Heaven On The 7th Floor

"Heaven On The 7th Floor"
Single by Paul Nicholas
from the album Paul Nicholas
B-side "Do You Want My Love"
Released August 1977
Format 7-inch single
Recorded 1977
Genre Pop, disco[1]
Length 2:44
Label RSO
Writer(s) Dominic Bugatti, Frank Musker
Producer(s) Christopher Neil
Certification Gold (RIAA)
Paul Nicholas singles chronology
"Grandma's Party"
(1976)
"Heaven On The 7th Floor"
(1977)
"On the Strip"
(1978)
Alternative cover

"Heaven On The 7th Floor" is a 1977 hit single by British singer Paul Nicholas. It was his greatest hit, a track from his eponymous debut LP. The song spent three weeks at number 6 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 [2] during November and December of that year. "Heaven On The 7th Floor" became a Gold record. It reached number 49 in Canada.[3]

The song was not among Nicholas's most popular hits in Britain, although it was a Top 10 hit in other nations. On the October 22, 1977, American Top 40 radio program, Casey Kasem described Nicholas as "a performer who didn't want to be there," i.e., on the musical charts. Having had a successful film career in Europe for 10 years, he had come to America to audition for a stage production of "Hamlet," however, he was not selected. Nicholas felt that musical success might help him make more of a name for himself, and would open a door for him into bigger acting roles. Kasem said of this strategy, "He makes the music industry sound easier than it really is."

"Heaven On The 7th Floor"
Single by The Mighty Pope
A-side "Heaven On The 7th Floor"
Released August 1977 (August 1977)
Format 7-inch single
Length 2:45
Label Private Stock Records

Chart performance

Paul Nicholas version

Weekly singles charts (1977–78) Peak
position
Canada RPM [3] 49
New Zealand [4] 1
UK [5] 40
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 6
U.S. Cash Box Top 100 [6] 5
WLS survey (Chicago) [7] 4

Year-end charts (1977) Rank
New Zealand [8] 19
U.S. (Joel Whitburn's Pop Annual) [9] 59
U.S. Cash Box [10] 70
WLS survey (Chicago) [11] 52

Cover versions

"Heaven On The 7th Floor" was covered by The Mighty Pope, and charted concurrently with Paul Nicholas's version. In Canada, his version was the bigger hit. It was issued by RCA Records on the Private Stock label, and reached #14. It also reached #83 on the U.S. Cash Box chart.[12]

The Mighty Pope version

Weekly singles charts (1977) Peak
Position
Canadian RPM [13] 14
U.S. Cash Box Top 100 [12] 83

Year-end chart (1977) Rank
Canadian RPM [14] 130

References

External links

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