TOTP 12 NOV 1999

“England versus Scotland – the biggest clash since…ooh…Geri Versus Emma” proclaims host Jayne Middlemiss at the start of this particular TOTP thereby neatly summing up what was happening in the worlds of both sport and music in mid November 1999. The day after this show aired, the first leg of a play off between the English and Scottish national football teams took place to decide which nation would proceed to the 2000 European Championship tournament after both teams had finished as runners-up in their respective qualifying groups. England would win that first game in Scotland 2-0 thanks to a pair of goals from Paul Scholes and would ultimately go on to the finals in Belgium and the Netherlands despite losing the second leg four days later 0-1. I remember watching the first game in a bar in Manchester with a couple of friends and then watching perhaps the worst England display for years in the second leg on TV in our flat.

If England overcoming the auld enemy would have been the shortest odds outcome at the bookies, the battle between Geri Haliwell and her Spice Girls ex-band mate Emma Bunton was less easy to predict. Not quite up there with Oasis v Blur and the whole Battle of Britpop saga, it was still quite the pop music story as both artists released singles in the same week with both having eyes on the No 1 spot. There could be only one winner though and the result was announced almost immediately with the opening act (and therefore not this week’s chart topper) being Tin Tin Out and Emma Bunton with their version of “What I Am” which debuted at No 2.

So was this clash of release dates accidental or deliberately engineered? Certainly, the generated press coverage wouldn’t have done either protagonist any harm promotion-wise but then, would both have been guaranteed a No 1 if they’d have gone to market seven days apart? There was a train of thought which predicted a surefire win for Emma Bunton given that this was her first ever solo release which wasn’t available on anything else whereas the Geri Halliwell track was the third to be taken from her “Schizophonic” album which had already been in the shops for five months by this point. However, Geri had another ace up her sleeve which kept her on the front pages for a week which was an “are they or aren’t they?” tabloid frenzy about whether she was dating Chris Evans. That was convenient that the story broke that week. Hmm.

Anyway, in the final reckoning it was Geri who won out even though Emma had potentially the more interesting release. Working with electronic dance duo Tin Tin Out, the decision to cover Eddie Brickell And The Bohemians’ 1988 minor hit “What I Am” was sound. A familiar but not over saturated song that actually could potentially not have been known by the Spice Girls fanbase at all and therefore mistaken for a Bunton original. To say the track was a decade old, it translated pretty well into the pop climate of the very late 90s which is just as well as Tin Tin Out/Emma deliver a pretty faithful version. Bunton would get her No 1 in 2001 when she answered her own question with the single “What Took You So Long”.

So what do you do after one of your first hits is a global smash, your debut album is massive but the lead single from your sophomore collection doesn’t go down so well? You return to the formula of that initial worldwide hit of course. That’s certainly how it appeared with Savage Garden who had topped charts everywhere with “Truly Madly Deeply” but had found sales harder to come by for “The Animal Song” which trailed second album “Affirmation”. Time to bring out the big guns then and “I Knew I Loved You”, just like “Truly Madly Deeply”, was a huge, shimmering, harmonies-laden pop ballad.

However, it wasn’t quite a case of copy and paste though as Darren Hayes and Daniel Jones hadn’t recorded the track as part of their original submission of the album to record label Columbia who challenged the duo to come up with another “Truly Madly Deeply”. Although not keen to rinse and repeat, Hayes and Jones agreed that the album lacked a ballad and so “I Knew I Loved You” was written. It would go Top 10 in the UK but critically, in America, replicated the success of “Truly Madly Deeply” by going to No 1on the Billboard chart. So, who was vindicated? Those Columbia executives for insisting on another big ballad or Savage Garden themselves for coming up with it? I think those dastardly record label executives won the battle but their artist won the war with their stance that “Truly Madly Deeply” was a one-off song as its legacy surely outshines that of “I Knew I Loved You”.

Beck might not be the greatest singer in the world (as this TOTP performance demonstrates) but you can’t doubt his creativity. Seven studio albums in seven years by 1999 proves he had ideas in him that he wanted to get out there. Album No 7 was “Midnite Vultures” from which “Sexx Laws” was the lead single. If your only acquaintance with Beck was via 1994’s slacker anthem “Loser”, then this track must have blown your expectations out of the water although Jayne Middlemiss’s intro of “This next track has been described as LA Punk, Memphis Funk and Chicago Blues with Hawaiian guitar and a Mississippi banjo” should have given a clue that you were in for something different. Jayne failed to specifically mention the brass section that leads the number that was almost jaunty in nature. Subject-wise, as Tim Booth of James once sang, it “messed around with gender roles” and expectations of how the sexes behave. I’d forgotten how good it was to be honest and it deserved better than its No 27 chart peak.

One last thing – that spelling of ‘sex’ as ‘sexx’? It’s either a play on the age rating system (as in an x-rated film) or it signifies two X-chromosomes, thus saying nothing is wrong with same-sex relationships.

And so the brief time of Another Level was at an end – “Bomb Diggy” was their eighth and final hit. Clearly, I wasn’t the target audience for this lot but even allowing for that, I found their success inexplicable. This last chart entry was a case in point. It came over like an R’n’B nursery rhyme but with decidedly non children-friendly lyrics. Read this:

“You know it’s the bomb diggy diggy
When we get jigyy let my piggyback
Ride on it all night long (all night)
While I’m singing my song, all through the hoody hoodywanna get the goody goody
You know It’s the bomb diggy diggy bomb bomb diggy
Can I get some of your bomb diggy?
Jello jello goody chocolate puddy
Want to get a little bit of your goody goody
Oh goody goody”

Songwriters: Dwight Reynolds

Bomb Diggy lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC

Now in her intro (and outro), Jayne Middlemiss says she doesn’t know what the song is about. Really Jayne?! “When we get jigyy let my piggyback, ride on it all night long”?! Come on! We all know what he’s singing about there don’t we?! I can only assume she was being ironic or deliberately obtuse. As for the phrase “Bomb Diggy”, apparently it’s a combination of two 90s slang terms – “The Bomb” and “Diggity” (derived from the older phrase hot diggity dog!) Then, of course, there’s also no diggity (meaning “without a doubt”), which was popularized by the 1996 R&B song by Blackstreet. I’m not really interested in any of this but maybe you are and I’m nothing if not concerned with public service.

It’s Jenny from the Block! Not that anyone called her that yet as that particular song wouldn’t be released for another three years. In 1999, Jennifer Lopez was just two singles and one album into her discography with that second single being “Waiting For Tonight”. More of a pop tune than her debut hit “If You Had My Love”, it did the job of consolidating her image as a singer rather than purely an actress when it was another big hit. Although we get an in person, studio performance here, the accompanying music video followed in the footsteps of Will Smith by pursuing a Y2K theme and specifically the millennium bug element. At a New Year’s Eve party, there is a power outage as the clock strikes midnight and everyone is plunged into darkness but it comes back on after a couple of moments because…well, it wouldn’t have been much of a music video if it didn’t I guess.

Going back to that TOTP appearance though, clearly a wind machine must have been installed at the front of the stage but off camera judging by how the Lopez locks were tossing about. Bizarrely, the performance is intercut with images of Jennifer from the video with lots of shots of her armpits. Given the aforementioned wind machine, am I the only one getting Madonna “Into The Groove”/ Desperately Seeking Susan vibes?

WHOOOO?! Who on earth was Mr. Vegas?! Well, he wasn’t Johnny’s Dad but apart from that I haven’t a clue. Zero memory of this so…

*googles Me. Vegas*

…he’s a Jamaican dancehall singjay (a style of vocals combining toasting and singing) who was born Clifford Smith who came to prominence in the late 90s, picking up a MOBO award and airplay for his track “Heads High”. When legendary reggae label Greensleeves got involved and gave it an official release, the Top 40 awaited. I can’t say it does much for me but at least he was a genuine artist unlike, I don’t know, Shaggy who always seemed like a grifter to me. On a nostalgic note, the name Greensleeves conjures up memories of the record distributor Jet Star who handled the label’s product. When working for Our Price, if I ever had to ring up Jet Star to place orders for the shop, the telesales guys on the phone lines were always so sound and laid back, like they were just chilling rather than at work and I always imagined them either about to blaze up or already with reefer in hand. They were different times.

Not sure I remember this charity single. Artists For Children’s Promise anyone? This collective of pretty big names from the world of music (plus a couple of actors) added their own personal contributions to a cover of The Rolling Stones’ “It’s Only Rock ‘n Roll (But I Like It)” to spearhead a campaign backed by Marks and Spencer to encourage UK citizens to donate the value of their final hour’s earnings before the millennium which would be split between seven children’s charities. It wasn’t a major hit, peaking at No 19 but you can’t doubt its intentions.

Right, so if you’ve watched the video, how many artists did you recognise? I think I got most of them though there’s a few on the list in its Wikipedia entry that I didn’t see. Maybe they were blink-and-you’ll-miss-them cameos or perhaps we didn’t see the entire promo? A few things did pique my interest though. Why did the Spice Girls get their own shouted intro mid song before adding their vocals? Nobody else did. Then there’s the lines about “suicide right on the stage” and “teenage lust” – could they be deemed controversial in a song designed to raise money for children’s charities or am I being overly sensitive? Finally, I’m not sure the contributions of Robin Williams and Eric Idle really added anything entertaining, big names or not.

And so to the winner of the chart battle of the Spice Girls as we witness Geri Halliwell bag her second consecutive No 1. I have to say that, listening back to “Lift Me Up”, it’s a fairly innocuous track. Not unpleasant but hardly outstanding and, remembering that musical opinion is subjective, possibly not deserving of topping the chart. Remember, musical opinion is subjective! That wind machine was obviously in use again here and although Geri covers her armpits up, I’m not sure why she performs in a bra.

So do you think Geri and Emma Bunton were in the studio together and if so, what would they have said to each other? Well, disappointingly, I don’t think they were. My evidence? Well, judging by the long outro shot segueing from Emma opening the show into the next act, Jayne Middlemiss was clearly in the actual studio at the same time but when she introduces Geri, she clearly isn’t due to the green screen effect going on behind her indicating that Halliwell’s performance was pre-recorded not in the presence of our host. Oh well.

Geri would come up trumps with a third consecutive No 1 early in 2000 with “Bag It Up” and then a fourth a year later with a cover of The Weather Girls’ “It’s Raining Men” before the hits became smaller and then dried up altogether. She would rejoin the Spice Girls in 2007 for a number of reunion dates and again in 2019 for their fourth and so far last concert tour.

Order of appearanceArtistTitleDid I like it?
1Tin Tin Out / Emma BuntonWhat I AmNope
2Savage GardenI Knew I Loved YouNah
3BeckSexx LawsGood song but no
4Another LevelBomb DiggyNever
5Jennifer LopezWaiting For TonightNo
6Mr. VegasHead HighI did not
7Artists For Children’s PromiseIt’s Only Rock ‘n Roll (But I Like It)Negative
8Geri HalliwellLift Me UpAnd 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/m002wnjr/top-of-the-pops-12111999

TOTP 02 JUL 1999

We’re halfway through these BBC4 1999 TOTP repeats which means I’m officially in the home straight with this blog which will end with the 90s and there will be no TOTP Rewind the 2000s. Also coming to an end back in 1999 was my time working for Our Price. Having started with the company in October 1990, I now had less than a year left before I would leave. I recently posted a photo of myself taken outside the store in Altrincham around this time and with me in that photo was my manager Pete whom I’ve not referred to before. Pete came in to replace Scott who had been so important in my rehabilitation back into work after a significant amount of time out when I was struggling with my mental health. I’d not worked with Pete before so I was probably a bit concerned when Scott was moved on to the Piccadilly shop in Manchester. I shouldn’t have worried as Pete was great albeit in very different ways to Scott. He was an absolute dynamo, always busy doing something, probably because he was a sugar junkie – Pete would think nothing of having a packet of Tunnocks Teacakes for his lunch. He was also not the best observer of Health and Safety regulations. I recall doing an induction for a Xmas Temp and had literally just told them about never standing on a swivel chair to reach for anything high up and Pete came into the stockroom and reached for something high up on a swivel chair! I once locked him in the shop by mistake after taking both his and my keys home. This was before we all had mobile phones and so I got all the way home to Manchester where I found my answer machine full of messages from a stranded Pete asking me to come back and let him out. He took it in good humour though and we went to the pub afterwards to watch the footy. Pete would be my 14th and final manager before I left both Our Price and Manchester for a job in the Civil Service at York.

You’re not here for recollections about my work life though so let’s get to the music. There are only seven artists on tonight as opposed to the usual eight but having checked, that appears to be the original figure when first broadcast and not due to any revised editing decision. Gail Porter is in the host hot seat and we start with last week’s No 1. This practice of having the previous week’s chart topper raise the curtain on the following week’s show despite having been toppled from their throne was becoming a regular feature. Previously, we had S Club 7, this time it’s the Vengaboys with “Boom Boom Boom Boom”. I get that it was a method of combatting the extreme fluctuations of the very top of the charts otherwise these big selling hits would only get one TOTP appearance but it made for an odd spectacle for those of us who grew up in the 70s and 80s watching the show. We just get a repeat of the performance from seven days prior in this one and as such, I have nothing more to say about this absolute pile of crud.

Instead, I think I’ll comment on the profuse usage of the word ‘boom’ in pop and rock music because the Vengaboys sure weren’t the first to coin it. Going back to 1962 there was “Boom Boom” by legendary US blues artist John Lee Hooker whilst the 70s brought us The Boomtown Rats. Into the 80s, the word seemed to be attached to bands and songs that didn’t achieve the same level of success. “Iko Iko” hitmaker Natasha released “The Boom Boom Room” as the follow up but it failed to crack the Top 40 whilst the band Boom Boom Room never hit any higher than No 74 with “Here Comes The Man” despite releasing it twice. The 90s was…ahem…boom time for songs featuring “boom” in their titles. There’s “Boom Boom Boom” by The Outhere Brothers and “Boom! Shake The Room” by DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince both of which were No 1 records. Meanwhile, Apache Indian would score a Top 5 hit with “Boom Shack-A-Lak” in 1993. I’m sure there are more but I think I’ve proved my point. In fact, I think I’ve earned the right to one of these…

Almost two months (TWO MONTHS!) after we first saw Whitney Houston perform “My Love Is Your Love” on the show, we got to see her do it again this week or rather we were just shown a repeat of that initial appearance. Yes, that’s what the once monumentally important TOTP had become by 1999 – a show that would feed us repeats of performances we’d already seen weeks before. OK, that assessment doesn’t really tell the whole story. Presumably when Whitney and her team agreed to record an in person performance for the show, it came with certain conditions. It wasn’t worth her time to do just one song so two tracks were performed – her current single “It’s Not Right But It’s OK” and the follow up “My Love Is Your Love”. I’m pretty sure that was the case anyway. It makes sense. I recently posited a similar theory regarding Cher who I believe did two performances of her hit “All Or Nothing” in the same recording but with two different outfits on! I guess satisfying diva demands was deemed a fair price to pay to get the biggest names in music on the show.

Anyway, the long game strategy played by Whitney’s people paid off for both parties – they had a ready made performance for promotional purposes in the can for the release of “My Love Is Your Love” and TOTP had the exclusive of a studio appearance that they could show. However, why then was said appearance shown on the 14th May show weeks before it was available to buy in the shops? It must have been to plug the album which had been released the previous November surely? Or perhaps the release date of the single got put back? My guess is your guess.

Ah 1999, you really were a pile of shite weren’t you? Pointless, needless, inexplicable hit after hit cluttering up the charts. Hers another example. For some reason, The Three Amigos and their cover version of “Louie Louie” puts me in mind of The Wiseguys* whom we recently saw coming on like a turn of the millennium Blues Brothers with their single “Ooh La La”. Just like those berks, these jerks put the least amount of original thought that they could get away with into their hit. I mean like literally – they chose possibly the world’s most recorded song (2000 different versions at last estimate) and added a rap to it. That’s it pretty much. Such a poor idea was it that some weird visuals were required to sell it so we get the monochrome, 60s style backing dancers (a nod to the popularity of Austin Powers perhaps) and some sort of sci-fi costumes and and a bloke with a beard who I can’t tell if he’s covered in cobwebs or looks like he’s just come out of a cryogenic freezing facility (Austin Powers again). What utter charlatans (just like the characters from the 1986 comedy movie they were presumably named after).

*It turns out that The Wiseguys remixed one of the tracks on the “Louie Louie” single for The Three Amigos. My Spidey senses working well there.

Suede’s commercial peak was starting to decline by the end of the 90s. Although fourth album “Head Music” had followed “Coming Up” (and before that their eponymous debut album) to the top of the charts, it had only sold a third of its predecessor’s copies. Following suit were the singles released from “Head Music”. “She’s In Fashion” would end a run of six releases charting inside the Top 10 when it peaked at No 13. Subsequent singles taken from the album would not even make the Top 20. And yet “She’s In Fashion” is generally regarded as one of the band’s most accessible songs receiving more airplay than any of their previous singles had. It was championed by Radio 1’s Zoe Ball though possibly she saw it as tool for self promotion due to its opening lines:

“She’s the face on the radio, she’s the body on the morning show.”

Writer(s): Brett Lewis Anderson, Neil John Codling

That must be why my immediate association with the song is the broadcaster and presenter. Didn’t she try and make out that it was written about her? I can’t remember now. It’s too long ago. Enough of all that though, was it any good and why did it receive so much airplay? Well, yes it was, certainly compared to the rest of the junk in the charts. I’m guessing its airplay was down to its lighter, breezier sound that almost had a summery feel. Almost. It’s also quite repetitive for a Suede track which probably helped to lodge it in people’s brains and make it possibly one of their best known songs despite not being one of their biggest hits. Apparently the track was written and recorded at a time when Brett Anderson’s drug habit was at its worst but looking at him here, either he’d turned his life around by this point or the make up artist had done an amazing job on him.

Even in the dying light of the 90s, still the disease that blighted the musical landscape of that decade would not yield – yes, we still had time for yet another boyband. This lot were so lightweight that they’d have floated to the surface if chucked in the nearest canal wearing concrete shoes which is possibly a fate they deserved for the bilge they served up. Too harsh? Maybe but having to write about A1 is really trying my patience. A1 – even their name was awful, only beaten in the manky moniker stakes by Blue.

OK, so what was the story behind this shower? It was all down to someone called Tim Byrne who was one of the people involved in setting up Steps apparently. Paul Marrazzi had just missed out on being in that group but Byrne must have seen something in the pop hopeful and so decided to form another band with him in it. Auditions were held and a four piece put together. Presumably Byrne’s track record with Steps helped get A1 a record deal and hey presto!…their debut single “Be The First To Believe” was suddenly in the Top 10 despite sounding like a piss weak version of Steps if such a thing were possible. Surely this lot were destined for just the 15 minutes of fame but no; they would rack up 11 hit singles including (and this is truly mind boggling) two No 1s! One was a cover version of A-ha’s “Take On Me” which I can only describe as depressing.

They would split in 2002 with the obligatory solo careers pursued but would reunite in 2009 for a series of live shows and a persistent dalliance with Norway and the Eurovision Song Contest (member Christian Ingebrigtsen is Norwegian). In 2014 they appeared in that last scraping of the fame barrel known as The Big Reunion alongside the aforementioned Blue, Five, 911, Adam Rickitt etc. When their 20 years anniversary came around in 2019, Marrazzi rejoined for some live shows and the band released some non album singles. They are still together to this day which see seems incredible to me for a band that had so little to offer.

P.S. When I was at secondary school, we had a grading system that was a combination of letters and numbers with the former referring to your level of achievement in a particular subject and the latter the amount of effort you put in. A1 was therefore the highest you could be awarded and you were generally considered a swot if you received that mark. The coolest grade was A5 – you were naturally clever but couldn’t give a toss about applying yourself. In that system, A1 the band should surely have been an E1 – desperate to do well but intrinsically hopeless. And the recipient of the A5 grade in boyband world? I don’t know, East 17 maybe?

Here’s a question – was I already aware of Jennifer Lopez as an actress before she turned her hand to singing or was her debut single “If You Had My Love” my first introduction to her? Let’s have a look. Which films had she been in up to this point?

*checks her filmography*

Nothing I’d seen then nor indeed since I don’t think. Out Of Sight alongside George Clooney seemed to have been her highest box office hit by this point. The truth is that it’s hard to recall our first awarenesses of huge public figures isn’t it? It’s difficult to pinpoint our consciousness in these matters as our memory shifts and re-edits what we knew and when. I think the answer is probably that I knew of her as an actress but hadn’t engaged with her work on any meaningful level until I had to as I was selling her CDs as part of my job at Our Price. Despite this, I’d be hard pushed to name any of her songs (save maybe “Jenny From The Block”) and there’s plenty to choose from – she’s released nine studio albums and 67 singles! I had no idea! As mentioned earlier, “If You Had My Love” was the first of those 67 and it hit immediately going to No 1 in America and No 4 over here. As a Latin-infused, R&B number, it was never going to do much for me but even my ‘pop’ ear (Popeye’s brother) could identify that it was a very serviceable track competently delivered. Parent album “On The 6” would sell 300,000 copies in the UK and 10 times that amount in the US. A superstar was born and she would go by the name of J-Lo. Well, it was snappier than Jenny From The Block I guess.

It’s yet another different No 1 this time from ATB who was German DJ André Tanneberger. Now, if you look at the chart for 6th to the 12th June 1999, you’ll find two separate entries for “9PM (Till I Come)” – one at No 97 and one at No 78. How could this be and how did the track get to No 1 from these lowly positions? Well, it was all down to imports. The release at No 96 was the Australian import and No 78 position was occupied by the German import. Both singles were released on different labels and therefore circumvented chart rules that didn’t allow the same track to occupy separate chart positions. Neither would get higher than No 47 in the charts. Now that might sound like I’m being sniffy but actually a peak of No 47 for an imported single was very respectable and showed a true demand for the track that had initially been released by Ministry of Sound three months earlier when it had peaked at No 68. Confusing isn’t it? Presumably that Ministry of Sound release didn’t have much promotion behind it or it was a limited pressing as the track remained popular in clubland thereby necessitating those import copies being brought into the country to satisfy demand. In the face of this, Ministry of Sound gave it another go, this time aligned with Summer and the Ibiza season and a No 1 was assured. As I wasn’t frequenting the nightclubs of Ibiza in 1999 (nor anywhere actually being in my 30s at this point), this trance track based around a synthesised slide guitar riff, to paraphrase Midge Ure, meant nothing to me.

Order of appearanceArtistTitleDid I buy it?
1VengaboysBom Boom Boom BoomOf course not
2Whitney Houston My Love Is Your LoveNope
3The Three AmigosLouie LouieNever
4SuedeShe’s In FashionDecent tune but no
5A1Be The First To BelieveNo, it was last
6Jennifer LopezIf You Had My LoveNah
7ATB9PM (Till I Come)And 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/m002t695/top-of-the-pops-02071999