OCTOBER 1991
#1s
GOOD VIBRATIONS –•– Marky Mark & The Funky Bunch (1 week)
EMOTIONS –•– Mariah Carey (3 weeks)
Mariah Carey explodes into second album era with another smash hit, the title track. Not my favourite early Mariah single by a long shot, but the choices are deep - it's still a good pop song. The UK were still treating her as B-list at this point however, with this song going to #17. It wasn't until the
Unplugged album that Mariah would get herself a big hit, and then they kept coming - but really it was "Without You" when she'd become a household name.
Martika's "Love... Thy Will Be Done" peaks at #10 this month (UK #9), which is a great song, but in hindsight must have felt like a risk shifting to a far more mature sound compared to the pop sensation of the debut album, but her audience responded kindly. The brilliant
Prince-penned follow-up "Martika's Kitchen" would sadly stall at #93 (#17 UK) and after one more single, that would be that for Martika. She might have had a third album, but apparently it was her choice to quite the music industry, citing burnout.
In the UK, This is a song I discovered on an Ibiza chillout album about 20 years ago, and was surprised to see it actually charted around this time:
As a result this is my favourite version of this song, which has such a BIZARRE and complicated history with
Donna Summer, and I still don't think I fully understand the story. Almost like this song has to be buried in perpetual confusion, even the
Moodswings/Chrissy Hynde cover has about FIVE different versions knocking about, and it was hard to find for a long time, but thankfully it's now on Spotify.
Sounds Of Blackness follow up with another single, "The Pressure". This one requires a bit of background... the album contains two versions of the song, part 1 and part 2. Part 1 is a massive bouncy gospel house track, whereas Part 2 strips it back into a more spiritual-sounding acapella with piano and synth strings. The latter is actually better - as a soul ballad the production is on point and the melody and vocal riffs are given more room to breathe. When it came down to putting it out as a single, they managed to wrangle
Frankie Knuckles to give the bouncy track a makeover. And in his genius, Frankie actually remixes the ballad instead, which eventually lead to one of the greatest introductions to a dance song ever put to record. He retains the drama of the original with a long piano vocal introduction and then brings in the beat at the right moment, leading into a typical Def Mix house track, reminiscent of
Mariah Carey's "Daydream (reprise)" or the famed "Unbreak My Heart" remix. Anyways - this is glorious in its 8 minute entirety and deserves to be listened to properly:
Genuinely one of the greatest dance remixes of all time.
Discoveries:
I was always familiar with the title track from
LL Cool J's Mama Said Knock You Out, but I've grown to appreciate the other singles over time, and this track was a big discovery:
Listened to in the context of 1991, this album is so
incredibly forward thinking... it's exprimental and eclectic in its production choices, but it's also SO smooth and slick, laying the groundwork for the rap superstars to come to successfully mesh rap with R&B elements.
This is a track that sounds ahead of its time...
Never heard this song or this group before, but in a time when New Jill Swing hadn't even peaked yet (that would happen with
En Vogue,
TLC and
Jade in 1992) this leapfrogs that in a deeper, smoother, more hip-hop soul sound that
Mary J Blige would soon gain credit for birthing and wouldn't really peak until about 1995. A nice pre-genre discovery!
After the wonderful big power ballad "How Can I Ease The Pain",
Lisa Fischer makes it 2 for 2 with this house-influenced bop
This peaked at #74. Her voice really is CRAZY and it's sad now that I've discovered her that there isn't much beyond 1 album to enjoy.
Over in the UK, this was an
Alison Moyet song I hadn't heard before my UK rerun and it's stunning:
From her 3rd album
Hoodoo, this would only scrape in at #40 in the UK, and mainland Europe largely ignored the album as a whole, despite her enjoying huge success in the 80s. This is so wonderfully overblown and melodramatic, but Alison proves she has the chops to make it land. She had almost a dozen more singles in the UK this decade, and I think I've heard them all now... this is definitely my favourite.
There are so many R&B/house divas in the 90s that I ignored beyond the signature tunes, and the deep dive I did during lockdown unearthed so many treasures.
Alison Limerick was one of those. This month, this track hit #53 in the UK as the follow up to "Where Love Lives":
There's also a Perfecto Mix which gives the song a very different sound, but it's also good. Speaking of "Where Love Lives", that's another song I didn't realise found success during the Eurodance boom of the mid 90s. It hit #27 in 1991, but #9 in 1996. Her 1996 album/compilation
Club Classics is definitely worth a listen.
And on that note,
Adeva is back with this single which peaked at #48 the same time period:
Not really changing much from the sound of the first album, but still great. Someone at Adeva's label must have really liked her - despite never having a Top 10, she had 15 single releases across almost a decade. I'm still discovering Adeva really as the songs keep growing on me, but the first album is a keeper, and like a greatest hits of early UK dance music in itself.
Notable new entries (US):
October 5
69 — GET A LEG UP –•– John Mellencamp
91 — SUPERMAN’S SONG –•– Crash Test Dummies
October 12
44 — WHEN A MAN LOVES A WOMAN –•– Michael Bolton
66 — STREET OF DREAMS –•– Nia Peeples
69 — TOP OF THE WORLD –•– Van Halen
72 — RING MY BELL –•– D.J. Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince
85 — LIVE FOR LOVING YOU –•– Gloria Estefan
94 — COOL AS ICE (EVERYBODY GET LOOSE) –•– Vanilla Ice
October 19
47 — BLOWING KISSES IN THE WIND –•– Paula Abdul
50 — SET ADRIFT ON MEMORY BLISS –•– P.M. Dawn
66 — CAN’T TRUSS IT –•– Public Enemy
78 — ANGEL BABY –•– Angelica
85 — TENDER KISSES –•– Tracie Spencer
90 — BROKEN ARROW –•– Rod Stewart
91 — FALL AT YOUR FEET –•– Crowded House
92 — SAVE UP ALL YOUR TEARS –•– Cher
93 — STAND BY MY WOMAN –•– Lenny Kravitz
October 26
70 — TRY A LITTLE TENDERNESS –•– The Commitments
71 — FOREVER MY LADY –•– Jodeci
73 — HOUSECALL –•– Shabba Ranks ft Maxi Priest
85 — SPENDING MY TIME –•– Roxette
89 — DO YOU FEEL LIKE I FEEL? –•– Belinda Carlisle
95 — CONVICTION OF THE HEART –•– Kenny Loggins
96 — TOO MUCH –•– Tara Kemp
98 — WHAT TIME IS LOVE? –•– The KLF
100 — FOREVER MORE –•– Stevie B
There was a lot of new entries on the 26th...
@alla was that the week of the chart changeover? I seem to recall you saying it was November.
I was surprised to see
John Mellencamp having a hit in 1991, but it turns out he was having US hits well into the 90s. Mellencamp, unlike his 80s contemporaries like
Bruce Springsteen,
Bob Seger &
Steve Winwood, was not a crossover in Europe at all (looks like he did well in Canada and Australia). His signature tune "Jack And Diane" (US #1) only went to #25 in the UK and "Hurts So Good" (US #2) didn't even chart. For the Brits unfamiliar he was absolutely massive in America and is one of the country's biggest ever selling male solo stars. This was the lead single from his 11th album
Whenever We Wanted and would peak at #14.
Didn't know
Crash Test Dummies had other hits besides... that song. This goes to #56 but the album doesn't do anything... they had to wait until 1993 and their second album to the big time.
Paula Abdul's 3rd single from Spellbound would be another Top Ten hit for her, but it would be her last.
Interesting to see
PM Dawn open big with their debut single, with America being such a massive market and most debutants having to build the audience of their introductory song slowly. "Set Adrift On Memory Bliss" was obviously a huge global smash, hitting #1 in the US and #3 in the UK. I only knew one song by them and would have happily accepted any accusations of being one hit wonders, but they were a big discovery for me when I did my UK chart rerun - they had ten Top 75 hits here, and nine inside the Billboard 100. There's one more single in particular that I LOVE and a couple others I like.
Crowded House are a band who are not as big as I thought they were. At least, they weren't in the US and they weren't in 1991. "Fall At Your Feet" is their second single from the third album
Woodface, after first single "Chocolate Cake" did nothing. This follow up only reached #17 in the UK, and #75 in the US. Other singles were released, but the other notable track is "Weather With You", which gave them their only Top 10 in the UK (#7) but didn't chart in the US. Of course their
most famous track is "Don't Dream It's Over", but that only went to #27 in the UK, which really surprises me. It hit #2 in the US, but it happened five years earlier from their debut album. I think their trajectory was just different in the UK - after the success of
Woodface, "Don't Dream It's Over" was re-released... it only reached #25 but it led to a VERY successful compilation album in 1996 which went 4x platinum, many more hit singles, and I think they've endured ever since. Those three singles mentioned above are all evergreen radio tracks in the UK. Despite only reaching #27 (and then #25), DDIO has been certified platinum in the UK which must be from digital sales gained much later. I'm not a huge Crowded House fan, but I do love all 3 of those songs.
The Commitments had a hit in the US too!? Was the film a success, my American correspondents? It's a GREAT film, and one of the best showcases of 60s soul music, the songs I grew up with thanks to my Dad.
Belinda Carlisle lands her only hit single from 4th album
Live Your Life Be Free, peaking at a lowly #73 and her last charting single. It's amazing to think how short and sharp her singles run was in the US. She had 4 hits in the UK from this album, which would take her to 16 charting singles at that point in her career, with another 7 yet to come. In the US she would have 9 hits total and most of them were in the 80s. "Do You Feel Like I Feel" hits #29 in the UK with the title track released earlier in the year reaching #12.