The combined "Official UK Top 40" and "Hit 40 UK" Chart as of Sunday 27th August
01 - Beyonce featuring Jay-Z - 'Deja Vu'
02 - Shakira featuring Wyclef Jean - 'Hips Don't Lie'
03 - Chamillionaire featuring Krayzie Bone - 'Ridin'
04 - Cascada - 'Everytime We Touch'
05 - David Guetta versus The Egg - 'Love Don't Let Me Go
06 - Cassie - 'Me & U'
07 - Snow Patrol - 'Chasing Cars'
08 - Arctic Monkeys - 'Leave Before The Lights Come On'
09 - Rogue Traders - 'Voodoo Child'
10 - James Morrison - 'You Give Me Something'
11 - Matt Willis - 'Hey Kid'
12 - Christina Aguilera - 'Ain't No Other Man'
13 - Justin Timberlake - 'Sexyback'
14 - Rihanna - 'Unfaithful'
15 - Kasabian - 'Empire'
16 - Micky Modelle versus Jessy - 'Dancing In The Dark'
17 - Morrissey - 'In The Future When All's Well'
18 - Lily Allen - 'Smile'
19 - Paris - 'Stars Are Blind'
20 - Keane - 'Crystal Ball'
21 - Paolo Nutini - 'Last Request'
22 - Stacie Orrico - 'I'm Not Missing You'
23 - Thom Yorke - 'Harrowdown Hill'
24 - The Feeling - 'Never Be Lonely'
25 - Kooks - 'She Moves In Her Own Way'
26 - Ronan Keating - 'Iris'
27 - Sandi Thom - 'I Wish I Was A Punk Rocker (With Flowers In My Hair)'
28 - Pink - 'U & Ur Hand'
29 - Alesha - 'Lipstick'
30 - Lazy-B - 'Underwear Goes Inside The Pants'
31 - Pharrell featuring Kanye West - 'Number One'
32 - Razorlight - 'In The Morning'
33 - Gnarls Barkley - 'Smiley Faces'
34 - Maria Lawson - 'Sleepwalking'
35 - Fratellis - 'Chelsea Dagger'
36 - Supermode - 'Tell Me Why'
37 - Bob Sinclair featuring Steve Edwards - 'World Hold On (Children Of The Sky)'
38 - Missy Elliott - 'We Run This'
39 - Michael Gray featuring Shelly Poole - 'Borderline'
40 - View - 'Wasted Little DJs'
There are a lot of wanky guitar bands in there for sure, but dance tracks make up about a fifth of the chart (discounting the Hip Hop/R&B tracks, of course). Encouragingly, the top six also is clinically void of any dist-guitar clatter - and it's suprisingly half-decent to boot.
It was never really going to happen though was it not when the corporate (rock) music machine was so set against something which undermined its very existence.Not to use a too romantic analogy but rather like the people trying to take on capitalism itself.
And sure enough in 1992 when the undeground started to dominate the British charts without any help from the music biz/Radio 1 etc it turned its full strength on the scene.
Has this alleged "decision" ever been investigated in any depth though? It's not that I don't think it holds any merits, it might well be accurate, it's just that I think it sounds overly simplistic. I have a similar problem with people describing the disco backlash as solely about homophobia, reactionary rockism, machoism, corporate inability to profit on it etc. Could it just not be that it was all getting a bit shit and people were looking elsewhere (yes, to their first love - R.O.C.K.) for the soundtrack of their lives.
P.S. I looove disco and dance music so don't even start

D.S.