Please note-I am still
constructing this site. I had vast archives at http://www.angelfire.com/ms/nigelsmusic/index.html, but they seem to have disappeared.
I have been rewriting them before moving them here anyway, it
just takes time. But there is 400+ pages here, so plenty to look
at.
Oh yeah, this page isn't up to much and needs rewriting, but it
does give you the general idea on what this site is all about.
And I WILL rewrite this page, it's just that time thing again.
Now, if you'd rather not read the boring stuff, you'll find what
you're looking for by clicking on the red Remember When image
above.
IT All BeganWelcome to Golden Days. My name is Nigel and I live in Nottingham UK with my wife Catherine, though I was born and raised in Wrexham, North Wales. I first became interested in popular music at the age of eleven, when on the day of leaving the primary school in July 1973, I untypically watched the TV show 'Top Of The Pops'. I say untypically because even though my parents sometimes watched it, I was never bothered about watching it myself. On this particular Friday, my friend Clive and I were playing Monopoly until he announced that he was going to go home to watch Top Of The Pops. I didn't really want to watch it, but as I was in quite a commanding position in the game of Monopoly, I didn't want Clive to leave without finishing the game. So I said that he could watch Top Of The Pops at our house, and I prepared for 40 minutes of boredom. But, featured as a new release on that weeks show was the new single from 'Gary Glitter'. It was called "I'm the leader of the gang (I am)". It changed my life ! I had to have that record. So I asked my Mum for an advance on my pocket money (allowance) and bought it. Two weeks later it was at number one in the UK chart where it stayed for four weeks. My life would never be the same again. Over the next few months I bought records by Suzi Quatro, Wizzard, Mott The Hoople etc. Then in 1974 (by which time Top Of The Pops had returned to it's more usual Thursday night), Queen came along with "Seven Seas Of Rhye". This was different and I've been a fan of the band since that Thursday evening when they were first featured on Top Of The Pops. I have so much Queen info that I would like to feature, but I just haven't got around to doing it yet. One day it will be here, I just can't say when. |
I
launched my REMEMBER WHEN page in January 1997. Each week
on this page, I have featured a UK top 40 from this week
in one of the years between 1973-1984. I have also
included my own commentary on each song. Some of the
commentary is fact, some is useless trivia, while some is
just about what was going on in my own life at that time.
The reason I chose that particular timeframe is that even
though I do know approx 80% of the hit singles from the
ten years prior to 1973, I don't actually remember them
being hits, so I don't see any point in commenting on
them (at this present time). As for 1984 being the cut
off point - To me, 1984 was the last truly great year for
music. True that 1985's 'Live Aid'concert was one of the
greatest moments in musical history, it's a concert that
could not be bettered by substituting today's most
popular acts for the acts taking part that day. But
brilliant though it was, music seemed to go into slow
decline from then on. I will not rule out the possibility
of featuring the years 1985-1987 at some point in the
future as (I repeat), it was a slow decline. But I don't
see myself going beyond that. 1987 saw the introduction
of House Music to the chart, and Tuesday 20th January
1987 was a very sad day for music. It was the day that
Steve 'Silk' Hurley hit number one with "Jack Your
Body". I can still barely believe that such an awful
noise could get to the summit of the UK Chart. Later in
the year something just as bad repeated the trick,
"Pump Up The Volume" by M.A.R.R.S. I had always
been a fan of dance music, but that changed during those
last 3 years of the 80s. As 1988 rolled in, the chart
began to get dominated by these awful noises that made me
feel irritable (and dare I say Violent ?) every time I
heard them, and the chart has remained in this state ever
since. |
Even
though the REMEMBER WHEN page is the most popular section
of my site, the NOSTALGIA CHART is my favourite secion.
As I mentioned above, I have been addicted to music since
1973, and have also been fascinated by the charts. In
those early days the charts were a lot different than
they are today in the UK. Singles would enter the charts
at a low position and gradually move up towards the top.
Only extremely popular acts would enter the chart inside
the top five, in fact any record that entered inside the
top ten would be expected to reach number one. New
entries at number one were very rare before 1989. Not
including the very first UK number one, only four singles
entered the chart at number one between 1952 and 1972.
Another four did it in 1973 and then no more until 1980.
It happened ten more times between then and 1989 before
all hell broke loose. It happens almost every week these
days, and the charts are no longer interesting.
Personally, I do not think the reason for this is because
the quality of music has got better. I feel that the
reason is the complete opposite. Record companies now
release all of their new singles on a Monday so that it
gets the full weeks sales in the first week of release.
Add to this the fact that Chart return shops seem to sell
the new release at a vastly reduced price (sometimes 70's
prices) during the first week of release. Add to that,
the fact that new singles (and their promo videos) are
released to the media as much as three months prior to
release, and you can see why records now debut so high.
Think for a minute. Enormously popular acts such as ABBA,
ROD STEWART, T.REX, ROLLING STONES, DONNY OSMOND and the
BAY CITY ROLLERS never entered the singles chart at the
top. The BEATLES only did it once, as did CLIFF RICHARD,
THE POLICE and DURAN DURAN. ELVIS did it twice, QUEEN
also did it twice, but that was only when it had become
commonplace. |
THE NOSTALGIA CHART INDEX
REMEMBERING A CHART FROM THIS WEEK IN HISTORY WITH COMMENTARY
THE PAGES THAT I HAVEN'T TRANSFERRED OVER HERE YET used to be available by clicking here
Finally, if you've e-mailed me as a result of visiting this site and have not yet received a reply, I'm attempting to work my way through the backlog, and hope to get back to you soon, thank you.
Email: nige@innotts.co.uk