Wednesday, 13 September 2023

Top 30 in 1995 Reviewed: Week 37

Here's my weekly look at the Top 30 from 28 years ago. The plan is for these posts to go out at 17:30 on a Wednesday.

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 1995 with my verdict on each record:


The 5th and final Top 40 hit to date for Shara Nelson. This time its writers include Ashley Beedle from X-Press 2. Her solo hits haven't been great generally speaking but this one is a big improvement. Unusual for your best hit to be your last one.

Verdict - Good


The 3rd Top 40 hit for The Nightcrawlers and by this point you more or less knew what you were getting from them. I'm pretty sure I'd heard this long before it entered the charts, I recall it doing the rounds early on in the summer. It's a decent enough formula.

Verdict - Good


One thing I started doing once I'd got into dance music was to listen to Pete Tong on a Friday night on Radio 1. In those early days I used to hear this record a lot to the point that if I was asked to name a record I used to hear when listening to Pete Tong back in the day then this would be it. 

Verdict - Good


"Kiss From A Rose" was originally a Top 40 hit in 1994 but was given a new lease of life when it featured in the "Batman Forever" soundtrack. I'd never heard "I'm Alive" until I bought the CD single of this. 

Verdict - Good Good


A few weeks ago we had a single from Eurogroove who was Japanese, now we have Tokyo Ghetto Pussy who aren't Japanese. They are German and are an alias of Jam & Spoon who also have a new entry this week. A great record.

Verdict - Good


The 2nd Top 40 hit for The Chemical Brothers. It was the sort of record that could appeal to both the dance crowd and the rock crowd and features Tim Burgess from The Charlatans on vocals. I remember liking this one at the time.

Verdict - Good


Lloyd Cole was best known for his hits in the 80s with his backing band The Commotions. Here he is in the 90s with a solo Top 40 hit. It's a complete non-entity of a record in my opinion, definitely sounds like he wrote it for himself rather than anyone else.

Verdict - Rubbish


I do remember this record but what I don't remember is the fact it sampled "Good Times" by Chic. It had already been proven to be a good record to sample. As a result we have another Michelle Gayle record that I actually like, which I'm surprised by.

Verdict - Good


This originally made the Top 40 in 1994 but fared better when it returned to the charts in 1995 following the success of "Right In The Night". I would say this is a much better record than it's predecessor.

Verdict - Good


Vanessa Williams is best known musically for he 1992 hit "Save the Best For Last". This was her only other Top 40 hit. It's also a ballad and it's from a Disney film, exactly the sort of music that I don't like.

Verdict - Rubbish


The penultimate Top 40 hit to date for D:Ream and the last time they will feature as their final Top 40 hit never made the Top 30. I can't say I'm going to miss their brand of what I would call dance music for estate agents. A sort of dance version of Kenny Thomas.

Verdict - Rubbish


Gompie were a Dutch group who covered the Smokie record "Living Next Door To Alice" with the audience adding "Alice, who the fuck is Alice" into it. This was big on the continent but was overshadowed by Smokie's rerelease with Roy 'Chubby' Brown which was a reaction to the success of this. Both records are good fun though.

Verdict - Good


I've always been a bit anti-Foo Fighters given the Nirvana connection and the fact they first established themselves when I had transitioned to a raver. They do however have a handful of decent records and this is one of them.

Verdict - Good


Cappella first came about in the acid house days but then became best known for their incredibly cheesy eurodance records in 1993/94. I feel we're out the other side of that period with this record which was their final Top 40 hit to date. Don't get me wrong, it's still eurodance and it's still cheesy but it's one of the best eurodance records ever made. 

Verdict - Good


This was originally a chart topper in 1977 and was remixed and returned to the charts in 1995. It was remixed by Rollo & Sister Bliss of Faithless but this was a time before Faithless were that well known. A decent 90s makeover though it doesn't sound too much different from the original.

Verdict - Good


Back in 1991 one of the rave Top 40 hits was "40 Miles" by Congress. In 1995 they were back in the Top 40 under the name Nush and were part of the hardbag scene. This is quite possibly the best hardbag record in my opinion. Member Danny Harrison would return to the Top 40 as part of the garage scene with 187 Lockdown.

Verdict - Good


The other Scatman Top 40 hit. It sounds like there's a more serious message in this one but you can't really take this record seriously. The eurodance sound, the funny noises he makes and the fact it's referring to his own fantasy world see to that. A great record though.

Verdict - Good


First we had the overplayed and very cheesy "Saturday Night". Then it was the almost identical "Another Day". Then we had the excellent if a bit cheesy "Think Of You". Now we have the ballad. I guess it was always coming, the only surprise really is that it was her 4th hit that was a ballad and not the 3rd.

Verdict - Rubbish


This originally made the Top 40 at the beginning of the year but was much more successful when it re-entered the Top 40 in August. I can sort of understand why because it's a record more suited to the summer. It's great to listen to whatever the time of year though.

Verdict - Good


What I was learning from being a raver in 1995 was that you generally weren't supposed to like house music because it's too slow. There were of course exceptions to the rule and this was one of them. The person who told me of that rule liked this record himself.

Verdict - Good


There are a handful of records that very famously reached number 2 in the charts and this was one of them. Famous because it lost the Blur vs Oasis chart battle. I wasn't on either side but this was the worst of the 2 records.

Verdict - Rubbish


This was originally a Top 40 hit for Smokie back in 1976. Then there was a cover by Gompie that was big in Europe where the audience would reply "Alice, who the fuck is Alice". Smokie therefore decided to revive this song and get comedian Roy 'Chubby' Brown to add the "Alice, who the fuck is Alice" bit. I think it's great.

Verdict - Good


I've already mentioned a memory of listening to the Chris Evans Breakfast Show one day on Radio 1 around this time and liking everything he was playing. This was another of those records that he played. It became the biggest hit to that point for TLC.

Verdict - Good


After being top of the charts for an eternity with the dreary ballad "Think Twice" it would seem that Celine Dion could release any old rubbish and people would buy it. That seemed to be the case with this French language record. 

Verdict - Rubbish


There's almost a bit of a reggae vibe to this record which isn't how I remember this record if I'm honest. I don't think I've heard it since 1995 and my memory of this record is it being a typical depressing Michael Bolton ballad. To be fair it's not a million miles away from that.

Verdict - Rubbish


This was originally a Top 40 hit in 1994 but fared better on it's return to the Top 40 in 1995. Around the same time there was a happy hardcore record called "Rainbow in the Sky" by Paul Elstak that was based on the same tune but with different lyrics.

Verdict - Good


The winner of the Blur vs Oasis chart battle. As a raver at the time I didn't care for Blur or Oasis but if I had to pick one it would have been Blur. In fact I did like Blur during their "Parklife" album era. This record marked the start of their demise in my opinion

Verdict - Rubbish


This of course was the theme song for the TV show Friends. I used to watch Friends back in the 90s and I liked it but I have to say it's not aged very well. The theme music though was always shit, but it was probably intended to be that way.

Verdict - Rubbish


After the impact that "Set You Free" had on me I was excited to hear a follow up record which was this. This quickly turned to disappointment, this wasn't rave at all, it was a cheesy remake of the Bee Gees record.

Verdict - Rubbish


This record was written by R Kelly. It's a ballad and R Kelly was one of those people who knew how to write a ballad well.

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 20/30, or 67%. Score remains decent.

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