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Another one done!

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Our fourth visit to the swingin' Sixties - how did 1963 do? It definitely felt like a watershed year - how could it be anything other thanks to four lads from Liverpool? There were certainly some decent albums in there though, although I think it's safe to say the women didn't exactly dominate matters. And to no-one's great surprise, the ownership ratio this year was a big fat zero percent. Looking at the best selling albums of the year, we're back to relying on the dubious information from bestsellingalbums.org but I don't think anyone will be surprised to see The Beatles taking the top two spots - although I'm quite surprised that With The Beatles takes the top spot, because Please Please Me was #1 for thirty weeks of the year. The other record which spent an age at #1 was Cliff Richard's Summer Holiday , so it's no surprise to see that at #3 but I wasn't expecting to have West Side Story (which was released in '61) at #4 - it's fair...

Wah-wah-waaaaah

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Concluding my trip back through the 1963 album charts. 06/01/63 : 'S Wonderful!/'S Marvelous - Ray Conniff Our third visit with Ray and last time I described it as " bizarre instrumentals which are somehow inexplicably elevated from the bland" and I remember being intrigued by it, so I'm pleased enough to meet him again - intriguingly this is two of his albums from the '50s which I assume were repackaged to squeeze a few more sales out of them. I know I shouldn't really like this because it's, at its heart. cheesy easy-listening jazz - but it's really well done cheesy easy-listening jazz. It uses interesting rhythms and instruments and it's exactly the sort of stuff that Zero 7, Air, Royksopp and many others would sample a "few" years later. No, I'm not going to ever listen to it again but it's a lot more interesting than a load of other albums I've heard this year that I'll never listen to again. We're at #18 in t...

I got some money in my jeans, and I'm really gonna spend it right

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Continuing my trip back through the 1963 album charts. 13/01/63 : Cherished Memories - Eddie Cochran I'm assuming this is a best-of, which feels even more of a cheat than usual because we've already had a best-of from him - but we're in no place to be rejecting albums this year (and I also don't remember listening to the previous one either). Hmmm - well. I'm sure these are memories for some and maybe even cherished for a few - but I can't say they did a lot for me. I recognised "Let's Get Together", but that's because it's exactly the same as "C'mon Everybody" except that those phrases are interchanged. The rest sounded pretty similar, but not all that enjoyably so. I can understand that it was big at the time and is historically significant but it's not something that I need to listen to now.  We're at #15 in the charts this week on his second week of a three week run - I'm guessing those memories weren't qu...

Broadcasting reckless confessions, we will all beg for extinction

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Continuing my trip forward in time through the album charts (very late - I'm still a week behind!) 03/07/26 : The Wow! Signal - Muse  Our sixth visit with the never knowingly understated boys from Devon - I'll be amazed if this isn't "well done but more of the same". Well, it's certainly in a similar vein, although it seems like they're trying to do a few slightly different things - but don't worry, they're certainly not different enough to frighten the horses. One thing that is different is the presence of Ellie Goulding on "Hush" (their first ever guest vocalist) - I'd say it works better than I was expecting. I didn't mind this all but can't claim I love it - it doesn't feel like it's going to earn them any new fans, but I also don't think it will lose them any existing ones. Of course, I could be basing that analysis on us being at #1 in the charts this week with a new entry! The rest of the top five are  Olivi...

Twangy-twang, silky-silk

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Continuing my trip back through the 1963 album charts. 20/01/63 : Twangy Guitar Silky Strings - Duane Eddy Skipping over another week where Cliff was #1 (starting a fourteen week run at the top) brings us to our second visit this year and fourth overall with Duane and I can't help but feel I've probably had enough Duane in my life now - but maybe he'll surprise me. Well, there's certainly plenty of twangy guitar and silky strings here, but it's all very pedestrian - it just feels like Duane could have knocked this out in his sleep. And I think that's pretty much all I have to say on the matter. We're at #13 in the charts this week on his last week of an eight week run, with this being as high as it got - for the last three weeks of the run, which is unusual. The top five this week were  The Shadows  (the third artist we've seen at the top all year, but not quite the last),  West Side Story ,  Elvis Presley , Bobby Vee & The Crickets and  South Pacif...

I was born into a fractured family where a word could start a war

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Continuing my trip forward in time through the album charts 26/06/26 : My Mess, My Heart, My Life - Myles Smith  I know I've heard a Myles track, but I'm blowed if I know what it is - maybe my memory will be jogged here... Oh yes - "ooh ah, nice to meet you. La la - la-di-da" . I can't remember any more words, but it's got a catchy tune. And if that wasn't particularly memorable, the rest of it really isn't - none of it is terrible, but there's really not a lot to it ("it's pretty basic" says Isobel, our guest reviewer). I was reminded of Mumford & Sons in quite a few places (but it's not as good) but finally dredged who it was really reminding me of towards the end of the album. And that was Jack Johnson, who was perfectly tolerable but had no obvious surplus of talent - and Myles feels to be firmly in the same category. And so, obviously we're at #2 with a new entry this week - there's nowt as queer as folk. The rest...

But while there's moonlight and music and love and romance

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Continuing my trip back through the 1963 album charts. 03/02/63 : Let's Face The Music - Shirley Bassey What? A woman who's not Brenda?!? I do like a bit of Shirley, but I'm looking forward to this one even more than usual because it also features Nelson Riddle and his orchestra, who've done a good job on several Sinatra albums we've met. Yeah, this is pretty much what I'd expect - Shirley belting it out over a decent lush orchestral backing. What more do you want?!? The only ones I recognised were "Let's Face The Music And Dance" and "I Get A Kick Out Of You" (our second version of the year, after Frank's) but it was all very listenable. We're at #14 in the charts this week on the last week of a five week run, with it having peaked at #12 in its debut week. The top five this week were  Cliff Richard ,  Elvis Presley ,  West Side Story ,  The Shadows  and  Elvis Presley (sigh - a '57 release back for no obvious reason) and th...