The Old Record Shop - framed vinyl records and sheet music
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Framed Birthday Number One Records from 1975
Find out what was top of the UK charts in 1975 in the list below.
We'll find and frame an original copy of the vinyl record or sheet music, with your own personal message printed and mounted beneath.
It's the perfect birthday gift idea for music lovers. From including delivery.
No.1 from:
Song title & artist:
December 15th 1974
Lonely This Christmas
Mud
Number One for 4 weeks
January 12th 1975
Down Down
Status Quo
Number One for 1 week
January 19th 1975
Ms. Grace
The Tymes
Number One for 1 week
January 26th 1975
January
Pilot
Number One for 3 weeks
February 16th 1975
Make Me Smile (Come up and See Me)
Steve Harley and The Cockney Rebel
Number One for 2 weeks
March 2nd 1975
If
Telly Savalas
Number One for 2 weeks
March 16th 1975
Bye Bye Baby
Bay City Rollers
Number One for 6 weeks
April 27th 1975
Oh Boy
Mud
Number One for 2 weeks
May 11th 1975
Stand by Your Man
Tammy Wynette
Number One for 3 weeks
June 1st 1975
Whispering Grass
Windsor Davies and Don Estelle
Number One for 3 weeks
June 22nd 1975
I'm Not in Love
10 CC
Number One for 2 weeks
July 6th 1975
Tears on My Pillow
Johnny Nash
Number One for 1 week
July 13th 1975
Give a Little Love
Bay City Rollers
Number One for 3 weeks
August 3rd 1975
Barbados
Typically Tropical
Number One for 1 week
August 10th 1975
Can't Give You Anything (But My Love)
The Stylistics
Number One for 3 weeks
August 31st 1975
Sailing
Rod Stewart
Number One for 4 weeks
September 28th 1975
Hold Me Close
David Essex
Number One for 3 weeks
October 19th 1975
I Only Have Eyes for You
Art Garfunkel
Number One for 2 weeks
November 2nd 1975
Space Oddity
David Bowie
Number One for 2 weeks
November 16th 1975
D.I.V.O.R.C.E.
Billy Connolly
Number One for 1 week
November 23rd 1975
Bohemian Rhapsody
Queen
Number One for 9 weeks
See Number One songs for a different year
The charts we use from November 1952 onwards are compiled by the Official Charts Company which produces the UK Singles Chart for the music industry, including the BBC. Their information can differ from that shown in reference guides such as The Guinness Book of British Hit Singles (now The Virgin Book of British Hit Singles). We explain this more fully here and you can find even more detail on the history of the charts on the Official Charts Company website.

The official UK pop charts based on record sales did not start until 14th November 1952. For earlier dates than this, we have used the weekly pop chart based on the sales of sheet music, which was published by Melody Maker and broadcast by Radio Luxembourg from May 1947. (Sheet music outsold records in the United Kingdom until the early 1950s.)