Middle Of The Road – ‘Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep’

10 July 1971 Reluctant as I am to mull on the lyrics of any '70s bubblegum pop hit or destroy your enjoyment of same, 'Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep' is not about a wee bird in a nest. It really is about a small child called Don—that second line is "little baby Don"—that's abandoned by its … Continue reading Middle Of The Road – ‘Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep’

Brendan Shine – ‘O’Brien Has No Place To Go’

19 June 1971 With five number one singles dotting the decade like bird droppings, Brendan Shine can claim to be Ireland's biggest chart-topping star of the '70s. It may somewhat colour this accolade for you to know that his nearest competitor in this was Red Hurley with four; the showband-dominated '60s Irish charts congealed into … Continue reading Brendan Shine – ‘O’Brien Has No Place To Go’

Neil Diamond – ‘I Am… I Said’

5 June 1971 Anyone who writes 'I'm A Believer' can't be all bad. Therefore, to say that every Neil Diamond song is knuckle-gnawingly dreadful would be incorrect. It's the other 99.9 percent of them that's the problem: his gauche, self-satisfied lyrics that amount to the wrong-headed knowingness of a parish priest telling a class of … Continue reading Neil Diamond – ‘I Am… I Said’

Lost Frequencies – ‘Are You With Me’

10 July 2015 Country-core fashion and country-adjacent pop have been huge in 2024-25. The countrifyin' of chart pop goes back a lot further, though. In particular, the colossal success of Avicii's 'Wake Me Up' in 2013 helped make country vocal-hook choruses a cheap, easy and popular option for shoehorning a bit of basic-bait sentimentality into … Continue reading Lost Frequencies – ‘Are You With Me’

Pat Lynch and The Airchords – ‘When We Were Young’

10 April 1971 Knocking Marc Bolan briefly off the Irish number one spot: a welder from Cork, an actual metal guru. Some more chopping and changing saw Lynn Anderson's 'Rose Garden' and T. Rex's 'Hot Love' each reclaim the top bunk, before 'When We Were Young' by Pat Lynch and The Airchords vanquished both again … Continue reading Pat Lynch and The Airchords – ‘When We Were Young’