In 1981, one of the strangest songs ever to top the Billboard Hot 100 reached No. 1.
On June 20, 1981, the Dutch studio project Stars on 45 climbed to the top of the U.S. pop charts with a Beatles-inspired medley whose official title was so long it took up most of the record label. The song, officially titled “Medley: Intro ‘Venus’/Sugar Sugar/No Reply/I’ll Be Back/Drive My Car/Do You Want To Know A Secret/We Can Work It Out/I Should Have Known Better/Nowhere Man/You’re Going To Lose That Girl/Stars On 45,” remains the longest-titled No. 1 hit in Billboard Hot 100 history.
The recording was the brainchild of Dutch producer Jaap Eggermont, who was inspired by an underground dance-club bootleg that stitched together snippets of popular songs over a relentless disco beat. Rather than using the original Beatles recordings, Eggermont recruited singers who closely resembled the voices ofJohn Lennon, Paul McCartney and George Harrison, then blended their performances with pieces of other familiar hits, including Shocking Blue’s “Venus” and The Archies’ “Sugar, Sugar.”
To recreate the Beatles’ sound, Eggermont assembled a group of Dutch studio musicians and vocalists rather than forming a traditional band. Bas Muys handled the John Lennon vocals, while Okkie Huysdens and Hans Vermeulen supplied the Paul McCartney and George Harrison parts. Session singer Jody Pijper, whose voice appears throughout the recording’s signature “Stars on 45” chorus, helped tie the medley together and became one of the key voices behind the project’s unlikely success.
The result was unlike anything else on the radio in 1981. Built around a steady hand-clap rhythm and rapid-fire transitions between songs, the medley became a worldwide phenomenon. It topped charts across Europe, reached No. 2 in the United Kingdom and eventually spent a week at No. 1 in the United States, interrupting the chart dominance of Kim Carnes’ “Bette Davis Eyes.”
The success of Stars on 45 launched a brief but memorable medley craze. Follow-up releases featuring Motown classics, Stevie Wonder songs and more Beatles material followed, while other artists rushed to release their own medley records. The trend produced hits such as “The Beach Boys Medley” and “The Beatles Movie Medley” before fading away a few years later.
More than four decades later, the song still inspires nostalgia among listeners who remember hearing it for the first time.
“Ya the FIRST time I heard this I was 16! Now I’m 57 and I STILL LOVE THIS MEDLEY! ❤️❤️❤️,” wrote one fan on YouTube.
Another commented, “omfg!!!! I haven’t heard this since 1981. Back then it was played ALL the time. Thank you!”
“One of my favorites in the early 80’s! ❤️,” wrote a third fan.
While Stars on 45 is often remembered as a novelty act, its biggest hit accomplished something few novelty records ever do: it became a genuine worldwide pop phenomenon and earned a permanent place in Billboard history.
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