Talk:Sing Your Life (single): Difference between revisions
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FWD: double checked chart placement - #33 = correct. Shows as a new entry at 33 in Music Week (April 13, 1991 edition)<br> | FWD: double checked chart placement - #33 = correct. Shows as a new entry at 33 in Music Week (April 13, 1991 edition)<br> | ||
NB: searching Music Week pdfs needs manual visual checking as text that is too small is skipped. | NB: searching Music Week pdfs needs manual visual checking as text that is too small is skipped. | ||
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By this point, Morrissey is with a major label (EMI), so any of the arguments I made about the potential unreliability of chart entry data while The Smiths were with Rough Trade would not apply here. But it is good that they do line up. :-) [[User:Alainsane|Alainsane]] ([[User talk:Alainsane|talk]]) 12:27, 19 December 2024 (PST) |
Latest revision as of 12:27, 19 December 2024
April 1st, 1991 was a bank holiday in the U.K.--specifically the Easter Monday bank holiday. All U.K. music releases were pushed to the next business day if the normally-scheduled Monday was a bank holiday--in this case, pushed April 2nd, 1991.
Record Mirror "Sing Your Life" blurb.
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DT: Thanks for the supporting info. Date fix applied.
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FWD: double checked chart placement - #33 = correct. Shows as a new entry at 33 in Music Week (April 13, 1991 edition)
NB: searching Music Week pdfs needs manual visual checking as text that is too small is skipped.
By this point, Morrissey is with a major label (EMI), so any of the arguments I made about the potential unreliability of chart entry data while The Smiths were with Rough Trade would not apply here. But it is good that they do line up. :-) Alainsane (talk) 12:27, 19 December 2024 (PST)