Saturday 27 April 2024

1980s World Events

Unemployment in England in the 80s had reached record-breaking numbers, the highest since The Great Depression. It caused mass hysteria, riots, rebellion against manufacturing plant shutdowns and protests. Much of these numbers were caused by the government’s monetarist policies to tackle inflation. Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher also cut benefits to state workers in half. Despite her being the least popular prime minister, she remained in office for 18 years. The highest unemployment rate exceeded 3 million in 1984, reaching almost 12%. It didn’t come down until the economic boom during the mid 1980s, dropping below 2 million in early 1989 and reached 1.6 million at 7% by the end of the year.

1980
Capture of “The Yorkshire Ripper”
The “Yorkshire Ripper” was identified as Peter William Coonan, who was a serial killer of 13 women and attempted to murder seven others between 1975 and 1980. He was found guilty on May 22nd, 1980, being sentenced to 20 concurrent sentences of life imprisonment, which converted to a whole life order in 2019. All of his murders took place in West Yorkshire and some in Manchester.

Death of John Lennon
On the evening of December 8th, 1980, John Lennon of The Beatles was shot dead in the archway of The Dakota in his New York City apartment. His killer, Mark David Chapman, was an American Beatles fan who travelled from Hawaii but was angered by his lifestyle and public statements. His statement regarding the Beatles being “more popular than Jesus” was what really got to him as well as the lyrics of his later songs “God” and “Imagine”. Chapman said he was also inspired by the fictional character Holden Caulfield from The Catcher in the Rye. Chapman had also planned the killing for several months, waiting for Lennon at the Dakota since the morning of December 8th. He even met John Lennon who signed his copy of the album Double Fantasy. After coming back from a recording session with his wife, Yoko Ono, Chapman fired five hollow-point bullets from his .38 revolver, four of which hit John in the back. After being rushed to the Roosevelt Hospital in a police car, he was dead upon arrival at age 40. Thousands of music fans later held a 10-minute vigil in Liverpool in his memory.

UFO Sightings
There was an alleged UFO sighting near RAF Woodbridge in December 1980, which was used by the United States Air Force (USAF) at the time. This as well as other sightings were part of the Rendlesham Forest incident, the most well known UFO incident in Britain and even worldwide. The sighting was also compared to the Roswell UFO incident in the United States, sometimes being referred to as “Britain’s Roswell”. Although it was never investigated as a security matter, the UK Ministry of Defense said the event didn’t pose a threat to national security. Although skeptics explained the sightings as a misinterpretation of a series of nocturnal lights, including bright stars, the Orfordness Lighthouse and a fireball.

1981
Launch of the ZX81 Home Computer
Produced by Sinclair Research, the ZX81 is a home computer manufactured in Dundee, Scotland by Timex Corporation. It launched in March 1981 to replace the Sinclair’s ZX80, which was designed to be a low-cost computer for the general public. It was extremely successful, selling more than 1.5 million units. It was first sold in the United States as the ZX-81 under another license by Timex. Although Timex later produced its own version of the ZX81: the Timex Sinclair 1000 and Timex Sinclair 1500. ZX81 copycats were also sold in other counties.

Wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana
Taking place on Wednesday, July 29th, 1981 at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London, England, the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer had an audience of over 750 million people on global TV. The wedding was a very traditional Church of England wedding service, with the dean, Alan Webster, presiding at the service and the archbishop of Canterbury, Robert Runcie, conducting the marriage. Many of the attendees included members of other royal families, republican heads of state, and the bride and groom’s families. After the wedding, the couple appeared on the Buckingham Palace balcony. The UK marked the day with a national holiday as the ceremony featured state carriages and roles for the Household Cavalry and Foot Guards. The wedding fit the stereotype of a typical “fairytale wedding” and “wedding of the century”. Many parties were held in the streets of the UK to celebrate the event.

1982
Falklands War
This began on April 2nd when Argentina occupied the British dependent territories of the Falkland Islands as well as South Georgia and the Sandwich Islands. Hostilities lasted ten weeks, ending on June 14th and the British military response resulted in Argentina’s surrender. Interestingly, the war helped to improve life for both the islanders and Argentinians, the former having their British citizenship restored and economy boosted, while the latter saw the military government’s image crumble and democracy restored the next year.

1983
The Launch of the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS)
This telescope was the first of its kind to be sent to space to survey the sky in infrared on January 25th, 1983. Following the ascension, it made a number of discoveries, including: The core of our galaxy, Six new comets and Evidence of Solid material around the Vega and Fomalhaut, giving evidence to support the existence of planetary systems around other starts. It was a joint project between NASA, the Netherlands Agency for Aerospace Programs and the United Kingdom’s Science and Engineering Research Council.

Thatcher Wins Landslide
The success of the Falklands War led to a boost in popularity that Margaret Thatcher received for the successful outcome. Favourable opinion polls for the Conservative Party left Labour and Liberal/Social Democratic Party Alliance far behind. Consequently, the Tories gained 58 seats in the 1983 General Election and secured another term as Prime Minister for Thatcher. The longest-serving British prime minister during the 20th century and the first woman to hold the office, she was dubbed the “Iron lady” due to her uncompromising politics and leadership style.

Maze Prison Escape
On September 25th, 1983 in County Antrim, Northern Ireland , 38 Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) prisoners escaped from HM Prison Maze (aka the Long Kesh), a maximum security prison considered to be one of the most escape-proof prisons in Europe. One prison officer died of a heart attack during the escape while twenty others were left injured, including two shots with smuggled guns. It was all a propaganda coup for the IRA while a British government minister was challenged to resign. The majority of the blame was on the prison staff who then blamed the political interference in how the prison was run. This was considered the largest prison escape since WWII as well as in England’s history. Only 19 escapees were apprehended.

1984 – Miners’ Strike
On March 6, 1984, the miners walked out in protest of coalmine (also known as colliery) closures in the UK by Thatcher’s Conservative government. The National Union of Mineworkers held out for a year until many returned to work after union pay ran out. This severely reduced the power of the union to negotiate with the government and arguably made the economic situation of the miners worse as customers switched to gas or found other providers.
The Birth of Henry Charles Albert David
Born on September 15th, 1984, Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex is a member of the British royal family. He is the younger son of Charles, Prince of Wales and Diana, Princess of Wales and is sixth in the line of succession to the British throne.

1985 – Live Aid
Founded by musicians and philanthropists Bob Geldof and Midge Ure, Live Aid was a benefit concert for famine relief in Ethiopia held simultaneously at JFK Stadium in Philadelphia and Wembley Stadium in London. Acts in London included Adam Ant, Sting, Phil Collins, U2, Dire Straits, David Bowie, The Who, and Queen, amongst others. The concert raised over $127 million for famine relief.

1986 – Major Industries Privatized
A major goal of the Thatcher government was to privatize many industries that had been nationalized in the early 20th Century. Amongst the industries that went private within a couple of years of 1986 included British Gas, British Airways, the National Bus Company, Rolls-Royce, Council houses, and many more. The privatization was pushed aggressively by the Tories, who relied on their overwhelming majority to accomplish their political goals. Pushback from the public and a weakened Conservative government led to a slowing of these efforts.

The Wedding of Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson
On July 23rd, 1986, Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson were wed at the Westminster Abbey in London, England. The couple met at one of the Queen’s “dine and sleep” events at Windsor Castle. Shortly after a year of dating, they were engaged in February and married in July. Unfortunately, they separated in 1992 after having their two children, Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie, although supposedly they are still close.

1987 – Thatcher Wins Third General Election for Conservatives
In perhaps what might have been a reality check to some of the Tories’ more aggressive policies since the landslide in 1983, the Conservative Party lost 21 seats in Parliament after the 1987 General Election. While still enough to give Margaret Thatcher another go at Prime Minister, nothing was really the same. Pushback against privatization led Conservatives to pursue other issues and sometimes individual agendas and was arguably the beginning of the end for Thatcher’s premiership.

1988
Liberal Democratic Party Forms
The previously-mentioned alliance between the Liberal Party and the Socialist Democratic Party had been around since the 1970s but in ten years had failed to achieve its goal of supplanting Labour as the UK’s other major political party. In response to the 1987 General Election, in 1988, the two merged to become the Social and Liberal Democratic Party, eventually known as simply the Liberal Democratic Party (or Lib Dems).

Piper Alpha Explosion
The Piper Alpha was an oil platform in the North Sea about 120 miles (190 km) to the northeast of Aberdeen, Scotland. Operated by Occidental Petroleum (Caledonia) Limited, it began production in 1976 only as an oil-only platform, then later added gas production. On July 6th, 1988, an explosion with oil and gas fires destroyed Piper Alpha and killed 167 men, including two crewmen of a rescue ship with 30 bodies never found. 61 workers escaped and survived. Known as one of the costliest manmade disasters ever to occur, the total loss resulted in £1.7 billion. At the time, the platform accounted for about ten percent of the North Sea oil and gas production. The accident was the worst offshore oil disaster in terms of industry impact and number of lives lost.

Lockerbie Bombing
On December 21st, 1988, Pan Am Flight 103, was on its way from Frankfurt to Detroit via London and New York City during a Pan Am transatlantic flight. Although the aircraft N739PA, which was operating the transatlantic leg of the route, was destroyed by a bomb and killed 243 passengers and 16 crew members, known as the Lockerbie bombing. Large portions of the plane crashed onto a residential street in Lockerbie, Scotland, killing 11 people on the ground. With a total of 270 fatalities, it is considered the deadliest terrorist attack in the history of the UK.

Edwina Currie and the Salmonella-in-Eggs Controversy
Serving as Conservative Party Member of Parliament for South Derbyshire from 1983 to 1997, Edwina Currie was also a Junior Health Minister for two years before resigning in 1988 when she claimed the eggs in the UK were infected with salmonella. She said “most of the egg production in this country, sadly, is now affected with salmonella,” which outraged numerous farmers and egg producers across the nation. It also caused the UK’s egg sales in the country to decline rapidly by 60 percent. The controversy dubbed her as “Eggwina”.

1989 – Tim Berners-Lee Invents the World Wide Web
Arguably the most significant technological advance of the 20th Century, the world wide web (or the Web as we know it today), was the creation of Sir Tim Berners-Lee in 1989. It was the product of Berners-Lee’s merger of hypertext with the internet to create an information-sharing network amongst researchers. The first public web pages appeared only four years later and has revolutionized our world.

Hillsborough Disaster
On April 15th, 1989, 96 people were killed and 766 injured during a human crush during a football match at Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England. It happened during an FA Cup semi-final between Nottingham Forest and Liverpool in the two standing-only central pens in the Leppings Lane for Liverpool fans. Just before the kick-off, police match commander, David Duckenfield was trying to ease overcrowding outside the entrance turnstiles when he ordered exit gate C to open, leading to an influx of fans to the pens, which ultimately led to the human crush. With so many fatalities and injuries, it’s considered to be one of England’s worst disasters in sporting history.

1990 – Poll Tax and Tacher’s Resignation
Margaret Thatcher’s government introduced the “Community Charge,” more commonly known as the Poll Tax, in 1990 as a flat-rate per-capita tax on every adult in the UK to fund local government. To say that the poll tax proved unpopular would be a massive understatement. The unpopularity brought the first serious challenge to Thatcher’s leadership of the Conservatives, and she opted to resign, effectively ending her tenure as Prime Minister.

Other Major Events
Many other events took place during the 80s, including the following:
• The birth of Prince William, Duke of Cambridge on June 21st, 1982, son of Charles, Prince of Wales and Diana, Princess of Wales.
• The Football World Cup in Spain. England was eliminated from the competition on July 5th, 1982.
• The Queen celebrated her Pearl Jubilee in February 1982.
• The compact disc (CD) went on sale in the UK on March 1st, 1983.
• The Band Aid charity single, “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” was released on December 3rd, 1984 in reaction to the 1983 – 85 famine in Ethiopia. The song remained number one on the UK Singles Chart for five weeks.
• Richard Stone won the Nobel Prize in Economics on December 10th, 1984.
• The first mobile phone calls in the UK were made on January 1st, 1985.
• The first photographs and films of the RMS Titanic’s wreckage were taken 73 years after it sank on September 4th 1985.
• James W. Black won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine alongside Gertrude B. Elion and George H. Hitchings “for their discoveries of important principles for drug treatment” on December 10th, 1988.
• The General Assembly of the Church of England voted to allow the ordination of women on November 7th, 1989.
• Margaret Thatcher, along with American president George Bush and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, announced the end of the Cold War after 40 years on December 3rd, 1989.

Thanks to these sites for taking the hard work out of it. England in the 80s | 80s Major Events | About the 80s and https://anglotopia.net/british-history/brit-history-ten-most-important-events-in-british-history-of-the-1980s/

Saturday 20 April 2024

My Top Thirteen 1989

1. Alice Cooper - Poison - 08-1989
2. Chris Rea - The Road To Hell (Part 2) - 10-1989
3. Guns N' Roses - Sweet Child O' Mine - 06-1989
4. Mike & The Mechanics - The Living Years - 01-1989
5. Cher - If I Could Turn Back Time - 10-1989
6. Queen - The Miracle
7. Tina Turner - The Best - 09-1989
8. Billy Joel - We Didn't Start The Fire - 10-1989
9. Chaka Khan - I'm Every Woman - 05-1989
10. Texas - I Don't Want A Lover - 02-1989
11. Bette Midler - Wind Beneath My Wings - 07-1989
12. Lisa Stansfield - All Around The World - 10-1989
13. Tears For Fears - Sowing The Seeds Of Love - 09-1989

And the ones bubbling under:

Aerosmith - Love In An Elevator - 09-1989
Stevie Nicks - Rooms On Fire - 05-1989
Kate Bush - This Woman's Work - 12-1989
Queen - The Miracle - 12-1989
Richard Marx - Right Here Waiting - 09-1989
The Bangles - Eternal Flame - 03-1989
Midnight Oil - Beds Are Burning - 04-1989
Roxette - The Look - 05-1989
Tom Petty - I Won't Back Down - 06-1989
Deacon Blue - Fergus Sings The Blues - 05-1989
Fine Young Cannibals - She Drives Me Crazy - 01-1989
Def Leppard - Rocket - 02-1989
Guns N' Roses - Patience - 07-1989
Deborah Harry - I Want That Man - 10-1989
Bon Jovi - Lay Your Hands On Me - 09-1989
Gloria Estefan & Miami Sound Machine - Rhythm Is Gonna Get You - 01-1989
Phil Collins - Another Day In Paradise - 11-1989
INXS - Mystify - 04-1989
Iron Maiden - Infinite Dreams (Live) - 11-1989
Belinda Carlisle - Leave A Light On - 10-1989
The Beautiful South - You Keep It All In - 09-1989
Kirsty MacColl - Days - 07-1989
Black Box - Ride On Time - 08-1989
Boy Meets Girl - Waiting For A Star To Fall - 01-1989
Cyndi Lauper - I Drove All Night - 06-1989
Michael Jackson - Leave Me Alone - 02-1989

Saturday 13 April 2024

1980s Gadgets & Inventions

The 1980s was truly an innovative time, dominated as it was by music, fashion and more than anything, gadgets. A lot of important technology, most of which is either still in use today or lay the foundation for things we couldn’t live without. Smartphones, tablets and streaming services being a few. we use now. Without the creation of the Graphical User Interface in 1984, where would personal computing be today? And the world’s most popular operating system, Microsoft Windows, entered the market in 1985. The invention of the first camcorder in 1983 changed how people create and even consume media. Some of these were relatively short lived, quickly superseded by smaller, faster, more portable developments. I’m sure to have missed a few – if you spot something, let me know via a comment.

MTV, 1981
MTV went on the air for the first time on Aug. 1, 1981, with the words: "Ladies and gentlemen, rock and roll." The first music video to air on the new television station was "Video Killed the Radio Star" by The Buggles.

The Columbia space shuttle 1981
Following the successful lunar missions in the late 60s and early 70s, the great minds at NASA decided to utilize their resources to create a new type of vehicle that could travel into space and return home safely. Launched in 1981, the Space Shuttle was far more than just a transportation vehicle; it could become an orbiting laboratory allowing astronauts and researchers to conduct a host of experiments with the aim of better understanding our universe. Even more so, the space shuttle has helped transport important maintaining equipment in space.

Stealth Planes 1981
Stealth technology would go on to change warfare. Lockheed Aeronautical Systems Co. performed a test flight of the world’s first radar-resistant aircraft, the F-117 Nighthawk, in 1981. Even though the plane was delivered to the United States Air Force in 1982, the plane was kept secret until 1988.

Camcorder, 1982
Prior to the invention of the camcorder, a bulky camera with heavy equipment was used (most usually for recording news) along with a separate sound recorder. Because both devices were bulky/heavy, it meant video recording was a two person job. The invention of this device combined the recoding and voice functions in a camera, eliminating the cable between them and increasing the recording freedom. In 1982, Sony released its Betamax camera for the use of news organizations. Only a year later, the company refined the Betamax and released it for the consumer market, where it quickly picked up in popularity. However, the competition between Betamax and VHS continued to boil and by 1985, Panasonic released a VHS camcorder and people began favouring this format over the Betamax.

Compact Disc player 1982
Though the Walkman (released in 1979) was the ultimate 80s symbol, cassettes degraded in quality over time. Sony and Phillips created an answer to this, the compact disc. The tremendous impact of the CD can not be overstated - it almost completely killed both the cassette and vinyl markets. Even more so, it also shifted the emerging computer industry. By the late 90s, the CD took over the markets. Sony released the world's first commercial CD player, the CDP-101 which sold for around £540 (nearly £2,000 today), while CDs themselves cost around £12 each (£40 today). CD players were viewed as products for the wealthy, but as they slowly became more mainstream, prices dropped.

Mobile Phone, 1983
In the UK, The first mobile phone service was a car radio phone system that started in Manchester in 1959 by the GPO12. The first mobile phone sold in the UK was the Vodafone VM1, a Panasonic in-car handset that cost £1,200 and weighed nearly 5kg34. The first mobile phone that ordinary consumers could buy and use was the Motorola DynaTac 8000X, also known as The Brick, that launched in 1983 and cost around £2,5005. It had the dimensions of 300 x 44 x 89mm and weighed about 785g. It had an LED display and allowed an hour of talk time. Across the pond, although portable phone using radio links to make and receive calls were available in the late 70s, research was hampered because the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) placed restrictions on the allocation of frequencies. AT&T introduced the ideas of a cellular system, and with this new approach, it became easier to research and invent the mobile phone.

Apple Mackintosh, 1984
It’s predecessor, the Apple Lisa, released in 1983 was hailed by BYTE magazine as "the most important development in computers in the last five years, easily outpacing the IBM PC." The Macintosh was introduced by a US$1.5 million Ridley Scott television commercial, "1984" which aired during the third quarter of Super Bowl XVIII on January 22, 1984, and is now considered a masterpiece more successful than the Mac itself. Again, BYTE quoted that the Macintosh attracted people who previously hated computers, saying there is, apparently, something about mice and pull-down menus and icons that appeal to people previously intimidated by DOS-based operating systems.

DNA Fingerprinting 1984
British geneticist Alec Jeffreys was studying hereditary family diseases, trying to trace genetic markers, when he accidentally discovered that every person has a unique DNA profile. The unique genetic profiles are derived from the profiles of one’s parents, which means that lineage can be traced back through generations with DNA testing. He successfully tested his discoveries when two murders occurred near the university. The new method worked to exonerate a suspect and convict a guilty one. Alec Jeffreys was knighted for his invention that changed the face of science forever. The world of forensic science owes its development to DNA fingerprinting.

Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) 1985
Although available in Japan from 1983, this console suffered from a glut in the market (and the rise of PCs) so its release in the US in 1985 (partnered with Atari) tanked. The United Kingdom, Ireland, Italy, Australia and New Zealand all received the system in 1987, where it was distributed exclusively by Mattel. In Europe, the NES received a less enthusiastic response than it had elsewhere, and Nintendo lagged in market and retail penetration, though the console was more successful later.

Windows operating system 1985
Since its initial launch, Microsoft has released 10 major versions of the operating system. While Windows today looks a lot different than it did decades ago, it was the 1980s when it really got its start. Windows 1, spearheaded by Bill Gates, was an iconic moment in the tech industry because the new system relied heavily on the use of a mouse to input information, while other systems typically used keyboards.

CD-ROM, 1985
The first laser disc, an analogue storage device invented in 1978, developed into the Compact Disc read-only memory (CD-ROM). This pre-pressed compact disc contains data which can be accessed but not written onto. It was released with the intention of feeding it with music, but later it was made into a form by which any binary data could be stored in it. It was used to transfer games and other computer software. Ccertain CD types which hold only audio, while others can store audio, as well as data. The data CDs can be played only on computers, whereas the audio can be played on CD players as well.

Disposable Camera, 1986
Fujifilm’s Utsurun-Desu took the world by storm, with photography companies like Kodak, Canon, and Nikon quickly flooding the market and suddenly, instead of an expensive hobby, disposable cameras were ideal for kids to record the world around them, being cheap, easy to use and readily available.

Nintendo Game Boy 1989
This personal gaming device meant users could play different games by switching out the cartridges. The Gameboy was originally only released in Japan, but months after much success, it was available in the U.S. and Europe with games such as Super Mario Land and Tetris.

Other inventions, particularly in the field of medicine, included:
MS-DOS 1981
Scanning tunneling microscope 1981
Artificial Human Heart 1982
Human growth hormone 1982
Synthetic skin 1986
Hepatitis B Vaccine (DNA recombinant), 1986
Prozac 1987
Disposable Soft Contact Lenses, 1987
First 3-D video game1987
The RU-486 (abortion pill) 1988
Doppler radar 1988
Indiglo nightlight 1988
High-definition television 1989

Saturday 6 April 2024

My Top Thirteen from 1988

1. Robbie Robertson - Somewhere Down The Crazy River - 08-1988
2. Deacon Blue - Dignity - 02-1988
3. Guns N' Roses - Sweet Child O' Mine - 09-1988
4. INXS - Never Tear Us Apart - 07-1988
5. The Bangles - Hazy Shade Of Winter - 02-1988
6. All About Eve - Martha's Harbour - 08-1988
7. The Commodores - Easy - 09-1988
8. Robert Palmer - She Makes My Day - 10-1988
9. The Christians - Harvest For The World - 10-1988
10. Whitesnake - Give Me All Your Love - 02-1988
11. George Michael - Kissing A Fool - 12-1988
12. Michael Jackson - Dirty Diana - 07-1988
13. Patrick Swayze featuring Wendy Fraser - She's Like The Wind - 04-1988

And the ones that got away:
The Hothouse Flowers - Don't Go - 05-1988
Bon Jovi - Bad Medicine - 09-1988
Def Leppard - Armageddon It - 04-1988
Iron Maiden - Can I Play With Madness - 03-1988
Glenn Medeiros - Nothing's Gonna Change My Love For You - 06-1988
Climie Fisher - Love Changes (Everything) - 03-1988
Whitney Houston - One Moment In Time - 09-1988
Danny Wilson - Mary's Prayer - 04-1988
Womack & Womack - Teradrops - 08-1988
Freiheit - Keeping The Dream Alive - 12-1988
Everything But The Girl - I Don't Want To Talk About It - 07-1988
Tnita Tikaram - Twist In My Sobriety - 11-1988
Fairground Attraction - Perfect - 04-1988
U2 - Angel Of Harlem - 12-1988
Kylie Minogue - I Should Be So Lucky - 02-1988
Phil Collins - In The Air Tonight - 06-1988
Enya - Orinoco Flow - 10-1988
The Travelling Wilburys - Handle With Care - 11-1988
Cher - I Found Someone - 01-1988
Billy Idol - Hot In The City - 01-1988
New Order - Blue Monday 1988 - 05-1988
Art Of Noise featuring Tom Jones - Kiss - 10-1988
Belinda Carlisle - Circle In The Sand - 05-1988
The Christians - Ideal World - 02-1988
Deacon Blue - Real Gone Kid - 10-1988
Michael Jackson - Smooth Criminal - 11-1988
Phil Collins - Groovy Kind Of Love - 09-1988
Rick Astley - Together Forever - 02-1988
Scritti Politti - Oh Patti (Don't Feel Sorry For Loverboy) - 05-1988
S-Express - Theme From S-Express - 04-1988
Pet Shop Boys - Left To My Own Devices - 11-1988
Prefab Sprout - The King Of Rock 'N' Roll - 05-1988
Aztec Camera - How Men Are - 03-1988
Bananarama - Nathan Jones - 11-1988
Bros - When Will I Be Famous - 02-1988
Belinda Carlisle - Heaven Is A Place On Earth - 02-1988
Tracey Chapman - Fast Car - 06-1988
Neneh Cherry - Buffalo Stance - 12-1988
Bobby McFerrin - Don't Worry, Be Happy - 10-1988