This is a summary of 1978 in music in the United Kingdom.
Events
- 14 January â The Sex Pistols play their final show (until a reunion in 1996) at Winterland, San Francisco.
- 24 January â Wings' "Mull of Kintyre" is number one for a ninth and final week, becoming the biggest-selling single in UK history at that point.
- 25 January â Electric Light Orchestra kick off their Out of the Blue world tour in Honolulu, Hawaii.
- 11 March â Kate Bush becomes the first British female solo artist to reach number one in the UK charts with a self-written song, "Wuthering Heights".
- 30 April â The Clash, Tom Robinson Band, Steel Pulse, X-Ray Spex, the Ruts, Misty in Roots and Generation X all play live in Victoria Park, Hackney, at the Anti-Nazi League/Rock Against Racism festival, following a march from Trafalgar Square.
- 25 May â The Who play their last show with Keith Moon before his death.
- 15 July â The Picnic at Blackbushe Aerodrome, Camberley, Surrey, a concert featuring Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton and Joan Armatrading, attracts some 200,000 people.
- 30 July â Thin Lizzy officially announce that Gary Moore has replaced Brian Robertson on guitar.
- 18 August â The Who release their eighth studio album Who Are You. It is the Who's last album with Keith Moon as the drummer; Moon dies twenty days after the release of the album.
- September â Second anti-racism event staged in Brockwell Park, South London, featuring Elvis Costello, Stiff Little Fingers and Aswad, with 150,000 people in attendance.
- 27 November â Def Leppard's permanent drummer Rick Allen joins the band at the age of 15.
- unknown dates
- The Bee Gees' Saturday Night Fever becomes the biggest-selling album of all time (until overtaken in 1983).
- The first BBC Young Musician of the Year competition for classical players is won by trombonist Michael Hext.
- Operatic contralto Helen Watts is appointed a CBE.
- Multitone Records is founded by Pranil Gohil, specialising in bhangra music.
Charts
Number one singles
Number one albums
Year-end charts
The tables below include sales between 31 December 1977 and 30 December 1978: the year-end charts reproduced in the issue of Music Week dated 23 December 1978 and played on Radio 1 on 31 December 1978 only include sales figures up until 16 December 1978.
Best-selling singles
Best-selling albums
Notes:
Classical music: new works
Film and Incidental music
Births
- 1 January â Tarik O'Regan, composer
- 13 January â Shelley Nash, singer (Girls@Play)
- 15 January â Sandi Lee Hughes, singer (allSTARS*)
- 19 January â Wayne Williams, singer (Another Level)
- 13 February â Hamish Glencross, Scottish guitarist
- 14 February â Ryan Griffiths (The Vines)
- 22 February â Jenny Frost, singer (Atomic Kitten)
- 6 April â Myleene Klass, singer (Hear'Say), radio and TV presenter
- 7 April â Duncan James, singer (Blue)
- 9 April â Rachel Stevens, singer (S Club 7)
- 16 April â Terry Daly, Irish singer (Mytown)
- 23 April â Tom Lowe, singer and keyboardist (North and South)
- 25 April â Luke Bedford, composer
- 28 April â Lauren Laverne, singer, radio DJ and TV presenter
- 4 May â Matthew Rose, bass
- 22 May â Jordan, model and would-be singer
- 29 May
- Adam Rickitt, singer and actor
- Daniel Pearce, singer (One True Voice)
- 6 June â Sophie Solomon, violinist
- 16 June â Elisa Cariera, American-born singer (Solid HarmoniE)
- 4 July â Stephen McNally, English singer-songwriter (BBMak)
- 1 August â Jonathan Wilkes, singer and entertainer
- 21 August â John Paul "J-Rock" Horsley, American-born singer (Big Brovaz)
- 3 September â Johnny Shentall, singer (Boom!)
- 15 September â David Sneddon, singer-songwriter
- 27 September â Jamie Benson, singer (Hepburn)
- 7 October â Alesha Dixon, singer (Mis-Teeq)
- 9 October
- Nicky Byrne, Irish singer (Westlife)
- Beverley Fullen, drummer (Hepburn)
- 26 October â Rachael Carr, singer (Boom!)
- 27 October â Sabrina Washington, singer (Mis-Teeq)
- 29 October â Sam Chapman, singer and keyboardist (North and South)
- 1 November â Bobak Kianovsh, singer (Another Level)
- 7 November â Mark Read, singer (A1)
- 23 November â Randy Brown, Jamaican-born singer (Big Brovaz)
- 27 November â Mike Skinner, rapper, musician and record producer
- 12 December â Paul Walker, Irish singer (Mytown)
- 18 December â Lindsay Armaou, Greek-born Irish-based singer (B*Witched)
- date unknown â Oliver Weeks, composer, arranger and guitarist
Deaths
- 11 January â William John Edwards, Cerdd Dant singer (b. 1898)
- 15 January â Jack Jackson, trumpeter, bandleader and radio disc jockey (b. 1906)
- 24 February â Mrs Mills, pianist (b. 1918; heart attack)
- 9 March â L. Radley Flynn, singer and actor (b. 1902)
- 12 March â Tolchard Evans, songwriter, composer, pianist and bandleader (b. 1901)
- 3 April â Ray Noble, composer and bandleader (b. 1903)
- 21 April â Sandy Denny, singer (Fairport Convention) (b. 1947) (cerebral haemorrhage)
- 14 August â Victor Silvester, dance band leader (b. 1900)
- 7 September
- Keith Moon, drummer of The Who (b. 1946) (Clomethiazole overdose)
- Charles Williams, composer (b. 1893)
- 15 September â Robert Bruce Montgomery, writer and composer (b. 1921)
- 13 December â Jack Doyle, Irish-born boxer and singer (b. 1913; cirrhosis of liver)
See also
References