TOTP 17 DEC 1999

So here it is…no, not Merry Christmas – though we are nearly there in these 1999 repeats – but my final review of a TOTP show. Yes, after nine and a half years of writing this blog, I’ve finally arrived at my last episode. Not my last post mind – I’ll still have a couple more to write tying up a few ends about 1999 specifically and the 90s in general but for actual TOTP shows, this is it as I don’t review the Christmas Day shows. However, any thoughts of going out with a bang were immediately removed when I checked the running order. It’s pretty wretched including leathery old Tom Jones with a Christmas song, some anonymous dance act, a well known dance act but it’s the Vengaboys and an awful No 1. So much for going out on a high!

Mercifully, those songs don’t feature much in my own memories of Christmas 1999 which was a positive but the down side was that it was because I was far too busy at work to have noticed most of them. The ultimate irony is, of course, that my work, at the time, was being the Assistant Manager of the Our Price store in Altrincham so I was literally surrounded by those same records. It’s not the best endorsement of their impact nor longevity. That particular Christmas was my 10th working for the chain and aged 31, they were becoming harder and harder to get through. OK, 31 doesn’t sound that old (especially to me now aged 58) but maybe it was for working in a record shop?

What was true was that I’d found the first Christmas I’d ever worked for the chain back in 1990 a bit of a buzz, exciting even. Subsequent festive trading periods would see stores being asked to navigate them on a smaller payroll budget year after year but expected to beat last year’s takings. On top of that, we were working more hours as both Sunday trading had come in as well as being open on Boxing Day. As such, I think I didn’t have a day off for nearly 10 days at one point in 1999. Certainly, in the frenzy of the final few days and up to New Year’s Eve, the only time I wasn’t at work was Christmas Day itself. I don’t mind admitting that I was nearly in tears when I woke up one morning and realised I had to go into work yet again. I’m not sure I had another one in me and so it proved as it would be my final ever retail Christmas. Within three months, I was gone not just from Our Price but from Manchester too. Both had been ‘home’ for the last decade. The times they really were a-changin’.

You’re not here for my personal life memories though – well, not exclusively – so let’s get to the music and we start with the aforementioned Tom Jones who is joined for a duet by Catatonia’s Cerys Matthews on the first even vaguely Christmas themed song we’ve heard in these 1999 TOTP repeats. And ‘vaguely’ is the word as “Baby It’s Cold Outside” doesn’t actually mention the Yuletide season in its lyrics at all. Ah, those lyrics. OK, before we get into those, a bit of context. This was a track from Tom’s “Reload” album which saw the Welsh powerhouse collaborate with 17 different artists to record (mostly) cover versions, an idea which paid off big time when the album went to No 1 and four times platinum. “Baby It’s Cold Outside” was the second single taken from it after Jones had collaborated with The Cardigans on a version of “Burning Down The House” by Talking Heads.

So, back to those lyrics. The song was written in 1944 by Frank Loesser who was a Broadway musical composer and has been recorded by many a huge star including Doris Day and Bob Hope, Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Jordan and Dinah Shore and Buddy Clark. The song’s two protagonists are a host and a guest with the former trying to convince the latter to stay for a romantic evening as the temperature outside falls. However, since 2009, its lyrics have come under scrutiny for allegedly implying coercive behaviour and sexual harassment on behalf of the host towards the guest. The line “What’s in this drink?” even led to accusations of date rape. Loesser’s daughter Susan has dismissed such allegations and suggested that the dark undertones being attributed to the song are a result of TV shows Saturday Night Live and South Park depicting it being performed by disgraced comedian and actor Bill Cosby who has served time for a sexual assault conviction. Despite this defence, the song has, in the past, been removed from radio playlists and streaming services.

No such concerns are apparent in this performance by Tom and Cerys though as the studio audience cheer their interaction enthusiastically throughout. Rather than anything sexual, there was some intertextuality in the pairing of Tim and Cerys with the latter having already duetted with Space on 1998 No 4 hit “The Ballad Of Tom Jones”. I’m not quite sure why Tom has been given the stage prop of a throne here as that seems to play into the scenario of masculine power being asserted over the female guest whilst Cerys’ dress with one sleeve being attached to the hem doesn’t seem very practical at all.

Has any UK pop group risen so high and then fallen so quickly as B*Witched? Kajagoogoo? Maybe but then they had just a solitary No 1 to their name not four. In just 18 months, Edele, Keavy, Lindsay and Sinéad had gone from that record breaking run of their first four singles debuting at the pinnacle of the charts and a Top 3, double platinum selling album to also rans. The writing had been on the wall when previous single “Jesse Hold On” had spent just one week at No 4 before sliding down the charts and that track, remember, had been the lead taster of their second album “Awake And Breathe”. To highlight their drop off in popularity, their eponymous debut album had spent nearly eight months inside the Top 40. It’s follow up clocked in at barely three.

Clearly something had to be done and that something was to release a ballad for Christmas. Perfect for the festive sales period and a shot in the arm for its parent album. To make the song – “I Shall Be There” – stand out in the Christmas rush, they roped in African male voice choir Ladysmith Black Mambazo to beef up the sound. After all, hadn’t Boyzone* had African chants on their No 1 single “A Different Beat” in 1996. If it worked for them…

*And who was the elder brother of Edele and Keavy Lynch? Yes? Boyzone’s Shane. Hmm.

Sadly for B*Witched, lightning would not strike twice. “I Shall Be There” struggled to a peak of No 13, a far cry from consecutive No 1s and an undeniable truth that their time as A-list pop stars was nearly at an end. A third single from the album would appear in 2000 and would do even worse signalling the initial break up of the group (though they would subsequently reform in 2012). So why didn’t “I Shall Be There” return B*Witched to former glories? Personally, I don’t think it’s that strong a song and the whole Lion King vibe had already been done to death. Also, judging by this performance, Ladysmith Black Mambazo don’t seem to add much sonically, being more involved in some curious, high kick dance moves than anything else. The girls themselves don’t seem to have their hearts in it either – especially Keavy, Lindsay and Sinéad who don’t have much to do apart from essentially act as Edele’s backing singers/dancers. Maybe they’d grown tired of just being there.

A classic summer time hit next which somehow only managed to find its way into the UK’s chart a week before Christmas! I’m not sure what the reason for that is and I can’t be bothered to research it but the truth was that we were late to the party with “Steal My Sunshine” by Len which had entered the American Billboard Hot 100 in the August of 1999. This Canadian group was mainly a vehicle for brother and sister duo of Marc and Sharon Constanzo who finally had that one big hit after eight years in existence. Though not a one hit wonder statistically, surely that’s what they are in the minds of most onlookers. In that regard, they’re up there with the likes of Barenaked Ladies (also Canadian), Sugar Ray, OMC and Smash Mouth. Listing those bands, it strikes me that their paucity of hits isn’t the only thing that connects them – is there an argument that musically they aren’t a million miles away from each other? I mean, I’m sure if you did a forensic investigation that generalisation not might not hold up to scrutiny but then, hey…it’s a generalisation and it isn’t supposed to withstand detailed exploration! Maybe it’s just me drawing musical ley lines between them – sometimes the synapses fire and connections are made that you just can’t shake.

Anyway, none of this psychobabble really matters. The facts are that Len took the Andrea True Connection sampling “Steal My Sunshine” to No 8 over here with its combination of pop, hip-hop, disco and rap proving as irresistible to UK audiences as it had to our American counterparts. Supposedly, Marc Constanzo had wanted to write something akin to “Don’t You Want Me” by the Human League and you can just about hear that reflected in their biggest hit. Just about. Following it up proved the harder task though and Len never really did in any meaningful way. However, after a six year hiatus in the 2000s, they reconvened and last released an album in 2012.

Around this time, I was working with a guy called Scott who, like most people in record shops (except me), had tried to get a band off the ground at one point or another. His was called Fairclough after the old Coronation Street character. I’m guessing that was because Len had already been taken then.

Oh come on! What is this nonsense? A horrible trance track based around the intro to Madonna’s “Papa Don’t Preach” with some decidedly dodgy staging involving dancing nurses?! Well, this was Progress Presents The Boy Wunda and their hit “Everybody” and as I’m on a countdown to my final few words of reviewing artists on TOTP, I’m going to allow myself to keep this one brief. This was some nasty shit topped off by a performance that stank the studio out. I’m assuming Boy Wunda is the guy is the straight jacket whilst the nurses are there as a continuation of the mental heath facility based official video and due to the fact that “Everybody” actually contains some lines of dialogue from One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest. It looked like crap, it sounded like crap and it was crap. Progress Presents The Boy Wunda? More like an abscess that makes you chunder.

Oh brilliant! It’s the Vengaboys! That’s how you turn the quality control up! Dear Lord! What a final review show running order this is turning out to be. The only saving grace here is that “Kiss (When The Sun Don’t Shine)” didn’t go to No 1 like their previous two singles had despite sticking to the same bubble gum pop/dance formula of those hits. Watching this bank from a distance of 27 years, it seems totally implausible that such a sound and group image could have been so successful. Why did so many people (literally) buy into it? Was it something to do with the impending millennium and expectations of parties to end all parties? Was that passing of time milestone somehow messing with the nation’s collective mind, casting a spell or incantation over the UK record buying public that had them believing that the Vengaboys were the answer to everything including the Y2K bug? Yes, it sounds like the theory of a madman but then how do you explain Trump?

OK, let’s get back to reality and deal with the facts and one which I would like to clarify is, after Len earlier, when was the last time there were two hits on the same show that had a reference to sunshine in their titles? Answers on a postcard please for the chance to win nothing at all.

I feel like I’m losing the plot here which is not the way I wanted to go out with these TOTP reviews but just like that old football adage that you can only play the opposition in front of you, I can only comment on the acts in front of my eyes and in my ears. Sadly for me and both of my sensory organs, the next act is Artful Dodger Featuring Craig David and their garage hit “Re-Rewind (The Crowd Say Bo Selecta)”. It’s holding at No 2, fighting off the challenge of all the other chart entries that we’ve seen earlier in the show though it can’t quite eclipse the record at the top.

It’s hard to talk about this hit without mentioning Leigh Francis and his BoSelecta! TV show. I commented in the last post that Craig David’s own view of it has not always been consistent with claims that it ruined his career and was racist to admissions that he had made peace with Francis and, of course, he did actually appear on the show in person as tribute act Craig Davis.

Whatever the real truth, what we do know is that Channel 4, in agreement with the comedian and writer, took the show down from its All 4 streaming platform in 2020 following complaints of its frequent use of blackface. I have to say that, at the time, I did find it funny especially the Michael Jackson character but on reflection, it would be hard to make claims that it was any different to the offensive sketches seen in the likes of Little Britain and Fantasy Football League. In my defence, the Jacko take off was so grotesque that he almost became a non-person and that somehow made the BoSelecta! characterisation more acceptable. It couldn’t be wrong to laugh at someone who wasn’t even real could it? I feel like I’m tying myself up in knots here so I should probably perform an act of escapology by saying I abhor racism in all its forms and leave it at that.

I have arrived at my final review destination and I could hardly have picked a worse place to alight. For the third consecutive week, Cliff Richard is No 1 with “The Millennium Prayer” and Lord only knows how we got here. In fact, looking at the final four songs I’ve had to review, I’m not sure I could have picked a worse quartet in my deepest nightmares. I’m literally out of words to say anymore about this one but before I go, there’s a little bit of admin to take care of. You see, Cliff wasn’t actually the Christmas No 1. No, that honour went to Westlife and their double A-side single “Seasons In The Sun / I Have A Dream” which was officially announced as the festive chart topper two days after this TOTP aired having timed the release of their Christmas offering to perfection. The next show was the Christmas jamboree on the 25th when they performed “I Have A Dream” alongside some of the year’s other big hits. The first TOTP of 2000 would see them perform “Seasons In The Sun”. Thankfully I won’t be reviewing either of them. And there we have it. I’m done…well, nearly. There will be a ‘TOTP 1999: the epilogue’ post and also one for the whole of the decade but then that will finally be it. The end is very near now…

Order of appearanceArtistTitleDid I buy it?
1Tom Jones and Cerys MatthewsBaby It’s Cold OutsideNope
2B*Witched featuring Ladysmith Black MambazoI Shall Be ThereBut I won’t – no
3LenSteal My SunshineNah
4Progress Presents The Boy WundaEverybodyNever
5VengaboysKiss (When The Sun Don’t Shine)As if
6Artful Dodger Featuring Craig DavidRe-Rewind (The Crowd Say Bo Selecta)No
7Cliff RichardThe Millennium PrayerHeavens above no!

Disclaimer

I make no claim to the rights of this show and all ownership and contents including logos and graphics belongs totally to the BBC or copyright holder(s).

All opinions on the music and artists featured are my own. Sorry if you don’t agree.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m002xks0/top-of-the-pops-17121999

TOTP 06 MAR 1998

We’ve entered March in these 1998 TOTP repeats and on the day this show was broadcast, Liam Gallagher was charged with assault after allegedly breaking a fan’s nose in Brisbane, Australia. He followed this up by getting himself banned from Cathay-Pacific airline for allegedly abusing passengers and staff on the flight home to the UK. Oh dear. He wasn’t the only pop star in this year to get themselves in bother as Mark Morrison, Mark E. Smith and Ian Brown all fell foul of the law. I wonder if any of the acts on this show have some misdemeanours in their pasts…

Our host is Jamie Theakston who certainly does have some proverbial skeletons in his closet, namely his visit to a Mayfair brothel in 2002 which was leaked in the press despite Theakston’s attempt to prevent publication of the story via an injunction. Back in 1998 though he was the squeaky clean host of kids Saturday morning TV show Live & Kicking as well as being part of the roster of presenters for TOTP and his first job on tonight’s show is to do the outro for the opening act who are Cornershop. Wait…what?! But they were the final act we saw in the last TOTP as they were at No 1! Yes, but this meant nothing in the era of the show’s executive producer Chris Cowey where chart positions and downward movement within the Top 40 were insignificant. For example, “Brimful Of Asha” was down from No 1 to No 3 this week but as a hit that was still selling lots of copies, it warranted a slot in the running order. Maybe Cowey was right – in a world of first week of release discounted prices, was this how TOTP countered that practice of manipulating the charts? After all, otherwise you had the prospect of a big hit only being featured once on the show* because of it peaking high and then constantly dropping as the full price point kicked in. Even so, this particular segue across two shows and seven days does jar.

*We’ll come back to this at the end of the show

Anyway, as I indicated in my last post, I bought “Brimful Of Asha” and actually enjoyed both versions of the track on the single so much so that I caught them live at Manchester Academy. However, it wasn’t the best gig I ever attended. They didn’t say a word to the audience all night which always irks me. A live gig should be just that – a live experience not just recreating the sound of the records however accurate that might be. Cornershop would have a couple more minor Top 40 hits but are still a together having last released an album in 2020.

Controversial moment: There was that time in 1992 when they burnt posters of Morrissey outside the offices of EMI to protest about his perceived overtly racist behaviour having draped a Union Jack flag around him during a set at the Madstock festival in Finsbury Park.

Finley Quaye was still riding high at this point in his career. His debut album “Maverick A Strike” had gone gold in just three weeks and he’d recently won the Best British Male award at the 1998 BRITS. He was also a regular on TOTP with “Your Love Gets Sweeter” his fourth consecutive Top 40 hit. It’s another reggae-tinged, soulful, melodic number but there’s something in its tune that reminds me of this…

Just me then. Anyway, where did it all go wrong for Finley? From what I have read, there seems to have been a certain element of self-destruction surrounding Quayle’s erratic behaviour and unreliability. He also had a reputation for uncooperativeness and not playing the music industry’s games. You can perhaps see an example of this in his appearance here with a less than energetic performance and his decision to turn up in attire as if it was dress down Friday. I’ve never heard any of his material since “Maverick A Strike” so I can’t comment on its quality but maybe it was just a case of musical tastes moving on? Certainly his private life was problematic involving assault charges, unpaid debts and being declared bankrupt in 2012. Attempts at a comeback were undermined by Quaye not turning up for gigs and, in one desperate case, being physically manhandled off stage by the venue owner for a shambolic performance. All of this led to a lack of trust in him within whatever was left of his dwindling fanbase. Whether he’ll be able to overcome his demons and return to a successful music career, who knows?

Controversial moment: Despite all the issues detailed above, perhaps Finley’s most stand out incident was when Prince Harry (himself no stranger to controversy) admitted in an interview in 2023 with Stephen Colbert (another controversial figure!) that if he could only listen to one song for the rest of his life then he would choose “Your Love Gets Sweeter”.

Like “Brimful Of Asha”, here was another song that had already peaked at No 1 and dropped down from the top spot but which was still an incredibly strong seller and so is featured on the show again. “My Heart Will Go On” by Celine Dion was in its second week at No 2 and it would rise back to the chart summit the following week. It is, however, a chart curiosity that despite being the second best selling single in the UK for 1998, it spent only two weeks at No 1. That shouldn’t diminish its sales reputation though. Look at these chart positions:

1 – 2 – 2 – 1 – 3 – 2 – 2 – 2 – 3 – 4

Not too shabby and definite evidence that even in the fast moving chart currents of 1998, certain singles could swim against the tide or at least tread water. Of course, “My Heart Will Go On” had an enormous advantage of most of its chart competitors in that it was from a massive, massive film – Titanic was the highest grossing film of all time, a record it held for twelve years – and that can’t be ignored in the final totting up but it remains an iconic song and yes, I hate it.

Controversial moment: Celine? Surely not though there is a comical claim by an American priest that her stereotype-free children’s clothing line was promoting satanism!

WHO?! Hinda Hicks anyone? Success wise she was the solo artist equivalent of N-Tyce who were on last week’s show. Four middling sized Top 40 singles (of which “If You Want Me” was the first) and an album that peaked at No 20. Her music was an R&B infused pop/soul sound (yawn – wasn’t it always?) and in Hinda’s defence she did get three MOBO Award nominations (plus two BRIT Awards ones). So why don’t I remember her given that I had the added advantage of working in a record shop at the time? Maybe the market for that genre was over flooded? Possibly. She did also suffer from record company machinations when Island Records and Universal Records merged causing the promotion for her second album to be non existent and that was that for her career as a chart artist. Her Wikipedia page doesn’t list any further activity by Hinda post 2008. However, her name resurfaced in 2011…

Controversial moment: Not really controversial but her name was appropriated by Lilly Allen in the tweet ‘Toni Braxton Hinda Hicks’ which was a reference to the phrase ‘Braxton Hicks’ which is a nickname for false labour pains during pregnancy.

It strikes me that it would be easy to dismiss this next artist as yet another forgotten hitmaker of the 90s whose hits were synth-heavy but gravitas-lite songs and she was just the pop puppet fronting them. However, having done some background reading on her, there’s more than meets the eye to Robyn. Firstly, she writes her own stuff so that preconceived notion of mine of her being all image and no substance is immediately dispelled. Secondly, the reaction to her songs has created quite the fan base, especially amongst the LGBTQ+ community. In an interview with vice.com, she posited the theory that this is because she is a Swedish woman and that feminist debate is very mainstream there and has been for years so there is an easier connection between the gay community and her because of her upbringing.

Robyn’s career could have gone a very different way. She declined to sign with Jive Records who then turned their attention to another young female artist called Britney Spears who Jive called “An American Robyn” and who, as it panned out, would prove to be much more easier to control than Robyn would have been. Despite not having the same levels of fame as Britney, Robyn’s influence on pop music has been widely acknowledged by the likes of Lorde, Charli XCX, Taylor Swift, Carly Rae Jepsen and Andy McCluskey (the writing force behind Atomic Kitten). Her work is seen as contributing to the ideological school of thought that is ‘poptimism’ which argues that pop music is as worthy of professional critique and interest as rock music. Blimey! Having said all of this, “Show Me Love” didn’t hold my interest for long, pleasant enough a pop tune as it is though. Plus, did she not think when she wrote it that a track called “Show Me Love” by an artist called Robyn might cause confusion with the dance anthem of the same name by Robin S?

Controversial moment: Her 1999 album “My Truth” included songs about abortion. Her US label RCA asked her to re-record or edit out these tracks deeming them too controversial for American markets. Robyn refused and the album was not released in the US.

I’m pretty sure that I dismissed this next song as being almost a novelty hit at the time. Have I changed my tune since? Maybe. We have arrived at the moment in the career of Space when those scouse scamps were never bigger. “The Ballad Of Tom Jones” would be their highest charting single ever when it peaked at No 4. Essentially a duet between Tommy Scott and Cerys Matthews of Catatonia, it tells the story of two warring partners in a chaotic relationship who are saved from inflicting physical damage to each other by stumbling across the songs of Tom Jones on the radio as their row reached boiling point. So why didn’t I think much of it at the time? I think it was that the chorus was underwhelming and the lines about knickers and not coming from Wales grated. Also, the counterpoint repeating of ‘Tom Jones, Tom Jones’ didn’t work for me. And yet…it is creepily endearing. A curiosity sure but with some musicality to it that perhaps I’d previously ignored. Whilst Space were at their pinnacle, Cerys and her band were only just beginning their run of hits having recently pierced the Top 3 with “Mulder And Scully”. They would have a further seven Top 40 hits including two Top 10 entries. Both Space and Cerys would end up contributing to tracks on an album by the actual Tom Jones in 1999 when he released his covers project “Reloaded”.

P.S. Unlike with the aforementioned Dexys performance of 16 years prior, there were no shenanigans with the picture on the backdrop screen here which features Sir Tom himself. How I would have loved it to have been Howard.

Controversial moment: Nothing much for Space but in 2020 Cerys played a song that included a racial slur in its lyrics on her radio show which BBC Radio 6 Music had to apologise for. She also engaged in a relationship with EastEnders actor Marc Bannerman whilst taking part in I’m a Celebrity…Get Me Out Of Here in 2011 making the front pages of the tabloids as Bannerman had a partner back home.

From Space to Spice next as we reach a line in the sand moment in the Spice Girls story by encountering both their first hit not to go to No 1 and their last single release whilst Geri Halliwell was still officially a member of the group (the first time around anyway). For the record, “Stop” was their seventh single out of eleven in total and one of only two not to top the charts. Is there any reasonable theory that explains this? Yes, parent album “Spiceworld” had been out for four months by this point so maybe punters didn’t feel the need to own the single and the album? Maybe but then how do you explain the fourth single lifted from it – “Viva Forever”- going to No 1 after “Stop”? Perhaps it was just a slow decline in their popularity 21 months into a career that had constantly been in our faces? Or was it the strength of the song that kept it off the top spot which was…

*checks the online chart archives*

…”It’s Like That” by Run-D.M.C. versus Jason Nevins. Possibly. It was the UK’s third best selling single of 1998. Or maybe “Stop” was just a weak track? It’s a jolly enough, upbeat, Motown-aping song but certainly not as strong as something like “Say You’ll Be There” or as explosive and attention demanding as “Wannabe”. I guess we’ll never know the true reason. What we do know is that Geri would be gone within three months of this performance and things would never quite be the same again in Spiceworld.

Controversial moment: Are you kidding? Far too many to list here.

There a new No 1 and it signalled the comeback of Madonna. Hang on, had she actually been away? Not really though she had been busy becoming a mother and filming the Evita film meaning she hadn’t released a studio album of new material since 1994’s “Bedtime Stories”. Although singles wise, she’d maintained a presence in our charts throughout that period, “Frozen” was her first single release in a year since “Another Suitcase In Another Hall” from the aforementioned Evita soundtrack. The lead track from her “Ray Of Light” album, it would debut at No 1 giving Madge a UK chart topper for the first time since “Vogue” in 1990. Despite this feat, this solitary week at the top was the only time it featured on TOTP. Now, as discussed earlier, a song dropping down the charts wasn’t a barrier to repeat appearances under executive producer Chris Cowey (even from No 1 – I give you Cornershop) so what happened here? Something to do with broadcasting restrictions imposed by Madonna herself?

Anyway, critical reaction to both the single and album were overwhelmingly positive and seen as a real return to form. Me personally? I wasn’t that enamoured – it just didn’t grab me and I wasn’t swayed by the whole Eastern mysticism angle nor the slightly odd video with Madonna as a shape-shifting witch figure prowling across a desert. However, I did quite like the rest of the album which my wife bought especially the title track. A collaboration with legendary producer William Orbit, it incorporated electronica, trip-hop and new age styles. Nearly 30 years in and it has become a touchstone album for creativity with it being credited as a huge influence for the likes of FKA Twigs, Addison Rae and Erika de Casier (I’ve no idea!) making “Ray Of Light” 2025’s hottest album according to some headlines. Ex-Little Mix member Jade Thirwell has even recorded her own version of “Frozen” whilst Madonna herself is revisiting the album with a remix version entitled “Veronica Electronica”.

Controversial moment: I’d be here all day listing them but how about this for a “Frozen” specific one? In 2005, a Belgian judge ruled that the track plagiarised the song “Ma Vie Fout Le Camp” by Fabrice Prevost and for eight years it could not be played nor sold in Belgium.

Order of appearanceArtistTitleDid I buy it?
1CornershopBrimful Of AshaYES!
2Finley QuayeYour Love Gets SweeterNo but my wife had his album
3Celine Dion My Heart Will Go OnNever
4Hinda HicksIf You Want MeNope
5RobynShow Me LoveNah
6Space / Cerys MatthewsThe Ballad Of Tom JonesNo
7Spice GirlsStopI did not
8MadonnaFrozenSee 2 above

Disclaimer

I make no claim to the rights of this show and all ownership and contents including logos and graphics belongs totally to the BBC or copyright holder(s).

All opinions on the music and artists featured are my own. Sorry if you don’t agree.