This is a summary of 1979 in music in the United Kingdom, including the official charts from that year. 1979 saw the beginning of several trends in British music. Electropop reached number one in both the singles and albums charts in the form of Gary Numan and Tubeway Army, and synthesiser bands began to gather momentum, which would come to dominate music in the early 1980s. The first rap hit in the UK came from the Sugar Hill Gang. The 2 Tone movement also emerged, with early work from bands such as The Specials and Madness. Disco music was still the most popular music of the year, although it showed signs of dying out in the year's later months. 1979 remains the year when physical-format singles hit their sales peak in the UK.
Events
Charts
Number one singles
Number one albums
Year-end charts
1979 appears to be the only year since 1977 for which "full year" year-end charts do not exist. The British Market Research Bureau (BMRB), which compiled the official UK charts from 1969 to 1982, used a cut-off date for the collection of sales data sometime in early December each year, in order for the "end of year" chart to be published in the year's final issue of Music Week and to be broadcast on BBC Radio 1. However, from 1977 to 1982, BMRB produced updated charts a few months later, which included the missing final weeks' sales for each year.
No updated chart appears to exist for 1979, so the tables below include only sales between 1 January and 8 December 1979. The two singles most affected by the lack of a full year chart are the records that were at number one and number two for the final three weeks of the year, "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)" by Pink Floyd and "I Have a Dream" by ABBA: neither of these records appear in the end of year list for 1979.
Best-selling singles
Best-selling albums
Notes:
Classical music: new works
Opera
Film and Incidental music
Musical theatre
Musical films
Births
- 5 January
- Steve Scott-Lee, singer (3SL)
- Michelle Barber, singer (Girl Thing)
- 19 January â Wiley, record producer and MC
- 20 January â Will Young, singer and winner of Pop Idol (series 1)
- 23 January â Vicky Dowdall, singer (Girls@Play)
- 8 March â Tom Chaplin, singer (Keane)
- 12 March â Pete Doherty, singer and guitarist (The Libertines and Babyshambles)
- 30 March â Simon Webbe, singer (Blue)
- 10 April â Sophie Ellis-Bextor, singer
- 11 April
- Paul Byrom, Irish tenor
- Lee Otter, singer (North and South)
- 13 April â Tony Lundon, Irish singer (Liberty X)
- 29 April
- Jo O'Meara, singer (S Club 7)
- Matt Tong (Bloc Party)
- 3 May â Danny Foster, singer (Hear'Say)
- 23 May â Lisa-Jay White, singer (Girls@Play)
- 31 May â Sarah Class, composer
- 8 June â Adam de la Cour, musician and composer
- 29 June â Abz Love, singer (5ive)
- 4 July â Nikki Stuart, singer (Girl Thing)
- 5 July â Shane Filan, Irish singer (Westlife)
- 19 July â Michelle Heaton, singer (Liberty X)
- 20 July â Charlotte Hatherley, singer-songwriter and guitarist (Ash and Nightnurse)
- 21 July â Tommy Clark, singer (Mero)
- 20 August â Jamie Cullum, jazz pianist and singer
- 23 August â Ritchie Neville, singer (5ive)
- 5 September â Garry O'Meara, Irish singer (Reel)
- 8 October â Alexander Shelley, conductor
- 22 November â Scott Robinson, singer (5ive)
- 28 November â Dane Bowers, singer (Another Level, 5th Story)
- 3 December
- Daniel Bedingfield, New Zealand-born pop singer and songwriter
- Kerri Ann, Irish singer
- 15 December â Edele and Keavy Lynch, Irish singers (B*Witched)
- date unknown
- Mark Bowden, Welsh-born composer
- Emily Howard, composer
Deaths
- 2 February â Sid Vicious, punk rocker, 21 (drug overdose)
- 4 March â Mike Patto, rock vocalist, 36 (throat cancer)
- 24 May â Sir Ernest Bullock, organist and composer, 88
- 16 July â Alfred Deller, countertenor, 67
- 25 August â Stan Kenton, bandleader, 67
- 4 September â Guy Bolton, librettist, 94
- 6 September â Ronald Binge, composer and arranger, 69
- 9 September â Norrie Paramor, record producer, composer, arranger, and orchestral conductor, 65
- 27 September â Gracie Fields, actress and singer, 81
- 13 October â Rebecca Helferich Clarke, viola player and composer, 93
- 6 November â Hugh Ottaway, music writer, 54
- 30 November â Joyce Grenfell, actress and musical performer, 69
- December â Terence Judd, pianist, 22 (probable suicide)
- 21 December â Nansi Richards, harpist, 91
See also
References