Deserving But Denied: 33 Number Twos That Should Have Been Number One
(2008)
It's obvious that you can't rely on the pop charts as
a mechanism for tabulating the comparative excellence of hit records.
But the charts are actually not much better at displaying how popular a pop single is. Because the volume of releases from the
industry and the amount of purchasing power out there in consumerland both fluctuate
with the seasons, a Number One single in
an off-peak period--like the post-Xmas lull of January--can have sold less than any of the Top Ten's
singles during busier times of year. The chart placing of a record is also
affected by pure contingency--what releases by heavy-hitter groups just happen to go out at the same time. (Tough luck for all those Sixties greats who
happened to release a single the same week as the Beatles or the Stones). This list honors those fantastically fine and/ or epochally
significant singles that were cheated by some historical quirk or other from fulfilling their true destiny: getting
to Number One. Upon
investigation, these injustices turned out to be so numerous
that the List of Ten format had to be overspilled thrice over, even
after leaving out many fabulous #2 singles
The
Who, "My Generation", November 1965.
It stands to reason that the Sixties was a cruelly
competitive time. All the genius and
creative energy around meant that many
classic singles-- Dave Clark Five's "Bits and Pieces", Petula Clark's
"Downtown", the Troggs's "Wild Thing"--fell just short of
the top spot. But it seems particularly
unjust that The Who's defining anthem of mod frustration and pride never went
all the way. Indeed a measure of the Who's distant third stature c.f. Beatles
and Stones was that they never would score a #1 at all.
The Beatles , "Penny Lane/Strawberry Fields Forever",
February 1967.
Arguably the Fab Four's greatest double
A-side and conceivably the world's first concept single (both sides addressing
the theme of nostalgia and helping to kickstart psychedelia's cult of childhood),
this release nonetheless ended the Beatles unbroken run of Number Ones (eleven in all) that went back to 1963's
''From Me To You". Perhaps "Strawberry Fields" was just too
trippy for the general public? For a similar fate befell the equally out-there Magical Mystery Tour EP ("I Am the
Walrus" etc) at the other end of 1967.
The Kinks, "Waterloo Sunset", May 1967.
One of a number of 67-defining singles--see
also Traffic's "Hole in My Shoe"--to stall at the runner-up spot,
"Waterloo Sunset"'s shortfall
is particularly poignant because the song constitutes the summit of Ray
Davies's achievement as a songwriter (give or take the indian summer that was
1968's The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation
Society).
The
Jackson 5, "I Want You Back," February 1970
Anybody looking to prove that the universe is a
botched creation ruled over by a callous, vindictive demiurge need only point
to the shocking not-actually-Number-One-ness of this pop-soul cataclysm.
Don
McLean, "American Pie", January 1972.
As if somehow always
already a "golden oldie", this was a monstrously prolonged radio
hit, and Zeitgeist-wise it distilled the early Seventies mood of melancholy
retro-spection. But despite sixteen weeks on the chart it never actually topped
them.
Gary
Glitter, "Rock and Roll (Parts 1 & 2)", June 1972
Massive in discos, the almost-instrumental "Part 2" was what drove Glitter's
breakthrough single to the very edge of pop's peak. At once lumpen and avant-garde, the missing
link between the Troggs and techno, this
controlled stampede of caveman chants
and dead-echoing guitar doesn't actually sound anything like the Fifties
rock'n'roll it purports to resurrect.
Next year's "Do You Wanna Touch Me" and "Hello Hello I'm
Back Again" also stopped one place short, before "I'm the Leader of
the Gang (I Am)" finally put Glitter and genius producer Mike Leander
where they belonged.
T. Rex, "Solid Gold Easy Action"
(December 1972)
Number ones galore under his belt, Marc Bolan can't
complain about his treatment at the hands of the UK Chart. That said, despite
the Beatles-level fandemonium of
"T.Rextasy", several of his best tunes-- "Ride A White
Swan", "Jeepster" (held off by Benny Hll's "Ernie (The
Fastest Milkman in the West)"!!!), and "Children of the
Revolution"--swooped to #2 but never scaled pop's summit. Likewise
"Solid Gold Easy Action", Marc's strangest single of all, with its
jolting beat, enigmatic title and the sculpted hysteria of its chorus.
The Osmonds, "Crazy Horses" (November 1972)
Surprisingly hard rockin' tune from the
Mormon clan, with a whinnying synth-riff that winnowed its way into your brain
and refused to budge. Kept off the top
spot by Chuck Berry's execrable "My Ding-A-Ling" but the Osmonds
could take consolation from their own Little Jimmy's subsequent annexation of the
Xmas #1 with the execrabler still "Long Haired Lover from Liverpool".
The
Sweet, "Ballroom Blitz" (September 73)
From its deliciously campy intro patter ("are you
ready, boys?" etc) to its frisky Bo Diddley beat, "Blitz" is the definitive Sweet
monstertune, but--despite entering at #2 and hovering there for three weeks--
it stayed stuck. Oddly, the same chart position was reached by
its immediate predecessor
"Hellraiser" and
immediate successor "Teenage
Rampage" and the latterday ultra-classic "Fox on the Run". Sole
Sweetsingle to go all the way:
"Blockbuster".
Sparks, "This Town Ain't Big Enough For the Both of Us"
(May 1974)
Branded
into the memory-flesh of anyone who saw the Mael brothers perform it on Top
of the Pops, this torrid, swashbuckling fantasia was fended off the pole
position by the Rubettes's sickly "Sugar Baby Love". Five years later Sparks tried to restore some
cosmic balance with the would-be self-fulfilling prophecy of "Number One
Song In Heaven" but despite killer Eurodiscotronic production from Giorgio
Moroder, to no avail.
Hot Chocolate, "You Sexy Thing" (December 1975)
As quintessentially Seventies as Sparks or
Sweet, these hardy hit parade perennials paused poised at #2 for three
weeks (thanks to the juggernaut that was
Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody") with this risqué slice of Britfunk.
Errol Brown's delivery of explicit (for its time and context) adult content like
"now you're lying next to me/giving it to me" and "now you lying cross from me/making love
to me" flushed many a pre-teen cheek even though the song spoke of things beyond our ken. Touchingly, the "miracle" Errol
believed in was apparently his missus, Ginette.
Consolation prize for not making it all the way: rereleases and remixes
have made "You Sexy Thing" the only song to be a UK Top 10 in the
Seventies, Eighties, and Nineties.
Wings, "Silly Love Songs" and "Let Em In"
(summer 1976)
Culminating with
bestselling-single-of-the-Seventies "Mull of Kintyre", 1976/77 was
Macca's most successful post-Beatles phase (with the possible exception of
1983/84, but the latter period was nonstop drek). This brace of winsome
confections from Wings At The
Speed Of Sound confirmed everything the
detractors (from Lennon on down) said about Paul's sweet tooth and miniaturist
craftsmanship. But you'd have to be pretty hard-of-heart to resist their
considerable charm, plus the metapop of "Silly Love Songs" cannily
deflects all critique in advance with its upfront and unashamed candour.
Heatwave, "Boogie Nights" (February 1977)
This sublime shimmer of discofunk hovered
at #2 on both the UK chart (where it was eclipsed by Leo Sayer, god help us)
and the Billboard Hot 100,
appropriately enough given the group's Transatlantic line-up. Heatwave's British keyboard player and
"Boogie Nights" songwriter Rod Temperton went on to pen "Rock
With You", "Thriller" and other hits for Michael Jackson.
Sex
Pistols, "God Save the Queen" (June 1977)
Punk folklore maintains that conniving by the authorities kept this act of sonic sedition off the
top spot to avoid the treasonous insult to Her Majesty during the Silver
Jubilee. On one of the rival UK Top 40
charts, the #2 space was, in an Orwellian twist, blanked out altogether,
turning the Pistols into an unband and
'God Save the Queen' into an unsingle, unrelease, unhit. Meanwhile Rod Stewart's "I Don't Want To
Talk About It" / "First Cut Is The Deepest" sealed over the
cracks in the British polity by maintaining its emollient grip on #1 for a
fourth week.
Elvis
Costello, "Oliver's Army" (February 1979)
Costello's one
true pop moment (his only other top 10
hits were cover versions, "I Can't
Stand Up for Falling Down" and "A Good Year For the Roses") so
it's sad that this Abba-influenced piano-rippling number didn't climb to the
highest height.
Squeeze, "Cool for Cats" (March 1979") and "Up
the Junction" (June 1979)
More New Wavers not getting their proper
dues. Touted as heirs to Lennon-McCartney, choonsmith Chris Difford and
wordsman Glenn Tilbrook narrowly missed #1 twice in the spring-summer of '79 with the cheeky
disco-flavored "Cats" and the poignant Sixties-evoking social realism
of "Junction".
M,
"Pop Muzik" (April 1979)
One of those hits so inescapably dominant that you
have to rub your eyes in disbelief when checking the Guinness hit singles guide
and discovering it never actually made it to
#1. Robin Scott's proto-pomo
metapop celebration was naturally a wow with radio deejays (as it was
calculated to be), which doubtless explains the aura of ubiquitousness that
clings to this tune. But Art Garfunkel's
"Bright Eyes" stopped its rise.
Adam and the Ants, "Antmusic" and "Kings of the Wild Frontier"
(winter 1980/81)
Adam and his merry minions at their most
witty ("Antmusic") and thrillingly tribal ("Kings"--ooh
that double-drummer polyrhythmic intro). In consolation, the Antman would
subsequently make it to Number One three times (most notably with the
autumn-of-81 dominating "Prince Charming") before his star faded.
Ultravox, "Vienna" (January 1981)
Can't say I was ever a huge fan but as a
synthpop-era defining slice of pseudo-Mittel Europa pomp, this deserved better
than to hover beneath Joe Dolce's "Shaddap Your Face" for a full
three weeks.
Laurie
Anderson, "O Superman" October 1981
With Radio One's
evening deejays and then daytime jocks too falling into lockstep with John
Peel, this vocodered oddity by downtown New York performance artist/experimental
composer Laurie Anderson joined the grand British tradition of novelty hits.
But despite the cod-surrealist spectacle of
an interpretative dance by Top of
The Pops's resident leggy troupe (there being no video and Anderson having
declined to perform) "Superman"'s climb was halted.
Altered Images, "Happy Birthday" (winter 1981)
Seventeen weeks on the charts and three of
them at #2, this irresistible bounce 'n
'shimmer of fizzy glee was a chart topper in all but hard unforgiving
fact. With the gorgeous "I Could Be
Happy" they tried the classic trick
of releasing a follow-up that contains the same keyword in its title (see Pete
Frampton's "Show Me the Way" and "Baby I Love Your Way")
but never hit as big again.
The Stranglers, "Golden Brown" (January 1982).
Only their second hit single about heroin
(the first was "Don't Bring Harry," their sick-and-twisted offering
as Xmas single in 1979) but it sure
would have been nice'n'sleazy if they'd gone all the way with this beguiling
waltz-time oddity. A fitting capper to
the Stranglers career as New Wave's most prolific hit machine. Alas…
Frankie
Goes to Hollywood, "Welcome To the Pleasuredome " (March 1985)
Not so much on its musical merits: a grand glistening
Horn production of cinematic funk, it's a lot of record but not a lot of song. But getting a record-breaking four
number ones with your first four singles would have been just reward for
Frankie and ZTT having brought some tumultuous eventfulness to an otherwise
fairly barren 1984.
Salt-N-Pepa,
"Push It" (June 1988)
Golden age hip hop at its most hooky and instant, the
electro-pulsating groove resembles a
funked-up Devo (hark at the titular echo
of "Whip It"!) but the raunch of the vocals makes Salt-N-Pepa comes
over like the female equivalent/equal of Rick "Superfreak" James.
Deelite, "Groove Is In the Heart" (September 1990)
So omnipresent that its charm turned to
irritant in record time, it's almost impossible to believe this wasn't Number
One. Apparently, it was. Sales-wise "Groove" tied with the
reissue of Steve Miller Band's "The Joker," so an arcane rule of
chart tabulation was invoked and "The Joker" was granted the supreme
position because its sales had gone up the most from the previous week.
The KLF, "Justified and Ancient" (December 1991)
Although Bill Drummond made it to #1 with the Timelords (and then
published a manual on how to have a number one single) and then again with the
KLF's "3 AM Eternal", it's still sad that his greatest feat as pop
conceptualist and mischief-maker--getting Tammy Wynette to sing "they're
justified and they're ancient/and they like to roam the land" over a house
beat on TOTP--was not appropriately
rewarded.
The Prodigy, "Everybody in the Place" EP (January 1992)
Hardcore rave classic thwarted by the Wayne's World spun off rerelease of
"Bohemian Rhapsody". Gah!
Shut Up and Dance, "Raving I'm Raving" (May 1992)
What is it about ardkore rave and the
number two? See also: SL2's marvelous "On A Ragga Tip" the month
before and Smart E's admittedly ridiculous "Sesame's Treet" later
that summer. "Raving I'm Raving" went straight in the charts at #2
and might have gone higher if it hadn't had to be withdrawn on account of its
hefty samples from Mark Cohn's AOR ballad "Walking In Memphis".
Pulp,
"Common People" (June 1995)
Britpop's finest four minutes: Pulp's epic anthem
brought class struggle back to the pop charts, the honed wit and keenly
observed economy of the lyric confirming Jarvis Cocker to be the best wordsmith
of his kind since Morrissey. It entered at Number Two but was barred from full
triumph by Robson and Jerome's "Unchained
Medley."
T2 Ft Jodie Aysha, "Heartbroken" (December, 2007)
The North Rises Again. Flagship tune of the vibrant "bassline
house" scene (a UK garage offshoot based in Sheffield, Nottingham, Leeds,
Huddersfield, and other North Eastern cities) the deliciously pop-frothy
"Heartbroken" crossed over big-time, but in the end proved unable to
breach the barricade of banality that was "Bleeding Love" by X-Factor
champion Leona Lewis.
No comments:
Post a Comment