The Reynolds Girls were a British dance-pop duo composed of sisters Linda (born in 1970) and Aisling Reynolds (born in 1972). They are best known for their hit single "I'd Rather Jack", produced by Stock Aitken Waterman, which achieved success across Europe in 1989.
The Reynolds Girls | |
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![]() The Reynolds Girls in the music video for their first and only hit single, "I'd Rather Jack" (1989) | |
Background information | |
Origin | Liverpool, United Kingdom |
Genres | Dance-pop |
Years active | 1989 |
Labels | PWL |
Past members |
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The sisters grew up in Litherland, a suburb of Sefton, Liverpool, and were of Irish descent.[1] The duo's younger sister, Debbie (no relation to the late American actress Debbie Reynolds),[2] played the original Katie Rogers, in Brookside, from 1987 to 1989.
"... AM/FM, all that jazz, we'd rather sing along with Yazz, what happened to the radio, they never play the songs we know ...." " ... No heavy metal rock and roll, music from the past, I'd rather jack, than Fleetwood Mac, I'd rather jack ...".
The sisters signed to the PWL record label after giving Pete Waterman a demo tape,[1] and their single "I'd Rather Jack" was produced by Stock Aitken Waterman. The song started out as a response to music critics who ignored the younger pop acts in the UK at the time, and to radio DJs who continued to play older bands on their playlists rather than Stock Aitken Waterman songs. It was also a response to a perceived snub at the Brit Awards, where SAW acts lost out to more "mature" acts such as Enya and Steve Winwood.
"I'd Rather Jack" reached the top ten in all the European countries it was released. It peaked at number 8 on the UK Singles Chart in April 1989 where it remained for 12 weeks,[3][4] number 6 in Ireland,[5] number 6 in Finland,[6] number 8 in the Netherlands,[7] number 7 in the Flanders region of Belgium,[8] and number 43 in Australia.[9] The single also reached a peak of number 24 on the Eurochart Hot 100.
In a public poll conducted by Channel 4 in 2003, "I'd Rather Jack" was voted number 91 in a list of the 100 Worst Pop Records of All Time.[10] By contract, in 2021, British magazine Classic Pop ranked the song number 38 in their list of 'Top 40 Stock Aitken Waterman songs', presented the song a "pure-pop apes Chicago house in a track squarely aimed at the teen market. [...] A bubbling, squelchy momentum carries the tune skywards as the two jettison music's old guard".[11]
After their brief success in 1989 with "I'd Rather Jack", The Reynolds Girls were dropped by the label. They disappeared from the music industry. A second single, "Get Real", was released but this failed to chart and the duo have not made any real media appearance since.[1] In a documentary about PWL that aired in 2012, the people interviewed admitted that the single was indeed a tongue-in-cheek response to the critics, and in part did ruin the siblings' career after they'd recorded it.[12] It is unknown what happened to them after that and they could not be traced for a 2012 PWL reunion concert.[13] In 2013, ITV started a search for the sisters, so they could appear in a commemorative documentary about Stock, Aitken and Waterman.[14] As of 2022, their whereabouts remain unknown.[15]
Title | Year | Peak chart positions | |||||
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UK [3] |
AUS [9] |
BEL (FL) [8] |
FIN [6] |
IRE [5] |
NLD [7] | ||
"I'd Rather Jack" | 1989 | 8 | 43 | 7 | 6 | 6 | 8 |
"Get Real"[1] | — | — | — | — | — | — |
{{cite AV media}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)[dead YouTube link]But the Liverpool sisters who burst into the pop charts in 1989 with the Stock Aitken Waterman-penned protest song I'd Rather Jack (than Fleetwood Mac) have still not been traced.
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