- Source: 1997 in British music
This is a summary of 1997 in music in the United Kingdom, including the official charts from that year.
Summary
Oasis released their highly anticipated third album, Be Here Now, on 21 August (in the UK). It sold 695,761 copies in its first three days and 813,000 copies in its first week. As of 2023, it is the fastest-selling album in UK history. Radiohead's third album, OK Computer, was released in June and topped the UK Albums Chart for two weeks. Met with widespread critical acclaim, it was voted the greatest album of all time by Q Magazine readers barely months after its release.
Compared to just five years earlier, singles sales were very high this year. From 22 June right through to the end of the year, every single #1 sold at least 100,000 copies a week. Like the previous year, 24 singles topped the chart, double as many as 1992.
The Spice Girls continued their success from 1996, once again getting three number ones. The first was the double A-side songs "Mama" and "Who Do You Think You Are"; the latter of which was the Comic Relief single for 1997. This ensured the group became the first act to have their first four singles all reach number 1. This was followed by "Spice Up Your Life" in October, and "Too Much" in December, which once again gave them the Christmas number one single. They had now become the first act to have their first six singles reach number 1, but this run would be broken in 1998, with "Stop" only reaching #2. Spice Girls also had great success on the album charts as Spice and Spiceworld were two of the top five best sellers of 1997.
The Backstreet Boys released their second international album Backstreet's Back. The album was a massive success reaching number two and selling over 800,000 copies in the U.K. The three singles released from the album were massive hits with "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)" reaching number 3 and "As Long as You Love Me" also reaching number three and staying in the charts for 19 weeks.
Six singles released this year went on to sell over a million. The first to do so was Puff Daddy & Faith Evans' "I'll Be Missing You", a tribute to the late rapper The Notorious B.I.G. In November and December, three consecutive number ones all sold over a million, for only the third time in UK chart history (it had previously happened in 1984 and 1995/6). These were Aqua's "Barbie Girl", the Children in Need charity single "Perfect Day", and "Teletubbies say "Eh-oh!", the theme tune to the popular children's television series Teletubbies. In addition, All Saints' "Never Ever" was released in November and also sold over a million, though it wouldn't reach number one until January 1998.
In November, The Prodigy released "Smack My Bitch Up", which received huge international media attention, due to the fact that many people believed it to be misogynistic and / or that it promotes violence against women. Some stores refused to stock the single and / or album from which it came, and some radio stations refused to play it. A graphic video showing bad behaviour on the part of the protagonist in the music video led to its showing on television being greatly restricted.
By far the biggest-selling single of the year, though, came from Elton John. In August, Diana, Princess of Wales, was killed in a car crash. At her funeral, John played a rewritten version of "Candle in the Wind" known as "Candle in the Wind 1997", a song originally written about Marilyn Monroe (made #11 in 1974, with a live version reaching #5 in 1988). When released this year, it quickly overtook 1984's "Do They Know It's Christmas?" to become the biggest selling UK single ever, selling 4.86 million copies, and the biggest selling in the world, selling 37 million. It continues to hold the record to this day.
Andrew Glover's string quartet The Fickle Virgin of Seventeen Summers was one of several new classical works by British composers. Others included Geoffrey Burgon's City Adventures, a percussion concerto written for Scottish virtuoso Evelyn Glennie and premièred by her during the 1997 Proms season. One of the UK's most prolific classical composers, Wilfred Josephs, died on 17 November. In April, Nigel Kennedy, now calling himself simply Kennedy, returned to the stage at the Royal Festival Hall after a five-year absence from the concert stage resulting from neck surgery. Towards the end of the year, veteran composer Sir Michael Tippett developed pneumonia while visiting Sweden, which would lead to his death early in 1998.
Events
9 January – David Bowie performs his 50th Birthday Bash concert (the day after his birthday) at Madison Square Garden, New York City, USA with guests Frank Black, the Foo Fighters, Sonic Youth, Robert Smith of the Cure, Lou Reed, and Billy Corgan of the Smashing Pumpkins, with the opening act Placebo. Proceeds from the concert went to the Save the Children fund.
30 January – Noel Gallagher courts controversy in an interview in which he claimed that taking drugs was "like having a cup of tea in the morning".
12 February – David Bowie receives a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Hollywood, USA.
18 February – Brian Harvey is sacked from East 17 after his controversial comments on a radio interview in which he appeared to be condoning the use of the drug ecstasy.
11 March – Paul McCartney receives his knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II.
30 March – The Spice Girls launch Britain's new television channel, Channel 5.
10 April – Nigel Kennedy, now calling himself simply Kennedy, returns to the stage at the Royal Festival Hall after a five-year absence from the concert stage resulting from neck surgery.
3 May
Five's musical career begins after auditions are held in London, UK to find potential band members, with over 3,000 hopefuls showing up to audition.
The Spice Girls attend the Cannes Film Festival to announce their plans to hit the big screen with Spiceworld: The Movie. A photo call on top of the Hotel Martinez entrance brings the area to a standstill.
At the 42nd Eurovision Song Contest, held in Dublin's Point Theatre, the UK win with "Love Shine a Light", sung by Katrina and the Waves.
11 May – The Spice Girls perform their first British live gig for the Prince's Trust 21st anniversary concert at the Manchester Opera House They break royal protocol by kissing The Prince of Wales (now Charles III) on the cheeks and even pinching his bottom.
15 May
The Spice Girls' album Spice reaches number one on the US charts, making them the first British act to top the charts with a debut album.
While his single "Return of the Mack" climbs up the US Charts, Mark Morrison is sentenced to three months in prison, for threatening a police officer with a stun gun.
The Heroes Symphony by Philip Glass is performed for the first time at the Royal Festival Hall.
28 June – The Haçienda club in Manchester closes. It is later demolished and turned into flats, whilst still retaining the "Hacienda" name.
September – Ten-year-old Nicola Benedetti begins her studies at the Yehudi Menuhin School for young musicians under Lord Menuhin and Natasha Boyarskaya.
6 September – Elton John performs "Candle in the Wind" at the Funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales; John Tavener's Song for Athene is performed at the same ceremony, with soprano Lynne Dawson as soloist.
13 September – Release of Elton John's "Candle in the Wind" remade as a charity tribute to Diana, Princess of Wales. It becomes the second best-selling single of all time worldwide, after "White Christmas".
14 August – Il Rozzo Martello for chorus by Peter Maxwell Davies, setting the words of Dante and Michelangelo, is performed for the first time in The Queen Elizabeth Hall, London.
28 September – The world premiere of James MacMillan’s Vigil Symphony, at the Barbican Centre, with the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Mstislav Rostropovich.
1 October – Asyla for orchestra by Thomas Adès is performed for the first time, at Birmingham Symphony Hall.
6 October – Aphex Twin courts controversy with the video to his single "Come to Daddy'". The video is banned by TV networks for being "too frightening".
14 October – The world premiere of Paul McCartney’s Standing Stone at the Royal Albert Hall with the London Symphony Orchestra and a 120 member choir, conducted by Lawrence Foster.
28 October – The Concerto Conciso for piano and ten players by Thomas Adès is performed for the first time in Birmingham.
3 November – The Spice Girls release Spiceworld, their second number-one album, making the group the first British band since the Beatles to have two albums in the US chart at the same time. Spice and Spiceworld have amassed enough sales for one out of every two people in Britain to own a Spice Girls album.
6 November – The Spice Girls make the decision to take over the running of the group and drop Simon Fuller as their manager.
9 November – Sufi Dance for guitar by Jonathan Harvey is performed for the first time, at Nottingham University.
17 November – The Prodigy release their controversial single "Smack My Bitch Up", which is censored by BBC Radio 1, and the X-rated video is banned from daytime television, except for a brief, late-night rotation on MTV before being removed from broadcast two weeks later.
20 November – Gary Glitter is arrested after indecent images were found on his computer that he took to a branch of PC World in Bristol for repair. His planned performance for Children in Need is cancelled, and his appearance in Spiceworld: The Movie is removed from the film as a result.
29 November – The Verve and their manager refuse to allow The Chart Show to show the video for their song "Lucky Man" unless the show is redesigned for them.
4 and 5 December – Black Sabbath perform a pair of reunion shows in their hometown of Birmingham, England. They are the first full-length concerts by the original lineup of the band since 1978.
26 December – The Spice Girls release their big screen debut Spiceworld: The Movie, starring Richard E. Grant, Roger Moore, Elton John and Stephen Fry. The movie makes £6.8m in its first week of release.
31 December – Composers Richard Rodney Bennett and Elton John are among those receiving knighthoods in the New Year's Honours List.
Charts
= Number-one singles
== Number-one albums
== Number-one compilation albums
=Year-end charts
= Best-selling singles
=Based on sales from 30 December 1996 to 28 December 1997.
Notes:
= Best-selling albums
=Based on sales from 30 December 1996 to 28 December 1997.
Notes:
= Best-selling compilation albums
=Based on sales from 30 December 1996 to 28 December 1997.
Classical music
Thomas Adès – Asyla
Geoffrey Burgon – City Adventures
Peter Maxwell Davies – Concerto for Piano and Orchestra
Alun Hoddinott – Spectrum 2: Lizard
Graham Waterhouse – Celtic Voices and Hale Bopp
Opera
Mark-Anthony Turnage – Twice Through the Heart
Musical films
Cabaret Neiges Noires
Births
23 January – Shaheen Jafargholi, actor and singer
18 February – Ramz, rapper and singer
16 February – Charlie Green, singer
7 April – Laura van der Heijden, cellist
7 July – James Marriott, musician and YouTuber
7 October – Lauren Platt, singer and 2014 X Factor semi-finalist
24 October – Raye, R&B singer-songwriter
Deaths
22 January
Ivor Kirchin, bandleader, 92
Billy Mackenzie, singer-songwriter (Associates), 39 (suicide)
Wally Whyton, singer-songwriter and broadcaster (The Vipers Skiffle Group), 67
10 February – Brian Connolly, vocalist (The Sweet), 51 (liver failure)
18 February – Eric Fenby, music teacher, composer, and amanuensis of Frederick Delius, 90
7 March – Alfred Nieman, pianist and composer, 82
4 June – Ronnie Lane, bassist (The Small Faces), 51 (multiple sclerosis, pneumonia)
7 June – Paul Reade, composer, 54
19 July – Frank Farrell, bassist, vocalist and songwriter, 50
4 August – Alexander Young, singer-songwriter, 58 (lung cancer)
10 August – Conlon Nancarrow, composer, 84
4 September – Belle Stewart, Scottish singer, 91
8 September – Derek Taylor, press agent for the Beatles, 65
10 October – George Malcolm, pianist, organist, conductor and composer, 80
6 November – Epic Soundtracks, singer-songwriter and drummer (Swell Maps), 38 (cause unknown)
17 November – Wilfred Josephs, composer, 70
21 November – Robert Simpson, composer, 76
6 December – George Chisholm, Scottish jazz trombonist, 82
11 December – Simon Jeffes, classical guitarist, 48 (brain tumour)
Music awards
= Brit Awards
=The 1997 Brit Awards winners were:
Best British producer: John Leckie
Best soundtrack: Trainspotting
British album: Manic Street Preachers – Everything Must Go
British breakthrough act: Kula Shaker
British dance act: The Prodigy
British female solo artist: Gabrielle
British group: Manic Street Preachers
British male solo artist: George Michael
British single: Spice Girls – "Wannabe"
British video: Spice Girls – "Say You'll Be There"
International breakthrough act: Robert Miles
International female: Sheryl Crow
International group: The Fugees
International male: Beck
Outstanding contribution: Bee Gees
= Mercury Music Prize
=The 1997 Mercury Music Prize was awarded to Roni Size/Reprazent – New Forms.
See also
1997 in British radio
1997 in British television
1997 in the United Kingdom
List of British films of 1997
References
External links
BBC Radio 1's Chart Show
Official Charts Company
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Titanic (film 1997)
- Freddie Mercury
- Madonna
- Diana, Putri Wales
- Lisa (rapper)
- Musik dansa elektronik
- Piramida Agung Giza
- Rosé (penyanyi)
- Aaliyah
- James Blunt
- 1997 in British music
- 1997 in music
- Music of the United Kingdom
- British rock music
- 1997 in British television
- 2004 in British music
- 1996 in British music
- 1998 in British music
- 1997 United Kingdom general election
- 2001 in British music