
NOW - Yearbook 1977 (4CD)
NOW is going back to the 1970s to proudly present the next instalment in our ongoing âYearbookâ series â with 80 tracks across 4 CDs, celebrating a magnificently diverse year of Pop singles⊠NOW â Yearbook 1977.
Kicking off with a timeless anthem from Queen with âWe Are The Championsâ and followed by the huge instrumental rock of âFanfare For The Common Manâ by Emerson, Lake and Palmer. The song that would open âLive Aidâ years later is next up from Status Quo with their signature âRockinâ All Over The Worldâ, and 1977 saw âWay Downâ from Elvis Presley go to #1 in the wake of his death. Classic pop-rock from 10CC with âGood Morning Judgeâ is followed by a trio of ballads from Electric Light Orchestra with âTelephone Lineâ, Leo Sayer with his trans-Atlantic chart topper âWhen I Need Youâ, and David Soul with another UK and US #1 âDonât Give Up On Usâ. Hot Chocolate enjoyed their first #1 with âSo You Win Againâ and is followed by a superb run of dance-pop from Candi Staton, Patsy Gallant, Donna Summer, Boney M. and The Rah Band. More pop-rock from Suzi Quatro, Smokie and a hit from the soundtrack of the tv series âRock Folliesâ lead toward the emotionally charged closing tracks on the first disc â from Elkie Brooks with âPearlâs A Singerâ, Liverpool Express and âEvery Man Must Have A Dreamâ, and the #1 âDonât Cry For Me Argentinaâ from the concept album for the upcoming musical âEvitaâ by Julie Covington along with Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice.
Disc Two opens with an amazing run of punk and new wave classics: The Stranglers with âNo More Heroesâ, Ramones with âSheena Is A Punk Rockerâ, The Clash with their debut âWhite Riotâ, and The Jam with their first Top 20 hit âAll Around The Worldâ. The Boomtown Rats debuted with âLookinâ After No.1â and defining hits are featured from Jonathan Richman & The Modern Lovers, Mink DeVille and Elvis Costello with the peerless âWatching The Detectivesâ. A genre defying hit from the Tom Robinson Band leads into a sequence of hits that includes singer-songwriters Paul Simon, Boz Scaggs and Bryan Ferry, rock smashes from Boston and Santana, and to close the disc softer rock from Thin Lizzy and beautiful ballads from Racing Cars with âThey Shoot Horses Donât Theyâ, and Yes with âWonderous Storiesâ.
The charts in 1977 were fantastically diverse, and one of the biggest genres of hits was Disco. Arguably one of pop musicâs defining moments came in 1977 with Donna Summerâs #1 âI Feel Loveâ with itâs production showcasing the role of the synthesiser. European disco smashes found huge success: Baccara topped the charts with âYes Sir, I Can Boogieâ, along-side massive tracks from Belle Epoque and the debut âDaddy Coolâ for Boney M. â who a year later would become the biggest selling singles act of 1978. Meco re-worked the âStar Warsâ theme into a US disco chart topper, and The Trammps, Heatwave, The Emotions, Rose Royce, Thelma Houston and chart newcomers Chic all feature here in a stellar run of floor-filling hits. Marvin Gaye had a massive track with âGot To Give It Up â Pt.1â and Gladys Knight & The Pips continued their run of hits with âBaby, Donât Change Your Mindâ. The disc finishes with 3 of 1977âs greatest soul tracks: Deniece Williams took âFreeâ to #1, and the Commodores released an all-time classic, with âEasyâ, featuring Lionel Richie on vocals, whilst Detroit R&B vocal group The Floaters scored their only UK hit in style with âFloat Onâ reaching #1 in August.
The final disc opens with 1977âs biggest seller â the first single to sell over two million copies! â and the yearsâ Christmas #1, âMull Of Kintyreâ from Paul McCartney & Wings. Two more #1s follow: Manhattan Transfer with âChanson DâAmourâ, and the second chart-topper in the year for David Soul with âSilver Ladyâ. Olivia Newton-Johnâs âSamâ continues the run of âeasy-listeningâ pop that also includes #1 âAngeloâ from Brotherhood Of Manâ, sublime tracks, âThe Things We Do For Loveâ, from 10CC, âOh Loriâ from Alessi Brothers, and the Boz Scaggs penned âWeâre All Aloneâ by Rita Coolidge, plus pop gems from Carole Bayer Sager and Meri Wilson all feature. Kenny Rogers hit #1 with âLucilleâ, Billy Ocean enjoyed his second #2 smash with âRed Light Spells Dangerâ, while The Dooleys and Andrew Gold made their chart debuts.
Rock ânâ roll was enjoying a revival and two contemporary groups both enjoyed massive success - Showaddywaddy continued their run of hits with âDancinâ Partyâ, and Darts arrived with a medley of âDaddy Coolâ and âThe Girl Canât Help ItââŠ.and the collection finishes with two instrumental hits, âPortsmouthâ from Mike Oldfield reached #3 in the first week of the year, whilst unexpectedly âThe Floral Danceâ became a massive seller for the Brighouse & Rastrick Brass Band, spending the last four weeks of 1977 at #2 behind âMull Of Kintyreâ.
NOW â Yearbook 1977 â a celebration of the diversity and wonderful creativity of a truly magnificent year in pop.
NOW is going back to the 1970s to proudly present the next instalment in our ongoing âYearbookâ series â with 80 tracks across 4 CDs, celebrating a magnificently diverse year of Pop singles⊠NOW â Yearbook 1977.
Kicking off with a timeless anthem from Queen with âWe Are The Championsâ and followed by the huge instrumental rock of âFanfare For The Common Manâ by Emerson, Lake and Palmer. The song that would open âLive Aidâ years later is next up from Status Quo with their signature âRockinâ All Over The Worldâ, and 1977 saw âWay Downâ from Elvis Presley go to #1 in the wake of his death. Classic pop-rock from 10CC with âGood Morning Judgeâ is followed by a trio of ballads from Electric Light Orchestra with âTelephone Lineâ, Leo Sayer with his trans-Atlantic chart topper âWhen I Need Youâ, and David Soul with another UK and US #1 âDonât Give Up On Usâ. Hot Chocolate enjoyed their first #1 with âSo You Win Againâ and is followed by a superb run of dance-pop from Candi Staton, Patsy Gallant, Donna Summer, Boney M. and The Rah Band. More pop-rock from Suzi Quatro, Smokie and a hit from the soundtrack of the tv series âRock Folliesâ lead toward the emotionally charged closing tracks on the first disc â from Elkie Brooks with âPearlâs A Singerâ, Liverpool Express and âEvery Man Must Have A Dreamâ, and the #1 âDonât Cry For Me Argentinaâ from the concept album for the upcoming musical âEvitaâ by Julie Covington along with Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice.
Disc Two opens with an amazing run of punk and new wave classics: The Stranglers with âNo More Heroesâ, Ramones with âSheena Is A Punk Rockerâ, The Clash with their debut âWhite Riotâ, and The Jam with their first Top 20 hit âAll Around The Worldâ. The Boomtown Rats debuted with âLookinâ After No.1â and defining hits are featured from Jonathan Richman & The Modern Lovers, Mink DeVille and Elvis Costello with the peerless âWatching The Detectivesâ. A genre defying hit from the Tom Robinson Band leads into a sequence of hits that includes singer-songwriters Paul Simon, Boz Scaggs and Bryan Ferry, rock smashes from Boston and Santana, and to close the disc softer rock from Thin Lizzy and beautiful ballads from Racing Cars with âThey Shoot Horses Donât Theyâ, and Yes with âWonderous Storiesâ.
The charts in 1977 were fantastically diverse, and one of the biggest genres of hits was Disco. Arguably one of pop musicâs defining moments came in 1977 with Donna Summerâs #1 âI Feel Loveâ with itâs production showcasing the role of the synthesiser. European disco smashes found huge success: Baccara topped the charts with âYes Sir, I Can Boogieâ, along-side massive tracks from Belle Epoque and the debut âDaddy Coolâ for Boney M. â who a year later would become the biggest selling singles act of 1978. Meco re-worked the âStar Warsâ theme into a US disco chart topper, and The Trammps, Heatwave, The Emotions, Rose Royce, Thelma Houston and chart newcomers Chic all feature here in a stellar run of floor-filling hits. Marvin Gaye had a massive track with âGot To Give It Up â Pt.1â and Gladys Knight & The Pips continued their run of hits with âBaby, Donât Change Your Mindâ. The disc finishes with 3 of 1977âs greatest soul tracks: Deniece Williams took âFreeâ to #1, and the Commodores released an all-time classic, with âEasyâ, featuring Lionel Richie on vocals, whilst Detroit R&B vocal group The Floaters scored their only UK hit in style with âFloat Onâ reaching #1 in August.
The final disc opens with 1977âs biggest seller â the first single to sell over two million copies! â and the yearsâ Christmas #1, âMull Of Kintyreâ from Paul McCartney & Wings. Two more #1s follow: Manhattan Transfer with âChanson DâAmourâ, and the second chart-topper in the year for David Soul with âSilver Ladyâ. Olivia Newton-Johnâs âSamâ continues the run of âeasy-listeningâ pop that also includes #1 âAngeloâ from Brotherhood Of Manâ, sublime tracks, âThe Things We Do For Loveâ, from 10CC, âOh Loriâ from Alessi Brothers, and the Boz Scaggs penned âWeâre All Aloneâ by Rita Coolidge, plus pop gems from Carole Bayer Sager and Meri Wilson all feature. Kenny Rogers hit #1 with âLucilleâ, Billy Ocean enjoyed his second #2 smash with âRed Light Spells Dangerâ, while The Dooleys and Andrew Gold made their chart debuts.
Rock ânâ roll was enjoying a revival and two contemporary groups both enjoyed massive success - Showaddywaddy continued their run of hits with âDancinâ Partyâ, and Darts arrived with a medley of âDaddy Coolâ and âThe Girl Canât Help ItââŠ.and the collection finishes with two instrumental hits, âPortsmouthâ from Mike Oldfield reached #3 in the first week of the year, whilst unexpectedly âThe Floral Danceâ became a massive seller for the Brighouse & Rastrick Brass Band, spending the last four weeks of 1977 at #2 behind âMull Of Kintyreâ.
NOW â Yearbook 1977 â a celebration of the diversity and wonderful creativity of a truly magnificent year in pop.
Original: $23.11
-65%$23.11
$8.09Description
NOW is going back to the 1970s to proudly present the next instalment in our ongoing âYearbookâ series â with 80 tracks across 4 CDs, celebrating a magnificently diverse year of Pop singles⊠NOW â Yearbook 1977.
Kicking off with a timeless anthem from Queen with âWe Are The Championsâ and followed by the huge instrumental rock of âFanfare For The Common Manâ by Emerson, Lake and Palmer. The song that would open âLive Aidâ years later is next up from Status Quo with their signature âRockinâ All Over The Worldâ, and 1977 saw âWay Downâ from Elvis Presley go to #1 in the wake of his death. Classic pop-rock from 10CC with âGood Morning Judgeâ is followed by a trio of ballads from Electric Light Orchestra with âTelephone Lineâ, Leo Sayer with his trans-Atlantic chart topper âWhen I Need Youâ, and David Soul with another UK and US #1 âDonât Give Up On Usâ. Hot Chocolate enjoyed their first #1 with âSo You Win Againâ and is followed by a superb run of dance-pop from Candi Staton, Patsy Gallant, Donna Summer, Boney M. and The Rah Band. More pop-rock from Suzi Quatro, Smokie and a hit from the soundtrack of the tv series âRock Folliesâ lead toward the emotionally charged closing tracks on the first disc â from Elkie Brooks with âPearlâs A Singerâ, Liverpool Express and âEvery Man Must Have A Dreamâ, and the #1 âDonât Cry For Me Argentinaâ from the concept album for the upcoming musical âEvitaâ by Julie Covington along with Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice.
Disc Two opens with an amazing run of punk and new wave classics: The Stranglers with âNo More Heroesâ, Ramones with âSheena Is A Punk Rockerâ, The Clash with their debut âWhite Riotâ, and The Jam with their first Top 20 hit âAll Around The Worldâ. The Boomtown Rats debuted with âLookinâ After No.1â and defining hits are featured from Jonathan Richman & The Modern Lovers, Mink DeVille and Elvis Costello with the peerless âWatching The Detectivesâ. A genre defying hit from the Tom Robinson Band leads into a sequence of hits that includes singer-songwriters Paul Simon, Boz Scaggs and Bryan Ferry, rock smashes from Boston and Santana, and to close the disc softer rock from Thin Lizzy and beautiful ballads from Racing Cars with âThey Shoot Horses Donât Theyâ, and Yes with âWonderous Storiesâ.
The charts in 1977 were fantastically diverse, and one of the biggest genres of hits was Disco. Arguably one of pop musicâs defining moments came in 1977 with Donna Summerâs #1 âI Feel Loveâ with itâs production showcasing the role of the synthesiser. European disco smashes found huge success: Baccara topped the charts with âYes Sir, I Can Boogieâ, along-side massive tracks from Belle Epoque and the debut âDaddy Coolâ for Boney M. â who a year later would become the biggest selling singles act of 1978. Meco re-worked the âStar Warsâ theme into a US disco chart topper, and The Trammps, Heatwave, The Emotions, Rose Royce, Thelma Houston and chart newcomers Chic all feature here in a stellar run of floor-filling hits. Marvin Gaye had a massive track with âGot To Give It Up â Pt.1â and Gladys Knight & The Pips continued their run of hits with âBaby, Donât Change Your Mindâ. The disc finishes with 3 of 1977âs greatest soul tracks: Deniece Williams took âFreeâ to #1, and the Commodores released an all-time classic, with âEasyâ, featuring Lionel Richie on vocals, whilst Detroit R&B vocal group The Floaters scored their only UK hit in style with âFloat Onâ reaching #1 in August.
The final disc opens with 1977âs biggest seller â the first single to sell over two million copies! â and the yearsâ Christmas #1, âMull Of Kintyreâ from Paul McCartney & Wings. Two more #1s follow: Manhattan Transfer with âChanson DâAmourâ, and the second chart-topper in the year for David Soul with âSilver Ladyâ. Olivia Newton-Johnâs âSamâ continues the run of âeasy-listeningâ pop that also includes #1 âAngeloâ from Brotherhood Of Manâ, sublime tracks, âThe Things We Do For Loveâ, from 10CC, âOh Loriâ from Alessi Brothers, and the Boz Scaggs penned âWeâre All Aloneâ by Rita Coolidge, plus pop gems from Carole Bayer Sager and Meri Wilson all feature. Kenny Rogers hit #1 with âLucilleâ, Billy Ocean enjoyed his second #2 smash with âRed Light Spells Dangerâ, while The Dooleys and Andrew Gold made their chart debuts.
Rock ânâ roll was enjoying a revival and two contemporary groups both enjoyed massive success - Showaddywaddy continued their run of hits with âDancinâ Partyâ, and Darts arrived with a medley of âDaddy Coolâ and âThe Girl Canât Help ItââŠ.and the collection finishes with two instrumental hits, âPortsmouthâ from Mike Oldfield reached #3 in the first week of the year, whilst unexpectedly âThe Floral Danceâ became a massive seller for the Brighouse & Rastrick Brass Band, spending the last four weeks of 1977 at #2 behind âMull Of Kintyreâ.
NOW â Yearbook 1977 â a celebration of the diversity and wonderful creativity of a truly magnificent year in pop.












