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The Nation's Favourite 80s Number One, ITV - TV review: Peppy performances and gossipy insights have you happily singing along

Many of the classics were churned out in less time than the programme lasts

Ellen E. Jones
Sunday 26 July 2015 12:55 BST
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"Don’t You Want Me": A hit for The Human League because it sounded 'crap'?
"Don’t You Want Me": A hit for The Human League because it sounded 'crap'? (YouTube/emimusic)

If your nostalgic mood runs towards the 1980s then ITV had you covered this weekend with The Nation’s Favourite 80s Number One. Behind every over-long, talking-heads list show, there’s a TV commissioner who’s given up on life, but The Nation’s Favourite series seems to be the happy exception. Even if you’d never have previously categorised the decade as a hotbed of musical genius, there were enough peppy performances and gossipy insights here to have you happily singing along on the sofa.

Peter Waterman, of the Stock, Aitken and Waterman hit factory, revealed how Rick Astley’s big hit “Never Gonna Give You Up” was inspired by his own dodgy love life, and Nik Kershaw was amusingly candid about his first thoughts on hearing former Smash Hits journalist Neil Tennant in Pet Shop Boys: “It started with this white middle-class rap song. I thought, ‘What is this? Pull yourself together, you went to grammar school!’” Best of all, Susan Ann Sulley from The Human League understood exactly the appeal of “Don’t You Want Me”: “Because we didn’t have those vocal ranges, people could relate to what we sounded like: crap.”

Interesting to note too, that many of these enduring classics were churned out in less time than it took to watch this programme. Today’s preening pop pretenders have no excuses.

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