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UK singles chart number ones UK singles chart 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s Other charts Melody Maker – 1956–1969 Melody Maker – 1970s Melody Maker – 1980s NME – 1960s NME – 1970s NME – 1980s Record Mirror (1955–1962) Miscellaneous charts 1952–1969 Miscellaneous charts 1969–1988 Related Official Charts Company Christmas number one Melody Maker was a ...
"The One for You" is a song written by Swedish guitarist Danne Larsson and recorded by his group Tages in 1965. Following an intensive tour of the Sweden, while also previously having composed songs for the band, Larsson wrote the song inspired by their trip to London, allegedly about a girl he had met there.
The song became the number one song of the year on Billboard Hot 100 in 2017, [56] and the second best-selling song in the US after "Despacito" with over 2.5 million copies sold. [57] It debuted at number one in France, [58] and was later certified diamond there. [59]
Kenny Rogers' first number-one single on the NME chart came over seven years before he reached the top of Record Retailer ' s chart. Joe Brown said the decision to favour the Record Retailer chart "has deprived [him] of [his] only number one". [3] Len Barry's only number-one single was on the NME chart with "1-2-3".
In 1985, he and two members of the band earned a CASBY award for their work on the band's (by then going by "M + M") 1984 album Mystery Walk. [6] Lanois worked collaboratively with Brian Eno on some of Eno's own projects, one of which was the "Prophecy Theme" for David Lynch's film adaptation of Frank Herbert's Dune.
"One for You, One for Me" is a song by the Italian disco duo La Bionda from their 1978 album La Bionda. It was written by Carmelo La Bionda, Michelangelo La Bionda and Richard Palmer-James . Most notably, it is used as the ending song for the 2024 film The Brutalist .
Richard had the third most number-one singles during this era; four as a solo artist and six with The Shadows (one as "The Drifters"). Melody Maker compiled its own chart from 1956 until 1988 which was used by many national newspapers. [1] It was the third periodical to compile a chart and rivaled existing compilers NME and Record Mirror.
Joseph Brooks (born Joseph Kaplan [1]; March 11, 1938 – May 22, 2011), [2] was an American songwriter, composer and filmmaker. He was a successful author of commercial jingles during the 1960’s, before pivoting to a filmmaking career.