Showing posts with label Dave Edmunds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dave Edmunds. Show all posts

UK Music Chart: December 12, 1970


Gilbert O'Sullivan - TopPop 1974 1
Number 11: Gilbert O'Sullivan

I Hear You Knocking by Dave Edmunds entered its third week as the UK's Number 1 song this week in 1970, but there were several challengers to its crown, among them three new entries to the Top 20.

Included in their number were both the debut hit by Ireland's Gilbert O'Sullivan and a novelty song from actor Clive Dunn.


The Chart:
  • 01 (01) Dave Edmunds - I Hear You Knocking 
  • 02 (06) McGuinness Flint - When I'm Dead And Gone 
  • 03 (03) Neil Diamond - Cracklin' Rosie 
  • 04 (18) Glen Campbell - It's Only Make Believe 
  • 05 (02) Jimi Hendrix Experience - Voodoo Chile 
  • 06 (07) T. Rex - Ride A White Swan 
  • 07 (17) Andy Williams - Home Lovin' Man 
  • 08 (05) Chairmen Of The Board - You've Got Me Dangling On A String 
  • 09 (04) Don Fardon - Indian Reservation 
  • 10 (09) Elvis Presley - I've Lost You 
  • 11 (30) Gilbert O'Sullivan - Nothing Rhymed 
  • 12 (12) Gerry Monroe - My Prayer 
  • 13 (15) The Jackson Five - I'll Be There 
  • 14 (08) White Plains - Julie, Do Ya Love Me? 
  • 15 (14) Christie - San Bernadino 
  • 16 (24) Peter Noone And Herman's Hermits - Lady Barbara 
  • 17 (32) Clive Dunn - Grandad 
  • 18 (19) CCS - Whole Lotta Love 
  • 19 (10) Jimmy Ruffin - It's Wonderful (To Be Loved By You) 
  • 20 (13) Edwin Starr - War

*Previous week in brackets; Climbers denoted in red; New entries in bold
Image by AVRO (Beeld En Geluid Wiki - Gallerie: Toppop 1974) [CC-BY-SA-3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

11: Gilbert O'Sullivan: Nothing Rhymed

In the UK, Gilbert O'Sullivan was to become one of the most successful recording artists of the 1970s. Although he had released several songs in the late Sixties, none of them had sold in any great  quantities. It wasn't until he'd secured himself a new management team that the hits began to flow. He was helped in this endeavour by a newly adopted image which included a cloth cap worn over a pudding basin haircut and short trousers held up by braces. It worked. Nothing Rhymed became the first of thirteen Top 20 hits for him in the UK and he would go on to enjoy success throughout the decade in both Europe and the USA.



16: Herman's Hermits: Lady Barbara

Asked to name a Herman's Hermits hit, Lady Barbara is probably not one that would instantly spring to mind. Unless you are a fervent fan, it probably figures among the group's "lost hits". In fact, it seemed the record company was trying to market the quintet a little differently at the time by crediting the single to Peter Noone and Herman Hermits. However, even though this record peaked at Number 13, it would prove to be the last time the band would appear in the UK charts. Peter Noone would soon leave for a solo career and consequently the hits would dry up for good.



17: Clive Dunn: Grandad

Released to cash in on the Christmas market, Clive Dunn's sickly sweet ode to grandads everywhere owes its success more to seasonal sentimentality than to good taste. Grandad entered the Top 20 at Number 17 this week and quite possibly should have been the Christmas Number 1 for 1970. However - fortunately or unfortunately depending on your view - due to strike action at the time which affected the record company's pressing plant and distribution, Dunn's record stalled at Number 6 over the Christmas period. It had to wait until January to finally secure the Number 1 spot, spending three weeks there and a total of 28 weeks on the chart.



The Number 1 album this week:
Led Zeppelin III - Led Zeppelin


The Number 1 Song in the USA:
The Tears of a Clown - Smokey Robinson & The Miracles

UK Music Chart: November 28, 1970


 

Dave Edmunds began his first week as the UK Number 1 this week in November 1970 by making an impressive fifteen-place climb to the top of the charts.

As he was doing that, a wave of easy listening was to invade the Top 20 with three new entries from the kings of the genre at this time: Elvis Presley, Andy Williams and Glen Campbell.

The Chart:
  • 01 (16) Dave Edmunds - I Hear You Knocking 
  • 02 (01) Jimi Hendrix Experience - Voodoo Chile 
  • 03 (03) Don Fardon - Indian Reservation 
  • 04 (02) Matthews' Southern Comfort - Woodstock 
  • 05 (10) Neil Diamond - Cracklin' Rosie 
  • 06 (05) Edwin Starr - War 
  • 07 (15) T.Rex - Ride A White Swan 
  • 08 (04) Clarence Carter - Patches 
  • 09 (23) Elvis Presley - I've Lost You 
  • 10 (13) White Plains - Julie, Do Ya Love Me? 
  • 11 (07) Christie - San Bernadino 
  • 12 (06) Jimmy Ruffin - It's Wonderful (To Be Loved By You) 
  • 13 (20) CCS - Whole Lotta Love 
  • 14 (09) Melanie - Ruby Tuesday 
  • 15 (08) The Rattles - The Witch 
  • 16 (19) Chairmen Of The Board - (You've Got Me) Dangling On A String 
  • 17 (45) Andy Williams - Home Lovin' Man 
  • 18 (38) Glen Campbell - It's Only Make Believe 
  • 19 (22) Mary Hopkin - Think About Your Children (RE) 
  • 20 (21) Roger Whittaker - New World In The Morning (RE)
*Previous week in brackets; Climbers denoted in red; New entries in bold

9: Elvis Presley: I've Lost You

Included on both the album and the documentary film That's the Way It Is, the track I've Lost You became Presley's fourth and final hit of 1970. Originally recorded by Matthews' Southern Comfort, many commentators have noted that the lyrics to this song reflect what was happening in his marriage to Priscilla. Chartwise it peaked at Number 9 in the UK, but fared less well in the US, stalling at Number 32.

 

17: Andy Williams: Home Lovin' Man

Back in the UK Top 20 for the third time this year was Andy Williams with the Cook-Greenaway-Macaulay composed song, Home Lovin' Man. Peaking at Number 7 on this side of the pond, it made the US Adult Contemporary chart, but failed to register on the Hot 100.


18: Glen Campbell: It's Only Make Believe

Glen Campbell's cover of the 1958 Conway Twitty Number 1 song, It's Only Make Believe, proved to be his last significant hit in the UK for five years when Rhinestone Cowboy brought him back into the Top 10. This one peaked at Number 4 in the UK and Number 10 in the US.


Until next time....

UK Music Chart: November 21, 1970




Following the death of the legendary Jimi Hendrix, his track Voodoo Chile raced to the top of the British charts on this date in 1970. (Listen below).

Meanwhile, four new entries steamrollered their way into the Top 20, each of them becoming classic hits and all of them possible contenders for the Number 1 spot in the weeks to come.

The Chart: 

  • 01 (05) Jimi Hendrix Experience - Voodoo Chile 
  • 02 (01) Matthews' Southern Comfort - Woodstock 
  • 03 (04) Don Fardon - Indian Reservation 
  • 04 (02) Clarence Carter - Patches 
  • 05 (03) Edwin Starr - War 
  • 06 (12) Jimmy Ruffin - It's Wonderful (To Be Loved By You) 
  • 07 (07) Christie - San Bernadino 
  • 08 (08) The Rattles - The Witch 
  • 09 (09) Melanie - Ruby Tuesday 
  • 10 (29) Neil Diamond - Cracklin' Rosie 
  • 11 (11) Deep Purple - Black Night 
  • 12 (06) The Tremeloes - Me And My Life 
  • 13 (16) White Plains - Julie, Do Ya Love Me? 
  • 14 (14) The Temptations - Ball Of Confusion (That's What The World Is Today) 
  • 15 (30) T. Rex - Ride A White Swan 
  • 16 (--)  Dave Edmunds - I Hear You Knocking 
  • 17 (10) Freda Payne - Band Of Gold 
  • 18 (15) The Four Tops - Still Water (Love) 
  • 19 (40) Chairmen Of The Board - (You've Got Me) Dangling On A String 
  • 20 (18) CCS - Whole Lotta Love
*Previous week in brackets; Climbers denoted in red; New entries in bold

10: Neil Diamond: Cracklin' Rosie

Having just spent a week on top of the American charts, Neil Diamond's Cracklin' Rosie was the song that would break the singer in the UK. He had already figured on the British charts as a songwriter, penning hits for the likes of The Monkees and Lulu, but this week in 1970 Cracklin' Rosie truly brought Diamond to the UK public's attention as the song leapt 19 places to Number 10.

 

15: T.Rex: Ride A White Swan

A new abbreviated name for Marc Bolan's band T.Rex combined with a new electric sound ushered in a change in his commercial fortunes. Gone were the acoustic, folksy rhythms and instead Bolan began to embrace his own rock concept. Although Ride A White Swan was not the song that would come to initiate the glam rock movement in the UK (that would come next year), it was certainly a forerunner to this genre synonymous with Marc Bolan - one which would dominate the charts for the next five to six years.



16: Dave Edmunds: I Hear You Knocking

Hot on the heels of the split of his band Love Sculpture (Sabre Dance #5, 1968), Dave Edmunds' solo career started off with a bang as his interpretation of I Hear You Knocking crashed in at Number 16. Originally recorded by Smiley Lewis in the mid-1950s, Edmunds turned it from an R&B number into a rock tune, reputedly playing all the instruments on the recording. Quite possibly his most successful single, it would climb to Number 1 the following week and remain there for six weeks, becoming the Christmas Number 1 of 1970.  



19: Chairmen of the Board: (You've Got Me) Dangling On A String

For the second time in three months, American soul outfit Chairmen of the Board was back in the UK Top 20, this time with (You've Got Me) Dangling On A String. Written by the legendary Motown songwriting team of Holland-Dozier-Holland, lead singer General Johnson's soulful vocals dominate the song and elevated it to a peak of Number 5 in the UK charts. 


Until next time...