Number One was a British magazine dealing with pop music. It ran for nine years, mostly during the 1980s and was aimed at a mainly teenage market.
The magazine was published weekly and ran from May 7th 1983 to February 1992. It was intended as direct competition to Smash Hits, which was at its peak at the time. Although Number One contained fewer pages and less colour (at a similar price), the magazine claimed “our strength is our weekliness”. One of the most popular aspects was that it published the singles and albums charts every week (obviously not possible for the fortnightly Smash Hits). Until 1990 however, these were the unofficial Network Charts (1985 – 1990). Previously the magazine had used the NME Top 75 singles & albums (March 1983 – December 1984).
From October 1990, the full official Top 75 Chart was used until the magazine’s demise. It was at this time that BBC Magazines took over publishing from IPC Magazines.
When Number One came to an end in 1992, it was incorporated into the BBC’s Fast Forward. The magazine’s demise went unannounced – the final issue carried details of the features and interviews that would appear in the next issue, but remained unpublished.
As well as the Charts, the magazine included interviews with pop stars of the day as well as centre pin-ups. Songwords to current pop songs were also featured. Other features were Single and album reviews, competitions and a letters page. Colomnists were used also throughout the magazine with their own pages. These were sometimes by well known people in the industry such as producer Pete Waterman or DJ Bruno Brookesor by staff writers who went under pseudonyms such as ‘Lola Lush’ (a glamorous woman with bitchy comments) or ‘Snabber’ (a depressive dog who answered the letters). At the end of each year, the magazine would run a reader’s poll of the top pop acts of the year. These would include best group, best single and most fanciable pop star among others.
Number One was the first magazine to champion pop group Take That and featured them many times on the cover in 1991 before they became famous. Ultimately, the magazine didn’t survive to see the group achieve their first top 10 hit.
Unlike Smash Hits, Number One made no secret of the fact the two were in direct competition and would very often refer to said magazine as “Sm*shed Tw*ts” and other less flattering terms. The approach it took to feature writing was more personal, in that the writers would show more of their own character and were not afraid to criticise their interviewees, where Smash Hits would remain more neutral.
In the end Smash Hits won out due to its higher page count and glossier appearance, while remaining at a similar price to Number One. By early 1990 Number One was selling in excess of 130,000 copies per issue, but this paled in comparison to Smash Hits’ 780,000 per issue.