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Your favourite number 1 of 1991

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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 23,495 ✭✭✭✭Billy86


    jimgoose wrote: »
    You know Daft Punk, the KLF and all that Electronica lot? Well Der Kraftwerk Krautrockmaschine invented it. :cool:
    Although using different process, that general synthesised sound appeared somewhere before Kraftwerk. Actually, quite fitting given that it was 50 years ago to the day. ;)



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 23,495 ✭✭✭✭Billy86


    Tabnabs wrote: »
    1991 sounds like the best year in music history.
    1967 would like a word...

    Beatles - Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band -AND- Magical Mystery Tour (album)
    Jimi Hendrix - Are You Experienced -AND- Axis: Bold as Love
    The Velvet Underground and Nico
    The Doors self titled
    Cream - Disraeli Gears
    Songs of Leonard Cohen
    The Doors - Strange Days
    Aretha Franklin - I Never Loved a Man
    The Who Sell Out
    Something Else by the Kinks
    Tim Buckley - Goodbye and Hello (most overlooked musician of his time?)
    Beach Boys - Smiley Smile
    Miles Davis - Miles Smiles

    ...and then songs which were not on these albums:
    Van Morrison - Brown Eyed Girl
    The Mamas and the Papas - My Girl
    Sam and Dave - Soul Man
    Jefferson Airplane - Somebody to Love
    Smoky Robinson and the Miracles - Tears of a Clown
    Moody Blues - Nights in White Satin
    Marvin Gay and Tammi Terrell - Ain't No Mountain High Enough
    Gladys Knight and the Pips - Heard it Through the Grapevine
    Frankie Valli - Can't Take My Eyes Off of You
    Scott McKenzie - San Francisco
    Sly and the Family Stone - Dance to the Music
    Procol Harrum - White Shade of Pale ("we skipped the light fandango...")
    James Carr - The Dark End of the Street
    Jackie Wilson - Higher and Higher

    There's also 1975:
    Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here
    Bob Dylan - Blood on the Tracks -AND- The Basement Tapes (with The Band)
    Queen - Night at the Opera
    Led Zeppelin - Physical Graffitti
    Neil Young - Tonight's the Night
    Aerosmith - Toys in the Attic
    Elton John - Captain Fantastic And The Brown Dirt Cowboy
    AC/DC - High Voltage
    Black Sabbath - Sabotage
    Bruce Springsteen - Born To Run
    Fleetwood Mac self titled
    David Bowie - Young Americans
    Alice Cooper - Welcome to My Nightmare
    ELO - Face the Music
    Roxy Music - Siren

    Also 1984 as mentioned.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,088 ✭✭✭Pug160


    I'm not sure about best years or decades but I think the 1980s seemed like the most diverse era of music. Probably the most cheesy decade too though.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,208 ✭✭✭✭Cienciano


    1969 wasn't bad either. Pisses all over 1991
    Beatles - Abbey Road
    Led Zeppelin - I
    Led Zeppelin - II
    The Band - The Band
    Nick Drake - Five Leaves Left
    The Who - Tommy
    David Bowie - Space Oddity
    Johnny Cash - San Quentin
    Rolling Stones - Let It Bleed
    Bob Dylan - Nashville Skyline

    Go a year back to 68:
    Beatles - The White Album
    Simon and Garfunkle - Bookends
    Jimi Hendrix - Electric Ladyland
    Rolling Stones - Beggars Banquet
    Van Morrisson - Astral Weeks
    The Doors - Waiting for the Sun
    Pink Floyd - Saucerful of Secrets
    Creedence - Creedence
    Leonard Cohen - Songs of LEonard Cohen
    The Band - Music from Big Pink

    I reckon any year from 1965 to 1978 would beat 1991. Entirely subjective, so the entire thread is pointless!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 23,495 ✭✭✭✭Billy86


    Cienciano wrote: »
    1969
    Ahem.

    ;)


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,208 ✭✭✭✭Cienciano


    Billy86 wrote: »

    LOL, there's loads of good stuff over those years, but I was never big into neil young and I was just putting stuff I like myself!

    Just googled 1971, it has 4 of my top 10 albums of all time!
    Pink Floyd - Meddle
    David Bowie - Hunky Dory
    LEd Zeppelin - IV
    The Doors - LA Woman


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 982 ✭✭✭J Cheever Loophole


    Reeling In The Years sometimes makes mistakes with the years of songs though. Sadeness was definitely out in 1991. Early 1991 though, so may have been released in Europe in late 1990.

    NAIL-ON-THE-HEAD! Sadness entered the UK charts at number 27, week ending 15 December 1990.
    I'm such a loser - can remember the months that particular songs were out. :o

    I don't think of you as a loser - a fellow anorak maybe!! ;)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,184 ✭✭✭✭Galwayguy35


    The Brian Adams one was fairly good, I remember it was number 1 for weeks on end.

    That Chesney Hawks song was played a lot as well, or maybe that was the next year , not too sure.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,184 ✭✭✭✭Galwayguy35


    "Hazard" by Richard Marx was another good song from that year.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 344 ✭✭room_149


    JupiterKid wrote: »
    1991 also gave us this track...

    That was played in clubs/ raves the previous year (1990)
    I remember hearing Eveson Allen/ the Ratpack (or it could have been Mad P from Top Buzz too) call it the national anthem one night at a warehouse in Hackney*

    *back when Hackney was as rough as a dogs arse still/ before Hipster gentrification

    Bit of a Uk centric tangent here, but Most of the house/ techno/ Bass stuff the hipster kids dance to these days sounds like stuff from 20 odd years ago- Blawan, Maia Coles, Disclosure, Scuba, Paul Woolford, Lone, Eats Everything etc. The backlash against the 'EDM' kids in the states reminds of the sneery atitude the likes of Mixmag/ Face/ ID magazine had towards the Rave scene (i.e. Hardcore/Breakbeat/proto-Jungle Techno stuff at Fantazia, Dreamscape, Raindance and on most of the pirates)
    Music recycles itself every 20 years I guess


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,775 ✭✭✭✭kfallon


    Love the start of The Fly! :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 847 ✭✭✭Bog Standard User


    "Your favourite number 1 of 1991"

    i always preferred (1)991 the 1 on the right looks shifty


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,681 ✭✭✭bodice ripper





    January 1992, but whatever.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,668 ✭✭✭nlgbbbblth


    room_149 wrote: »
    That was played in clubs/ raves the previous year (1990)
    I remember hearing Eveson Allen/ the Ratpack (or it could have been Mad P from Top Buzz too) call it the national anthem one night at a warehouse in Hackney*

    *back when Hackney was as rough as a dogs arse still/ before Hipster gentrification

    Bit of a Uk centric tangent here, but Most of the house/ techno/ Bass stuff the hipster kids dance to these days sounds like stuff from 20 odd years ago- Blawan, Maia Coles, Disclosure, Scuba, Paul Woolford, Lone, Eats Everything etc. The backlash against the 'EDM' kids in the states reminds of the sneery atitude the likes of Mixmag/ Face/ ID magazine had towards the Rave scene (i.e. Hardcore/Breakbeat/proto-Jungle Techno stuff at Fantazia, Dreamscape, Raindance and on most of the pirates)
    Music recycles itself every 20 years I guess

    The Nomad track was compiled on Telstar's Thin Ice: The First Step [a short-lived follow up to their seminal Deep Heat series]. I played it lots back in the day.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,628 ✭✭✭Femme_Fatale


    kfallon wrote: »
    Love the start of The Fly! :D
    Me too. And the whole song is so ****ing brilliantly used on Reeling In The Years 1991 for Operation Desert Storm. Can't find on YouTube. Other stuff popping up though, like the start of the Balkans War and release of the Birmingham Six... /sniff :(


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,628 ✭✭✭Femme_Fatale


    jimgoose wrote: »
    Somewhat tangential, but does anyone remember RTE using this, of all things, as "filler" in-between programs in the late '70s/early '80s?

    Sure do. Probably went on up to about 86/7 as I was only born in the late 70s and remember it clearly.
    Also the one with the guy getting up and leaving the house to go work, but getting into a rocket and spending the day in space.
    And the crap eastern European cartoons. And cheapy American cartoons like Barnaby. There's a bunch of threads on all that stuff in All Things Retro.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,623 ✭✭✭thegreatgonzo


    kowloon wrote: »
    I remember RTE having Polish cartoons some time in the late 80s or early 90s, I can't find any, but this fits the bill:


    I have a pain from laughing at that!
    Don't remember RTE's polish cartoons but I did love Hamilton the musical elephant and some other Hallas and Bachelor ones


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,429 ✭✭✭branie


    Black or White - Michael Jackson


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2, Paid Member Posts: 4,138 ✭✭✭dasdog




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,244 ✭✭✭✭bnt


    From the OP list, I'd go for U2's "The Fly", like many others. But an honourable mention for Cher's "Shoop Shoop" song, since it's from a movie I enjoyed. (Mermaids with Cher, Bob Hoskins, Winona Ryder and a very young Christina Ricci in her first movie role.)

    Government resting upon the will and universal suffrage of the people has no anchorage except in the people's intelligence.

    — Grover Cleveland



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