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(Redirected from
Boney M)
Boney M. is a pop and disco group
masterminded by West German
record producer
Frank Farian. The
four original members of the band were Liz
Mitchell, Marcia
Barrett, Maizie
Williams and Bobby
Farrell.
Boney M., with their bubble-gum infectious tunes, became one of
the few Western groups at that time to become well-known in places
such as Africa, the Arab
countries, Iran, Southeast Asia,
and the Soviet Union. To
this day, along with Swedish pop group
ABBA,
they are among the most widely known 1970s Western music acts in
these regions[citation
needed].
[
edit] History
Frank Farian (Franz Reuther), an unsuccessful German
schlager singer, wasn't
happy with the choice of material his record company wanted him to
sing. He would much rather have done black music but it was
unthinkable for him to front such a project. He went into the
studio in December 1974 and recorded the song single "Baby
Do You Wanna Bump?", a monotonous dance track, singing the repeated
"Do you do you wanna bump?" in a deep voice (entirely studio
created) as well as performing the high female chorus vocals in his
falsetto voice. The
record came out, credited to Boney M. Frank Farian had been
watching an Australian detective
show, where the lead character was called Boney, and Farian decided
that this would make a good name for a group, and added the M.
After a slow start it became a hit in the Netherlands and
Belgium. It was then
that Farian decided to hire a team to 'front' the group for TV
performances. A booking agency (Katja Wolfe) found
model-turned-singer Maizie Williams
(originally from Montserrat) and her
Jamaican friend and
singer Sheyla Bonnick
for him, and a dancer called Mike for the first gigs. Also during
1975,
a girl named Nathalie joined but was soon replaced by Claudja Barry.
Then Sheila and Mike left, and Maizie Williams brought in an exotic
dancer from Aruba, Bobby Farrell.
Singer Marcia Barrett
(Jamaica) reluctantly
joined the group, which went through another change in line-up when
Claudja Barry – tired of merely lip-synching – left
in February 1976 to pursue a solo career as a disco singer. Finally
Liz Mitchell, an
unemployed singer and former member of the Les Humphries
Singers, stepped in – and the final line-up was found at last
with Maizie Williams, Marcia Barrett, Liz Mitchell and Bobby
Farrell.
Farian began recording Boney M.'s first LP, Take the Heat
Off Me, for which Marcia Barrett had already recorded some
songs with Farian: these were the title track and "Lovin' or
Leavin'", both previously recorded in German by another Farian act,
Gilla. While Maizie
Williams' voice wasn't considered good enough for recording
purposes by Farian, and a try-out with Bobby Farrell doing "No
Woman No Cry" didn't work, Farian decided to use only Liz Mitchell
and Marcia Barrett along with his own studio created deep male
voice and high falsetto voice to create the Boney M. sound.
1977 album
Love
For Sale including "Ma Baker", "Still I'm Sad" and
"Belfast".
The commercial response to the album was initially lukewarm.
However, the group rigorously toured discos, clubs and even country
fairs, to earn a reputation for themselves. The group's big break
came when, at the end of that summer, music-TV-producer Michael
'Mike' Leckebusch of Radio Bremen,
requested the group for his show Musikladen. Boney
M. appeared on the live music show on September
18, 1976, after 10 pm, in
their now trademark daring costumes; by the end of the following
week, "Daddy
Cool" became Germany's #1 single in the charts. The album
was to follow the success of the single.
In 1977, Boney M. released their second album Love
for Sale, and this contained further hits "Ma
Baker" and "Belfast". The group also embarked on their first
major concert tours with a live band of musicians called 'The Black
Beautiful Circus' (given their name after Maizie Williams' first
band, 'Black Beautiful People'). Neither Love for Sale nor
Take the Heat Off Me did very well in the UK Albums Chart,
most likely due to their rather risqué covers. In 1978, Boney M.
had their biggest year: they released a new single, "Rivers of
Babylon", which became a massive-selling single all over Europe
and #1 in the UK Singles
Chart. It also became their most successful single in the
United States of
their five singles to make the Billboard
Hot 100. "Rivers of Babylon" peaked at number 30 on the
U.S. pop
singles chart. Next came their biggest-selling album,
Nightflight
to Venus, which spawned a further single "Rasputin".
Continuing with their success, they released "Mary's Boy
Child/Oh My Lord", which was the 1978 Christmas
number one single in the United Kingdom. Also during 1978,
Boney M. made a much publicised promotional visit to the
Soviet Union,
which in the shadow of the Cold War made them
one of the very few Western acts along with Elton John to do
so. Although tracks like "Rasputin" were officially banned in
the Soviet Union
because of their lyrics, the band was still welcomed by the
Soviet regime and this visit resulted in an enormous popularity
in the entire former Eastern Bloc
that has lasted for more than three decades.
While it had been common knowledge all along that Bobby Farrell
only mimed to Farian's vocals, it also emerged during 1978 that
Maizie Williams didn't sing (on the studio recordings) "since her
voice wasn't suited for this kind of music", as Farian put it in an
interview with German teen magazine Bravo at the time. Since
it was common practice in the disco genre of the late 70s, few
people cared – unlike when Farian did the same thing with
Milli Vanilli
ten years later. It should, however, be noted that for all Boney
M. concerts, the four members of the group, including Maizie
Williams and Bobby Farrell, performed all the vocals live. They
had been left out of the recording process by Farian.
1978 album
Nightflight to
Venus including classic hits "Rivers of Babylon", "Brown
Girl In The Ring", "Rasputin" and "Painter Man"
The year 1979 saw Boney M. release their fourth album,
Oceans of
Fantasy, containing two hit singles – "El Lute"/"Gotta Go
Home" and "I'm Born Again"/"Bahama Mama". The track "No More Chain
Gang", one of a number of black freedom songs the group recorded,
exemplified Boney M.'s mix of white and black music – the producer
Farian is white, and the singers are black. They also released
another hit single, "Hooray! Hooray! It's A Holi-Holiday", prior to
the release of Oceans of Fantasy though this single was not
included on the album. The album also included a Lead- and
Backing-Vocals credit for the first time.
In 1980, Boney M. released a greatest hits album,
The Magic of Boney M. - 20 Golden Hits, which also
contained two new songs, "My Friend Jack" and "I See a Boat on the
River". It made the #1 spot in the UK, and was their last big
UK-seller until "Boney M. Megamix" in 1992.
1979 album
Oceans of
Fantasy including hit singles "Gotta Go Home", "El Lute",
"I'm Born Again" and "Bahama Mama"
Boney M.'s fifth album had been scheduled for release in
November 1980 but the recording sessions dragged on all through
1981, and when Boonoonoonoos
was finally released by the end of the year, Bobby Farrell was
fired from the group due to his unreliable working discipline.
While still a healthy seller on the continent, "Boonoonoonoos"
failed to crack the UK Top 75 after three consecutive #1 albums,
and Farrell's departure leaving the group unable to promote it.
Still, the group's Christmas Album, issued concurrently,
became a holiday favourite.
Reggie Tsiboe was presented as the new male member of Boney M.
in 1982 but the singles "The Carnival Is Over" and "Jambo" fared
alarmingly poorly, and the group's seventh album Ten Thousand
Lightyears, issued in 1984, marked another commercial low
point. The group, however, returned to the German Top 20 in the
fall of 1984 with "Kalimba de Luna" and "Happy Song", the latter
seeing Bobby Farrell return to the group, both songs being
carbon-copies of the original Italian hits by Tony Esposito and
Baby's Gang respectively.
In 1985, Farian clearly began losing interest in the group, and
their final studio album Eye Dance was
widely regarded as uninspired and disappointing, with its anonymous
cover. After celebrating 10 years of Boney M. in early 1986, the
group officially disbanded.
Late 1987, Bobby Farrell persuaded Maizie Williams and Liz
Mitchell to do another tour. For reasons unknown, Marcia Barrett
was not part of this. Furthermore, Bobby Farrell had set up a deal
for a new Boney M. album to be recorded without Farian in Belgium –
he never showed up for either recording or tour, so the album ended
being released as Liz Mitchell's first solo album No One Will
Force You. Liz Mitchell and Maizie Williams completed a tour
during 1987-88, adding singer Celena Duncan and dancer Curt Dee
Daran as substitutes.
In October 1988, Boney M. reunited for the album
Greatest Hits of All Times - Remix '88 but tensions ran
high between the members, and Liz Mitchell left in the spring of
1989 to be replaced by Madeleine Davis.
While Mitchell promoted her solo album, the group recorded the
single "Everybody Wants to Dance Like Josephine Baker", without
Farian's knowledge or approval. Threatened with legal action over
the use of the Boney M. name, the single was subsequently withdrawn
and Farian issued "Stories" with a competitive Boney M. line-up
featuring Liz Mitchell, Reggie Tsiboe and two new members, Sharon
Stevens and Patty Onoyewenjo, while a second remix album
Greatest Hits of All Times - Remix '89 - Volume II passed
fairly unnoticed.
1993 saw a rise in Boney M.'s popularity with the album
Gold being a huge seller. While Marcia Barrett, now residing
in Florida, was hit by several bouts of cancer and unable to work,
Liz Mitchell toured the world with Carol Grey, Patricia Lorna
Foster and Curt Dee Daran (replaced by Tony Ashcroft in 1994).
Maizie Williams assembled her own Boney M. line-up with her friend
and short-time Boney M. member in the early days in 1975, Sheila
Bonnick, and two others, while Bobby Farrell also toured with three
ever-changing ladies.
As of 2006, Liz Mitchell is currently touring the world with her
line-up of Boney M., which is the only official line-up supported
by Farian (the court ruling of 1990 stated that all four members
are entitled to perform their own Boney M. shows), as well as
releasing solo albums. Marcia Barrett has released two solo albums,
and Maizie and Bobby are touring with their own Boney M. groups.
Farrell has also issued a series of albums containing re-recordings
of Boney M.'s classic hits. Maizie Williams released her first solo
album Christmas 2006, and released her version of "Sunny" as a
single in February 2007. This single will precede a new studio
album with Maizie, reportedly to contain a new recording with
original Boney M. members Marcia Barrett and Bobby Farrell.
A musical based on the music of Boney M., Daddy
Cool, opened in London in October 2006 to mixed reactions
and slow ticket sales, causing it to close again in February
2007.
In October 2006, pop singer Peter Wilson, who
during the mid-90s scored a couple of Top 40 hits in his native
Australia, recorded a brand new song, co-written by Frank Farian,
which is to be included on his forthcoming album, Follow Me,
due for release in late 2007. The song entitled "Doin' Fine" is
described as paying tribute to the 'sound' of Boney M. and features
the famous string arrangement from their number 1 hit,
"Daddy Cool".
In a sign of their continued popularity in South Asia, a concert
by Boney M. (featuring Marcia Barrett) was a featured attraction at
the 37th International Film Festival of India (IFFI), which took
place on 23 November
2006 in Panaji,
the state capital of Goa, India. The group is
also popular in the Vietnamese diaspora, and was recently
featured in Thuy Nga music productions.
The classic line-up of Boney M. as portrayed on the Japanese
edition of 1999 compilation
20th
Century Hits
In the UK, a new album of their greatest hits, entitled
The Magic of
Boney M. was released via BMG on
27 November
2006. Special additions
to this release were a Mousse T. remix of
"Sunny" and a
brand new song from 2006, featuring Liz Mitchell, entitled "A
Moment Of Love".
On 10 April 2007, Boney
M.'s first four albums were reissued to compact disc with
bonus tracks, this time also in the United States, which meant that
for the first time these were available to the U.S. music market
since their original releases in the 1970s.
In September 2007, Boney M.'s last four original albums,
Boonoonoonoos,
Ten Thousand
Lightyears,
Kalimba de Luna - 16 Happy Songs and Eye
Dance were reissued to compact disc in
Europe and the United States, all including bonus tracks. In
November 2007, a new
Christmas compilation is being released as well as the DVD
Fantastic Boney M. - On Stage and on the Road featuring
live performances and a film from the band's 1981 visit to
Jamaica.
Bobby Farrell's Boney M. held a big concert before large crowds
at the Amphi in Ra'anana,
Israel in May 2007. On
June 28, 2007, Boney
M. featuring Liz Mitchell performed at "Oktiabrsky" concert hall
in St. Petersburg, Russia, and celebrating their 30th
anniversary will be doing a big concert tour in Germany in
November 2007. In September 2007, Maizie Williams Boney M.
line-up performed live at The Royal Albert Hall, UK, to raise
awareness of HIV/AIDS in Africa, performing her own renditions
of 'Brown Girl In The Ring' and 'Hooray! Hooray! It's A
Holi-Holiday'. On October 13,
2007 Marcia Barrett's
Boney M. performed in the Georgian-controlled village of
Tamarasheni, in
the breakaway South Ossetia,
in a concert directed at ousting the de facto President of South
Ossetia, Eduard
Kokoity. December 28,
2007, Marcia Barrett's
Boney M. gave a gala performance in Russia for Premier Putin
while playing New Year's Eve concerts in front of 16,000 people
in Lithuania. December 31,
2007, Boney M. original
Maizie Williams performs a live concert to capacity crowds in
Krakow, Poland.
The legal rights to the name "Boney M." have been a matter of
controversy, and even court cases, between the former members of
the band and producer Frank Farian ever since the early 1990s.
Farian, the man who in effect created the group, has continued to
work with Liz Mitchell and her official line-up all through the 90s
and 2000s, but in a strange twist of fate further Boney M.
productions in Germany could be faced with legal proceedings.
January 2007 was the date Zanillya Farrell (daughter of
Bobby Farrell,
original Boney M. dancer who was fired from the band by Farian
at the height of their popularity) and Yasmina Ayad-Saban
(ex-wife of Farrell) renewed the copyright to the name Boney M.
in Germany for a 10 year period. Also, an upcoming case in the
High Court in Berlin, Maizie Williams vs Frank Farian and
Sony/BMG.
[
edit] Members
The official line-up comprises these members:
- Liz Mitchell, Lead
and backing vocals (1976–)
- Marcia Barrett,
Lead and backing vocals (1975–)
- Maizie Williams,
Dancer, live vocals (1975–)
- Bobby Farrell,
Dancer, rap, live vocals (1975–81, 1984–)
- Reggie Tsiboe,
Lead and backing vocals (1982–86, 1989-90)
[
edit] UK sales
mark
In 1978, "Rivers of
Babylon", a cover of a track by The Melodians with lyrics
partly based on Psalm
137,[1]
became (at the time) the second highest-selling single of all
time in the UK. After
"Rivers of Babylon" slipped back down the chart, the B-side "Brown Girl
in the Ring" was given extensive airplay on the radio, and the
single climbed back up the chart to #2. It eventually sold 500
copies short of two million. As recounted in his book
Touching the
Void, the British climber Joe Simpson was
subsequently to find the catchy tune of "Brown Girl in the
Ring" haunting him in the final hours of his epic struggle to
survive the descent of Siula Grande
in the Andes, and the song
was later used in the film of Touching
the Void made by Kevin
Macdonald. Simpson recalls: "I remember thinking, bloody
hell, I'm going to die to Boney M".
The group also achieved a second UK million-seller with their
version of the calypso classic
"Mary's Boy
Child/Oh My Lord", which was previously a million-seller for
Harry Belafonte.
On the list of the
all-time best selling singles in the United Kingdom, Boney M.
appear in fifth place (with "Rivers of Babylon") and tenth place
(with "Mary's Boy Child/Oh My Lord"). Paul
McCartney is the only other artist to appear twice (once with
The Beatles, once
with Wings) in the
Top 10 of that list.
[
edit] Back
catalogue
Compared to other best-selling artists of the 1970s like
ABBA,
Donna Summer, and
the Bee Gees the Boney M.
discography is quite unusual – while the greater part of the band's
back catalogue has been remixed, remade, remodeled and reissued all
through the 80s, 90s and 2000s by producer Frank Farian and record
company BMG-Ariola (now
Sony BMG), most of the
original 7" and 12" versions issued on vinyl in the 70s and early
80s remained unavailable on CD until 2008 and the release of the
box set
The Collection and the single CD compilation
Rivers Of Babylon (A Best Of Collection).
[
edit] Covers of Boney M.
songs
Shortly after the worldwide success of the Nightflight to
Venus album, disco/soul singer-songwriter,
Millie Jackson
covered "Never Change Lovers In The Middle of The Night'" (a Marcia
Barrett lead vocal) for her 1979 album, A Moment's
Pleasure. It was released as a single and became a Top 40
R&B chart hit for Jackson, peaking at #33.
"Silent Lover" (a Marcia Barrett solo) was covered in 1980 by
disco project El Coco for the album "Revolución".
The Finnish
folk metal band
Turisas have played a
cover of "Rasputin"
at several live events. They released this cover as their debut
single August 2007. They have also released it on a re-release
of their album The Varangian Way.
UK punk rock band
Belisha have
also been covering "Rasputin"
for about 2 years, and riotous live performances at festivals
across Europe in 2007 have seen the entire crowd joining in with
Russian style dancing, both on stage with the band, and in the
audience.
Placebo
covered "Daddy
Cool" in 2003 for the bonus disc of their Sleeping with
Ghosts album.
Liz Mitchell and
Russian singer Alexander Buynov covered "Rasputin" in
1996 for a Russian compilation album.
Marcia Barrett
did a solo version of "Rivers of Babylon" in 2001 which was aired
on Dutch radio but ultimately never released.
Bobby Farrell
released his own version of 'Baby Do You Wanna Bump' in 2006 on
The Bump EP.
The Latvian
cello trio Melo-M
covered "Daddy
Cool" in 2007, featuring Maizie
Williams on vocals.
The Spanish group Fangoria
recorded a cover version of "Rasputin" in 1996 which was also
included on BMG-Ariola compilation Best in
Spain.
Their song "Ma Baker" has been
widely covered. One of the most "weird" covers is Knorkator's version,
which changes the disco/pop tunes for heavy guitar riffs.
Australian children's entertainers The Wiggles
covered "Brown Girl in the Ring" on their 2006 album Here
Comes the Big Red Car.
[
edit] Songs that were
re-worked into Boney M. titles
Frank Farian's right hand Hans-Jörg Mayer (aka Georg Reyam)
sought out songs from all over the world and rewrote them for Boney
M.
The first Boney M. recording "Baby Do You Wanna Bump" was
reworked from Prince Buster's
"Al Capone".
"Ma Baker" features the melody line of a Tunisian folk
melody.
"Rasputin" features elements of a Serbian ("Ај, русе косе цуро
имаш") and Turkish traditional.
"Nightflight to Venus" with its characteristic drums, the rock
guitar theme, and the march interludes, was rewritten from
Cozy Powell's
1974 #1 hit "Dance With the Devil".
"Hooray! Hooray! It's a Holi-Holiday" was a rewrite of
Polly Wolly
Doodle.
"I'm Born Again" a cover of an Irish traditional, 'Buachaill An
Éireann Mé'
"Children of Paradise" was rewritten from Moroccan Younès
Migri's hit "Lili Twil".
Their song "Train to Skaville / That's Boonoonoonoos" (rec.
1980, released 1981) is partly inspired by the 1979 #1 hit
Pop Muzik by
M (the walking
bass, the rap parts, and "Bo Bo Bo Boonoonoonoos" >< "Pop
Pop Pop Muzik").
"Exodus (Noah's Ark 2001)" (1984) features a guitar theme
borrowed from The Temptations'
"Papa Was a
Rolling Stone" while the chorus borrows from Bob
Marley's "Exodus".
"Sample City" (1985) features the same chord pattern as
"I
Can't Stand the Rain", the Ann Peebles classic
and a 1977 hit single for Farian's soul band Eruption.
[
edit] Discography
For detailed track information and timings see
the respective albums.
[
edit] Studio
albums
[
edit] Compilations
[
edit] Singles
For detailed information on single releases in
the UK, the US and Germany see the respective studio albums.
- "Baby Do You
Wanna Bump" (1975)
- "Daddy
Cool"/"No Woman No Cry" (1976)
- "Sunny"
(1976)
- "Ma Baker"/"Still I'm
Sad" (1977)
- "Belfast"/"Plantation Boy" (1977)
- "Rivers of
Babylon"/"Brown Girl in
the Ring" (double A-side) (1978)
- "Rasputin"/"Painter
Man" (1978)
- "Mary's Boy
Child/Oh My Lord"/"Dancing In The Streets" (1978)
- "Painter Man" (1979)
- "Hooray Hooray It's A Holi-Holiday"/"Ribbons of Blue"
(1979)
- "El Lute"/"Gotta Go Home" (1979)
- "I'm Born Again"/"Bahama Mama" (1979)
- "I See A Boat On The River"/"My Friend Jack" (1980)
- "Children of Paradise"/"Gadda-Da-Vida" (1980)
- "Felicidad (Margherita)"/"Strange" (1980)
- "Malaika / Consuela Biaz" (1981)
- "We Kill The World (Don't Kill The World)"/"Boonoonoonoos"
(1981)
- "Little Drummer Boy"/"Boney M. On 45" (1981)
- "The Carnival Is Over (Goodbye True Lover)" / "Going Back West"
(1982)
- "Zion's Daughter" (1982)
- "Jambo - Hakuna Matata (No Problems)" (1983)
- "Somewhere In The World" (1984)
- "Kalimba De Luna" (1984)
- "Happy Song" - Boney M. Feat. Bobby Farrell
& The School Rebels (1985)
- "My Cherie Amor" (1985)
- "Young Free and Single" - Boney M. Feat. Bobby Farrell
(1985)
- "Daddy Cool (Anniversary Remix)" (1986)
- "Bang Bang Lulu" (1986)
- "Rivers of Babylon´88" (1988)
- "Megamix" (1988)
- "The Summer Megamix" (1989)
- "Malaika (Lambada Mix)" (1989)
- "Everybody Wants To Dance Like Josephine Baker" (1990)
(withdrawn)
- "Stories" - Boney M. Feat. Liz Mitchell
(1990)
- "Boney M. Megamix" (1992)
- "Christmas Megamix" (1992)
- "Brown Girl in the Ring (Remix '93)" (1993)
- "Ma Baker (Remix '93)" (1993)
- "Papa Chico" - Boney M. Feat. Liz Mitchell (1994)
- "Ma Baker '99" - Boney M. vs. Horny United/Sash! (1999)
- "Daddy Cool '99" - Boney M. 2000 featuring Mobi T. (1999)
- "Hooray! Hooray! (Caribbean Night Fever)" - Boney M. 2000
(1999)
- "Sunny (Remix)" - Boney M. 2000 (2000)
- "Daddy Cool 2001" (2001)
- "Sunny" (Mousse T. Remix) (2006)
- "Mary's Boy Child - Oh My Lord" (2007)
[
edit] Video / DVD / VCD
releases
- Gold - Video / VCD (in Hong Kong) (1993)
- Gold - DVD (2001 Europe)
- Greatest Hits (2001 UK)
- Special Edition (2002 South Korea)
- Special Edition EP (2003 UK)
- The Magic of Boney M. (2006)
-
Fantastic Boney M. - On Stage and on the Road (2007)
[
edit] Chart
positions
[
edit] Albums
[
edit] Singles
Singles chart peaking in various countries. Includes U.S.
Hot Dance Club
Play chart entries.
| Year |
Title |
Chart positions |
| GER |
UK |
AUT |
SWE |
CH |
NL |
US |
US Hot Dance Club
Play |
IRE |
| 1975 |
"Baby Do You Wanna Bump" |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
14 |
- |
- |
- |
| 1976 |
"Daddy
Cool" |
1 |
6 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
3 |
65 |
11 |
- |
| 1977 |
"Sunny" |
1 |
3 |
1 |
11 |
2 |
1 |
- |
- |
4 |
| "Ma Baker" |
1 |
2 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
96 |
31 |
4 |
| "Still I'm Sad" |
- |
- |
- |
17 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| "Belfast" |
1 |
8 |
2 |
- |
1 |
3 |
- |
- |
1 |
| 1978 |
"Rivers of
Babylon"/"Brown Girl In The Ring" |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
30 |
- |
1 |
| "Rasputin" |
1 |
2 |
1 |
- |
2 |
8 |
- |
- |
3 |
| "Mary's Boy
Child/Oh My Lord" |
1 |
1 |
3 |
3 |
1 |
3 |
85 |
- |
1 |
| 1979 |
"Painter Man" (UK + Ireland only) |
- |
10 |
- |
- |
- |
8 |
- |
- |
5 |
| "Hooray Hooray It's a Holi-Holiday" |
4 |
3 |
3 |
11 |
4 |
1 |
- |
- |
5 |
| "El Lute" / "Gotta Go Home" |
1 |
12 |
1 |
10 |
2 |
2 |
- |
- |
11 |
| "I'm Born Again" / "Bahama Mama" |
7 |
35 |
9 |
17 |
6 |
11 |
- |
- |
12 |
| 1980 |
"I See a Boat on the River" / |
5 |
- |
3 |
- |
9 |
7 |
- |
- |
- |
| "My Friend Jack" |
- |
57 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| "Children of Paradise" |
11 |
66 |
- |
- |
13 |
28 |
- |
- |
- |
| 1981 |
"Felicidad (Margherita)" |
6 |
- |
6 |
- |
3 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| "Malaika" / "Consuela Biaz" |
13 |
- |
7 |
- |
4 |
20 |
- |
- |
- |
| "We Kill The World (Don't Kill The World)" |
12 |
39 |
- |
- |
3 |
25 |
- |
- |
- |
| "Little Drummer Boy" |
20 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 1982 |
"The Carnival is Over" / "Going Back West" |
41 |
- |
- |
- |
11 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 1983 |
"Jambo - Hakuna Matata" |
48 |
- |
- |
- |
11 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 1984 |
"Somewhere in the World" |
49 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| "Kalimba de luna" |
17 |
- |
11 |
- |
23 |
27 |
- |
49 |
- |
| "Happy Song" |
7 |
- |
15 |
- |
21 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 1985 |
"My Cherie Amour" |
55 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| "Young Free and Single" |
48 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 1986 |
"Bang Bang Lulu" |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 1988 |
"Mary's Boy Child (Remix)" / "Megamix" |
- |
52 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 1989 |
"Summer Megamix" |
- |
92 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 1990 |
"Stories" |
- |
94 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 1992 |
"Boney M. Megamix" |
26 |
7 |
11 |
- |
- |
13 |
- |
- |
3 |
| 1993 |
"Brown Girl in the Ring (remix)" |
- |
38 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
25 |
| 1999 |
"Ma Baker" versus Sash! |
28 |
22 |
32 |
10 |
21 |
26 |
- |
- |
- |
| "Daddy Cool '99" Boney M. 2000 feat. Mobi
T. |
47 |
- |
- |
- |
49 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| "Hooray! Hooray! Caribbean Night Fever"
Boney M. 2000 |
79 |
- |
- |
- |
80 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 2000 |
"Sunny" Boney M. 2000 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
80 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 2001 |
"Daddy Cool 2001" |
- |
47 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 2007 |
"Mary's Boy
Child/Oh My Lord" |
- |
47 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
"-" means chart peak is unknown or the single did not chart on a
particular chart.
[
edit] See also
[
edit] References