Number One albums from this week in history...

Two very diferent albums this week - The Coral and Dire Straits...
2003
The Coral - Magic and Medicine
Following on from the success of their self-titled debut, the Hoylake indie favourites' second album shot straight to number one in the charts.
Released on Liverpool's Deltasonic label and produced by Ian Broudie, it brought their mixture of old-fashioned country, 1960s-style psychedelia and folk with modern rock influences to a wider audience.
The album title originates from a lyric in Time Travel, the hidden track on the band's debut album: "Well there's a war going on, ain't the obvious one. It's between magic and medicine".
Not only did it go to number, it also gave them their first top 10 hit singles with Pass It On and Don't Think You're the First.
It was followed with UK, European, American and Japanese tours and a one-off festival Midsummer Nights Scream held on the New Brighton promenade - an urban mini-festival for fans of the alternative. It boasted an impressive line up of the then hottest up-and-coming bands - The Libertines, The Thrills, The Basement and The Zutons.
And then, after a whirlwind few years that had seen them put their young lives on hold, the band decided they needed a break.
It would be two years before the Hoylake seven-piece - then made up of frontman James Skelly, drummer Ian Skelly, guitarist and trumpet player Bill Ryder-Jones, guitarist Lee Southall, bassist and sax player Paul Duffy and percussionist John Duffy - headed back to the studio to work on The Invisible Invasion.
1985
Dire Straits - Brothers in Arms
The English rock quartet's fifth album was one of the first albums to be directed at the CD market, being the first full digital recording released. It became the first album to sell one million copies in the CD format and to outsell its LP version.
Money for Nothing was one of the pioneering songs and music videos of the MTV era. It is the only Dire Straits song on a studio album to not be solely written by Mark Knopfler, who gave Sting a co-writing credit because the vocal hook, "I want my MTV" is the same melody as The Police's Don't Stand So Close To Me. The song was nearly left off the album, only included on producer Neil Dorfsman's insistence.
In 2000 Q magazine placed Brothers in Arms at number 51 in its list of the 100 Greatest British Albums Ever. It remains the fifth best-selling UK albums.
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