The song 'Domino' describes the end of a relationship with a girl called Domino. She tells the singer he'll forget him, but he still remembers 'She was called Domino or something'.
Released as the second single from their second album, 'Domino' reached number 4 in the Belgian singles chart and number 10 in the Dutch Top 40.
My collection: 7" single no. 1356 Found: Free Record Shop, Den Haag, November 24, 1990 Cost: 6,5 guilders Tracks: 'Domino' / 'Als je lacht'
I bought this single with an information sheet from the German record company which released this single on November 9, 1987. According to this, Mike Oldfield employed the Norwegian ex-child star Anita Hegerland on lead vocals for 'The time has come'. 'Voll geschmeidiger Kraft interpretiert sie das spannungsreiche, melodische 'The time has come', fur dessen Sphärensound auch Michael Cretu as co-produzent verantwortlich zeichnet.'
Or, as Google Translate tells us: 'Full supple strength she interprets the tension-filled, melodic 'The time has come' records, for the spheres sound even as co-producer Michael Cretu responsible.' You've got to love automatic translators.
My collection: 7" single no. 4806 Found: Record fair, Utrecht, April 10, 2010 Cost: 0,5 euro Tracks: 'The time has come' / 'North point'
Circa 1987, Frank Boeijen had a much-publicized relationship with English television presenter Amanda Redington. 'Winter in Hamburg' could easily have been a description of a trip the two enjoyed together, but in interviews, Boeijen never spoke much about his personal life, so it's anyone's guess.
The photograph on the sleeve of this single was taken during one of the band's concerts. In 1987, the band embarked on a tour in theatres everywhere in the Netherlands, moving away from the club circuit. It was obvious that their music was better suited for this new environment.
My collection: 7" single no. 571 Found: Free Record Shop, Den Haag, 1987 Cost: 6 guilders Tracks: 'Winter in Hamburg' / 'Welkom in Utopia 1 (acoustic)'
Another single from their 1981 album 'Class', 'I'm losing you' is one of those many infectious Hot Chocolate tunes.
The track was written by Russ Ballard, writer of many hit singles throughout the Eighties. However, this particular single failed to reach the charts in any territory.
My collection: 7" single no. 4776 Found: Record fair, Utrecht, April 10, 2010 Cost: 0,5 euro Tracks: 'I'm losing you' / 'Children of spacemen'
Kim Wilde seemingly finished the Eighties in a winning mood: she'd toured with Michael Jackson, her album 'Close' had been a phenomenal success, and superstardom was looming. But meanwhile, she wasn't quite that happy. She'd witnessed the intense loneliness stardom could bring while she was watching Michael Jackson and it wasn't that easy to come up with an equally successful album after 'Close'.
The first single from Kim's 1990 album 'Love moves' was the optimistic 'It's here'. When this single stalled at number 42 in the UK singles chart and was unsuccessful in several other territories, it was a first sign that the Nineties could be a bit troublesome for the British singer.
My collection: 7" single no. 1200 Found: Melody Maker, Den Haag, March 30, 1990 Cost: 6,5 guilders Tracks: 'It's here' / 'Virtual world'
A single sleeve like this one wouldn't be acceptable anymore nowadays: a man with a fag in his hand, well, it's a disgrace! It's interesting to see how much has changed in three decades.
Jean Claude Pascal represented Luxembourg for the second time in 1981. His first effort for the same country in 1961 was a big success: his song 'Nous les amoureux' won the Contest. In 1981, he was considerably less successful: 'C'est peut-être pas l'Amérique' finished eleventh in a field of 20 competitors. Maybe the fag had something to do with it after all...
My collection: 7" single no. 4768 Found: Record fair, Utrecht, April 10, 2010 Cost: 2 euro Tracks: 'C'est peut-être pas l'Amérique' / 'Car tu es la musique'
Martin Gore wrote 'In your room', a tense and atmospheric track on Depeche Mode's 1993 album 'Songs of faith and devotion'. It was released as the fourth and final single from that album in a remixed version. The 'Zephyr mix', as it was called, includes music completely redone by Butch Vig of Nirvana fame.
The single reached number 8 in the UK singles chart and number 40 in Australia. It achieved its biggest success in Sweden, where the single peaked at number 2. 'In your room' was the last Depeche Mode single to be released on 7" vinyl, until the format was re-used in the Noughties.
My collection: 7" single no. 2404 Found: Wreckastow, Rotterdam, 1994 Cost: 6 guilders Tracks: 'In your room (Zephyr mix)' / 'Higher love (Adrenaline mix)'
'Rules of the game' was written by Warren Harry. The lyric centres on a woman who becomes famous and turns her back on her old friends, but when the fame ends, she finds herself desperately lonely. Cheryl Baker, who performs lead vocals on this song, has since said of her dislike for this song, stating that she finds the lyrics depressing and was unhappy with the affected way she was asked to sing.
Released in November 1983, the single proved to be one of the group's least successful singles, peaking at number 57 in the UK singles chart. The single was released to promote Bucks Fizz's first Greatest Hits album.
My collection: 7" single no. 4785 Found: Record fair, Utrecht, April 10, 2010 Cost: 1 euro Tracks: 'Rules of the game' / 'When we were at war'
Two weeks after the death of lead singer Freddie Mercury, this double A-side single by Queen was released on December 9, 1991. It brought together the band's seminal track 'Bohemian rhapsody' from 1975 and a track from their most recent album, 'Innuendo', 'These are the days of our lives'. The song had very poignant lyrics that seemed almost too appropriate for the occasion.
The single reached number 1 in the UK singles chart immediately after release, and number 2 in the Dutch Top 40 a month later.
My collection: 7" single no. 1613 Found: Melody Maker, Den Haag, March 28, 1992 Cost: 6,5 guilders Tracks: 'Bohemian rhapsody' / 'These are the days of our lives'
These days, you have the Junior Eurovision Song Contest for children who want to be a performer watched by millions of viewers who get excited at watching young persons do their thing. It always makes me think of pedophiles, but that's a different story.
In 1969, Jean-Jacques was just 12 years old when he participated in the 'real' Eurovision Song Contest. Singing 'Maman', he represented Monaco and finished sixth in a field of 16 contestants. He subsequently recorded the track in French, Spanish and Italian. This EP brings together four French songs, sold as a souvenir of the youngster's Eurovision appearance.
My collection: 7" single no. 4824 Found: Record fair, Utrecht, April 10, 2010 Cost: 2 euro Tracks: 'Maman', 'Paris m'a dit je t'aime' / 'Les beaux dimanches', 'Il est vrai'
For a little while in 1984, Jermaine Jackson was just about as successful as his brother Michael. It seemed the world just couldn't get enough of Michael Jackson and so any record released by a sibling became a chart hit as well.
Jermaine released the album 'Dynamite' in February 1984, and all the singles taken from that album became hits. 'Sweetest sweetest', the first single from the album, reached number 52 in the UK singles chart and number 16 in the Dutch Top 40.
My collection: 7" single no. 4777 Found: Record fair, Utrecht, April 10, 2010 Cost: 0,5 euro Tracks: 'Sweetest sweetest' / 'Come to me (One way or another)'
In 1987, the Frank Boeijen Groep released their seventh album 'Welkom in Utopia' ('Welcome in Utopia'). The album featured two title tracks: both titled 'Welkom in Utopia', the two tracks were very different from one another. Number one was the album's opening track, an uptempo track about social circumstances leading to desperate actions.
'Welkom in Utopia 2', the closing track of the album and released as a single ahead of the album, was a midtempo track with a more personal lyric. It was a hit for the band, reaching number 18 in the Dutch Top 40.
My collection: 7" single no. 563 Found: Free Record Shop, Den Haag, 1987 Cost: 6 guilders Tracks: 'Welkom in Utopia 2' / 'De tijden'
'Love don't live here' was released last Monday as the most recent Bananarama single. Taken from their current album 'Viva', the track was written by Sara Dallin, Keren Woodward and their producer Ian Masterson.
This 12" single features an extended remix of the track, as well as a remix of the album track 'The runner', a cover of the Three Degrees hit from the Seventies. So will this be a hit? I surely hope so, as this is among the girls' best work.
My collection: 12" single no. 536 Found: What records, received April 14, 2010 Cost: 2 pounds Tracks: 'Love don't live here (Ian Masterson's extended mix)' / 'The runner (Buzz Junkies 12" mix)'
'Raspberry beret' tells the story of a teenager and his first sexual experience with a girl who wears the titular hat. The video for the song was Prince's first since his short-lived 'ban' on music videos. The song quickly became a fan favorite, and a staple in nearly every Prince tour.
The single reached number 2 in the US Billboard Hot 100 chart. This UK pressing, featuring a different B-side when compared to the American pressing, only reached number 25 on the UK singles chart.
My collection: 7" single no. 3096 Found: Record Exchange, London, May 13, 1999 Cost: 50p Tracks: 'Raspberry beret' / 'Hello'
'You sexy thing' was originally a hit for Hot Chocolate in 1975. Dutch DJ Ben Liebrand, who already made a career for himself remixing tracks for Dutch radio and also for record releases, took on the task of remixing the track for a 1987 single release. His effort didn't go by unnoticed: the single reached number 10 in the UK singles chart.
When the original version of 'You sexy thing' was re-released in 1997 and reached number 6 in the UK singles chart, the track became the only Hot Chocolate track to become a top 10 hit in the Seventies, the Eighties and the Nineties. It's almost a shame the song didn't achieve this once again in the Noughties.
My collection: 7" single no. 4797 Found: Record fair, Utrecht, April 10, 2010 Cost: 0,5 euro Tracks: 'You sexy thing (Ben Liebrand remix)' / 'Every 1's a winner'
Frankly, I was very surprised when I played this single for the first time after buying it. Everyone knows Hot Chocolate's 'You sexy thing', with the near-falsetto lead vocals by Errol Brown. But this version of the song sounds very different. So what happened? You tell me, I couldn't find any information about it on the web.
'You sexy thing' was released in the autumn of 1975 and reached number 5 in the Dutch Top 40 and number 2 in the UK singles chart.
My collection: 7" single no. 4773 Found: Record fair, Utrecht, April 10, 2010 Cost: 0,5 euro Tracks: 'You sexy thing' / 'A warm smile'
It's a familiar story: a band signs with a record company, has some success, leaves the record company and signs with another one, and the previous record company tries to milk the success to the very last drop. It's no different with Clouseau: when they left HKM music to sign with EMI, HKM released a live album to try and get some extra money in.
To promote the live album - which reached number 10 in the Dutch albums chart - a single was also released: a live version of 'Oh ja' ('Oh yes'), which failed to reach the chart.
My collection: 7" single no. 2234 Found: Record fair, January 21, 1995 Cost: 2 guilders Tracks: 'Oh ja (live)' / 'Ik wil vannacht bij je slapen (live)'
Well, at least they don't beat around the bush. 'Ik wil vannacht bij je slapen' ('I want to sleep with you tonight') was released in February 1991 as the third single from Clouseau's second album, a title that leaves nothing to the imagination.
The appreciation for this single was almost identical in Belgium and the Netherlands, where the single peaked at number 27 and 28 respectively.
My collection: 7" single no. 1402 Found: Free Record Shop, Den Haag, March 16, 1991 Cost: 6 guilders Tracks: 'Ik wil vannacht bij je slapen' / 'Oh ja'
Joan Manuel Serrat was born on December 27, 1943. He started his career in music in the early Sixties, first as a member of a pop band in school, and after 1965 as a solo artist.
In 1968, Spain chose Serrat to represent the country in the Eurovision Song Contest. He would sing the song 'La, la, la'. After he asked to sing it in Catalan, the Spanish authorities didn't agree. At the time, the dictator Francisco Franco was repressing the Catalan language. Defiantly, Serrat refused to sing the Spanish-language version, and was hurriedly replaced by Massiel, who went on to win the contest with her Spanish-language interpretation. A recording of Serrat's version of 'La, la, la' still exists on this single, a souvenir of a Eurovision performance that never came to be.
My collection: 7" single no. 4821 Found: Record fair, Utrecht, April 10, 2010 Cost: 5 euro Tracks: 'La, la, la' / 'Mis gaviotas'
Kate Bush wrote the song 'Cloudbusting' after she read the book 'A book of dreams', published in 1973. The book was written by Peter Reich, son of psychologist Wilhelm Reich, about his father's arrest and imprisonment through the eyes of himself as a young boy. Wilhelm Reich is the inventor of the 'cloudbuster', a rain machine that looks very much like the machine that is pictured on the cover of this single. It's an extraordinary book, which was re-released as a result of the success of this song. I bought it, and I still recommend it to everyone who loves this song.
The music video, in which Kate plays Peter and Donald Sutherland plays Wilhelm, retells the story in short and made quite an impression at the time. The single fared pretty well as a result: it reached number 20 in the UK singles chart and number 11 in the Dutch Top 40. The American single, released in 1986 in conjunction with the greatest hits compilation 'The whole story', has a different B-side. I bought it four years after its release.
My collection: 7" single no. 370 / no. 1344 Found: LP Top 100, Den Haag, 1985 / London, October 18, 1990 Cost: 6 guilders / 2 pounds Tracks (no. 370): 'Cloudbusting' / 'Burning bridge' Tracks (no. 1344): 'Cloudbusting' / 'The man with the child in his eyes'