The soundtrack album for the fifties-set film That'll Be the Day was number one on the UK charts today in 1973, according to social media. I have never owned a copy but it was very important to me nevertheless: tracks were played on the radio at the time - Luxembourg as well as Radio 1 - and I still recall that first thrill of hearing Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers' Why Do Fools Fall in Love.
The film, written by Ray Connolly, has endured, probably because it wasn't primarily conceived as a means of selling records. Quite the reverse, in fact: the soundtrack LP was a way of raising the rest of the finance to make the film, as Connolly has said:
[David] Puttnam went to see a small Canadian television marketing company and proposed building our movie around a plethora of old hits they could promote as a tele-marketed compilation album.
They would pump more than £200,000 into an advertising campaign, showing clips from the film, so all we had to do was put together a 40-track soundtrack album of oldies but goldies.
We’d always planned to have some songs in the film, but 40!










































