
NOW - Yearbook 1987 (Special Edition 4CD)
NOW is proud to present the next instalment in our ongoing âYearbookâ series â and looks back to 37 years ago â with 80 tracks on 4 CDs, to celebrate an incredible year of Pop singles⊠NOW â Yearbook 1987. This format is Special Edition 4CD set housed in âhard-back-bookâ packaging, including a 28-page booklet featuring a summary of the year and a track-by-track guide.
Kicking off with a run of huge hits that truly underline just how stellar a year for the singles chart 1987 was: George Michael opens the collection with the title track from his debut solo album âFaithâ, and is followed by the yearsâ Christmas #1, Pet Shop Boys with their version of âAlways On My Mindâ, and âTrue Faithâ, a defining single in the rich discography of New Order. Dance music was evolving and M/A/R/R/S with their #1 âPump Up The Volumeâ was one of the first sample-led club tracks to become a mainstream hit and would be instrumental in paving the way for how dance music was often constructed going forward. In their fifth year of hits Eurythmics continued to deliver stunning singles and âBeethoven (I Love To Listen To)â still sounds breathtakingly original today⊠Established hitmakers Duran Duran, A-ha and ABC were sharing the charts in 1987 with a great line-up of new pop bands, including here, Curiosity Killed The Cat, Johnny Hates Jazz and Wet Wet Wet â all enjoying their first hits. With use in tv ads for jeans, soul classics originally released in the â60s became even bigger hits in 1987: Ben E. King with âStand By Meâ and Percy Sledge with âWhen A Man Loves A Womanâ. The year saw continued success for the Pretenders and Alison Moyet, whilst Suzanne Vega and Swing Out Sister consolidated chart success from the previous year, the superb âWonderful Lifeâ from Black was a hit on re-release, Rosie Vela debuted with âMagic Smileâ â and closing the disc, TâPauâs second hit âChina In Your Handâ became the UKâs 600th #1 single.Â
A second appearance for George Michael opens Disc 2 â this time in partnership with Aretha Franklin on their #1 âI Knew You Were Waiting (For Me)â ahead of Whiney Houstonâs floor-filler and second #1 âI Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me)â and the lead track from the hugely popular film âDirty Dancingâ â â(Iâve Had) The Time Of My Lifeâ by Bill Medley & Jennifer Warnes. Next up â87âs biggest selling single â âNever Gonna Give You Upâ, the debut for Rick Astley, and another huge hit for writers and producers Stock, Aitken & WatermanâŠ.roles they also performed on Mel & Kimâs #1 âRespectableâ and âToy Boyâ from Sinitta, and who were also producers on Bananaramaâs âLove In The First Degreeâ, and Dead Or Aliveâs âSomething In My Houseâ. Man 2 Man had a huge HI-NRG hit with âMale Stripperâ, The Communards continued their run of hits with a cover of âNever Can Say Goodbyeâ and Boogie Box High took disco classic âJive Talkinâ into the Top 10. 1987 saw Top 40 debuts for Living In A Box, Jellybean (& Elisa Fiorillo) and the first solo track from Shalamar singer Jody Watley. Donna Summer continued her massive run of hits with âDinner With Gershwinâ, and one of the most successful debuts was from Sananda Maitreya with his album âIntroducing The HardlineâŠâ which included Disc 2 closer âWishing Wellâ.
Disc 3 opens celebrating the gothic rock and huge Jim Steinman production on âThis Corrosionâ from The Sisters Of Mercy, before a stunning run of legendary artists and timeless songs including Paul Simon, Sting, Bruce Springsteen, Bon Jovi, Kiss, Iggy Pop and the #1 cover of âLa Bambaâ from Los Lobos that topped the charts in 15 countries including the UK and the US. Beastie Boys debuted with an anthem that fused rock and rap, and The Cure and Siouxsie And The Banshees continued to add new hits to their already impressive track record, whilst The Jesus And Mary Chain enjoyed their biggest chart hit to date with âApril Skiesâ. Steve Winwood had a hit with the remix of âValerieâ, Crowded House scored their UK chart debut, Elkie Brooks was back in the Top 10 for the first time in 10 years, and taking the disc to itsâ close, two fantastic covers of âLove Lettersâ and âEvâry Time We Say Goodbyeâ from Alison Moyet and Simply Red.
The final disc presents an exceptional run of pure pop⊠starting with a second appearance on this Yearbook for Pet Shop Boys, this time with Dusty Springfield on the sophisticated pop of âWhat Have I Done To Deserve Thisâ⊠and also a second appearance for A-Ha with âCry Wolfâ ahead of Frankie Goes To Hollywood, Level 42, The Blow Monkeys, and Hue & Cry , along with âCrockettâs Themeâ an instrumental hit for Jan Hammer from the soundtrack of one of the yearâs biggest TV shows âMiami Viceâ. Disc 4 is also home to some fantastic cover versions re-visioned for 1987âs charts including âEver Fallen In Loveâ from Fine Young Cannibals, âRespect Yourselfâ from Bruce Willis, and Boy George with his first solo single and #1 âEverything I Ownâ plus hits from Maxi Priest and Nick Kamen. Dance-pop from Kim Wilde & Junior, Pepsi & Shirlie and Bananarama lead towards âSome Peopleâ a Top 3 single for Cliff Richard, Karel Fialkaâs âHey Matthewâ, and the #1 charity supergroup âFerry Aidâ with âLet It Beâ. The beautiful âOnce Upon A Long Agoâ, the single release from Paul McCartneyâs âAll The Bestâ collection leads into a track that, in recent years makes an appearance in the charts every Christmas - 1987 was the release year for âFairytale Of New Yorkâ â and so, the Yearbook for 1987 closes on this truly timeless classic from The Pogues feat. Kirsty MacColl.
NOW â Yearbook 1987Â â A celebration of the diversity and wonderful creativity of a truly magnificent year in Pop.
NOW is proud to present the next instalment in our ongoing âYearbookâ series â and looks back to 37 years ago â with 80 tracks on 4 CDs, to celebrate an incredible year of Pop singles⊠NOW â Yearbook 1987. This format is Special Edition 4CD set housed in âhard-back-bookâ packaging, including a 28-page booklet featuring a summary of the year and a track-by-track guide.
Kicking off with a run of huge hits that truly underline just how stellar a year for the singles chart 1987 was: George Michael opens the collection with the title track from his debut solo album âFaithâ, and is followed by the yearsâ Christmas #1, Pet Shop Boys with their version of âAlways On My Mindâ, and âTrue Faithâ, a defining single in the rich discography of New Order. Dance music was evolving and M/A/R/R/S with their #1 âPump Up The Volumeâ was one of the first sample-led club tracks to become a mainstream hit and would be instrumental in paving the way for how dance music was often constructed going forward. In their fifth year of hits Eurythmics continued to deliver stunning singles and âBeethoven (I Love To Listen To)â still sounds breathtakingly original today⊠Established hitmakers Duran Duran, A-ha and ABC were sharing the charts in 1987 with a great line-up of new pop bands, including here, Curiosity Killed The Cat, Johnny Hates Jazz and Wet Wet Wet â all enjoying their first hits. With use in tv ads for jeans, soul classics originally released in the â60s became even bigger hits in 1987: Ben E. King with âStand By Meâ and Percy Sledge with âWhen A Man Loves A Womanâ. The year saw continued success for the Pretenders and Alison Moyet, whilst Suzanne Vega and Swing Out Sister consolidated chart success from the previous year, the superb âWonderful Lifeâ from Black was a hit on re-release, Rosie Vela debuted with âMagic Smileâ â and closing the disc, TâPauâs second hit âChina In Your Handâ became the UKâs 600th #1 single.Â
A second appearance for George Michael opens Disc 2 â this time in partnership with Aretha Franklin on their #1 âI Knew You Were Waiting (For Me)â ahead of Whiney Houstonâs floor-filler and second #1 âI Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me)â and the lead track from the hugely popular film âDirty Dancingâ â â(Iâve Had) The Time Of My Lifeâ by Bill Medley & Jennifer Warnes. Next up â87âs biggest selling single â âNever Gonna Give You Upâ, the debut for Rick Astley, and another huge hit for writers and producers Stock, Aitken & WatermanâŠ.roles they also performed on Mel & Kimâs #1 âRespectableâ and âToy Boyâ from Sinitta, and who were also producers on Bananaramaâs âLove In The First Degreeâ, and Dead Or Aliveâs âSomething In My Houseâ. Man 2 Man had a huge HI-NRG hit with âMale Stripperâ, The Communards continued their run of hits with a cover of âNever Can Say Goodbyeâ and Boogie Box High took disco classic âJive Talkinâ into the Top 10. 1987 saw Top 40 debuts for Living In A Box, Jellybean (& Elisa Fiorillo) and the first solo track from Shalamar singer Jody Watley. Donna Summer continued her massive run of hits with âDinner With Gershwinâ, and one of the most successful debuts was from Sananda Maitreya with his album âIntroducing The HardlineâŠâ which included Disc 2 closer âWishing Wellâ.
Disc 3 opens celebrating the gothic rock and huge Jim Steinman production on âThis Corrosionâ from The Sisters Of Mercy, before a stunning run of legendary artists and timeless songs including Paul Simon, Sting, Bruce Springsteen, Bon Jovi, Kiss, Iggy Pop and the #1 cover of âLa Bambaâ from Los Lobos that topped the charts in 15 countries including the UK and the US. Beastie Boys debuted with an anthem that fused rock and rap, and The Cure and Siouxsie And The Banshees continued to add new hits to their already impressive track record, whilst The Jesus And Mary Chain enjoyed their biggest chart hit to date with âApril Skiesâ. Steve Winwood had a hit with the remix of âValerieâ, Crowded House scored their UK chart debut, Elkie Brooks was back in the Top 10 for the first time in 10 years, and taking the disc to itsâ close, two fantastic covers of âLove Lettersâ and âEvâry Time We Say Goodbyeâ from Alison Moyet and Simply Red.
The final disc presents an exceptional run of pure pop⊠starting with a second appearance on this Yearbook for Pet Shop Boys, this time with Dusty Springfield on the sophisticated pop of âWhat Have I Done To Deserve Thisâ⊠and also a second appearance for A-Ha with âCry Wolfâ ahead of Frankie Goes To Hollywood, Level 42, The Blow Monkeys, and Hue & Cry , along with âCrockettâs Themeâ an instrumental hit for Jan Hammer from the soundtrack of one of the yearâs biggest TV shows âMiami Viceâ. Disc 4 is also home to some fantastic cover versions re-visioned for 1987âs charts including âEver Fallen In Loveâ from Fine Young Cannibals, âRespect Yourselfâ from Bruce Willis, and Boy George with his first solo single and #1 âEverything I Ownâ plus hits from Maxi Priest and Nick Kamen. Dance-pop from Kim Wilde & Junior, Pepsi & Shirlie and Bananarama lead towards âSome Peopleâ a Top 3 single for Cliff Richard, Karel Fialkaâs âHey Matthewâ, and the #1 charity supergroup âFerry Aidâ with âLet It Beâ. The beautiful âOnce Upon A Long Agoâ, the single release from Paul McCartneyâs âAll The Bestâ collection leads into a track that, in recent years makes an appearance in the charts every Christmas - 1987 was the release year for âFairytale Of New Yorkâ â and so, the Yearbook for 1987 closes on this truly timeless classic from The Pogues feat. Kirsty MacColl.
NOW â Yearbook 1987Â â A celebration of the diversity and wonderful creativity of a truly magnificent year in Pop.
Original: $27.19
-65%$27.19
$9.52Description
NOW is proud to present the next instalment in our ongoing âYearbookâ series â and looks back to 37 years ago â with 80 tracks on 4 CDs, to celebrate an incredible year of Pop singles⊠NOW â Yearbook 1987. This format is Special Edition 4CD set housed in âhard-back-bookâ packaging, including a 28-page booklet featuring a summary of the year and a track-by-track guide.
Kicking off with a run of huge hits that truly underline just how stellar a year for the singles chart 1987 was: George Michael opens the collection with the title track from his debut solo album âFaithâ, and is followed by the yearsâ Christmas #1, Pet Shop Boys with their version of âAlways On My Mindâ, and âTrue Faithâ, a defining single in the rich discography of New Order. Dance music was evolving and M/A/R/R/S with their #1 âPump Up The Volumeâ was one of the first sample-led club tracks to become a mainstream hit and would be instrumental in paving the way for how dance music was often constructed going forward. In their fifth year of hits Eurythmics continued to deliver stunning singles and âBeethoven (I Love To Listen To)â still sounds breathtakingly original today⊠Established hitmakers Duran Duran, A-ha and ABC were sharing the charts in 1987 with a great line-up of new pop bands, including here, Curiosity Killed The Cat, Johnny Hates Jazz and Wet Wet Wet â all enjoying their first hits. With use in tv ads for jeans, soul classics originally released in the â60s became even bigger hits in 1987: Ben E. King with âStand By Meâ and Percy Sledge with âWhen A Man Loves A Womanâ. The year saw continued success for the Pretenders and Alison Moyet, whilst Suzanne Vega and Swing Out Sister consolidated chart success from the previous year, the superb âWonderful Lifeâ from Black was a hit on re-release, Rosie Vela debuted with âMagic Smileâ â and closing the disc, TâPauâs second hit âChina In Your Handâ became the UKâs 600th #1 single.Â
A second appearance for George Michael opens Disc 2 â this time in partnership with Aretha Franklin on their #1 âI Knew You Were Waiting (For Me)â ahead of Whiney Houstonâs floor-filler and second #1 âI Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me)â and the lead track from the hugely popular film âDirty Dancingâ â â(Iâve Had) The Time Of My Lifeâ by Bill Medley & Jennifer Warnes. Next up â87âs biggest selling single â âNever Gonna Give You Upâ, the debut for Rick Astley, and another huge hit for writers and producers Stock, Aitken & WatermanâŠ.roles they also performed on Mel & Kimâs #1 âRespectableâ and âToy Boyâ from Sinitta, and who were also producers on Bananaramaâs âLove In The First Degreeâ, and Dead Or Aliveâs âSomething In My Houseâ. Man 2 Man had a huge HI-NRG hit with âMale Stripperâ, The Communards continued their run of hits with a cover of âNever Can Say Goodbyeâ and Boogie Box High took disco classic âJive Talkinâ into the Top 10. 1987 saw Top 40 debuts for Living In A Box, Jellybean (& Elisa Fiorillo) and the first solo track from Shalamar singer Jody Watley. Donna Summer continued her massive run of hits with âDinner With Gershwinâ, and one of the most successful debuts was from Sananda Maitreya with his album âIntroducing The HardlineâŠâ which included Disc 2 closer âWishing Wellâ.
Disc 3 opens celebrating the gothic rock and huge Jim Steinman production on âThis Corrosionâ from The Sisters Of Mercy, before a stunning run of legendary artists and timeless songs including Paul Simon, Sting, Bruce Springsteen, Bon Jovi, Kiss, Iggy Pop and the #1 cover of âLa Bambaâ from Los Lobos that topped the charts in 15 countries including the UK and the US. Beastie Boys debuted with an anthem that fused rock and rap, and The Cure and Siouxsie And The Banshees continued to add new hits to their already impressive track record, whilst The Jesus And Mary Chain enjoyed their biggest chart hit to date with âApril Skiesâ. Steve Winwood had a hit with the remix of âValerieâ, Crowded House scored their UK chart debut, Elkie Brooks was back in the Top 10 for the first time in 10 years, and taking the disc to itsâ close, two fantastic covers of âLove Lettersâ and âEvâry Time We Say Goodbyeâ from Alison Moyet and Simply Red.
The final disc presents an exceptional run of pure pop⊠starting with a second appearance on this Yearbook for Pet Shop Boys, this time with Dusty Springfield on the sophisticated pop of âWhat Have I Done To Deserve Thisâ⊠and also a second appearance for A-Ha with âCry Wolfâ ahead of Frankie Goes To Hollywood, Level 42, The Blow Monkeys, and Hue & Cry , along with âCrockettâs Themeâ an instrumental hit for Jan Hammer from the soundtrack of one of the yearâs biggest TV shows âMiami Viceâ. Disc 4 is also home to some fantastic cover versions re-visioned for 1987âs charts including âEver Fallen In Loveâ from Fine Young Cannibals, âRespect Yourselfâ from Bruce Willis, and Boy George with his first solo single and #1 âEverything I Ownâ plus hits from Maxi Priest and Nick Kamen. Dance-pop from Kim Wilde & Junior, Pepsi & Shirlie and Bananarama lead towards âSome Peopleâ a Top 3 single for Cliff Richard, Karel Fialkaâs âHey Matthewâ, and the #1 charity supergroup âFerry Aidâ with âLet It Beâ. The beautiful âOnce Upon A Long Agoâ, the single release from Paul McCartneyâs âAll The Bestâ collection leads into a track that, in recent years makes an appearance in the charts every Christmas - 1987 was the release year for âFairytale Of New Yorkâ â and so, the Yearbook for 1987 closes on this truly timeless classic from The Pogues feat. Kirsty MacColl.
NOW â Yearbook 1987Â â A celebration of the diversity and wonderful creativity of a truly magnificent year in Pop.













