EPISODE · Jun 29, 2026 · 2H 21M
11th February 1984, with Kerri Chandler
from Record Mirror Disco Charts
As the son of a New Jersey DJ, Kerri Chandler started mixing records in public in his early teens, and so many of the tunes in this chart – published when he was 14 years old – are part of the soundtrack of his formative years. Then again, as we discover, there was often a disparity between the UK and the USA in terms of which tunes became successful: a high-charting track on the Record Mirror chart was sometimes only a minor entry on the Billboard chart, and some of the biggest tunes in New York were ignored by British DJs. In this chart, more traditional post-disco soul/funk material was being challenged by the continuing wave of electro-funk releases, with breakdancing becoming so popular that even our future king tried joining in.To accompany this episode, you can listen to this entire Top 20 in full, or alternatively as a shorter medley of snippets.Further listening: * other tracks mentioned in this episode (YouTube)* random monthly megamixes, 1975-1989Further reading:* James Hamilton's Dance Pages 1983-1989 (800 page hardback book)* James Hamilton's Disco Pages 1975-1982 (550 page hardback book)Record Mirror Disco Charts mugs and T-shirts are available from our merchandise store.Mike also hosts the podcast Which Decade Is Tops For Pops? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What this episode covers
As the son of a New Jersey DJ, Kerri Chandler started mixing records in public in his early teens, and so many of the tunes in this chart – published when he was 14 years old – are part of the soundtrack of his formative years. Then again, as we discover, there was often a disparity between the UK and the USA in terms of which tunes became successful: a high-charting track on the Record Mirror chart was sometimes only a minor entry on the Billboard chart, and some of the biggest tunes in New York were ignored by British DJs. In this chart, more traditional post-disco soul/funk material was being challenged by the continuing wave of electro-funk releases, with breakdancing becoming so popular that even our future king tried joining in.To accompany this episode, you can listen to this entire Top 20 in full, or alternatively as a shorter medley of snippets.Further listening: * other tracks mentioned in this episode (YouTube)* random monthly megamixes, 1975-1989Further reading:* James Hamilton's Dance Pages 1983-1989 (800 page hardback book)* James Hamilton's Disco Pages 1975-1982 (550 page hardback book)Record Mirror Disco Charts mugs and T-shirts are available from our merchandise store.Mike also hosts the podcast Which Decade Is Tops For Pops? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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11th February 1984, with Kerri Chandler
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