In the late 1970s and early 1980s,
Radio & Record News and
Record Business magazines compiled Scottish charts which were broadcast on
Independent Local Radio stations such as
Radio Clyde and
Radio Forth; these showed particular favour for
hard rock,
punk and
new wave while
soul and other "black" styles would fare less well; for example, on 23 June 1978,
Radio & Record News placed
Heatwave at number 15 UK-wide but number 40 in Scotland,
the O'Jays at number 21 UK-wide but not in the Scottish Top 40 and
Bob Marley at number 26 UK-wide but not in the Scottish Top 40, but
AC/DC at number 38 UK-wide and number 20 in Scotland,
the Clash at number 62 UK-wide and number 22 in Scotland, and
the Vibrators at number 65 UK-wide but number 39 in Scotland. In the late 1980s, as frustration in Scotland at perceived isolation from the
Thatcher government grew, pressure was applied for the creation of an official Scottish chart; Brian Guthri of the Scottish Record Industry Association claimed that the official UK charts did not pick up many sales by Scottish acts as they were not polling enough shops in Scotland, citing
Win's "You've Got the Power" (the theme song from
McEwan's Lager adverts) as an example and a month of research determined significant differences from the UK charts, with
indie acts selling particularly well. That autumn, the SRIA voted to set up its own chart, suggesting that the balance of 75 chart return shops in
Greater London to 45 in Scotland was unfair. Although a Scottish chart had been broadcast on
BBC Radio Scotland beforehand, the first official Scottish Gallup charts were published on 17 March 1991; notably, they placed Scottish band
the Silencers at number 6 in the album chart (only number 39 UK-wide) and
The Simpsons Sing the Blues album higher than the
Inspector Morse soundtrack, which was 11 places higher UK-wide. The launch of this chart was heralded by Neil Ross of the Scottish Record Industry Association, who again suggested that the UK charts were disproportionately slanted towards sales in London and the south of England, while music manager Bruce Findlay suggested that Scotland could potentially produce a music TV show with as much international appeal as the then-popular
DEF II series
Rapido. From 20 September 1991, a short weekly TV programme based around the Scottish chart was broadcast by
BBC1 Scotland on Friday nights, hosted by
Nicky Campbell, then of
Radio 1 and the chart continued to be broadcast on Monday nights on BBC Radio Scotland although it was dropped, along with other night-time music programmes on that station, during the last year of Gallup's contract.
Frankie Miller's song "
Caledonia", also included in McEwan's adverts which were only shown in Scotland and Northern Ireland, topped the Scottish chart while only being a minor UK-wide hit. An unofficial
Scottish Network Chart was also taken by Scottish commercial stations, including
Radio Tay, in the early 1990s. Archives on the Official Charts Company website go back to February 1994, when Millward Brown took over as chart compilers and the number of retailers sampled throughout the UK increased. After this relaunch,
Scottish Television launched a show based around the official Scottish chart, called
Chart Bite. How the UK and Scottish charts were compiled diverged several times from 1994. Whereas digital downloads were incorporated into the UK singles chart from April 2005 and albums from April 2006, the Scottish charts remained physical sales only until the week ending 10 October 2009 when digital sales were included. This brought how the two charts were compiled in line for almost five years until the week ending 6 July 2014, when streaming was included in the UK singles chart and later in the UK album chart for the week ending 1 March 2015. The Scottish charts remained compiled of digital and physical sales only until the week ending 20 November 2020, when the singles chart was discontinued and only physical sales are counted for the album chart. The final number one single was "Always" by Scottish band
the Snuts. ==Number ones==