778. ‘Teletubbies Say ‘Eh-Oh!”, by The Teletubbies

From one of the classiest, most understated ‘novelty-in-inverted-commas’ #1s off all time… To the other end of the spectrum…

Teletubbies Say ‘Eh-Oh!’, by The Teletubbies (their 1st and only #1)

2 weeks, from 7th – 21st December 1997

It’s a remix of the theme song to the biggest children’s TV show of the age: the Teletubbies. First aired in March 1997, by August it was reaching an audience of two million. I was one of them, I must admit, though I was a good decade older than the intended audience. I don’t know, there was just something grotesquely fascinating about the four… creatures (what the hell are they?) the grassy dome they lived in, the flowers that talked, the pink pancakes they ate… So huge was the programme that a spin-off single was inevitable, just in time for the Christmas number one race. They didn’t quite make it, but two weeks at number one plus over a million copies sold is pretty impressive.

Sadly, but not surprisingly, as a pop single this is utter garbage. It just about works as a theme-tune (though in these days of streaming you’d happily ‘Skip Intro’) but removed from the context of the show it sounds absolutely bonkers. And not good bonkers. There’s the babyish voices, the rather camp narrator, interludes in which some sheep sing ‘Baa Baa Black Sheep’ and a matronly old lady sings ‘Mary, Mary Quite Contrary’, and a prolonged bout of diarrhoea (which turns out to be the tubby custard machine, when you watch the video…) All set to a rinky-dink synthesised banjo riff.

At the same time, there’s not much point in getting annoyed about this. It is what it is. Crap, but also something of a time capsule, a glimpse back into those carefree, late-twentieth century days. You could raise an eyebrow at the ridiculous quantities of this record that were sold – well over half a million copies during its two weeks at the top – but then single sales were at their highest ever levels in late-1997, something we can perhaps explore in our next post.

The obvious comparison to make here is to cast your minds back four years, to Mr. Blobby’s similarly bizarre festive release. But Blobby’s song has an anarchic quality to it, a level of chaos and a tongue-in-cheek quality that ‘Teletubbies Say “Eh-Oh!”’ lacks. The only way you could find another level on which to enjoy this song is if you were seriously high.

Finally, I have to raise a hand and admit that I am, in my small way, to blame for this record doing so well. Or at least my younger brother is, as he bought me a cassingle copy for Christmas that year. I wonder how many other copies were bought as a joke, rather than for any love of the song. Teletubbies was only on our screens for four years (in its original run) but its cultural impact was massive. In fact, if you have a spare minute, why not remind yourself of the ‘Tinky Winky Controversy’, and feel a sense of relief that something so narrow-mindedly crazy couldn’t happen in today’s level-headed world…

5 thoughts on “778. ‘Teletubbies Say ‘Eh-Oh!”, by The Teletubbies

  1. A week or so ago it was ‘Candle in the Wind ’97’. Now it’s…THIS. You are very brave to continue going through all the No. 1’s like this, as goodness knows what other horrors are in store for you. (Oh yes, Millennium Prayer, how could we forget? I tried very hard to). Did the world really go completely mad in 1997, or am I just taking the wrong drugs?

    • Yes, the second half of 1997 throws up some oddities! For sure it’s a horrible single, but I’m pretty used to the odd horror show popping up by now… St Winifred’s, the Chicken Song, Star Trekkin, Blobby…. And this isn’t the worst chart-topper ever. I’d still go with ‘No Charge’ for its humourless sanctimony (something the Millenium Prayer will surely challenge in due course!)

      Ps. I thought this was too tenuous to mention in the post, but the ‘Ba Ba Black Sheep’ snippet means that you can tie this #1 back to the 18th century French melody “Ah! vous dirai-je, maman”, which was popularised in the 1780s by…. Mozart himself. If only he could have had a writing credit on this single!

  2. I’m the right age to have experienced Teletubbies. In Australia, that was one of several iconic children’s TV shows growing up as a little kid during the early-to-mid-2000s. Therefore, for nostalgic reasons and nothing else, I can’t hate it. But it is very silly.

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