Let’s work the problem people. Let’s not make things worse by guessing.
— Gene Kranz
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The Best-Selling UK Albums of 1990

1990 was a year clinging to the past in a decade pretending to move forward. Greatest hits, opera gimmicks, stadium ballads from men with expensive mullets. The top ten was less a chart and more a denial mechanism. Change was coming, but you wouldn't know it from this lot.

The UK didn’t want revolution. It wanted reassurance. And it bought millions of CDs to get it.

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The Best-Selling UK Albums of 1991

1991 was the year before the wave hit. Grunge was coming. Rave was mutating. Britpop was tuning its guitars. But the charts? Still clinging to soft rock, legacy acts, and pain wrapped in plastic. This list isn’t rebellion. It’s retreat.

A nation in flux choosing Simply Red over change, and power ballads over noise. The revolution was happening elsewhere. The high street didn’t get the memo.

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Battle of Britpop

The Blur vs Oasis rivalry sits at the chaotic centre of Britpop, fusing sharp songwriting with a media-fuelled clash of class, region, and attitude. More than just a chart battle, it distilled everything Britpop stood for and still offers a jagged window into the energy, arrogance, and absurdity of 1990s Britain.

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Be Here Now

Decades later, Be Here Now remains a fascinating snapshot of Britpop’s boldest moment. Its larger-than-life production, sprawling tracks, and unrelenting ambition encapsulate a band at their peak. Love it or loathe it, the album’s unapologetic excess is a testament to Oasis’s belief in their own legend. Revisit Be Here Now to experience a record that dared to be bigger, louder, and more audacious than anything else in its time.

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