1981
De Mi caja de notas
R&D discothèque[1]
1980s in music in the UK |
Events |
---|
By location |
---|
By genre |
By topic |
| |||
---|---|---|---|
+... |
This is a summary of 1981 in music in the United Kingdom, including the official charts from that year.
Events
- 9 February – Phil Collins releases his first solo album, although he would not leave the band Genesis until 1995.
- 14 February – Billy Idol leaves Generation X to begin a solo career.
- 26 February – The Symphony No. 2 by Peter Maxwell Davies commissioned by the Boston Symphony Orchestra in celebration of its centenary, receives its world premiere at Symphony Hall, Boston, with Seiji Ozawa conducting.
- 4 April – Bucks Fizz win the Eurovision Song Contest with "Making Your Mind Up".
- 7 April – Former Who manager Kit Lambert dies after falling down a flight of stairs in his mother's home in London.
- 17 April – Eric Clapton is released from St. Paul's Hospital in Minnesota following a month-long treatment for bleeding ulcers.
- 18 April – Yes announce that they are breaking up. They would, however, reunite frequently in the future.
- 25 April – Paul McCartney's band, Wings, officially breaks up.
- 2 May – Working as a local wedding singer 12 months previously, Scottish vocalist Sheena Easton hits number one in the US with "Morning Train (9 to 5)"
- 11 May – The musical Cats begins its 8,949-performance run on London's West End.
- August – The success of Stars on 45 leads to a short-lived medley craze. The most successful imitator of the Stars on 45 format is, rather unexpectedly, the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, whose "Hooked on Classics (Parts 1 & 2)" reaches number two in the charts.
- 17 June – Pink Floyd perform their last full concert with Roger Waters, as part of The Wall Tour, at Earls Court in London. Waters would not perform with the band again until a one-off performance for Live 8 in 2005.
- 13 July – The first performance of George Lloyd‘s Symphony No 4, written in 1945-6 after the composer’s harrowing wartime experiences in the Arctic convoys, at the Cheltenham Festival.
- 14 September – Emma Kirkby and Gothic Voices record the album A Feather on the Breath of God in St Jude-on-the-Hill, Hampstead Garden Suburb, London.
- 23 September – The first performance of Christian Darnton‘s Twenty Minute Symphony (his fourth), composed in 1978 with the subtitle Diabolus in musica (it is based on the tritone), performed by the BBC Northern Symphony Orchestra under Edward Downes.
Charts
Number-one singles
Issue Date | Song | Artist(s) |
---|---|---|
3 January | "There's No One Quite Like Grandma" | St Winifred's School Choir |
10 January | "Imagine" | John Lennon |
17 January | ||
24 January | ||
31 January | ||
7 February | "Woman" | |
14 February | ||
21 February | "Shaddap You Face" | Joe Dolce Music Theatre |
28 February | ||
7 March | ||
14 March | "Jealous Guy" | Roxy Music |
21 March | ||
28 March | "This Ole House" | Shakin' Stevens |
4 April | ||
11 April | ||
18 April | "Making Your Mind Up" | Bucks Fizz |
25 April | ||
2 May | ||
9 May | "Stand and Deliver" | Adam and the Ants |
16 May | ||
23 May | ||
30 May | ||
6 June | ||
13 June | "Being with You" | Smokey Robinson |
20 June | ||
27 June | "One Day in Your Life" | Michael Jackson |
4 July | ||
11 July | "Ghost Town" | The Specials |
18 July | ||
25 July | ||
1 August | "Green Door" | Shakin' Stevens |
8 August | ||
15 August | ||
22 August | ||
29 August | "Japanese Boy" | Aneka |
5 September | "Tainted Love" | Soft Cell |
12 September | ||
19 September | "Prince Charming" | Adam and the Ants |
26 September | ||
3 October | ||
10 October | ||
17 October | "It's My Party" | Dave Stewart and Barbara Gaskin |
24 October | ||
31 October | ||
7 November | ||
14 November | "Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic" | The Police |
21 November | "Under Pressure" | Queen and David Bowie |
28 November | ||
5 December | "Begin the Beguine" | Julio Iglesias |
12 December | "Don't You Want Me" | The Human League |
19 December | ||
26 December |
Number-one albums
Issue Date | Title | Artist(s) |
---|---|---|
3 January | Super Trouper | ABBA |
10 January | ||
17 January | ||
24 January | Kings of the Wild Frontier | Adam and the Ants |
31 January | ||
7 February | Double Fantasy | John Lennon and Yoko Ono |
14 February | ||
21 February | Face Value | Phil Collins |
28 February | ||
7 March | ||
14 March | Kings of the Wild Frontier | Adam and the Ants |
21 March | ||
28 March | ||
4 April | ||
11 April | ||
18 April | ||
25 April | ||
2 May | ||
9 May | ||
16 May | ||
23 May | Stars on 45 | Starsound |
30 May | ||
6 June | ||
13 June | ||
20 June | ||
27 June | No Sleep 'til Hammersmith | Motörhead |
4 July | Disco Daze and Disco Nites | Various Artists |
11 July | Love Songs | Cliff Richard |
18 July | ||
25 July | ||
1 August | ||
8 August | ||
15 August | The Official BBC Album of the Royal Wedding |
Various Artists |
22 August | ||
29 August | Time | Electric Light Orchestra |
5 September | ||
12 September | Dead Ringer | Meat Loaf |
19 September | ||
26 September | Abacab | Genesis |
3 October | ||
10 October | Ghost in the Machine | The Police |
17 October | ||
24 October | ||
31 October | Dare | The Human League |
7 November | Shaky | Shakin' Stevens |
14 November | Greatest Hits | Queen |
21 November | ||
28 November | ||
5 December | ||
12 December | Chart Hits '81 | Various Artists |
19 December | The Visitors | ABBA |
26 December |
Year-end charts
The tables below include sales between 1 January and 31 December 1981: the year-end charts reproduced in the issue of Music Week dated 26 December 1981 and played on Radio 1 on 3 January 1982 only include sales figures up until 12 December 1981.
Best-selling singles
At the end of 1981, the official year-end charts provided by the UK's chart provider, the British Market Research Bureau, stated that the best-selling single of the year was "Tainted Love" by Soft Cell.[1][2] However, in March 2021, the Official Charts Company announced that new research had shown that "Don't You Want Me" by the Human League, previously thought to be the year's 21st-biggest seller, was in fact the biggest-selling single of 1981 with over one million sales, and the year-end charts were adjusted accordingly.[3]
Best-selling albums
Notes:
Classical music: new works
- David Bedford
- Elegy and Caprice for oboe and piano
- Ocean Star, a Dreaming Song, for youth orchestra
- Prelude for a Maritime Nation
- Sonata for piano, in one movement
- String Quartet
- Symphony for 12 musicians
- Vocoder Sextet
- Wind Sextet
- Richard Rodney Bennett
- Impromptu on the Name of Haydn for piano
- Isadore, ballet
- Music for String Quartet
- Noctuary, ballet for piano
- Six Tunes for the Instruction of Singing-birds, flute solo
- Sonatina for clarinet solo
- Vocalise, for soprano and piano
- Lennox Berkeley – Bagatelles for two pianos
- Michael Berkeley
- Flames for orchestra
- String Quartet No. 1
- String Quartet No. 2
- Wessex Graves for voice and harp
- Harrison Birtwistle – Pulse Sampler for oboe and claves
- Edward Cowie - Kelly Choruses for voices and harp
- Peter Maxwell Davies
- The Bairnes of Brugh for chamber ensemble
- Brass Quintet
- Hill Runes for guitar
- Little Quartet No. 2 for string quartet
- Lullabye for Lucy for mixed chorus
- The Medium, monodrama for mezzo soprano
- Piano Sonata
- The Rainbow, music theatre for children
- Seven Songs Home for children's voices
- Gordon Crosse
- Dreascanon 1 for choir, piano and percussion
- Elegy and Scherzo Alla Marcia for string orchestra
- Fear No More, for oboe, oboe d'amore and cor anglais
- Peace for Brass
- Wildboy, ballet score
- Brian Ferneyhough
- Lemma - Icon - Epigram for piano
- Superscripto for solo piccolo
- Michael Finnissy
- An-dimironnai for solo cello
- Duru-duru for soprano, flute, percussion and piano
- Jisei for ensemble
- Kelir for six voices
- Keroiylu for oboe, bassoon and piano
- Piano Concert No 7
- Reels for piano
- Rushes for piano
- Stomp for accordion
- Terekkeme for solo cembalo
- Tree Setting for piano
- White Rain for piano or clavichorrd
- Yalli for solo cello
- Alexander Goehr
- Behold the Sun for soprano, vibraphone and chamber ensemble
- Deux Etudes for orchestra
- Iain Hamilton
- The Morning Watch for mixed chorus and ten wind instruments
- La Ricordanza for tenor and orchestra
- Symphony No. 3.Spring
- Symphony No. 4
- Robin Holloway
- Brand, dramatic ballet for soli, chorus, organ and orchestra
- Clarissa Symphony for soprano, tenor and orchestra
- The Lover's Well for bass-baritone and piano
- Sonata for Violin Solo
- Wilfred Josephs
- Eight Aphorisms for trombone octet
- Overture The Brontes
- Quartet Prelude in honour of Joseph Haydn
- Spring Songs for chorus
- String Quartet No. 4
- Testimony for toccata and organ
- Kenneth Leighton
- Household Pets for piano
- These Are Thy Wonders for high voice and organ
- George Lloyd – Symphony No 10, November Journeys (for brass)
- John McCabe
- Afternoons and Afterwards for piano
- Desert 1: Lizard for woodwind and percussion
- Desert II: Horizon for ten brass instruments
- Music's Empire for soli, chorus and orchestra
- Elizabeth Maconchy
- Little Symphony
- Piccola Musica for violin, viola and cello
- Trittico for two oboes, bassoon and harpsichord
- William Mathias – Rex Gloriae for unaccompanied voices
- Nicholas Maw – Flute Quartet
- Dominic Muldowney
- In Dark Times for soli and ensemble
- Sports et Divertissements for reciter and ensemble
- Thea Musgrave
- An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge, radio opera
- Preipeteia for orchestra
- Stephen Oliver
- Mass for unaccompanied chorus
- Wind Octet
- Paul Patterson – The Canterbury Psalms for chorus and orchestra
- Priaulx Rainier – Concertante for two winds (oboe, clarinet) and orchestra
- John Tavener
- Funeral Ikos for chorus
- The Great Canon of the Ode to Saint Andrew of Crete for chorus
- Mandelion for organ
- Prayer for the World for sixteen solo voices
- Trisagion for brass quintet
- Adrian Williams – String Quartet No. 2
- Malcolm Williamson
- Fountainbleau Fanfare, for brass, percussion and organ
- Josip Broz Tito for baritone and orchestra
Opera
- Iain Hamilton – Anna Karenina[6]
- Jonathan Harvey – Passion and Resurrection, a church opera, fp. Winchester Cathedral.
Musical theatre
- 11 May – Cats, with music by Andrew Lloyd Webber, opens in London's West End.
- 16 December – Alan Ayckbourn's Making Tracks, with music by Paul Todd, opens at the Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough.
Musical films
Births
- 11 January
- Jamelia, singer
- Tom Meighan, lead singer of Kasabian
- 22 January – Sarah Davies, bassist (Hepburn)
- 19 January – Thaila Zucchi, singer (allSTARS*) and actress
- 24 February – Gwilym Simcock, pianist and composer
- 11 March – Russell Lissack, guitarist with Bloc Party
- 13 March – Ivo Neame, jazz pianist and saxophonist
- 20 March – Declan Bennett, singer (Point Break)
- 26 March – Jay Sean, singer
- 1 April – Hannah Spearritt, actress and singer (S Club 7)
- 2 April – Linzi Martin, singer (Girl Thing)
- 10 April – Liz McClarnon, singer (Atomic Kitten)
- 21 April – Mike Christie, baritone (G4)
- 26 April – Ms Dynamite, singer
- 4 May – Ryan Elliott, singer (Ultimate Kaos)
- 5 May – Craig David, singer
- 20 May – Sean Conlon, musician (5ive)
- 22 May – Su-Elise Nash, singer (Mis-Teeq)
- 23 May – Gwenno Saunders, singer
- 5 June – Anika Bostelaar, Dutch-born singer (Girl Thing)
- 22 June – Chris Urbanowicz, guitarist (Editors)
- 23 June – Antony Costa, singer (Blue)
- 27 June – Colin and Joe O'Halloran, Irish singers (Reel)
- 6 July – Vicky Palmer, singer (Boom!)
- 12 July – Rebecca Hunter, singer (allSTARS*)
- 19 July – Didz Hammond, singer and bass player (Dirty Pretty Things and The Cooper Temple Clause)
- 24 July – Lisa Lister, guitarist (Hepburn)
- 8 August – Bradley McIntosh, singer (S Club 7)
- 11 August – Sandi Thom, singer-songwriter
- 21 August – Jenilca Giusti, Puerto Rican-born singer (Solid HarmoniE)
- 29 September – Suzanne Shaw, singer (Hear'Say) and actress
- 6 October – Sarah Keating, Irish singer (Six)
- 10 October – Una Healy, Irish singer (The Saturdays)
- 13 October – Kele Okereke, singer (Bloc Party)
- 31 October – Liam McKenna, Northern Irish singer (Six)
- 17 November – Sarah Harding, singer (Girls Aloud)
- 20 November – Kimberley Walsh, singer (Girls Aloud)
- 22 November – Ben Adams, singer (A1)
- 26 November – Natasha Bedingfield, singer[7]
- 19 December – Sam Bloom, singer (allSTARS*)
Deaths
- 19 February
- Olive Gilbert, actress and singer, 82[8]
- Frank Merrick, pianist, 95[9]
- 21 February – Ron Grainer, Australian-born electronic music pioneer and composer involved with the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, 58 (spinal cancer)[10]
- 10 March – Bill Hopkins, pianist, composer and critic, 37 (heart attack)
- 24 March – George Charles Gray, cathedral organist, 83
- 7 April – Kit Lambert, manager and producer, 45 (fall)
- 8 April – Eric Rogers, composer, 59
- 14 April – Christian Darnton, composer, 75
- 21 April – Ivor Newton, pianist and accompanist, 88
- 28 April – Steve Currie, bassist of T.Rex, 33 (car crash)[11]
- 12 May – Frank Weir, orchestra leader and jazz musician, 70
- 17 May – Alan Gowen, keyboardist (Gilgamesh), 33 (leukaemia)
- 29 May – Sir John Dykes Bower, cathedral organist, 75
- 18 July – Janet Craxton, oboist, 52
- 29 July – Sydney Kyte, bandleader and violinist, 85[12]
- 5 August – Reginald Kell, clarinettist, 75
- 29 August – Guy Stevens, band manager, record producer and DJ, 38 (overdose)
- 23 September – Sam Costa, dance band singer and DJ, 71
- 29 September – Tommy Moore, former drummer of the Beatles, 50 (brain haemorrhage)
- 30 September – Boyd Neel, orchestral conductor, 76
- 15 October – Elsie Randolph, actress, dancer and singer, 77
- 9 November – Willis Grant, cathedral organist, 74
- 13 December – Cornelius Cardew, experimental music composer, 45 (hit-and-run car accident)[13]
- 17 December – Sybil Gordon, operatic mezzo-soprano, 79
- date unknown – Albert Ernest Sims, composer, conductor and music director of The Central Band of H.M. Royal Air Force, 85[14]
See also
- 1981 in British radio
- 1981 in British television
- 1981 in the United Kingdom
- List of British films of 1981
References
- ^ Scaping, Peter, ed. (1982). "The Top 200 Singles: January–December 1981". BPI Year Book 1982 (5th ed.). London, England: The British Phonographic Industry Ltd. pp. 46–49. ISBN 0-906154-03-0.
- ^ Jones, Alan; Lazell, Barry; Rees, Dafydd (1982). "The Top 200 Singles (UK)". Chart File 1982. London, England: Virgin Books. pp. 74–77. ISBN 0-907080-49-9.
- ^ Copsey, Rob (5 March 2021). "The Official Top 50 best-selling songs of 1981". Official Charts Company. Archived from the original on 5 March 2021. Retrieved 24 November 2021.
- ^ Scaping (1982). "The Top 200 LPs: January–December 1981". pp. 50–53.
- ^ Jones; Lazell; Rees (1982). "The Top 200 Albums (UK)". pp. 78–81.
- ^ Dean, Winton (1981). "Music in London: Anna Karenina". The Musical Times Vol. 122, No. 1661 (July 1981), p. 487. Retrieved 1 December 2010.
- ^ Tracie Ratiner (May 2010). Contemporary Musicians: Profiles of the People in Music. Cengage Gale. p. 16. ISBN 978-0-7876-9617-7.
- ^ "Miss Olive Gilbert", The Times, 20 February 1981, p. 16, col. G
- ^ Gerald Norris (1981). A Musical Gazetteer of Great Britain & Ireland. David & Charles. p. 94. ISBN 978-0-7153-7845-8.
- ^ Lone Eagle Publishing Co (2000). Film Composers Directory. Lone Eagle. p. 199.
- ^ Nick Talevski (1999). The Encyclopedia of Rock Obituaries. Omnibus. p. 90. ISBN 978-0-7119-7548-4.
- ^ Principal Probate Registry; London, England; Calendar of the Grants of Probate and Letters of Administration made in the Probate Registries of the High Court of Justice in England
- ^ Tilbury, John. Cornelius Cardew: A Life Unfinished Harlow: Copula, an imprint of Matchless Recordings and Publishing, 2008. ISBN 978-0-9525492-3-9
- ^ Bierley, Paul E; Rehrig, William H (1991). The heritage encyclopedia of band music : composers and their music. Westerville, Ohio: Integrity Press. ISBN 0-918048-08-7.
- ↑ Le tube France Il suffira d'un signe