1988 in British music GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21

      This is a summary of 1988 in music in the United Kingdom, including the official charts from that year.


      Summary


      The growing popularity of house music was evident in the charts by the start of 1988, with many songs of this genre becoming big hits, such as "House Arrest" by Krush, "Beat Dis" by Bomb the Bass and "Rok da House" by The Beatmasters. Acid house band S'Express had two Top 10 hits this year including a number 1 in April with the song "Theme from S'Express", but the biggest dance hit of the year came from London singer Yazz, who had first had a big hit with producers Coldcut on the song "Doctorin' The House". Still with Coldcut, but now with her name billed as the lead artist, her song "The Only Way Is Up" topped the chart for five weeks, becoming the second biggest-selling single of the year, and paved the way for a successful solo career, including the follow-up "Stand Up For Your Love Rights" which hit No.2 in October.
      One of the biggest successes of the year was 19-year-old Kylie Minogue, well known to the public from her role in the Australian soap opera Neighbours which had been airing on the BBC since 1986. The popularity of "girl next door" Minogue and her on-screen character Charlene Mitchell ensured chart success. Signed to the production trio Stock Aitken Waterman, her debut international song "I Should Be So Lucky" was number 1 for five weeks, and all of her other solo releases this year – "Got to Be Certain", "The Loco-Motion" and "Je Ne Sais Pas Pourquoi" – reached number 2. Her album Kylie was also number 1 for six weeks, the biggest-selling album of the year and the fifth best-selling album of the entire decade. All Kylie's hits were produced by Stock Aitken Waterman who continued to score hit after hit this year. The production powerhouse also scored Top 10s with Mel and Kim ("That's The Way It Is", No.10, February) Sinitta ("Cross My Broken Heart", No.6, March), Rick Astley ("Together Forever", No.2, March and "Take Me to Your Heart", No.8, November), Bananarama ("I Want You Back", No.5, April), Hazell Dean ("Who's Leaving Who", No.4, April), Brother Beyond ("The Harder I Try", No.2, August and "He Ain't No Competition", No.6, November). In September, another star from Neighbours – Minogue's co-star Jason Donovan – debuted with his Stock Aitken Waterman-produced hit "Nothing Can Divide Us" which reached number 5 and he would go on to outsell even Kylie the following year.
      Popular teenage acts other than Minogue to emerge this year included the American singer Tiffany who scored three Top 10 hits including the No.1 "I Think We're Alone Now" while fellow American teenage star Debbie Gibson also crossed over to the British Charts and had four Top 20 hits. Gibson's biggest hit was the 1980s-compilation staple "Shake Your Love" which reached number 7 in January. Meanwhile, from Italy came Sabrina whose infamous appearances in skimpy swimsuits became tabloid-fodder throughout the year as her pan-European smash hit "Boys (Summertime Love)" hit number 3 in June and the Stock Aitken Waterman-produced follow-up "All of Me" peaked at number 25 three months later.
      New British boyband Bros took five singles into the Top 5 this year including "When Will I Be Famous?" and their only number 1 "I Owe You Nothing", a re-issue of their first single originally released in 1987. Wet Wet Wet scored the first number 1 of their long run of hits with a cover of "With A Little Help From My Friends" which held the top position for 3 weeks.
      Also making her chart debut this year was nineteen-year-old Tanita Tikaram, who launched her career with the critically acclaimed album Ancient Heart, containing the Top 10 hit "Good Tradition" and the intriguing "Twist In My Sobriety" which peaked at number 22 in October. Eddi Reader also rose to prominence during 1988 as the lead-singer of Fairground Attraction. The band made number 1 with the song "Perfect" and followed it up with another Top 10 hit, "Find My Love" and number 2 album The First of a Million Kisses.
      Making chart comebacks after long-absences were Cher, re-launching her music career with "I Found Someone", a number 5 hit written and produced by Michael Bolton. Belinda Carlisle revived her career this year with three Top 10s including the number 1 "Heaven is a Place on Earth" while Kim Wilde scored a career-best three successive Top 10s with "You Came" (No.3), "Never Trust a Stranger (No.7) and "Four Letter Word" (No.6). Pop duo Dollar scored their ninth and final Top 20 hit with comeback hit "Oh L'amour", a cover of an early Erasure single, which made number 7 in April, and also making a chart comeback was the song "A Groovy Kind Of Love", originally a hit in 1965 for The Mindbenders, it hit number 1 in September for Phil Collins, taken from the film Buster in which Collins also starred.
      Some of the more unusual hits of the year included a remix of the theme tune from the popular television series Doctor Who, by "The Timelords", who would go on to have huge success in the early 1990s under the name The KLF. Their song "Doctorin' The TARDIS" (a play on Coldcut's "Doctorin' The House") was number 1 for a week in June. A television advertisement for Miller Lite beer used the 1969 song "He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother" by The Hollies, which became a number 1 in September 19 years after its original release, and an advert for Coca-Cola gave Robin Beck a number 1 with the ballad "First Time". Film and Television actress Patsy Kensit, a teenager in 1988, also reached the Top 10 this year in the band Eighth Wonder. Their Pet Shop Boys–produced UK debut "I'm Not Scared" slowly climbed up the Top 40 and peaked at number 7 in May. The band were more popular in Italy and Japan where they scored several number 1 hits.
      The race for Christmas number one was a battle between Cliff Richard, with a career stretching back to the 1950s and his seasonal song "Mistletoe and Wine", and new star Kylie Minogue with "Especially for You", a duet with her Neighbours co-star Jason Donovan released to coincide with their characters' on-screen wedding. Cliff won the battle with the biggest-selling song of the year, but "Especially for You" climbed to number 1 in the new year of 1989, eventually selling just short of 1 million copies.
      1988 sees Radio 1 start to broadcast on FM on a full time basis across much of the UK when five major transmitters begin radiating Radio 1 on FM for the first time. Previously, Radio 1 had only been available on FM for approximately 25 hours per week, when it 'borrowed' BBC Radio 2's FM frequency at certain points of the day.
      New classical works by British composers included oboe and trumpet concertos from Peter Maxwell Davies and Michael Finnissy's Red Earth for orchestra. Devotional works included Nicholas Jackson's Variations on ‘Praise to the Lord, the Almighty’ and John Tavener's The Akathist of Thanksgiving. Russian pianist Evgeny Kissin made his Proms debut during the 1988 season, whilst Sir Andrew Davis gave up his role as conductor of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra to become director of Glyndebourne.


      Events


      February 8 – Kenney Jones performs for the last time as the regular drummer for The Who at the British Phonographic Industry awards ceremony, where the band receives the Lifetime Achievement Award.
      15 February – The first public performance of Anthony Payne’s realisation of Elgar’s Symphony No. 3 is given by the BBC Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Andrew Davis at the Royal Festival Hall.
      10 March – Andy Gibb dies five days after his 30th birthday at John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford of myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle caused by a recent viral infection and exacerbated by his years of cocaine abuse.
      11 March – The first performance of Richard Rodney Bennett‘s Marimba Concerto takes place at Muhlenberg College in Allentown, Pennsylvania, performed by the Lehigh Chamber Orchestra, conducted by Donald Spieth.
      16 April – A concert performance of the opera Beatrice Cenci by Berthold Goldschmidt takes place at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, London, 37 years after it won first prize in the Festival of Britain opera competition.
      30 April – The Eurovision Song Contest, held in the RDS Simmonscourt Pavilion, Dublin, is won by Celine Dion, representing Switzerland. The UK entry, "Go", sung by Scott Fitzgerald, finishes in second place after leading for most of the judging.


      Charts




      = Number-one singles

      =


      = Number-one albums

      =


      Year end charts




      = Best-selling singles of 1988

      =


      = Best-selling albums of 1988

      =

      Notes:


      Classical music


      Malcolm Arnold – Robert Kett Overture (Op. 141)
      Geoffrey Burgon – The Trial of Prometheus
      Peter Maxwell Davies
      Oboe Concerto
      Trumpet Concerto No. 1 (from the Strathclyde Concertos)
      Stephen Dodgson – Promenade I for two guitars
      Michael Finnissy – Red Earth for orchestra
      Oliver Knussen – Flourish with Fireworks (original version)
      Michael Nyman – String Quartet No. 2
      Philip Sparke – A Swiss Festival Overture
      John Tavener – The Akathist of Thanksgiving


      Opera


      Mark-Anthony Turnage – Greek


      Film and Incidental music


      Michael Nyman – Drowning by Numbers directed by Peter Greenaway.


      Musical films


      It Couldn't Happen Here, starring the Pet Shop Boys
      Testimony: The Story of Shostakovich, starring Ben Kingsley, featuring the London Philharmonic Orchestra and the voices of John Shirley-Quirk and Felicity Palmer


      Musical theatre


      22 October – Sherlock Holmes – The Musical by Leslie Bricusse opens at the Northcott Theatre, Exeter.


      Births


      24 January – Jade Ewen, singer and actress
      13 February – Aston Merrygold, singer-songwriter, dancer, and actor
      27 March – Jessie J, singer
      5 May – Adele, singer-songwriter
      13 July – Tulisa Contostavlos, singer-songwriter and member of N-Dubz
      19 July – Charlene Soraia, singer-songwriter
      25 June – Amanda Marchant and Sam Marchant, singers (Samanda)
      4 August – Tom Parker, singer, (The Wanted) (died 2022)
      6 September – Max George, singer, (The Wanted)
      26 September
      James Blake, singer-songwriter and producer
      Mark Simpson, clarinet player and composer
      7 October – Lauren Mayberry, Scottish singer-songwriter (Chvrches)
      2 December – Fuse ODG, Ghanaian-English recording artist
      15 December – Lady Leshurr, rapper, singer-songwriter and producer
      21 December
      Yasmin, singer-songwriter and DJ
      Alexa Goddard, singer
      31 December – Holly Holyoake, singer


      Deaths


      17 January – Harry Jacobs, conductor, 99
      2 February – Solomon, pianist, 85
      10 March
      Andy Gibb, singer, 30 (myocarditis)
      William Wordsworth, composer, 79
      25 May – Martin Slavin, composer and music director, 66
      3 July – George Lloyd, composer, 85
      9 August – Peggy Cochrane, composer, 86
      19 August – Sir Frederick Ashton, dancer and choreographer, 83
      24 August – Kenneth Leighton, composer, 57 (cancer)
      11 September – H. Hugh Bancroft, organist and composer, 84
      23 September – Arwel Hughes, composer and conductor, 79
      15 October – Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji, composer, music critic, pianist and writer, 96
      11 November – William Ifor Jones, conductor and organist, 88
      7 December – John Addison, composer, 78
      21 December – Paul Jeffreys, bass player (Be-Bop Deluxe and Steve Harley & Cockney Rebel), 36 (air crash)
      25 December – Denis Matthews, pianist and musicologist, 69


      Music awards




      = BRIT Awards

      =
      The 1988 BRIT Awards winners were:

      Best British producer: Stock Aitken Waterman
      Best classical recording: Ralph Vaughan Williams – Symphony No. 5
      Best international solo artist: Michael Jackson
      Best Music Video: New Order – "True Faith"
      Best soundtrack: "The Phantom of the Opera"
      British album: Sting – "...Nothing Like the Sun"
      British breakthrough act: Wet Wet Wet
      British female solo artist: Alison Moyet
      British group: Pet Shop Boys
      British male solo artist: George Michael
      British single: Rick Astley – "Never Gonna Give You Up"
      International breakthrough act: Terence Trent D'Arby
      International group: U2
      Outstanding contribution: The Who


      See also


      1988 in British radio
      1988 in British television
      1988 in the United Kingdom
      List of British films of 1988


      References




      External links


      BBC Radio 1's Chart Show
      The Official Charts Company

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