Further down, Basement Jaxx's Romeo - which became the duo's third Top 10 single in June that year - places at 26. Rounding out the Top 5 are So Solid Crew, a collective of underground rappers, singers, producers and DJs who became a household name overnight when their rap battle banger 21 seconds topped the chart in August, picking up 266,000 sales across the summer.Įlsewhere, big dance tracks in summer 2001 were Castles In The Sky, the debut single by Belgian house project Ian Van Dahl (6), and Another Chance by Roger Sanchez (10), the DJ's first and only UK Number 1 in July. In third are girl group Atomic Kitten, whose straightforward cover of The Bangles' Eternal Flame spent two weeks at Number 1 in August (328k), while Robbie Williams finishes fourth with his chart-topping double A-side Eternity/The Road To Mandalay (308k). The track did exactly that, spending one week at the top and practically redefining pop collaborations for years to come. The UK's second best-selling single of summer 2001 was Lady Marmalade (379k), a showstopping cover of Labelle's 70s disco hit recorded by Christina Aguilera, Pink, Lil Kim and Mya to build up hype for the film Moulin Rouge. That no doubt helped propel it to the top of the chart, with 397,000 sales logged that between the first week of June to the last week of August (931,000 in total). Looking down the list of 2001's best-selling songs of summer at the bottom of the page, you'll notice that Angel was one of the few summer-friendly songs released that year. Central to the song's success was its reggae fusion twist on timeless pop number Angel Of The Morning, a song etched into the minds of most thanks to numerous covers over the years. The UK's best-selling song that summer was Shaggy's Angel, a reggae-pop jam that served as the follow-up to his wildly successful, international Number 1 hit It Wasn't Me.Īngel, which featured Barbadian singer Rayvon, boasted similar success, reaching Number 1 in 12 countries, including three weeks at the UK summit. 2001 saw an eclectic bunch of tracks soundtrack the warmer months including reggae, trance, UK garage, hip-hop and - of course - straight-up pop. While a flurry of dance bangers compete for this year's song of the summer, the music landscape was very different 20 years ago.
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