The newspaper went on to describe how Minogue's chartbuster had already become a household word in India. |
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If Mardi McConnochie really were a pop star, her novel would be pitched as the big, bold high-concept chartbuster. |
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Singer Boy George lashed out today as his descent from chartbuster to dustbuster turned into a sanitation circus on the streets on New York City. |
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The way Lewis recalls it, Martin had recorded a few small hits in the early Fifties, but desperately craved a breakthrough chartbuster. |
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In a powerful demonstration of the difference a year makes in television, the ratings chartbuster series wrapped up this year with an audience one million viewers lighter than last season's. |
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At one point, the couple talked their African-American babysitter, Little Eva, into singing their creation, The Loco-Motion, and it too became a chartbuster. |
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They jived to just about every chartbuster that rocks disco, pub and party circuit. |
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When a group of boys and girls danced to the latest chartbuster, many in the auditorium started tapping their feet. |
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With all the right ingredients to be the next chartbuster, the much-awaited release is a true celebration of mod. |
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The song hasn’t quite been the chartbuster that might have been expected, having dropped to No 9 in its second week, and now, in its third week of release, stands at No 16. |
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Despite her single being a modest US success rather than a chartbuster, it does enough to convince you that her long-delayed moment in the sun won’t be fleeting. |
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If he goes to the top of the pops, we’ll hear the strains of his hit song wafting over the Great Lawn, the great chartbuster that applies equally to nuclear war as to global warming. |
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Drag Me Down hasn't quite been the chartbuster that might have been expected. |
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