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== The "Pretty" Festive Thirty-One Of 1997 ==
 
== The "Pretty" Festive Thirty-One Of 1997 ==
   
*'''31''': [[Angelica]], "Teenage Girl Crush"
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*[[File:John Peel's Festive Fifty - 1997|thumb|330x330px]]'''31''': [[Angelica]], "Teenage Girl Crush"
 
*'''30''': [[Prolapse]], "Slash/Oblique"
 
*'''30''': [[Prolapse]], "Slash/Oblique"
 
*'''29''': [[Hybirds]], "Seventeen"
 
*'''29''': [[Hybirds]], "Seventeen"
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;Footnotes
 
;Footnotes
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
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==Video==
 
[[File:John Peel's Festive Fifty - 1997-0|thumb|left|670 px|John Peel's Festive Fifty - 1997]]
 
 
[[Category: 1997]]
 
[[Category: 1997]]
 
[[Category:Festive Fifty]]
 
[[Category:Festive Fifty]]

Revision as of 18:31, 31 December 2016

Festive Fifty
1976 1977 1978 1979
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
2020 2021 2022 2023


R1 logo burst ani

In November 1997, Peel announced that there would be no Festive Fifty chart that year, then changed his mind and allowed Alison Howe to organise a reduced chart of 31 places, compiled from emails, faxes, letter and cards (the phone votes spoken of elsewhere on the Internet were not mentioned). It was broadcast over a specially extended show running from 6.30-10.30 p.m. on Tuesday 23 December.

Quite why the 1997 Festive Fifty was reduced to only 31 is something of a mystery. The official reason given by Peel was that due to the late Christmas scheduling at Radio 1 he was not given enough time to display a proper chart. This seems somewhat specious, given the facts that:

  1. He had already managed to fit the 1993 chart quite comfortably into a single programme, with a running time half an hour less than he was given on this occasion. Mark Whitby [1] has pointed out that the programme containing the chart, if the session repeat by Pavement is disregarded, contains 50 tracks anyway.
  2. The remaining records contain no new releases at all. Instead, JP allowed programme staff, his family and individual listeners to select favourite tracks from the year. It is difficult to believe that no other listeners voted for these tracks.
  3. Rather tellingly, he makes a verbal slip early on in the programme and refers to a 'Festive 51'.
  4. A slightly more tangential fact is that it was a full 20 years since the last Festive Fifty chart he selected himself (see 1977 Festive Fifty), and this may have been a way of 'commemorating' it.

In view of all this, it is tempting to wonder whether he was trying to impose some kind of personal criteria on the chart, since he had actively voiced diapproval with the charts in 1987-8, and did not broadcast the 1991 chart at the time. However. since there are opposing arguments (such as the fact that there is no African pop, for example, surely something he would have included given the choice, the fact that he showed a positive attitude to the 1995 Fifty, and the troubled events at home that autumn that he refers to could have influenced his decision), this theory will remain open to conjecture.

The number 20 track is Stereolab's 'Fluorescences', which curiously made the same number and in the same recording the previous year. Mark Whitby, answering a query in October 2008 on the Peel Mailing List on this subject, offered the following explanation: "Fluorescences was indeed number 20 in both years. Neither was a session version. The single was released in December 1996 and charted on the strength of pre-release plays from Peel that year. It was then allowed to qualify for the 1997 Festive Fifty. I'm not sure whether it should have, but bear in mind the voting for the 1997 chart was unusual compared with other years as there was only a late decision to do a Festive Fifty that year, and votes mostly came in fewer than usual....Peel did, on announcing voting for the FF, on at least one occasion state that votes for tracks released the previous December were eligible. Given his slightly detached relationship with the chart, it's unlikely he would have checked the previous year's chart in order to identify anomalies such as this. So, an interesting (to me, anyway) quirk of Festive Fifty history rather than an error."

Show

The "Pretty" Festive Thirty-One Of 1997

Availability

  • The complete show is available in excellent sound: see date page.
Footnotes
  1. The Festive Fifty, Nevin Publishing, 2005, p. 46. Mark adds, reasonably, "Even if it hadn't been (possible to broadcast a proper Festive Fifty)...could we not at least have been told what records were between numbers 32 and 50?"