The UK Number Ones Blog » Indie
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Join me as I listen to every UK Number 1 single since the charts began. Each and every song to have claimed the top spot since 1952. Find all the top and popular indie music in this section.
The UK Number Ones Blog » Indie
5d ago
In my last post I promised you something quirky. Is this quirky enough for you? Are you not quirked??
Your Woman, by White Town (his 1st and only #1)
1 week, from 19th – 26th January 1997
A gender-bending tale, centred around a trumpet sample from the 1930s, all written , recorded and produced by a fairly geeky looking chap in his bedroom. And catchy. I should also mention that it’s incredibly catchy.
It’s also very hard to describe. Is it dance, funk, indie, Britpop…? Is it lo-fi, hip-hop… boom bap?? (I have no idea what ‘boom bap’ is – Wikipedia suggested it, and I just liked the sound of i ..read more
The UK Number Ones Blog » Indie
1M ago
I’ve made a big deal about British rock (‘indie’, ‘Britpop’, call it what you will) not getting its fair share of airtime at the top of the singles chart in the ‘90s. I even did a special post on it. But here’s an even rarer sighting of the US equivalent…
Breakfast at Tiffany’s, by Deep Blue Something (their 1st and only #1)
1 week, from 29th September – 6th October 1996
When I think of US alternative rock, post-grunge, in the mid-1990s, I think of REM, the Chili Peppers, Hootie & the Blowfish, and… I’m struggling, to be honest. Britain was bursting at the seams with their own alt-rock, a ..read more
The UK Number Ones Blog » Indie
2M ago
The second number one of 1996, and one of the year’s most interesting hits, is yet another Levi’s assisted chart-topper.
Spaceman, by Babylon Zoo (their 1st and only #1)
5 weeks, from 21st January – 24th February 1996
I had no idea before starting this blog the extent of the jeans brand’s grip on the British charts. I make this, I think, the seventh Levi’s-assisted #1 in under ten years, but I admit I’ve lost count. (If we treated Levi’s as an act in themselves, they’d be up there with the Stones and ABBA in the overall list.) And almost all of them have been good #1s – re-released oldies fro ..read more
The UK Number Ones Blog » Indie
8M ago
If we thought ‘Oh Carolina’ was an unpolished step away from the usual sounds of the early nineties, then what to make of this folksy jig…?
Young at Heart, by The Bluebells (their 1st and only #1)
4 weeks, from 28th March – 25th April 1993
We need to sound the ‘random re-release’ klaxon, one that has been honked fairly often during these past few chart years, for the success of this record was not completely organic. ‘Young at Heart’ was originally a #8 hit, in 1984, for Scottish jangle-pop act The Bluebells. It was their biggest hit, from the only studio album they released before disbanding ..read more
The UK Number Ones Blog » Indie
10M ago
One glance at our next number one, and there’s an involuntary shiver. A comedian, a cover of a well-loved classic… It’s not that long since Hale and Pace were bothering the charts with their charidee dance-a-thon ‘The Stonk’. Is this the latest assault on the charts in the name of a ‘good cause’…?
Dizzy, by Vic Reeves & The Wonder Stuff (their 1st and only #1s)
2 weeks, from 3rd – 17th November 1991
Thankfully, no. It wasn’t for charity – more of cash-in of Vic Reeves being the hot young thing of British comedy – and, more importantly, it’s actually quite good! It’s a faithful cover of To ..read more
The UK Number Ones Blog » Indie
1y ago
Following on from the sweaty, pounding ‘Theme from S-Express’ comes the jaunty, acoustic ‘Perfect’. One of the biggest style switches between consecutive chart-toppers?
Perfect, by Fairground Attraction (their 1st and only #1)
1 week, from 8th – 15th May 1988
I’ve always liked ‘Perfect’, long before I knew it had been a number one hit. It’s the sort of song that plays in the background, throughout your life: the sort of song you think you’ve heard even when you haven’t. A little rockabilly ditty, with a cutesy hook: It’s got to be-e-e-e-e-e-e, Perfect…
But, like I said, I knew the song long b ..read more
The UK Number Ones Blog » Indie
1y ago
Right at the start of this year (and by ‘this year’ I mean 1987, not the actual year in which you are reading this) we had our first ever house #1: Steve ‘Silk’ Hurley’s ‘Jack Your Body’. That was Chicago house, and here we now have Britain’s answer…
Pump Up the Volume / Anitina (The First Time I See She Dance), by M/A/R/R/S (their 1st and only #1)
2 weeks, from 27th September – 11th October 1987
I’m pretty sure everybody’s heard the classic title line: Pump up the volume… Dance! Dance! The adjacent, ominous piano note is iconic, too. Problem is, that line and the piano note add up to about f ..read more