Mark Elliott, a SAW expert and author of the definitive book on the trio, The Ministry Of Pop, reveals his favourite Stock Aitken Waterman albums

15. Jason Donovan
Ten Good Reasons (1989)

This hastily assembled pop confection was pieced together while Jason was still committed to TV soap Neighbours, with three of the songs pulled together in a frantic two-and-a-half day session in London and the remainder slotted into filming breaks in Melbourne. The 11-track collection ended up the year’s biggest-selling album and featured the No.1 hits Too Many Broken Hearts, Sealed With A Kiss and the Kylie duet Especially For You.

Read more: Jason Donovan interview

14. Bananarama 
Please Yourself (1993)

After the tepid response to 1991’s Pop Life album, Keren and Sara began a fresh chapter as a duo by returning to Pete Waterman for a concept project he billed “ABBA-Banana”. Despite featuring classics like Movin’ On and Last Thing On My Mind, the 10-track collection managed just a single week at No.46 and even a cover of Andrea True Connection’s More, More, More couldn’t shore things up. The band wouldn’t return to the singles chart for another 12 years.

Read more: Bananarama interview

13. Various Artists
The Cream Of Supreme (1987)

With just two of its 10 tracks not penned by the SAW team, this early compilation includes formative classics like the first hits from Princess and Mel & Kim. Ahead of the successful Hit Factory compilations, this UK and Germany release is today easy enough to source in its gatefold-sleeve vinyl format, but the limited CD issue is much harder to find. Vinyl copies, with the promotional poster intact, are rarer still.

12. Lonnie Gordon
If I Have To Stand Alone (1990)

Denied a UK release until its Cherry Pop reissue in 2009, this largely SAW-penned collection should have built on the strong performance of Happenin’ All Over Again, a Top 10 smash. In fact, subsequent singles stalled amid indecision about which direction the US-born singer should go and the set only got a limited release. One of its 45s, Beyond Your Wildest Dreams, was recycled for Sybil in 1993, but again it peaked just outside the UK Top 40.

11. Jason Donovan 
Between The Lines (1990)

With the SAW bubble slowly starting to deflate, this follow-up to Jason’s hit debut actually contained some of his strongest numbers. It was a wide-ranging affair, with vintage covers like The Cascades’ Rhythm Of The Rain sitting alongside more contemporary tracks such as Hang On To Your Love and When You Come Back To Me. The best track is the ABBA pastiche Another Night, which unexpectedly broke his opening run of Top 10 hits when it was released as a single in June.

10. Dead Or Alive
Mad, Bad And Dangerous To Know (1986)

That this tense collaboration almost broke Pete Burns is well-documented, but the strife helped shape an epic Hi-NRG opus that was to prove the Liverpool band’s final partnership with Mike, Matt and Pete. Brand New Lover, the nine-track album’s first single, was to prove a major hit Stateside, but in Britain it was the gothic romp Something In My House that captured the public’s imagination.

Read more: Pete Burns – The final interview

9. Rick Astley
Whenever You Need Somebody (1987)

The former PWL assistant struck gold when his debut album sold more than 15 million copies worldwide off the back of a single that remains, arguably, SAW’s most famous. Never Gonna Give You Up was one of six SAW productions on the LP, which also included a cover of When I Fall In Love and Together Forever. Rick was struggling with the sudden pressure and second album, Hold Me In Your Arms, would be his last with the SAW team.

Read more: Rick Astley interview

8. Kylie Minogue
Let’s Get To It (1991)

With its striking Jürgen Teller artwork, Kylie’s fourth studio album was an uneasy statement by an artist now fighting against her image and musical direction. Kylie admits the brief had been to stir things up a bit and launch single Word Is Out certainly did that by stalling at No 16. A cover of Give Me Just A Little More Time was the album’s biggest hit (reaching No.2), but closing track I Guess I Like It Like That set the star down the dance-oriented path she’d follow until the end of the decade.

Read more: Top 40 Kylie tracks

7. Princess
Princess (1986)

Britain’s new-soul movement of the mid 80s secured an unlikely anthem when Say I’m Your Number One became an international smash in the summer of 1985. The Mike Stock composition was offered to Bucks Fizz and Dee C. Lee before the demo by Desiree Heslop was polished into a hit. This release would yield four further singles, including I’ll Keep On Loving You, but a disagreement with the artist’s management meant this collaboration would be the last.

6. Dead Or Alive
Youthquake (1985)

After hearing the Hazell Dean track Whatever I Do (Wherever I Go), Dead Or Alive’s amboyant frontman Pete Burns tracked down Pete Waterman to work on their second LP. Lead single, You Spin Me Round (Like A Record), would be the first UK No.1 hit for the SAW production trio and helped make the album a worldwide platinum success. Three more singles from the set would make the UK Top 40, including In Too Deep and the Moroder-inspired Lover Come Back To Me.

Read more: Interview with Mike Stock and Matt Aitken

5. Mel & Kim
F.I.M. (1987)

Sisters Mel and Kim Appleby were introduced to SAW by Supreme Records’ Nick East and the pair’s authentic charm soon had the team won over. Initial plans to mould the duo’s sound into a soft-soul style were shelved (early track System went unreleased for years), but the pop-dance hybrid Showin’ Out (Get Fresh At The Weekend) was a huge hit and paved the way for the first single written by Stock/Aitken/Waterman to top the British charts – Respectable, in early 1987.

Read more: Top 20 girlband singles of the 80s

4. Various Artists
The Hit Factory 3 (1989)

SAW were champions of the hit single and this volume – the third of four sets issued in the UK during their heyday – was released in the middle of the trio’s most successful year. Featuring one of their most popular 45s, (Especially For You) and one of their least remembered (S.S. Paparazzi), it’s a fascinating time capsule that perfectly captures the team’s eclectic output. Numerous compilations have been released since, but the first three have yet to be bettered.

3. Kylie Minogue 
Kylie (1988)

After labels passed on the chance to release Kylie’s I Should Be So Lucky, Pete was forced to launch the song on his PWL label to his bank manager’s delight – it was her rst UK No.1 and remained at the top spot for ve weeks. Following singles, Got To Be Certain, The Loco-Motion and Je Ne Sais Pas Pourquoi would all reach No.2. Kylie was Britain’s best-selling album of 1988 and its brace of Hi-NRG pop standards set the benchmark for her spectacular career.

Read more: The Stock Aitken Waterman story

2. Bananarama 
WOW! (1987)

Routinely remembered as the most difficult act SAW were to work with, Bananarama’s decision to embrace high-camp pop was a commercial triumph, even if it was to splinter the band. Opening single I Heard A Rumour rewarded the trio with a US Top 10 hit, but Love In The First Degree ended up being the group’s biggest domestic success. Siobhan found working with SAW particularly tough and quit the group, before rejoining her friends for a spectacular reunion tour in 2017.

Read more: The stories behind SAW

1. Donna Summer
Another Place And Time (1989)

When disco queen Donna Summer turned to SAW to relaunch her career, she hadn’t had a hit in years. Her vocals on the first single This Time I Know It’s For Real lifted an already great song to another level and rewarded her with a Top 10 hit on both sides of the Atlantic. Summer’s impeccable delivery makes Another Place… a pop masterpiece. Sadly, plans for her to work with Pete, Matt and Mike again never materialised.

Read more: Top 40 Stock Aitken Waterman songs