Frankie Goes To Hollywood - Relax <Editor's Choice>

The song’s meteoric rise was fueled by a high-profile censorship battle .

: Vocalist Holly Johnson and backing singer Paul Rutherford were the only band members to perform on the final track. The rest of the band's only contribution was a sampled sound of them jumping into a swimming pool. Frankie Goes to Hollywood - Relax

: The BBC implemented a total ban across radio and TV. This backfired spectacularly, creating a "forbidden fruit" effect that propelled the song from number six to number one in just two weeks. The song’s meteoric rise was fueled by a

The final version of "Relax" was less a band effort and more a masterpiece of studio engineering by producer Trevor Horn . : The BBC implemented a total ban across radio and TV

: On January 11, 1984, BBC Radio 1 DJ Mike Read infamously stopped the record mid-play, labeling its lyrics and artwork "obscene".

: "Relax" spent five weeks at the top of the UK charts and remained in the Top 40 for 37 consecutive weeks , with 35 of those weeks overlapping with the official ban. Cultural Impact and Legacy

Released in October 1983, by Frankie Goes to Hollywood is one of the most commercially successful and culturally significant debut singles in British pop history. Known for its pioneering electronic production and the massive controversy it sparked, the track became a defining anthem of the 1980s. Production and "The Trevor Horn Sound"

The song’s meteoric rise was fueled by a high-profile censorship battle .

: Vocalist Holly Johnson and backing singer Paul Rutherford were the only band members to perform on the final track. The rest of the band's only contribution was a sampled sound of them jumping into a swimming pool.

: The BBC implemented a total ban across radio and TV. This backfired spectacularly, creating a "forbidden fruit" effect that propelled the song from number six to number one in just two weeks.

The final version of "Relax" was less a band effort and more a masterpiece of studio engineering by producer Trevor Horn .

: On January 11, 1984, BBC Radio 1 DJ Mike Read infamously stopped the record mid-play, labeling its lyrics and artwork "obscene".

: "Relax" spent five weeks at the top of the UK charts and remained in the Top 40 for 37 consecutive weeks , with 35 of those weeks overlapping with the official ban. Cultural Impact and Legacy

Released in October 1983, by Frankie Goes to Hollywood is one of the most commercially successful and culturally significant debut singles in British pop history. Known for its pioneering electronic production and the massive controversy it sparked, the track became a defining anthem of the 1980s. Production and "The Trevor Horn Sound"