen during Freddie Mercury's lifetime. Interestingly Leo Sayer, who's vocals have previously been mistaken for being Freddie Mercury, made his Top 40 debut with a different record called "The Show Must Go On". Furthermore the final week "The Show Must Go On" by Leo Sayer was in the charts, Queen were making their chart debut with "Seven Seas Of Rhye". Anyway what do I think of this record? I like it, one of the better Queen singles in my opinion

Verdict - Good


Many will have probably forgotten this Paul Young cover of the Crowded House record. This came before Crowded House had the bulk of their hits with this being their only Top 40 hit to their name at the time which made just number 25 in 1987. It was the 12th Top 40 hit for Paul Young and his 10th cover, which is just ridiculous in my opinion.

Verdict - Rubbish


This record really irritated me at the time. My view hasn't really changed, it's a truly awful record. It was one that Bryan Adams kept off number one.

Verdict - Rubbish


I've not heard this record in a long time and it's one of those records that's hard to place as being at any particular time. However listening to it did bring back memories of the period it's from. Not my cup of tea though.

Verdict - Rubbish


I've said numerous times that music and football don't mix, but I should really extend that to music and sport don't mix. To add to that, I don't think there is any sport I dislike more than rugby.

Verdict - Rubbish


The only Top 40 hit credited to Justified Ancients of Mu Mu, but they were also having hits in 1991 as KLF. The lyrics are basically a long list of northern towns which does seem like a very KLF thing to do. Like pretty much anything by KLF it's great.

Verdict - Good


The lead single from her album of the same name, Robert Clivilles and David Cole penned this record which is surprisingly uplifting for a Mariah Carey record. That doesn't mean it's any good though. She may have a vocal range few can claim to have, but all that screeching just gets on my nerves.

Verdict - Rubbish


An upbeat record with a dark subject matter and some pretty angry vocals. Get this combination right and you have a great record. That's exactly what this is and definitely my favourite Carter The Unstoppable Sex Machine tune.

Verdict - Good


This is one of those records I'm not sure I remember being in the charts at the time but it's one I've probably known since. Enya's music was always a little too different for my liking and almost seemed like music the sort of music they'd want you to learn at school which was never good. However over the years I've got to appreciate her music a lot more and quite like this record now.

Verdict - Good


There was a happy hardcore version of this in the mid-90s by DNA, Breeze & Munchie which I listened to quite a bit. When I heard this for the first time in years it seemed so slow given I'd got used to the happy hardcore version. That was a long time ago though, nowadays I can take the relative slowness.

Verdict - Good


The debut hit for Moby. I forgot his name pretty much straight away, I remember at the time talking about a record called "Go" without knowing who it was by. A few years later I found out who it was and was also surprised to find out he was American given this fits right in with the rave music British acts were making at the time.

Verdict - Good


A record I didn't realise was an old record charting for the second time at the time. It's Don McLean's best known song but not one of his two UK number ones. I tried to find out why this was given a new lease of life in 1991 but couldn't find anything. I liked this at the time and remember me and a mate singing it at school. My view hasn't really changed.

Verdict - Good


The Top 40 debut for SL2 aka Slipmatt and Lime. At a time before the rave scene split into happy hardcore and jungle, you'd think based on these tunes they would end up going down the jungle route. However, Slipmatt has often been crediting for starting happy hardcore with his SMD series. These are both great tunes and show there's more to SL2 than just "On A Ragga Tip".

Verdict - Good


The biggest hit to date for The Scorpions who had last been in the Top 40 in 1979 with their debut. My memories of this record at the time was that whenever it got played it never seemed to get played till the end and I was always intrigued as to how it ended. 

Verdict - Good


This failed to chart when first released 12 years earlier, but thanks to Simon Mayo and his revival of old novelty records this was re-released. I did quite like it at the time admittedly, but its one of those songs that's supposed to be shit. Therefore a verdict of OK seems appropriate.

Verdict - OK


The debut Top 40 hit for K-Klass. It failed to make the Top 40 when released earlier on in the year, but here it is going straight into the Top 10. It perhaps suffers from it's "anthem" status, but it's a great record that really did sound quite something in the 90s.

Verdict - Good


Despite the fact that Kylie Minogue was still with Stock Aitken & Waterman (who were just Stock & Waterman by this point) it does sound different to her earlier hits. What we have instead is a song that sounds like it should be from a Disney movie

Verdict - Rubbish


My take on Genesis at the time were they were basically Phil Collins with a band. I had no idea about their history. It does seem quite odd in a way that a band who didn't really do singles in the beginning are having Top 10 hits 20 years after their 70s heyday. I do still think their later stuff could just as easily be Phil Collins solo material though and I happen to like Phil Collins as a solo artist.

Verdict - Good


At the time I thought how the fuck did a record like this get into the Top 40. An opera song sung by someone I'd never heard of who wasn't exactly young. Many years later I discovered it was the song for the Rugby World Cup, I never knew there was such a thing until England won it.

Verdict - Rubbish


Summer holidays are on the way, this so reminds me of the summer holidays of 1991 where it was number one the whole time and beyond. Quite remarkable for a 31 year old 80s singer who'd failed to even make the Top 40 with most of his prior singles. I got pretty sick of this at the time like most people, but I actually quite like it.

Verdict - Good


The Top 40 debut for 2 Unlimited, though they had a Top 40 hit the previous year as Bizz Nizz. I did like this at the time, but my memory has been somewhat tainted by the crap they released after this. I also remember hearing it a few years later for the first time in a while and it sounded much slower than I remembered. 

Verdict - OK


Despite the fact this topped the charts a knocked the longest running number one off the top, this may struggle to even get into the Top 10 when it comes to best known U2 songs. The fact it was a limited edition probably helped it to top the charts but also made it a blink and you miss it sort of song. The fact you don't hear it much these days though means it still sounds good.

Verdict - Good


It amazes me how many people I've met who don't remember The Wonder Stuff, particularly given they had a number one with this. They did alienate some of their fans by collaborating with Vic Reeves, but I do wonder if they'd think the same had Vic Reeves not been a famous comedian. To me there is absolutely nothing wrong with this song, I've always liked it.

Verdict - Good

If we give the records which were good 1 point each and those which were OK half a point, the final score is 19.5/30, or 65%. A decent score, but I wonder if the score goes down as we get towards the end of the year like it did with 1990 and 1999. We'll soon find out.

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