This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1990.
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This year was the peak of cassette sales in the United States, with sales declining year on year since then.[1]
Specific locations
editSpecific genres
editEvents
editJanuary–March
edit- January 8 – Irish singer Sinéad O'Connor released her famous single "Nothing Compares 2 U" (originally written, composed and performed by Prince) which was a worldwide success, becoming one of the best selling singles in the world in 1990 and topped the charts in many countries including the United States and the United Kingdom.
- January 18 – Eric Clapton plays the first of eighteen shows in a three-week span at London's Royal Albert Hall.
- January 21 – MTV's Unplugged is broadcast for the first time, on cable television, with British band Squeeze.
- February 6
- Billy Idol is involved in a serious motorcycle accident, resulting in several broken bones. Idol had been scheduled to have a major role in Oliver Stone's film The Doors, but due to his injuries, the role was reduced almost to a bit part. The role of the T-1000 in Terminator 2: Judgment Day, originally intended for Idol, was recast entirely as a result of the accident.
- Bob Marley's birthday is a national holiday in Jamaica for the first time.
- February 14 – 50,000 fans watch The Rolling Stones play the first of 10 concerts at Tokyo's Korakuen Dome, the beginning of the Stones' first ever tour of Japan. The group was originally scheduled to perform there in 1973 but a drug conviction prevented Mick Jagger from obtaining a visa at the time.
- February 16 – Ike Turner is sentenced to four years in prison for possession of cocaine.
- February 21 – The 32nd Annual Grammy Awards are presented in Los Angeles, hosted by Garry Shandling. Bonnie Raitt's Nick of Time wins Album of the Year, while Bette Midler's cover of "Wind Beneath My Wings" wins both Record of the Year and Song of the Year. Milli Vanilli win Best New Artist.
- February 24 – The Byrds (Roger McGuinn, Chris Hillman and David Crosby) reunite, for the first time in 25 years, to perform at a Los Angeles tribute to Roy Orbison. The three are joined unexpectedly on stage by Bob Dylan, who sings "Mr. Tambourine Man" with the band.
- March 15 – MCA Inc. purchases Geffen Records for over $550 million in stock. Under the agreement, David Geffen will continue to run the record company through an employment contract.
- March 16 – Flea and Chad Smith of Red Hot Chili Peppers are arrested and charged for an incident two days earlier at a performance in Daytona Beach during MTV's spring break coverage, in which they allegedly sexually assaulted and verbally abused a female audience member after jumping from the stage. They are released on $2,000 bail.
- March 20
- Gloria Estefan's tour bus is involved in an accident. Estefan suffers several broken bones in her back.
- A riot almost breaks out in downtown Los Angeles when Depeche Mode draw a crowd of 20,000 during an in-store appearance at Wherehouse Entertainment to sign copies of their new album Violator.[2]
- March 25 – Mötley Crüe's Tommy Lee is arrested for allegedly exposing his buttocks during a performance in Augusta, Georgia.
- March 28 – The Go-Go's reunite to play a benefit concert for the California Environmental Protection Act. They play several more reunion shows later in the year.
April–June
edit- April 4 – Gloria Estefan returns to Miami, Florida after undergoing back surgery following the March 20 accident.
- April 5 – Michael Jackson is awarded 'Artist of the Decade' by George H. W. Bush at the White House.
- April 6 – Mötley Crüe's Tommy Lee suffers a mild concussion after falling off of scaffolding above his elevated drum kit during a performance in New Haven, Connecticut.
- April 7 – Neil Young, Elton John, Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson, John Mellencamp, Guns N' Roses and Jackson Browne perform at Farm Aid IV in Indiana. John dedicates "Candle in the Wind" to AIDS patient Ryan White during his performance. White dies the following day.
- April 13 – Madonna starts her controversial Blond Ambition Tour in Tokyo, Japan.
- April 16 – A massive tribute concert is held at Wembley Stadium for recently freed anti-apartheid activist Nelson Mandela, who appears in a pre-taped 45-minute speech at the event. Performers include Anita Baker, Tracy Chapman, Peter Gabriel, The Neville Brothers and Neil Young. The event is broadcast to 61 countries around the world.
- April 24 – Janet Jackson is honored with a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[3]
- April 25 – Jimi Hendrix's Fender Stratocaster, on which he performed his famous version of the "Star Spangled Banner" at Woodstock, is auctioned off in London for $295,000.
- April 27 – Axl Rose marries model Erin Everly, daughter of singer Don Everly, in a Las Vegas ceremony. Divorce papers are filed on May 24, then withdrawn, then filed again in October.
- May 5 – The 35th Eurovision Song Contest, held in Vatroslav Lisinski Concert Hall in Zagreb, is won by Italian singer Toto Cutugno for the song "Insieme: 1992", Italy's first victory in the contest since 1964. At 46 years old, Cutugno becomes the oldest winner of the contest to date, a record he holds until 2001.
- May 6 – Valery Leontiev show "It seems to me that I have not lived" in the Olympic Stadium.
- May 12 – First Prague Spring International Music Festival following the Velvet Revolution: Rafael Kubelík conducts the Czech Philharmonic orchestra in Smetana's Má vlast.
- May 18 – The Rolling Stones open their Urban Jungle European tour in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
- May 29
- In Canada, Toronto police threaten to arrest Madonna if she performs her simulated masturbation scene during her performance of "Like a Virgin" on her Blond Ambition Tour. Madonna refuses to change her show, and the police decide not to press charges, later denying that they had ever threatened to do so (a claim refuted by footage captured during the filming of Madonna's 1991 documentary Truth or Dare).
- At the Eurovision Young Musicians Competition 1990 finals, held at the Musikverein in Vienna, Austria, pianist Nick van Oosterum of the Netherlands takes first place.
- June 10 – Members of rap group 2 Live Crew are arrested and charged with obscenity after a performance in a Hollywood, Florida nightclub.
- June 12 – Mariah Carey releases her debut album, which would go on to top the Billboard 200 for 11 consecutive weeks.[4]
- June 30 – Knebworth 1990, a one-off festival at Knebworth Park, England in support of Nordoff-Robbins Music Therapy. Participating musicians have all been winners of the Silver Clef Award. The acts include headliners Pink Floyd, Genesis, Robert Plant, Elton John, Dire Straits, Status Quo, Eric Clapton and others.
July–September
edit- July 7 – The Three Tenors give their first concert, at the Baths of Caracalla in Rome.
- July 14 – Jean Michel Jarre's concert Paris la Defense attracts 2.5 million spectators.
- July 21 – Roger Waters and numerous guest stars stage a performance of Pink Floyd's The Wall in Berlin, Germany to commemorate the fall of the Berlin Wall eight months earlier. Scorpions, Cyndi Lauper, Thomas Dolby, Sinéad O'Connor, The Band and Bryan Adams are among the performers.
- August 5 – Madonna ends her controversial Blond Ambition Tour in Nice, France. The last date was aired live and broadcast on HBO in United States, and later released as Laser Disc only.
- August 13 – Curtis Mayfield is paralyzed from the neck down in an accident at an outdoor concert in Flatbush, Brooklyn, after stage lighting equipment collapses on top of him.
- August 19 – Leonard Bernstein conducts his final performance at Tanglewood; he suffers a coughing fit in the middle of one piece which almost brings the concert to a premature end.
- August 22 – James MacMillan's symphonic piece The Confession of Isobel Gowdie premieres at The Proms in London.
- August 24
- A judge rules that heavy metal band Judas Priest is not responsible for the actions of two Nevada youths who shot themselves, one fatally, after listening to the band's music in December 1985.
- Irish singer Sinéad O'Connor sparks controversy when she refuses to play a concert at the Garden State Arts Center in New Jersey unless the venue refrains from its tradition of playing a recording of the American national anthem before the performance. O'Connor is heavily criticized and her music is dropped from a number of radio stations as a result.
- August 27 – Guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan is killed in a helicopter crash following a concert at the Alpine Valley Music Theatre in East Troy, Wisconsin. He was 35.
- September 4 – Walter Yetnikoff steps down after fifteen years as President of CBS Records.
- September 11 – After a decade of performing in the Francophone world, Céline Dion makes her formal English-language debut in the United States with the release of her album Unison.
- September 26 – The poorly received Cop Rock premieres on US television; it was TV's only musical police drama.
October–December
edit- October 9 – Leonard Bernstein announces his retirement from the conducting podium; he dies five days later.
- October 20 – A Florida jury acquits 2 Live Crew of the obscenity charges stemming from a June 10 performance of their act known for its sexually explicit lyrics.
- October 22 – Pearl Jam, then named "Mookie Blaylock", play their first show as a band at the Off Ramp club in Seattle, Washington.
- October 27 – Janet Jackson's "Black Cat" reaches number one.[5] It was also the first song to simultaneously peak atop the Billboard Hot 100 and Mainstream Rock chart.[6]
- November 6 – Madonna releases her new single, "Justify My Love". The accompanying music video is banned by MTV amid international controversy over its sexually explicit content.
- November 21 – The Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger finally marries longtime girlfriend Jerry Hall in a traditional Hindu ceremony on the island of Bali, although the wedding's legality is questionable.
- November 27 – Amid growing public skepticism towards the artistic integrity of dance-pop duo Milli Vanilli as well as creative differences with frontmen Fab Morvan and Rob Pilatus, music producer Frank Farian admits that Morvan and Pilatus had been lip-synching all of their songs, including hits such as "Girl You Know It's True." In actuality, the tracks were composed and recorded by an ensemble of much older artists. Milli Vanilli's Grammy award for Best New Artist is voided in the ensuing fallout; accounts vary as to whether it was revoked or if Morvan and Pilatus returned it themselves.
- December 1 – ABC airs a television special accompanying the Red Hot + Blue benefit album in which contemporary pop performers reinterpret the songs of Cole Porter. The special includes video clips portraying the societal effects of AIDS.
- December 3 – Following the banning of her "Justify My Love" music video by MTV, singer Madonna appears on Nightline to defend the video.
- December 15 – Rod Stewart marries model Rachel Hunter.
- December 31 – The nineteenth annual New Year's Rockin' Eve special airs on ABC, with appearances by The Beach Boys, Bell Biv DeVoe, The Kentucky Headhunters, Nelson, The O'Jays and Sweet Sensation.
Also in 1990
edit- Fall – For the first time, Amy Grant and Gary Chapman hold a night of music at their Franklin, Tennessee Riverstone Farm, for local teenagers. Performers included Rich Mullins, Rick Elias, Charlie Peacock, Wes King and Michael W. Smith. The event becomes known as "The Loft".
- Guitarists: Dan Nilsson & Micke Bargstörm, Bassist: Martin Persson & Drummer: Rille Even, all quit Opeth who were the original members of the band. David Isberg, the only remaining original member hires Guitarists: Mikael Åkerfeldt (who applied for a bassist position even when the band already had bassist causing friction but ended up as a guitarist) Andreas Dimeo, Bassist: Nick Döring & Drummer: Anders Nordin.
- Studio Fredman is built.
- Sons of Kyuss change their name to Kyuss and add new members, except for guitarist Josh Homme.
- After a hiatus of 7 years, rock group Styx reform to record a new album and tour without long-time guitarist Tommy Shaw, who was committed to Damn Yankees at the time.
- Tapes of the original William Walton score for the 1969 film Battle of Britain are rediscovered, having been lost since the score was abandoned in favour of one by Ron Goodwin.
Bands formed
editBands disbanded
editAlbums released
editJanuary–March
editApril–June
editJuly–September
editOctober–December
editRelease date unknown
editBiggest hit singles
editThe following songs achieved the highest positions in the charts of 1990.[7]
# | Artist | Title | Year | Country | Chart Entries |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sinéad O'Connor | Nothing Compares 2 U | 1990 | UK 1 – January 1990; US Billboard 1 of 1990; Netherlands 1 – January 1990; Sweden 1 – February 1990; Austria 1 – March 1990; Switzerland 1 – February 1990; Norway 1 – February 1990; Poland 1 – March 1990; Germany 1 – February 1990; Republic of Ireland 1 – January 1990; New Zealand 1 for five weeks, April 1990; Australia 1 for eight weeks, May 1990; KROQ-FM 1 of 1990; Australia 3 of 1990; US Cash Box 4 of 1990; Italy 8 of 1990; Europe 8 of the 1990s; Rate Your Music 9 of 1990; Germany 19 of the 1990s; Poland 59 of all time; Belgium 90 of all time; Acclaimed 113; OzNet 138;Rolling Stone 162; WXPN 661. | |
2 | Madonna | Vogue | 1990 | UK 1 – Apr 1990, US BB 1 of 1990, US CashBox 1 of 1990, Sweden 1 – Apr 1990, Norway 1 – Apr 1990, Poland 1 – Apr 1990, New Zealand 1 for 4 weeks May 1990, Australia 1 for 4 weeks Aug 1990, Netherlands 2 – Apr 1990, Switzerland 2 – Apr 1990, Italy 5 of 1990, Germany 4 – Apr 1990, France 7 – Apr 1990, Austria 7 – May 1990, POP 7 of 1990, US BB 8 of 1990, RYM 8 of 1990, Australia 10 of 1990, Global 33 (5 M sold) – 1990, Party 181 of 2007, Germany 230 of the 1990s, Acclaimed 521, OzNet 881 | |
3 | Vanilla Ice | Ice Ice Baby | 1990 | UK 1 – Nov 1990, US BB 1 of 1990, Netherlands 1 – Nov 1990, Republic of Ireland 1 – Dec 1990, New Zealand 1 for 7 weeks Dec 1990, Australia 1 for 3 weeks Apr 1991, Sweden 2 – Nov 1990, Switzerland 2 – Nov 1990, Norway 2 – Dec 1990, Germany 2 – Jan 1991, Austria 3 – Nov 1990, US BB 4 of 1990, POP 4 of 1990, France 5 – Dec 1990, Australia 15 of 1991, US CashBox 21 of 1990, Party 42 of 2007, Italy 65 of 1991, Germany 82 of the 1990s, RYM 188 of 1990 | |
4 | MC Hammer | U Can't Touch This | 1990 | Netherlands 1 – Jul 1990, Sweden 1 – Aug 1990, Australia 1 of 1990, New Zealand 1 for 6 weeks Jul 1990, Australia 1 for 5 weeks Oct 1990, Switzerland 2 – Jul 1990, UK 3 – Jun 1990, Germany 3 – Jul 1990, US BB 5 of 1990, Austria 5 – Aug 1990, POP 5 of 1990, France 6 – Jun 1990, Norway 6 – Aug 1990, US BB 8 of 1990, Scrobulate 18 of rap, US CashBox 39 of 1990, RYM 63 of 1990, Germany 147 of the 1990s, RIAA 201, Party 214 of 1999, Acclaimed 1797 | |
5 | Roxette | It Must Have Been Love | 1990 | US Bullfrog 1 – Apr 1990 (25 weeks), US BB 1 of 1990, Switzerland 1 – Jun 1990, Norway 1 – Jun 1990, Poland 1 – Jun 1990, Australia 1 for 2 weeks Oct 1990, Japan (Tokyo) 2 – May 1990, UK 3 – Jun 1990, Netherlands 3 – Jun 1990, Sweden 3 – Dec 1987, Austria 4 – Jul 1990, Germany 4 – Jun 1990, US CashBox 6 of 1990, France 8 – May 1990, Australia 8 of 1990, Brazil 12 of 1990, US Gold (certified by RIAA in Jun 1990), POP 30 of 1990, Italy 48 of 1990, Europe 52 of the 1990s, Japan (Osaku) 64 of 1990, Germany 119 of the 1990s, OzNet 716 |
Top 40 chart hit singles
editSong title | Artist(s) | Release date(s) | US | UK | Highest chart position | Other Chart Performance(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
"A Dream's a Dream" | Soul II Soul | April 1990 | 86 | 6 | 1 (Greece) | See chart performance entry |
"À toutes les filles..." | Félix Gray & Didier Barbelivien | May 1990 | n/a | n/a | 1 (France, Belgium) | See chart performance entry |
"After the Rain" | Nelson | October 1990 | 6 | n/a | 6 (United States) | 39 (US Billboard Album Rock Tracks) |
"All I Wanna Do Is Make Love to You" | Heart | March 1990 | 2 | 8 | 1 (Australia, Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"All or Nothing" | Milli Vanilli | January 1990 | 4 | 74 | 1 (New Zealand) | See chart performance entry |
"All Together Now" | The Farm | November 1990 | n/a | 4 | 4 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"Alors regarde" | Patrick Bruel | September 1990 | n/a | n/a | 3 (France) | 14 (Québec) – 16 (Europe [European Airplay Top 50]) – 20 (Europe [Eurochart Hot 100]) |
"Alright" | Janet Jackson | March 1990 | 4 | 20 | 4 (Netherlands, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"The Anniversary Waltz" (Part One) | Status Quo | September 1990 | n/a | 2 | 2 (United Kingdom) |
3 (Ireland) – 5 (Netherlands) – 9 (Austria) – 12 (Switzerland) – 13 (Belgium) – 17 (Germany) – 104 (Australia) |
"The Anniversary Waltz" (Part Two) | Status Quo | December 1990 | n/a | 16 | 16 (United Kingdom) | 14 (Ireland) – 33 (Belgium) – 66 (Netherlands) |
"Are You Dreaming?" | Twenty 4 Seven | November 1990 | n/a | 17 | 4 (Switzerland) | See chart performance entry |
"Around the Way Girl" | LL Cool J | November 1990 | 9 | n/a | 9 (United States) | 1 (U.S. Billboard Hot Rap Songs) – 5 (U.S. Billboard Hot R&B/Hip Hop Songs) – 7 (U.S. Billboard Dance Club Songs) – 27 (New Zealand) – 45 (Australia) |
"Avant de partir" | Roch Voisine | July 1990 | n/a | n/a | 7 (France) | 12 (Québec) – 34 (Europe) |
"Because I Love You" | Stevie B | September 1990 | 1 | 6 | 1 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Been Caught Stealing" | Jane's Addiction | November 1990 | n/a | 34 | 24 (Ireland) | 1 (US Billboard Alternative Songs) – 29 (US Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks) – 56 (Australia) |
"Being Boring" | Pet Shop Boys | November 1990 | n/a | 20 | 5 (Finland, Italy) | See chart performance entry |
"Better the Devil You Know" | Kylie Minogue | April 1990 | n/a | 2 | 2 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"Black Cat" | Janet Jackson | August 1990 | 1 | 15 | 1 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Black Velvet" | Alannah Myles | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
1 | 2 | 1 (4 countries) | See chart performance entry |
"Blaze of Glory" | Bon Jovi | July 1990 | 1 | 13 | 1 (4 countries) | See chart performance entry |
"Blue Savannah" | Erasure | January 1990 | n/a | 3 | 1 (Israel) | See chart performance entry |
"Candy" | Iggy Pop | September 1990 | 28 | 67 | 9 (Australia) | See chart performance entry |
"(Can't Live Without Your) Love and Affection" | Nelson | May 1990 | 1 | 54 | 1 (United States) | 11 (Canada) – 20 (Australia) – 44 (New Zealand) |
"Cherry Pie" | Warrant | August 1990 | 10 | 35 | 6 (Australia) | See chart performance entry |
"Close to You" | Maxi Priest | May 1990 | 1 | 7 | 1 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Club at the End of the Street" | Elton John | April 1990 | 28 | 47 | 12 (Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"Come Back to Me" | Janet Jackson | 2 | 20 | 2 (United States) | See chart performance entry | |
"Cradle of Love" | Billy Idol | April 1990 | 2 | 34 | 2 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Crying in the Rain" | A-ha | June 1990 | n/a | 13 | 1 (Norway) | See chart performance entry |
"Cult of Snap" | Snap! | September 1990 | n/a | 8 | 1 (Spain) | See chart performance entry |
"The Dance" | Garth Brooks | April 1990 | n/a | 36 | 3 (Ireland) | 1 (Canada Country Tracks, U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs) – 31 (Scotland) – 89 (Europ) |
"Dangerous" | Roxette | May 1990 | 2 | 6 | 2 (Canada, Denmark, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Disappear" | INXS | September 1990 | 8 | 21 | 1 (Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"Do You Remember?" | Phil Collins | April 1990 | 4 | n/a | 1 (Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"Doin' the Do" | Betty Boo | May 1990 | 90 | 7 | 3 (Australia) | See chart performance entry |
"Don't Miss The Party Line" | Bizz Nizz | April 1990 | n/a | 7 | 7 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"Don't Wanna Fall in Love" | Jane Child | January 1990 | 2 | 22 | 2 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Don't Worry" | Kim Appleby | October 1990 | n/a | 2 | 1 (Zimbabwe) | See chart performance entry |
"Don't You Love Me" | 49ers | March 1990 | 78 | 12 | 6 (Ireland) | See chart performance entry |
"Doubleback" | ZZ Top | May 1990 | n/a | 29 | 9 (Sweden) | See chart performance entry |
"Downtown Train" | Rod Stewart | Charted in '89/'90 | 3 | 10 | 1 (Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"Dub Be Good to Me" | Beats International | January 1990 | 76 | 1 | 1 (Israel, United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"Enjoy the Silence" | Depeche Mode | February 1990 | 8 | 6 | 1 (Denmark, Spain) | See chart performance entry |
"Epic" | Faith No More | January 1990 | 9 | 25 | 1 (Australia) | See chart performance entry |
"Escapade" | Janet Jackson | January 1990 | 1 | 17 | 1 (Canada, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Falling" | Julee Cruise | Charted in '90,'91,'92 | n/a | 7 | 1 (Australia) | See chart performance entry |
"Fantasy" | Black Box | October 1990 | n/a | 5 | 3 (Australia, Ireland) | See chart performance entry |
"Forever" | Kiss | January 1990 | 8 | 65 | 8 (United States) |
17 (US Billboard Mainstream Rock – 18 (Canada) – 73 (Australia) |
"Freedom! '90" | George Michael | October 1990 | 8 | 28 | 1 (Canada, Zimbababwe) | See chart performance entry |
"Friends In Low Places" | Garth Brooks | August 1990 | n/a | 36 | 3 (Ireland) | See chart performance entry |
"Get Up! (Before the Night Is Over)" | Technotronic | January 1990 | 1 | 2 | 1 (6 countries | See chart performance entry |
"Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)" | C+C Music Factory | November 1990 | 1 | 3 | 1 (5 Countries) | See chart performance entry |
"Groove Is in the Heart" | Deee-Lite | August 1990 | 4 | 2 | 1 (Australia) | See chart performance entry |
"Hanky Panky" | Madonna | July 1990 | 10 | 2 | 1 (Finland) | See chart performance entry |
"Happenin' All Over Again" | Lonnie Gordon | January 1990 | n/a | 4 | 3 (Ireland) | See chart performance entry |
"Have You Seen Her" | MC Hammer | March 1990 | 4 | 8 | 2 (Ireland) | See chart performance entry |
"Healing Hands" | Elton John | June 1990 | 13 | 45 | 1 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"Hear the Drummer (Get Wicked)" | Chad Jackson | February 1990 | n/a | 3 | 3 (Netherlands, United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"Heart of Stone" | Taylor Dayne | July 1990 | 12 | n/a | 4 (Canada) | 1 (Canada Adult Contemporary) – 8 (U.S. Billboard Adult Contemporary) – 42 (Australia) |
"Hello Afrika" | Dr. Alban | September 1990 | n/a | n/a | 1 (Austria) | See chart performance entry |
"Here I Am (Come and Take Me)" | UB40 | January 1990 | 7 | 46 | 3 (Australia) | See chart performance entry |
"High Enough" | Damn Yankees | September 1990 | 3 | 81 | 3 (United States) | 2 (US Billboard Album Rock Tracks) – 12 (Canada) – 24 (New Zealand) – 57 (Australia) |
"Hold On" | En Vogue | March 1990 | 2 | 5 | 2 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Hold On" | Wilson Phillips | February 1990 | 1 | 6 | 1 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
Holy Smoke" | Iron Maiden | September 1990 | n/a | 3 | 3 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"How Am I Supposed to Live Without You" | Michael Bolton | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
1 | 3 | 1 (Belgium, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"How Can We Be Lovers?" | Michael Bolton | May 1990 | 3 | 10 | 2 (Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"I Can't Stand It!" | Twenty 4 Seven | Releaesd in 1989 Charted in '90/'91 |
n/a | 7 | 1 (Europe, Italy) | See chart performance entry |
"I Don't Have the Heart" | James Ingram | August 1990 | 1 | n/a | 1 (United States) | 2 (US Billboard Adult Contemporary) – 53 (US Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Song) – 78 (Australia) |
"I Don't Know Anybody Else" | Black Box | Releaesd in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
23 | 4 | 1 (Finland) | See chart performance entry |
"I Go to Extremes" | Billy Joel | January 1990 | 6 | 70 | 3 (Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"I Promised Myself" | Nick Kamen | 1990 | n/a | 50 | 1 (Austria, Sweden) | See chart performance entry |
"I Saw Red" | Warrant | November 1990 | 10 | n/a | 10 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" | The Chimes | May 1990 | n/a | 6 | 2 (Norway) | See chart performance entry |
"I Wanna Be Rich" | Calloway | May 1990 | 2 | 100 | 2 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"(I Wanna Give You) Devotion" | Nomad & MC Mikee Freedom | 1990 | n/a | 2 | 1 (Greece) | See chart performance entry |
"I Wish It Would Rain Down" | Phil Collins | May 1990 | 3 | 7 | 1 (Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"Ice Ice Baby" | Vanilla Ice | August 1990 | 1 | 1 | 1 (9 Countries) | See chart performance entry |
"If Wishes Came True" | Sweet Sensation | June 1990 | 1 | n/a | 1 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"I'll Be Your Baby Tonight" | Robert Palmer & UB40 | October 1990 | n/a | 6 | 1 (New Zealand) | See chart performance entry |
"I'll Be Your Everything" | Tommy Page | February 1990 | 1 | 53 | 1 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"I'll Be Your Shelter" | Taylor Dayne | March 1990 | 4 | 43 | 1 (Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"I'll Never Fall in Love Again" | Deacon Blue | August 1990 | n/a | 2 | 2 (Ireland, United Kingdom) | 72 (Netherlands) |
"I'm Free" | The Soup Dragons & Junior Reid | 1990 | 79 | 5 | 5 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"I'm Not in Love" | Will to Power | July 1990 | 2 | 1 | 1 (Canada, Ireland, UK) | See chart performance entry |
"I'm Your Baby Tonight" | Whitney Houston | September 1990 | 1 | 5 | 1 (Greece, Italy, Portugal, US) | See chart performance entry |
"Impulsive" | Wilson Phillips | October 1990 | 4 | 42 | 1 (Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"Infinity" | Guru Josh | Released in 1989 Charted in 1990 |
n/a | 5 | 1 (Spain) | See chart performance entry |
"Insieme: 1992" | Toto Cutugno | 1990 | n/a | n/a | 2 (Portugal, Switzerland) | See chart performance entry |
"It Must Have Been Love" | Roxette | March 1990 | 1 | 3 | 1 (8 countries) | See chart performance entry |
"It Takes Two" | Rod Stewart & Tina Turner | November 1990 | n/a | 5 | 1 (Denmark) | See chart performance entry |
"It's Here" | Kim Wilde | April 1990 | n/a | 42 | 4 (Finland) | See chart performance entry |
"It's On You" | M.C. Sar & The Real McCoy | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
n/a | n/a | 1 (Spain) | See chart performance entry |
"Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini" | Bombalurina | July 1990 | n/a | 1 | 1 (Ireland, United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"I've Been Thinking About You" | Londonbeat | September 1990 | 1 | 2 | 1 (15 countries) | See chart performance entry |
"Janie's Got a Gun" | Aerosmith | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
4 | 76 | 1 (Australia) | See chart performance entry |
"The Joker" | Steve Miller Band | August 1990 Released in 1974 Reissued in 1990 |
n/a | 1 | 1 (4 countries) | See chart performance entry |
"Jōnetsu no Bara" | The Blue Hearts | See chart performance entry | ||||
"Just Like Jesse James" | Cher | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
8 | 11 | 8 (Canada, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Justify My Love" | Madonna | November 1990 | 1 | 2 | 1 (4 Countries) | See chart performance entry |
"Keep It Together" | Madonna | January 1990 | 8 | n/a | 1 (Australia) with "Vogue" |
See chart performance entry |
"Keep On Running" | Milli Vanilli | November 1990 | n/a | 76 | 2 (Austria) | See chart performance entry |
"Killer" | Adamski & Seal | March 1990 | n/a | 1 | 1 (Belgium, UK, Zimbabwe) | See chart performance entry |
"King of Wishful Thinking" | Go West | July 1990 | 8 | 18 | 3 (Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"Kingston Town" | UB40 | March 1990 | n/a | 4 | 1 (France) | See chart performance entry |
"Kinky Afro" | Happy Mondays | October 1990 | n/a | 5 | 5 (United Kingdom) | 1 (US Billboard Alternative Airplay) – 22 (Europe) – 34 (New Zealand) – 63 (Australia) |
"Let's Try It Again" | New Kids on the Block | September 1990 | 53 | 8 | 6 (Ireland) | See chart performance entry |
"Listen to Your Heart" | Roxette | Released in 1988 Charted in '88,89,90 |
1 | 6 | 1 (Canada, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Listen to Your Heart" | Sonia | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
n/a | 10 | 10 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"Live Together" | Lisa Stansfield | February 1990 | n/a | 10 | 7 (Belgium) | See chart performance entry |
"Love and Kisses" | Dannii Minogue | February 1990 | n/a | 8 | 4 (Australia) | 15 (New Zealand) – 22 (Ireland) – 25 (Europe) – 48 (Belgium) |
"Love Takes Time" | Mariah Carey | August 1990 | 1 | 37 | 1 (Canada, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Love Will Lead You Back" | Taylor Dayne | January 1990 | 1 | 69 | 1 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Love Will Never Do (Without You)" | Janet Jackson | October 1990 | 1 | 34 | 2 (Canada, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Mary Had a Little Boy" | Snap! | December 1990 | n/a | 8 | 1 (Canada, Zimbabwe) | See chart performance entry |
"Miles Away" | Winger | October 1990 | 12 | 56 | 12 (United States) | 14 (US Billboard Mainstream Rock) – 44 (Canada) – 151 (Australia) |
"Miracle" | Jon Bon Jovi | November 1990 | 12 | 29 | 8 (Australia) | See chart performance entry |
"Mona (I Need You Baby)" | Craig McLachlan & Check 1-2 | March 1990 | n/a | 2 | 2 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"Mélodie d'amour" | Kaoma | See chart performance entry | ||||
"More Than Words Can Say" | Alias | September 1990 | 2 | n/a | 1 (Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"My, My, My" | Johnny Gill | May 1990 | 10 | 89 | 10 United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Naked In The Rain" | Blue Pearl | June 1990 | n/a | 4 | 2 (Austria) | See chart performance entry |
"No Coke" | Dr. Alban | November 1990 | n/a | n/a | 1 (Australia) | See chart performance entry |
"No More Lies" | Michel'le | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
7 | 78 | 7 (United States) | 1 (US Billboard Dance Singels Sales) – 2 (US Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs) – 7 (US Billboard Dance Club Songs) – 153 (Australia) |
"Nothing Compares 2 U" | Sinéad O'Connor | January 1990 | 1 | 1 | 1 (17 countries) | See chart performance entry |
"Ooops Up" | Snap! | June 1990 | 35 | 5 | 1 (Greece) | See chart performance entry |
"Opposites Attract" | Paula Abdul | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
1 | 2 | 1 (Australia, Canada, US) | See chart performance entry |
"The Other Side" | Aerosmith | June 1990 | 22 | 46 | 22 (Canada, United States) | 1 (US Albums Rock Tracks) |
"Pictures of You" | The Cure | March 1990 | 71 | 24 | 9 (Ireland) | See chart performance entry |
"Play That Funky Music" | Vanilla Ice | November 1990 | 4 | 10 | 3 (Finland) | See chart performance entry |
"Poison" | Bell Biv DeVoe | March 1990 | 3 | 19 | 3 (New Zealand) | See chart performance entry |
"Policy of Truth" | Depeche Mode | May 1990 | 15 | 16 | 5 (Finland) | See chart performance entry |
"The Power" | Snap! | January 1990 | 2 | 1 | 1 (7 countries) | See chart performance entry |
"Pray" | MC Hammer | August 1990 | 2 | 8 | 2 (New Zealand, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Praying for Time" | George Michael | August 1990 | 1 | 6 | 1 (Canada, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Price of Love" | Bad English | March 1990 | 5 | 80 | 5 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Release Me" | Wilson Phillips | June 1990 | 1 | 36 | 1 (Canada, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Ride On Time" | Black Box | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
n/a | 1 | 1 (Iceland, Ireland, UK) | See chart performance entry |
"Right Here, Right Now" | Jesus Jones | September 1990 | 2 | 31 | 2 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Roam" | The B-52's | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
3 | 17 | 2 (New Zealand) | See chart performance entry |
"Rockin' Over the Beat" | Technotronic | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
95 | 9 | 9 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Romeo" | Dino | September 1990 | 6 | n/a | 6 (United States) | 32 (Canada) – 35 (US Billboard Hot Dance Music/Club Play) – 48 (New Zealand) – 69 (US Billboard Hot R&B Singles) – 105 (Australia) |
"Sacrifice" (1990 reissue) |
Elton John | May 1990 First released in 1989 |
18 | 55 | 2 (Europe, France) | See chart performance entry UK # 1 with "Healing Hands" |
"Sadeness (Part I)" | Enigma | October 1990 | 5 | 1 | 1 (14 countries) | See chart performance entry |
"Saviour's Day" | Cliff Richard | November 1990 | n/a | 1 | 1 (United Kingdom) | 5 (Ireland) – 36 (Belgium) – 97 (Australia) |
"Sensitivity" | Ralph Tresvant | October 1990 | 4 | 18 | 4 (United Kingdom) | 1 (UK Dance) – 1 (US Billboard Hot R&B Singles) – 19 (US Billboard Hot Dance Club Play) – 62 (Australia) |
"She Ain't Worth It" | Glenn Medeiros & Bobby Brown | May 1990 | 1 | 12 | 1 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"The Shoop Shoop Song (It's in His Kiss)" | Cher | November 1990 | 33 | 1 | 1 (7 countries) | See chart performance entry |
"Show Me Heaven" | Maria McKee | June 1990 | n/a | 1 | 1 (Belgium, Netherlands, Norway, UK) | See chart performance entry |
"Signs" | Tesla | November 1990 | 8 | 70 | 8 (United States) | 2 (US Billboard Mainstream Rock) – 72 (Canada) |
"So Close" | Hall & Oates | September 1990 | 11 | 69 | 4 (Canada) | 6 (US Billboard Adult Contemporary) – 9 (US Radio & Records CHR/Pop Airplay Chart) – 106 (Australia) |
"So Hard" | Pet Shop Boys | September 1990 | 62 | 4 | 1 (Finland) | See chart performance entry |
"Soca Dance" | Charles D. Lewis | July 1990 | n/a | n/a | 1 (Belgium, France) | See chart performance entry |
"Something Happened on the Way to Heaven" | Phil Collins | April 1990 | 4 | 15 | 1 (Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"Something to Believe In" | Poison | September 1990 | 4 | 35 | 3 (Canada) | 5 (US Billboard Mainstream Rock) – 38 (New Zealand) – 44 (Australia) – 98 (Europe) |
"Steamy Windows" | Tina Turner | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
39 | 13 | 5 (Belgium) | See chart performance entry |
"Step by Step" | New Kids on the Block | September 1990 | 1 | 2 | 1 (Canada, Spain, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Step Back in Time" | Kylie Minogue | October 1990 | n/a | 4 | 4 (Finland, Ireland, UK) | See chart performance entry |
"Step On" | Happy Mondays | March 1990 | 57 | 5 | 5 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"Still Got the Blues (For You)" | Gary Moore | April 1990 | 97 | 31 | 1 (Belgium) | See chart performance entry |
"Sucker DJ (A Witch for Love)" | Dimples D. | November 1990 | n/a | 17 | 1 (Australia) | 2 (New Zealand) – 8 (Netherlands) – 10 (Austria) – 16 (Germany) – 25 (Belgium) |
"Suicide Blonde" | INXS | August 1990 | 9 | 11 | 1 (Canada, New Zealand) | See chart performance entry |
"Tears on My Pillow" | Kylie Minogue | January 1990 | n/a | 1 | 1 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"Thieves in the Temple" | Prince | July 1990 | 6 | 7 | 3 (Denmark) | See chart performance entry |
"This Beat Is Technotronic" | Technotronic | February 1990 | n/a | 14 | 5 (Finland, Ireland) | See chart performance entry |
"Thunderstruck" | AC/DC | September 1990 | n/a | 13 | 1 (Finland) | See chart performance entry |
"To Love Somebody" | Jimmy Somerville | November 1990 | n/a | 8 | 4 (Netherlands) | 5 (New Zealand) – 11 (Switzerland) – 12 (Italy) – 15 (France) – 20 (Germany) |
"Tom's Diner" (remix) | Suzanne Vega&DNA | July 1990 | 5 | 2 | 1 (Austria, European, Greece, Switzerland) | See chart performance entry |
"Tonight" | New Kids on the Block | February 1990 | 7 | 3 | 3 (France, Netherlands, UK) | See chart performance entry |
"Touch Me" | 49ers | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
n/a | 3 | 3 (Finland, Greece, UK) | See chart performance entry |
"Turtle Power!" | Partners In Kryme | April 1990 | 13 | 1 | 1 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"U Can't Touch This" | MC Hammer | May 1990 | 8 | 3 | 1 (6 countries) | See chart performance entry |
"Unbelievable" | EMF | October 1990 | 1 | 3 | 1 (United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Unchained Melody" | The Righteous Brothers | October 1990 | 19 | 1 | 1 (6 countries) | See chart performance entry |
"Unskinny Bop" | Poison | June 1990 | 3 | 15 | 1 (Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"Vision of Love" | Mariah Carey | May 1990 | 1 | 9 | 1 (Canada, New Zealand, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Vogue" | Madonna | March 1990 | 1 | 1 | 1 (30 countries) | See chart performance entry |
"Volare" | Gipsy Kings | Released in 1989 charted in '89/'90 |
n/a | 86 | 16 (France) | 1 (US Billboard Hot Latin Songs) – 24 (Belgium, Italy) – 26 (Netherlands) – 90 (Australia) |
"What I Am" | Edie Brickell & New Bohemians | Released in 1988 Charted in '88,'89,'90 |
7 | 31 | 1 (Canada) | See chart performance entry |
"What it Takes" | Aerosmith | February 1990 | 9 | n/a | 9 (United States) | 1 (US Billboard Album Rock Tracks) – 15 (Canada) – 19 (New Zealand) – 46 (Australia |
"What Time Is Love?" | The KLF | August 1990 | n/a | 5 | 5 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"Where Are You Baby?" | Betty Boo | July 1990 | n/a | 3 | 3 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"Wicked Game" | Chris Isaak | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
6 | 10 | 1 (Belgium) | See chart performance entry |
"Wiggle It" | 2 in a Room | November 1990 | 15 | 3 | 3 (Australia, Ireland, UK) | See chart performance entry |
"With Every Beat of My Heart" | Taylor Dayne | Released in 1989 Charted in '89/'90 |
5 | 53 | 5 (Canada, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Without You" | Mötley Crüe | February 1990 | 8 | 39 | 8 (United States) | 11 (US Billboard Mainstream Rock) – 46 (Australia) |
"Words" | The Christians | Released in 1989 charted in '89/'90 |
n/a | 18 | 1 (France) | See chart performance entry |
"World in Motion" | England New Order | May 1990 | n/a | 1 | 1 (United Kingdom) | See chart performance entry |
"World in My Eyes" | Depeche Mode | September 1990 | 52 | 17 | 2 (Denmark, Spain) | See chart performance entry |
"You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)" | Jimmy Somerville | January 1990 | 87 | 5 | 1 (Israel) | See chart performance entry |
Other chart hit singles
edit- "The Age of Love" – Age of Love
- "Algo de mí en tu corazón" – Alejandro Lerner (ARG)
- "Baila Esta Cumbia" – Selena y Los Dinos (MEX)
- "Because I Love You (The Postman Song)" – Stevie B (#1 US, #2 CAN, #3 NLD)
- "Been Caught Stealing" – Jane's Addiction
- "Being Boring" – Pet Shop Boys (#3 FR, #4 Japan, #5 FIN)
- "Better the Devil You Know" – Kylie Minogue (#1 (ISR), #2 (UK), #4 (Australia)
- "Birdhouse In Your Soul" – They Might Be Giants (#6 UK)
- "Bird on the Wire" – The Neville Brothers
- "Blue Sky Mine" – Midnight Oil (#7 CAN, #8 Australia)
- "Bo le lavabo" – Lagaf' (#1 (FR))
- "Burbujas de Amor" – Juan Luis Guerra
- "C'est toi qui m'as fait" – François Feldman (#2 FR)
- "Chain Reaction" – John Farnham (#3 Australia)
- "De mí" – Charly García (ARG)
- "De Música Ligera" – Soda Stereo (#1 ARG)
- "Ding Dong" – Erste Allgemeine Verunsicherung
- "Do Me!" – Bell Biv DeVoe (#3 US)
- "El Cariño Es Como Una Flor" – Rudy La Scala (#1 US Latin)
- "Epic" – Faith No More (#1 Australia, #2 NZ)
- "Escapade" – Janet Jackson (#1 US, CAN)
- "Fais-moi une place" – Julien Clerc (#8 FR)
- "Falling" – Julee Cruise (#1 AUS, #2 SWE, #3 NOR)
- "Fantasy" – Black Box (#3 AUS, IRL, #4 AUT, #5 UK)
- "Forever" – Kiss (#8 US)
- "Freedom! '90" – George Michael (#1 (SP), #2 (UK), #6 (Australia, IRL))
- "Friends In Low Places" – Garth Brooks (#3 IRL)
- "Frente a Frente" – Chico & Roberta (#5 FR)
- "Get Up! (Before the Night Is Over)" – Technotronic (#1 BE, CAN, SP)
- "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)" – C+C Music Factory (#1 AUT, NLD, SWI, US)
- "Groove Is In The Heart" – Deee-Lite (#1 AUS, #2 UK, NZ #4 US)
- "Hacelo por mí" – Attaque 77 (#1 (ARG))
- "Hanky Panky" – Madonna (#1 FIN, #2 UK, #3 IRE, #5 ITA, #6 AUS, #10 US)
- "Happenin' All Over Again" – Lonnie Gordon
- "Have You Seen Her" – MC Hammer (#4 (US), #6 (FIN), #8 (UK))
- "Healing Hands" – Elton John
- "Hear the Drummer (Get Wicked)" – Chad Jackson (#3 UK, #5 NLD)
- "Heart of Stone" – Taylor Dayne
- "Hello Afrika" – Dr. Alban (#1 AUT, #2 GER, #3 SWI)
- "Here I Am (Come and Take Me)" – UB40 (#3 AUS, #6 NZ, #9 NLD)
- "Here We Are" – Gloria Estefan
- "High Enough" – Damn Yankees (#4 (POL))
- "Hijo de la Luna" – Mecano #3 (NLD))
- "Hiroshima" -Sandra (#4 GER, SWI)
- "Hold On" – En Vogue (#2 US, #5 UK)
- "Hold On" – Wilson Phillips (#1 US, #2 AUS, #3 CAN)
- "Holy Smoke" – Iron Maiden (#3 UK, #4 IRL)
- "How Am I Supposed to Live Without You" – Michael Bolton (#1 US, BE, #2 AUS)
- "How Can We Be Lovers?" – Michael Bolton
- "The Humpty Dance" – Digital Underground (#11 US)
- "I Can't Stand It!" – Twenty 4 Seven (#2 AUT, IT, SWI)
- "I Don't Have the Heart" – James Ingram
- "I Don't Know Anybody Else" – Black Box (#2 IRL, #3 SWI, #4 NOR, UK)
- "I Go to Extremes" – Billy Joel (#1 JAP, #3 CAN)
- "I Promised Myself" – Nick Kamen (#1 AUT, SWE, #3 SWI)
- "I Saw Red" – Warrant
- "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" – The Chimes (#2 NOR, #6 UK, IRL, NZ)
- "I Wanna Be Rich" – Calloway (#2 US)
- "(I Wanna Give You) Devotion" – Nomad & MC Mikee Freedom (#2 UK)
- "I Wish It Would Rain Down" – Phil Collins (#1 CAN, POL, #2 ZIM)
- "Ice Ice Baby" – Vanilla Ice
- "Ich hab' geträumt von dir" – Matthias Reim
- "If Wishes Came True" – Sweet Sensation (#1 US)
- "I'll Be Your Baby Tonight" – Robert Palmer & UB40 (#1 NZ, #4 AUS, #5 AUT, NLD, SWI)
- "I'll Be Your Everything" – Tommy Page (#1 US)
- "I'll Be Your Shelter" – Taylor Dayne (#1 CAN, #4 US, AUS)
- "I'll Never Fall in Love Again" – Deacon Blue (#2 UK, #2 IRL)
- "I'm Free" – The Soup Dragons & Junior Reid
- "I'm Not in Love" – Will to Power (#7 US, #8 NOR)
- "I'm Your Baby Tonight" – Whitney Houston (#1 IT, US, #2 BE, CAN, FIN, NLD)
- "Impulsive" – Wilson Phillips
- "Infinity" – Guru Josh (#1 SP, #2 BE, #3 NLD)
- "Jukebox in Siberia" – Skyhooks (#1 AUS)
- "Knockin' Boots" – Candyman
- "Lay Down Your Guns" – Jimmy Barnes (#4 AUS)
- "Le Jerk" – Thierry Hazard (#2 FR)
- "Les hommes qui passent" – Patricia Kaas (#7 FR)
- "Me siento mucho mejor" – Charly García
- "Maldòn (la musique dans la peau)" – Zouk Machine (#1 FR, #9 NLD)
- "Marie-Jeanne" – Michel Sardou (#2 FR)
- "Megamix" – Technotronic (#4 IRL, #6 UK, #7 SWI)
- "Mujer Amante" – Rata Blanca (ARG)
- "Nah Neh Nah" – Vaya Con Dios (#3 ISR, CZ, #4 NLD, SWI)
- "Obsesión" – Miguel Mateos (ARG)
- "Odoru Pompokolin" – B.B.Queens (#1 JPN)
- "On écrit sur les murs" – Demis Roussos (#4 FR)
- "Only on the Radio" – The Osborn Sisters
- "Oye Mi Canto (Hear My Voice)" – Gloria Estefan (#4 POL, #7 IRL, #9 NLD)
- "Petit Frank" – François Feldman (#1 FR)
- "Pourtant" – Roch Voisine (#3 FR)
- "Se bastasse una canzone" – Eros Ramazzotti (#2 BE, #4 NLD, #7 SWI)
- "Se Me Olvidó Otra Vez" – Maná (#5 US Latin)
- "Serious" – Duran Duran (# 3 ITA, #48 UK, #69 GER)
- "Star" - Erasure
- "Taiyō no Komachi Angel" – B'z (#1 JPN)
- "Tengo Todo Excepto a Tí" – Luis Miguel (#1 US Latin)
- "That's Freedom" – John Farnham (#6 AUS)
- "Un'estate italiana" – Edoardo Bennato & Gianna Nannini (#1 IT, SWI, #2 GER)
- "Verdammt, ich lieb' dich" – Matthias Reim (#1 AUT, BE, CRO, GER, NLD, POL, SWI)
- "Vous êtes fous!" – Benny B (#3 FR)
- "What's a Woman?" – Vaya Con Dios (#1 BE, NLD, #5 FR)
- "White and Black Blues" – Joëlle Ursull (#2 FR)
- "Y dale alegría a mi corazón" – Fito Paez (ARG)
Notable singles
editSong title | Artist(s) | Release date(s) | Other Chart Performance(s) |
---|---|---|---|
"100 Miles and Runnin'" | N.W.A | 1990 |
2 (U.S Billboard Hot Rap Songs) |
"Being Boring" | Pet Shop Boys | November 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"Blue Savannah" | Erasure | January 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"Blue Sky Mine" | Midnight Oil | February 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"Birdhouse in Your Soul" | They Might Be Giants | January 1990 |
3 (U.S. Billboard Alternative Airplay) |
"Can I Kick It?" | A Tribe Called Quest | October 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"De-Luxe" | Lush | March 1990 | 14 (U.S. Billboard Alternative Songs) |
"Dig for Fire" | Pixies | October 1990 |
11 (US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks) |
"Dub Be Good to Me" | Beats International | January 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"Enjoy the Silence" | Depeche Mode | February 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"Hello" | The Beloved | January 1990 | See Chart Performance Entry |
"Heaven or Las Vegas" | Cocteau Twins | September 1990 | 9 (U.S. Billboard Alternative Airplay) |
"Heavenly Pop Hit" | The Chills | March 1990 |
2 (New Zealand) |
"Here's Where the Story Ends" | The Sundays | January 1990 | 1 (U.S. Billboard Alternative Airplay) |
"Holy Wars... The Punishment Due" | Megadeth | September 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"Iceblink Luck" | Cocteau Twins | August 1990 | 38 (UK Singles Chart) |
"Joey" | Concrete Blonde | May 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"Killer" b/w "Bass Line Changed My Life" | Adamski featuring Seal | March 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"Kool Thing" | Sonic Youth | June 1990 | 7 (U.S. Billboard Alternative Airplay) 24 (Ireland) |
"Metropolis" | The Church | February 1990 |
1 (U.S. Billboard Alternative Airplay) |
"Never Enough" | The Cure | September 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"Nothing Compares 2 U" | Sinéad O'Connor | January 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"Pictures of You" | The Cure | March 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"Policy of Truth" | Depeche Mode | May 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"Shine On" (re-record) | The House of Love | January 1990 | 20 (UK Single Charts) |
"The Ship Song" | Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds | March 1990 | 84 (UK Singles Chart) |
"Soon" b/w "Glider" | My Bloody Valentine | April 1990 | 41 (UK Singles Chart) |
"One Love" | The Stone Roses | July 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"Took the Children Away" | Archie Roach | September 1990 | n/a |
"Velouria" | Pixies | July 1990 |
4 (US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks) |
"The Only One I Know" | The Charlatans | May 1990 | See chart performance entry |
"The Weeping Song" | Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds | September 1990 | n/a |
Other notable singles
edit- "Alimony" (re-recording) – The Hummingbirds
- "Allison" – Pixies
- "All Different Things" – Bark Psychosis
- "Caroline" – Concrete Blonde
- "Daydreaming" – Massive Attack
- "Looking for Atlantis" – Prefab Sprout
- "Planet" – The Sugarcubes
- "Story of My Life" – Social Distortion
- "True Fools Fall" – Died Pretty
Top singles of 1990
editOther significant singles
edit- "Little Fluffy Clouds" – The Orb (Sampling led to legal action.)
- Sampling copyright debate continues over the Soho single Hippychick, which uses a sample from How Soon Is Now? by The Smiths.
Published popular music
edit- "Keep It Together" w.m. Stephen Bray & Madonna
- "The Simpsons theme song" m. Danny Elfman
Top ten best albums of the year
editAll albums have been named albums of the year for their hits in the charts.[8]
Album charts
editClassical music
edit- Mario Davidovsky
- Biblical Songs for soprano, flute, clarinet, violin, cello, and piano
- Concertante for string quartet and orchestra
- Thomas Demenga – Solo per due, for cello and orchestra
- Lorenzo Ferrero
- Cadenza, for clarinet and marimba
- Discanto sulla musica sull'acqua di Handel
- Four Modern Dances, for small orchestra
- Musica per un paesaggio, for small orchestra
- Rock my Tango, for piano solo
- Henryk Górecki
- Good Night, Op. 63, for soprano, alto flute, piano and three tam-tams
- Intermezzo, for piano
- John Harbison – The Flight into Egypt (cantata)
- Chris Harman – Iridescence, for 24 strings
- Paul Lansky – Smalltalk
- Alvin Lucier – Music for Piano with One or More Snare Drums
- Witold Lutosławski – Chantefleurs et chantefables for Soprano and Orchestra
- John McCabe – Flute Concerto
- James MacMillan
- Meredith Monk – Book Of Days
- John Pickard – The Flight of Icarus
- Carl Vine – Piano Sonata No. 1
- Takashi Yoshimatsu – Symphony No. 1 Kamui-Chikap
- John Zorn – The Dead Man
Opera
edit- Gerald Barry – The Intelligence Park
- Azio Corghi – Blimunda
- Mark Lanz Weiser – Purgatory (chamber opera, based on a play by William Butler Yeats)
Jazz
editMusical theater
edit- Aspects of Love (Andrew Lloyd Webber) – Broadway production opened at the Broadhurst Theatre and ran for 377 performances
- Bran Nue Dae (Jimmy Chi)
- A Change in the Heir – Broadway production opened at the Edison Theatre and closed after only two weeks
- Five Guys Named Moe – London production
- Into the Woods London production opened on September 25 and ran for 197 performances. Starring Julia McKenzie and Imelda Staunton.
- Once on This Island – Broadway production opened at the Booth Theatre and ran for 469 performances
- Shogun – Broadway production opened at the Marquis Theatre and ran for 72 performances
- Sunday in the Park with George (Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine) – London production
- Truly Blessed – Broadway production opened at the Longacre Theatre and ran for one month
Musical films
editAwards
edit- Country Music Hall of Fame Inductee: Tennessee Ernie Ford
- Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Inductees: Hank Ballard, Bobby Darin, The Four Seasons, The Four Tops, The Kinks, The Platters, Simon & Garfunkel and The Who
- 1990 Country Music Association Awards
- Grammy Awards of 1990
- Eurovision Song Contest 1990: Toto Cutugno
- Luc Ferrari wins the International Koussevitzky Prize for Recordings for his composition Histoire du plaisir et de la désolation
- Juno Awards: Best Composer: David Tyson/Christopher Ward
- Dalida is posthumously awarded the International Diploma by the "International Star Registry" (USA), three years after her death.[9][10]
- Scottish composer Thomas Wilson is appointed a CBE.
- Kumar Sanu wins the Filmfare Best Male Playback Award
- Anuradha Paudwal wins the Filmfare Best Female Playback Award
- 32nd Japan Record Awards
- Yehudi Menuhin (laureate)
Music festivals
edit- In Australia, the Port Fairy Spring Music Festival is founded by Michael Easton and Len Vorster.
Births
edit- January 9 – Di Genius, Jamaican singer, producer, and DJ
- January 10 – Nicolas Jaar, Chilean American composer and recording artist, works with FKA Twigs.
- January 14 – Grant Gustin, American actor and singer (Glee)
- January 22 – Logic (musician), American rapper, singer, songwriter, and record producer.
- January 25 – Thomas Berge, Dutch singer
- January 28 – Ichiko Aoba, Japanese singer
- January 29 – MacKenzie Porter, Canadian country singer, songwriter, and actress.
- February 1 – Laura Marling, British folk-pop singer-songwriter
- February 3 – Sean Kingston, American-Jamaican R&B artist
- February 6 – Georgia (musician), English record producer, songwriter, singer, rapper and drummer.
- February 10 – SooYoung, a member of nine-piece Korean pop girl group Girls' Generation
- February 16 – The Weeknd, Canadian singer, songwriter, rapper, producer (Selena Gomez, Bella Hadid)
- February 18 – Choi Sung-Bong, Korean singer
- February 20 – Alemán, Mexican rapper
- February 28 – Olivia Jean, American singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist. (She is known as the lead singer and guitarist of the all-female "garage goth" rock band, the Black Belles)
- March 9 – YG, American rapper
- March 13 – Klô Pelgag, Canadian singer from Quebec
- March 15 – Siobhan Magnus, American singer
- March 17
- Hozier (musician), Irish singer-songwriter, musician and activist
- Kai (Canadian singer), Canadian singer-songwriter (Flume)
- March 20 – Tessa Violet, American singer-songwriter, musician, activist and YouTuber
- March 21 – Erika de Casier, Portuguese-born Danish singer
- March 22
- Claire Huangci, American pianist
- Lisa Mitchell, English-born Australian singer-songwriter
- March 24 – Cleo Sol, British singer-songwriter
- March 26 – Xiumin, South Korean singer (EXO)
- March 27 – Kimbra, New Zealand singer-songwriter/guitarist
- April 2 – Roscoe Dash, American rapper
- April 8 – Jonghyun, South Korean singer-songwriter, record producer and actor { Shinee } (D. 2017)
- April 10 – Maren Morris, American country music singer, songwriter, activist and record producer
- April 20 – Luhan, Chinese singer-songwriter
- April 21 – Nadya Dorofeeva, Ukrainian singer
- April 22 – Machine Gun Kelly (rapper), American rapper, singer, musician and actor (Megan Fox)
- April 24 – Carly Pearce, American country music singer and songwriter
- April 27 – Robin Bengtsson, Swedish singer
- April 29 – Loick Essien, British singer
- May 12
- May 14 – Sasha Spielberg, American actress and singer known by her stage name of Buzzy Lee.
- May 17
- I_o (musician), American electronic dance music DJ and record producer. (D. 2020)
- Kree Harrison, American singer
- May 26 – Nadia Oh, English singer, producer rapper, songwriter and model
- May 27 – Chris Colfer, American singer, author and actor
- May 30
- YoonA, South Korean singer and actress, member of Girls' Generation
- Phillipa Soo, American actress and singer.
- June 4 – Zac Farro, American musician, drummer, singer-songwriter and multi instrumentalist (Hayley Williams, Paramore)
- June 5 – DJ Mustard, American producer, DJ,
- June 6
- Raisa Andriana, Indonesian singer
- Mike G, American rapper (Odd Future)
- June 7 – Iggy Azalea, Australian rapper
- June 14 – Starrah, American songwriter, singer and rapper
- June 16 – John Newman (singer), English musician, singer, songwriter and record producer
- June 18 – Raleigh Ritchie, English actor, singer-songwriter, rapper, and record producer
- June 19
- Jason Dy, Filipino singer
- Moses Sumney, American singer-songwriter, musician
- June 20 – Iselin Solheim, Norwegian singer and songwriter
- June 23 – Sasami, American singer-songwriter and musician.
- June 25 – Makj, American dj
- July 4 – Fredo Santana, American rapper (d.2018)
- July 6 – Meg Mac, Australian singer-songwriter and musician
- July 10 – Talay Riley, British singer-songwriter, producer
- July 12 – Maverick Sabre, British singer-songwriter
- July 15 – Olly Alexander, English singer-songwriter, musician, producer
- July 16
- James Maslow, American actor, singer (Big Time Rush)
- Paula Rojo, Spanish singer and songwriter.
- Wizkid, Nigerian singer
- C. Tangana, Spanish rapper, singer and songwriter (worked with Rosalía)
- July 19 – GFOTY, British EDM Pop singer with PC music
- July 23 – Dagny (singer), Norwegian pop singer
- July 24
- Ben McKenzie, Australian Idol contestant, singer, actor
- Jay McGuiness, British singer, songwriter and dancer, former member of The Wanted
- July 28 – Soulja Boy, American rapper
- July 29
- Kat Dahlia Cuban-American R&B Latin Pop rapper, singer-songwriter and recording artist.
- Evan Edinger, English-British ukelele player and youtuber. (Worked with Dodie, Connie Glynn, Luke Cutforth, Danial J Layton)
- Shin Se-kyung, South Korean actress
- August 13
- Shila Amzah, Malaysian singer
- Serrini – Hong Kong singer-songwriter
- August 15
- Jennifer Lawrence, American singer/actress
- BloodPop – American musician, record producer, and songwriter (Worked with Britney Spears, Ariana Grande, Madonna, Lady Gaga)
- August 16 – Rina Sawayama, Japanese-British singer-songwriter, activist and model.
- August 18 – Tommy Genesis, Canadian rapper, model and artist
- August 21 – Bo Burnham, American comedian and musician
- August 23 – A.G. Cook, British singer-songwriter, music producer and head of record label PC Music. (Charli XCX)
- August 24 – Hiroki Kamemoto, Japanese guitarist (Glim Spanky)
- August 30 – Julia Jacklin, Australian singer-songwriter and musician
- September 3 – IZA, Brazilian singer-songwriter
- September 4 – James Bay (singer), English singer-songwriter and guitarist
- September 6 – DPR Ian, Australian singer
- September 9 – Haley Reinhart, American singer and songwriter
- September 11 – Alex Cameron, Australian musician
- September 18 – Sam Perry (looping artist), Australian singer-songwriter and looping artist
- September 19 – Bjarki, Icelandic electronic music composer
- September 20 – Phillip Phillips, American jazz singer-songwriter, guitarist and sometime actor
- September 21 – Phoebe Ryan, American singer-songwriter
- September 22 – Sorcha Richardson, Irish singer-songwriter
- September 25 – Danny L Harle, British music producer and composer (PC Music)
- September 27 – Mitski, Japanese-American singer-songwriter and musician
- October 1 – Charlie McDonnell, English singer-songwriter and guitarist (Chameleon Circuit)
- October 2 – Samantha Barks, A Manx singer and actress
- October 4 – Saki, Japanese guitarist and songwriter (Mary's Blood)
- October 5 – Taylour Paige, American singer and dancer
- October 7 – Seinabo Sey, Swedish recording artist and songwriter
- October 8 – Trent Harmon, American signer
- October 11 – Behzod Abduraimov, Uzbek classical pianist
- October 19 – Jessica Meuse, American singer
- October 20 – Andrew Watt (record producer), American record producer, singer, musician, and songwriter (Miley Cyrus, Camilla Cabello, 5 Seconds Of Summer, Charlotte Lawrence)
- October 23 – Stan Walker, Australian-New Zealand singer-songwriter, activist, actor and television personality
- October 26 – Stu Mackenzie, Australian musician (King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard)
- October 29 – Eric Saade, Swedish singer-songwriter
- October 31 – JID, American rapper and songwriter
- November 2 – Kendall Schmidt, American actor, singer (Big Time Rush, Hilary Duff)
- November 6 – Kris Wu, Canadian rapper
- November 7 – Matt Corby, Australian singer-songwriter
- November 8 – SZA (singer), American singer/songwriter
- November 14 – DJ Suede the Remix God, American hip hop record producer and songwriter
- November 18
- Jackie Thomas, New Zealand singer
- Myk Perez, Filipino singer
- November 21 – Ricardo Andrés "Ricky" Reglero Rodríguez, member of Mau y Ricky, a Venezuelan Latin pop and reggaeton duo and sons of Argentine-Venezuelan singer Ricardo Montaner
- November 26
- November 27 – blackbear, American rapper, producer, singer
- December 11 – Hyolyn, Korean singer and dancer
- December 20
- JoJo, American singer, songwriter, activist and actress
- Bugzy Malone, English rapper
- December 21
- Holiday Sidewinder, Australian singer-songwriter, musician and record producer
- Taylor Louderman, American actress, singer, and dancer
- December 23 – Anna Maria Perez de Tagle, American singer and actress (Demi Lovato)
- December 26
- Jon Bellion, American singer-songwriter, rapper, record producer
- Illenium, American DJ and record producer
- December 28 – David Archuleta, Season 7 American Idol runner-up
- December 29 – Nightbirde, American singer-songwriter (d. 2022)
Unknown:
- Virgen Maria, Spanish DJ and record producer.
Deaths
edit- January 3 – Arthur Gold, American pianist, 72
- January 7 – Jimmy Van Heusen, composer and songwriter, 77
- January 18 – Melanie Appleby of British duo Mel and Kim, 23 (liver cancer)
- January 19 – Semprini, pianist and broadcaster, 81
- January 28 – Puma Jones, American singer, 36 (breast cancer)
- January 23 – Allen Collins, Lynyrd Skynyrd guitarist, 37 (complications from pneumonia)
- February 1 – Peter Racine Fricker, composer, 69
- February 2 – Mel Lewis, drummer and bandleader, 60 (cancer)
- February 8 – Del Shannon, singer-songwriter, 55 (suicide by shotgun)
- February 14 – Tony Holiday, German singer, 38 (AIDS-related illness)
- February 15 – George Suranovich, drummer (Love, Eric Burdon, Chuck Berry), 45 (heart attack)
- February 16 – Keith Haring, iconic graffiti artists and AIDS activist
- February 24 – Johnnie Ray, singer, 63 (liver failure)
- February 26 – Cornell Gunter, R&B singer, 53 (gunshot wound)
- March 6 – Mala, singer, 50
- March 11 – Muriel Dickson, operatic soprano, 86
- March 17 – Ric Grech, bassist (Family, Blind Faith), 43 (brain haemorrhage)
- March 19 – Andrew Wood, singer (Mother Love Bone), 24 (heroin overdose)
- April 3 – Sarah Vaughan, American jazz singer, 66 (lung cancer)
- April 25 – Dexter Gordon, jazz saxophonist, 67
- May 1 – Sergio Franchi, Italian-American tenor/actor, 64 (brain cancer)
- May 8 – Luigi Nono, composer, 66
- May 16 – Sammy Davis, Jr., American entertainer, 64
- June 3 – Richard Sohl, pianist (Patti Smith Group), 37 (heart failure)
- June 4 – Stiv Bators, punk musician, 40 (concussion)
- June 6 – Joe Loss, English bandleader, 80
- June 14 – Erna Berger, operatic soprano, 89
- June 15 – Jim Hodder, Steely Dan drummer, 42 (drowning)
- June 16 – Dame Eva Turner, operatic soprano, 98
- June 21
- June Christy, American singer, 64 (renal failure)
- Elizabeth Harwood, operatic soprano, 52 (cancer)
- June 22 – Kripp Johnson, American singer (The Del-Vikings), 54
- June 25 – Peggy Glanville-Hicks, composer, 77
- July 2 – Snooky Lanson, American singer, 76
- July 7 – Cazuza, singer and composer, 32 (AIDS-related)
- July 15 – Trouble T Roy, hip-hop dancer, 22 (fall from stage)
- July 16 – Sidney Torch, pianist, cinema organist, conductor, orchestral arranger and composer
- July 18 – Gerry Boulet, Canadian singer-songwriter (Offenbach), 44 (colon cancer)
- July 26 – Brent Mydland, keyboardist (Grateful Dead), 37 (drug overdose)
- August 3 – M. Ranga Rao, Indian film composer and music director
- August 14 – Lafayette Leake, blues and jazz pianist, organist, vocalist and composer, 71
- August 15 – Viktor Tsoi, Russian singer of Kino, 28 (car accident)
- August 15 – Ingrid Lang-Fagerström, Swedish harpist, 92
- August 17 – Pearl Bailey, singer, 72
- August 27 – Stevie Ray Vaughan, American blues guitarist performer, 35 (helicopter crash)
- September 2 – Sari Biro, pianist, 78
- September 6 – Tom Fogerty (Creedence Clearwater Revival), 48 (AIDS-related)
- September 13 – Phil Napoleon, jazz trumpeter, 89
- October 3 – Eleanor Steber, operatic soprano, 76
- October 4 – Ray Stephens, a onetime member of The Village People, 35
- October 6
- Asser Fagerström, pianist, composer and actor, 78
- Danny Rodriguez, Christian rap artist, 22 (shot)
- October 8 – B. J. Wilson, drummer of Procol Harum, 43 (pneumonia after three years in a coma)
- October 14 – Leonard Bernstein, American composer and conductor, 72 (pneumonia and a pleural tumor)
- October 16
- Art Blakey, jazz drummer, 71
- Jorge Bolet, pianist, 75
- October 27 – Xavier Cugat, violinist, bandleader and arranger, 90
- October 31 – M. L. Vasanthakumari, Carnatic musician and playback singer, 62
- November 3 – Mary Martin, US singer and actress, 76
- November 10 – Ronnie Dyson, soul singer and actor
- December 2 – Aaron Copland, American composer
- December 7 – Dee Clark, singer, 52 (heart attack)
- December 18 – Paul Tortelier, cellist, 76
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "U.S. Sales Database". Recording Industry Association of America. Archived from the original on January 12, 2016.
- ^ Ultimate Classic Rock (December 22, 2020). "When Depeche Mode's 'Violator' Nearly Caused a Riot: Book Excerpt". Ultimate Classic Rock.
- ^ "Celebrity Pictures, Entertainment News Photo Galleries and Videos". www.wireimage.com. WireImage. Archived from the original on January 27, 2011. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
- ^ Rowley, Glenn (July 15, 2020). "Mariah Carey Shares Cryptic Teaser For 30th Anniversary Celebration of Debut Album". Billboard.
- ^ "'Black Cat' Is Anything But Bad Luck For Jackson". DeKnock, Jan. Orlando Sentinel. October 26, 1990. Retrieved April 20, 2014.
- ^ "Rock On The Net: Janet Jackson Info Page". Rock on the Net. Retrieved April 20, 2014.
- ^ Hawtin, Steve (February 10, 2008). "Songs from the Year 1990". Steve Hawtin/TsorT. Archived from the original on April 18, 2008. Retrieved April 26, 2008.
- ^ "Best albums of 1990". besteveralbums. 2005. Retrieved December 31, 2011.
- ^ Dalida's Official Website, Awards and Achievements Archived 2004-03-17 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved December 29, 2009
- ^ Dalida: Entre violon et amour, by Isaline, Éditions Publibook, 2002, p. 127. ISBN 978-2-7483-2629-1. (in French), retrieved December 29, 2009