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| New at Number 12: Blue Mink |
Presenting the UK Top 20 music chart for the week ending 2 December, 1972
With Christmas 1972 fast approaching, it was perhaps not a big surprise that Chuck Berry continued to hold on to the Number 1 spot for a second week with his novelty tune, My Ding-A-Ling
Further down the listing, you can\'t help but notice the increasing collection of teenage heartthrobs (both contemporary and past) cramming the Top 20 - singles by the Osmond
Four new entries this week, though, meaning we said goodbye to The Carpenters
Read on...
Chuck Berry at Number 1
The Chart:
Stream This Week\'s New Hits:
12: Blue Mink: Stay With Me
Making an impressive 19 place jump into this week\'s Top 20 was Blue Mink, the six-piece combo which included the likes of Madeline Bell, Roger Cook and Herbie Flowers.
Co-written by Flowers, Stay With Me
16: Michael Jackson: Ben
While still a major player in the Jackson 5, Michael Jackson\'s solo had taken off with singles such as Got to Be There
However, it was a song originally intended for Donny Osmond
Ben was the title song to the movie of the same name
In the UK, the single would eventually peak at Number 7.
18: David Cassidy: Rock Me Baby
By this time, David Cassidy\'s chart career was faring much better in the UK than it was in his homeland. His heartthrob status, passionately nurtured by his British fans, almost inevitably guaranteed him a high placing on the hit parade.
This time, the sales for Rock Me Baby
The track was uptempo, trying to be more rock\'n\'roll and less middle of the road, but Cassidy\'s vocals - while good - did not really suit this type of song.
Consequently, it peaked at a lower Number 11 in the UK and proved to be his final US Top 40 hit (No.38) of the 1970s.
19: Neil Sedaka: Oh! Carol/Breaking Up is Hard to Do/Little Devil
In a year full of re-releases, it was Neil Sedaka\'s turn to return to the British charts bringing Oh! Carol
One of the main reasons for its reappearance was because of RCA\'s MAXI-Million series of releases, which brought together a small collection of an artist\'s previous hits on one 45rpm record.
While Oh! Carol was the lead track, it was backed with Breaking Up is Hard to Do
It afforded him his first UK Top 40 hit in a decade, bringing him back to the British public\'s attention just ahead of the relaunch of his 1970s chart career.
The UK Number 1 album this week:

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