sandie-shaw.jpg
sandie-shaw.jpg

SANDIE SHAW

Sandie Shaw, MBE is an English singer born Sandra Ann Goodrich on February 26, 1947 in Dagenham, Essex. Sandie was an aspiring model and singer when she was spotted by Adam Faith after she appeared at a charity concert in 1964, and changed her name when she signed to Pye Records. Sandie had been a regular chart-topping hitmaker and TV personality throughout the sixties and was known for performing barefoot. Sandie Shaw was invited by the BBC in 1967 to participate in the Eurovision Song Contest with the number Puppet On A String, which went on to win the contest and sold in excess of four million copies worldwide. Sandie was awarded the MBE for services to music in the 2017 Birthday Honours list.

SANDIE SHAW Songs stats

UK No1s
3
UK Top 10s
8
UK Top 40s
16
UK Top 75s
20
Weeks at No1
9
Weeks in the Top 10
38
Weeks in the Top 40
129
Weeks in the Top 75
165

SANDIE SHAW Albums stats

UK No1s
0
UK Top 10s
1
UK Top 40s
1
UK Top 75s
3
Weeks at No1
0
Weeks in the Top 10
8
Weeks in the Top 40
13
Weeks in the Top 75
15

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SANDIE SHAW Hits

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PP

Philip Price

1

The charts record for Sandie Shaw should also include her version of Rose Garden which attained No41 - a breaker in March 1971 and was in the Top 50 for three weeks. This is a serious omission and needs to be rectified.

SF

Stuart Fraser

1

There is no error here. For a short time in Feb/March 1971, there was only a top 40. Sandie's Rose Garden MAY have been in the breakers, but there was no official 41 during that period, so the OCC has (for once) got this right.

DH

David Haley

0

I have to say that although Stuart is correct technically, the better way of looking at this matter is to say that as the information which Philip cites is in existence, then it should be utilized now. The whole point of historical records for the charts is that they should contain all relevant information. If more should come to light, then it should be entered in the records, as has happened with the charts in the 1960s which were not published in the press, and also with the LP charts that appeared in "Record Mirror" from 1956. The information concerning "Rose Garden" (and the other affected records) which is in the public domain is specific regarding chart positions and weeks in the 41-50 section, so it is based on evidence of returns, not merely speculation. Therefore, Sandie Shaw should be credited with the three weeks for "Rose Garden"; and the same applies for the other records which peaked in the 41-50 section during these weeks.