The
progressive rock band
Yes owes its success to the effects of the strike. In February, it released
The Yes Album, its third album. Since its first two had not been very successful, they had hired a new manager,
Brian Lane. He promised he would make the album a hit. The strike prevented
Melody Maker magazine from compiling its weekly sales charts of albums and singles, since record stores could not mail in their reports of sales figures. In their absence, the media used a chart compiled by
Richard Branson, owner of the
Virgin record store on
Oxford Street in London, based on sales at his store and a few others in the capital. Lane went to Virgin and bought as many copies of
The Yes Album as he could to ensure it became the top-selling album at the store, and thus prominent in Branson's chart. As a result, the album began selling well enough nationally that after the strike, when
Melody Maker was able to resume publishing its charts, it reached No. 4 and remained on the charts for 34 weeks, selling well over a million copies. ==See also==