It’s time to flip the script and talk about the songs that made 1992 somewhat tolerable to a large degree. I wasn’t lying when I said that 1992 was a rough year for the ARIA singles chart with rock having an incredible year with quality everywhere, pop also had its moments of quality as did hip hop and R’n’B but overall the year trended toward dull and sappy ballads especially in pop and the New Jack Swing sound is starting to sound really washed out however I did manage to piece together a top ten best hit songs along with five honourable mentions but before we get started, let’s go over the rules…
1.
For a song to make this list, it must have made
the ARIA Year End top 100 for 1992… a song from 1991 is eligible if it peaked
higher on the 1992 year end than it did in 1991.
2.
This isn’t a definitive list of the best songs
of 1992; this list is my opinion only. Not that of any music historian or what
any outlet would choose to canonise from a specific year (I am certain a few
choices here would have me thrown out anyway).
Now that’s clear, let’s get the show on the road with a song
that I’m certain will be one of the most contentious picks of this list but the
more I heard this song the more it made me love it so thus…
10. “I Love Your Smile” by Shanice
I think I seem to spare my number ten pick on the best list
for any given year for a guilty pleasure song, songs that I love but know they
would never be canonised by the critical set and “I Love Your Smile” by Shanice
is one of those kind of songs..hell, I’ve seen it on worst lists for 1992
however I could never bring myself to hate this song, it’s a pop/r’n’b song
where she’s in love with this guy’s smile and wants to be a better person
because of this guy, it’s kind of cute…even if I am not sure Shanice should be
sitting in class daydreaming and staring out the window…
Also, Shanice’s inflection on the line “I love your smile”
makes the song feel incredibly genuine and the production even with the
whistling (doesn’t help the song at all and put a couple of slots lower than I
would have placed it) gives the song an infectious spirit that makes me want to
tap my toes, it’s that bright, warm sunny song that makes my day every time I
hear it…makes me feel better on a bad day, it’s not perfect but yeah sometimes
it’s that song I need to hear.
So we’re going straight from a bright sunny pop/r’n’b song
where the song is just scratching the surface to a song that is dealing with a
considerably darker subject matter…
9. “Tennessee” by Arrested Development
Yeah, this is a tough song to write about but it deserved
it’s place here, it’s a song inspired by Arrested Development’s frontman Speech
meeting up with his brother at their grandmother’s funeral only for his brother
to die in the same week as their grandmother’s funeral due to a severe asthma
attack and as a way of coping and sorting through the trauma, Speech wrote
“Tennessee” and asking whoever is up there to look after him in life and guide
him knowing the last place he saw the people he loves alive was in Tennessee.
It’s this slice of catchy hip hop riding a sample of
Prince’s 1988 song “Alphabet Street” with the production being upbeat which
makes sense given that Speech is healing and trying to find his way in the
world and honestly, I think I love it for the reason that it’s a song about
finding hope even when those you love pass on, it works for that reason. I’m
only sad it took me until 2021 to find it, great song!
You might remember that I said 1992 was a great year for
rock music, well here’s the first proof of that…
8. “Nothing Else Matters” by Metallica
That haunting guitar in the beginning that introduces the song and gives the song the lonely vibe before the drums kick in precisely before James Hetfield starts singing about the constant touring the band was doing at the time and missing somebody who is at home but more importantly the song never actually defines who that person is that Hetfield is missing (he has said in interviews it was a song for his girlfriend at the time) which allows for that more personal connection for the listener and really just makes the song hit even harder and even more powerfully especially as the orchestra kicks in.
To those of you who have only heard the Miley Cyrus cover of
the song, I really recommend going back and listening to the original because
yeah while Miley’s cover is damn good, the gut punch in the original is even
more powerful and stronger.
Well, this was a rough pick, two songs by the same artist
fought over this spot hard but in the end I ended up going with…
7. “Not a Day Goes By” by Rick Price
I agonised over this slot so much because “Heaven Knows” is
a beautiful piano ballad that I wish I could have found room for in the top ten on this list
however I gave it to “Not a Day Goes By” because Rick Price sells the
frustration with himself here damn well, he is wondering what he did to drive
this girl away and wonders how he got to being this person that so badly needs
somebody he can cuddle at night and feels lost without her and the hook sounds
so genuinely sweet and sincere in telling her, he is constantly thinking of
her. Throw in the keyboards and guitars supporting Price’s vocals and I was
sold…this is a great Aussie pop/rock song.
Originally, I was planning to leave this song off the list
altogether not even an honourable mention but when I relistened to it to be sure
of my feelings about it…the more I realized the song deserved to be on the list
and well…
6. “Djapana (Sunset Dreaming)” by Yothu Yindi
I was shocked this made the year end for 1992, sure, Yothu
Yindi had a massive year in 1991 thanks to “Treaty” but “Djapana (Sunset Dreaming)”
didn’t even feel like a hit and I am also surprised just how much of a forgotten
gem of a song it is in Australian music especially when you consider just how
well traditional Aboriginal instrumentation like the didgeridoo and clapsticks
blend in with the more European style electronic elements with the lyrics taken
directly from age old ceremonial repertoires
that belonged to Gumatj and Rirratjingu clans, musing on that red sun
sinking in the sky taking the vocalist back in his mind to memories of home as
he battles homesickness and worry, something that in the end even as a white
person even with my worries being very different than those of those missing
their mobs in Arnhem Land, this song resonated for me at the end of things and
I am so glad it made my list.
Well, I don’t think I need to even introduce this song…
5. “Under the Bridge’ by Red Hot Chili Peppers
Let’s not mince words here, “Under the Bridge” is the sort
of rock behemoth that is unmatched even by the Red Hot Chili Peppers themselves,
it’s the sort of killer rock song that blows the listener away and remains a
rock classic to this day. Lead vocalist Anthony Kiedis wrote the song to vent
his feelings of despondency, loneliness and just how much narcotics had
impacted his life to the point he was recording “Blood Sugar Sex Magik” with
the rest of Red Hot Chili Peppers and right from the outside you can feel the
loneliness in Kiedis vocal delivery. So glad that the Peppers producer Rick
Rubin encouraged Kiedis to share the lyrics because otherwise we might not have
gotten absolute rock classic.
I don’t know what it says about me that this next song flung
itself so high up this list but yeah, this song got here by breaking my heart…
4. “Sometimes Love Just Ain’t Enough” by Patty Smyth and Don
Henley
I am going to keep this one brief because I’m not sure how I
can explain how or why this song hits me the way it does, it’s the moment where
a relationship is on the verge of breaking down because not working how they
want it to and they realize they’ve been blind to it because they still love
each other but love isn’t enough to justify staying in a crumbling relationship.
It’s a song that just gets way too real and honest and sometimes a song like
this is what is needed…I’ll leave it right there…
Well, that got dark and too real for moment there…so let’s
brighten this list up for moment, shall we?
3. “Jump” by Kriss Kross
I don’t know how anyone can listen to “Jump!” and not at
least nod their head with it, it’s this 3 minute 15 second lightning in a
bottle of a debut single which samples artists ranging from Jackson 5 to Naughty
by Nature, it should have been a mess of a song but no, thanks to the
production team, it works better than it has any right to. The lyrics written
by producer Jermaine Dupri after he observed people jumping at a concert and performed
by two twelve year olds from Atlanta manage to have more charisma and energy
than most of the trap scene in 2021. We don’t get these sort energetic rap songs
with a damn good groove and magic choice of sampling in 2021 but we got it in
1992, I guess that’s something to be grateful to 1992 for? Right?
This song was all set to be my number one pick, hell, this
is a song I’ve LOVED for years, it’s an instant thing for me to sing along to
it on the radio but something has to finish second thus…
2. “Tip of My Tongue” by Diesel
Yeah, that guitar line gets me every god damn time and Diesel
expressing that frustration of knowing what he wants to say to this girl to the
point the words are right there and he is about to say but he gets nervous when
she gets close, he forgets and she walks away with Diesel begging her not to
walk away. It’s the sort of song that is just an easy sing along every time
which is something Diesel is so good at especially on his “Hepfidelity” even
with the hook being more repetitive than I would like, it’s still one of the
best hit songs of 1992. Great song
So before we get to our number one, how about five honourable
mentions
HM 1: “Take It From Me” by Girlfriend
Of all the songs from girl groups to hit the chart in 1992, Girlfriend’s
‘Take It From Me” was the best of them especially as Girlfriend and “Take It from
Me” becoming a hit were probably responsible for the start of the girl power
trend that would become big in music in the mid 90s however what I like about “Take
It From Me” is that it’s just a simple pop song about this girl reassuring a
boy that he doesn’t need to cry or carry on anymore as he can trust her and she’ll
be good to him. I enjoyed Girlfriend way more than I probably should!
HM 2: “That Word (L.O.V.E)” by The Rockmelons feat. Cutty
Ranks, Nardo Ranks and Deni Hines
Speaking of simple pop songs…this one hit the joy receptors
like nothing else. Every time I heard this song it made me smile and that hook
is an absolute monster. Damn good song
HM 3: “Remember the Time” by Michael Jackson
This is not the best Michael Jackson single in 1992 but of anything
of Michael’s to make the year end for 1992, I’d take “Remember the Time” over
anything else especially with that new jack swing style that was common this
year and often misused. The song inspired by Michael describing how he fell in love;
the song was dedicated to Jackson’s friend Diana Ross. Pop music misses you, Michael.
HM 4: “Justified & Ancient” by The KLF
Yeah, time didn’t do this song any favours unfortunately, the
song is still good though and still worth being among the best of 1992 as it
takes country singer Tammy Wynette’s vocals and actually references her signature
hit “Stand by Your Man” thanks to the
ever so subtle steel guitar, it was the oddest pairing of 1992 but sometimes an
odd pairing makes a good hit together and that was the case here!
HM 5: “Heaven Knows” by Rick Price
This was so close to making the top ten so much so I couldn’t
justify not giving it an honourable mention, it’s a beautiful piano ballad
where Rick Price is missing this girl since she left but knows he can’t chase
her forever and leaves it all up to the heavens above hoping that heaven knows
that he will see her again someday. It’s a song that just got to me the moment
I heard so I guess consider this my official number 11.
Well now to our number one and yeah, this is a cover but my
god, this is a cover that improves on the original and rips you apart at the
same time….
1. “The Day You Went Away” by Wendy Matthews
Until now, I had never come to terms with how I felt about “The Day You
Went Away” since I first heard it some years ago, it was a fine song that didn’t
resonate with me as per a lot of songs filled with more adult concepts did when
I was a kid growing up in the 90s however having gone back to listen to it for
covering 1992’s popular music, this song just became that proverbial gut punch
ins the stomach over a spare piano and Wendy Matthews selling the anger and
bitterness that comes sometimes with relationship break up for me and my god it
did so much more effectively than that of the original by Soul Family Sensation.
It’s a powerful song that just does everything well which for a ballad in 1992
is something worth recognising as most ballads in 1992 sunk into nonsense or
were weepy and overwrought but “The Day You Went Away” isn’t overwrought or
weepy, it got the mix right and for that, it’s the best hit song of 1992.
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