El Floppo
Footballguy
oh great, decades classification expert OTO reporting in.Threads like this drive me crazy because of my own OCDish categorization of 80s musical acts/genres.
oh great, decades classification expert OTO reporting in.Threads like this drive me crazy because of my own OCDish categorization of 80s musical acts/genres.
True, this one is supposed to be "pop".Threads like this drive me crazy because of my own OCDish categorization of 80s musical acts/genres.
oh great, decades classification expert OTO reporting in.
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More like "the guy who spent every freaking penny he had in the 80s on music (and beer)"
Right...True, this one is supposed to be "pop".
I would probably go with Time after Time.totally.
was just in a discussion with the wife about what her quintessential and longest-lasting hit was... we disagreed.
thoughts?
Oh... Good one.I would probably go with Time after Time.
Lol... Yeah true. I guess I feel like if it got played on a radio station with commercials it was a "pop song"Right...
Big Country? Talking Heads? New Order?
One of my eyelids is twitching.
Girls Just Wanna Have Fun and I don't see how it's particularly close.totally.
was just in a discussion with the wife about what her quintessential and longest-lasting hit was... we disagreed.
thoughts?
Agreed. She Bop gets all kinds of points just for what it was about.Girls Just Wanna Have Fun and I don't see how it's particularly close.
I like She Bop.
Big Country was definitely played on the "hits" stations I listened to in the 80s. There was virtually no "alternative" music on the radio back then in most places, except for college radio.Lol... Yeah true. I guess I feel like if it got played on a radio station with commercials it was a "pop song"
HA!Big Country was definitely played on the "hits" stations I listened to in the 80s. There was virtually no "alternative" music on the radio back then in most places, except for college radio.
Talking Heads and New Order I would not call "pop", though they were popular bands.
SF had two commercial alternative stations that played all this bands c. 1985, and at least two fantastic college stations that were playing them earlier in the decade. But yeah... the AM hot hits stations there may or may not have been playing them.Big Country was definitely played on the "hits" stations I listened to in the 80s. There was virtually no "alternative" music on the radio back then in most places, except for college radio.
Talking Heads and New Order I would not call "pop", though they were popular bands.
And the biggest problem is that I don't even know a lot of the time. I'll go back and forth.Lol... Yeah true. I guess I feel like if it got played on a radio station with commercials it was a "pop song"
But great power pop group.I was going to say My Sharona by The Knack, but I guess it was from 1979.
Yup. And I thought of Dream Police from Cheap Trick, but also from 1979.But great power pop group.
Speaking of awesome Chicago power popYup. And I thought of Dream Police from Cheap Trick, but also from 1979.![]()
Great song. I think The Elvis Brothers were around a little later, but from the same area. I can't remember the one song I loved by them.
The Romantics' What I Like About You is another song that brings me immediately back to 1980 and trying to get Heather S. to dance with me at every Jr. High dance. Of course, I flailed.Lots of great songs mentioned but a song that popped in my head is the Romantics - Talking in Your Sleep
Cabin Fever (1978) was their best work. Great songs that most people have never heard.For me, nothing was more (early) 80s than the Michael Stanley band. If you were a high school kid in NE Ohio/NW PA at that time, you probably had one or more of their albums. This was one of their better known songs. They were a regional act, selling out show in the Cleveland area for the most part.
On the other hand, Pittsburgh had Donnie Iris who is still considered an icon all these years later. Ah! Leah was the song that most everyone knows him by.
Didn't get as much play, but I liked Synchronicity I better than II.Ghost Rider said:It is IMPOSSIBLE to pick just one, but a handful that were favorites growing up that I still love to death include...
The Boys of Summer - Don Henley
Synchronicity II - The Police
When Doves Cry - Prince
Come Dancing - The Kinks
Shout - Tears for Fears
Don't Dream It's Over - Crowded House
Gypsy - Fleetwood Mac
Not sure if it was related to growing up near Boston, but always thought of Aimee Mann as a great singer, and I loved the video to this great song.lod001 said:Motels: Only The Lonely and Suddenly Last Summer
Quarterflash: Harden My Heart
Til Tuesday: Voices Carry
Pour Some Sugar On Me.Statorama said:What's the 80s song you hope to never hear again? Gotta be "We built this city", right?
Yep, Part 1 is awesome, too. That whole album is pretty damn great from start to finish.Didn't get as much play, but I liked Synchronicity I better than II.
Would've bet everything I had on you choosing a Huey Lewis or Genesis song. Glad I didn't look for a market on it.Patrick Bateman said:Crowded House-Don't Dream It's Over
YepGirls Just Wanna Have Fun and I don't see how it's particularly close.
I like She Bop.
Mickey by Toni Basil gotta be up thereStatorama said:What's the 80s song you hope to never hear again? Gotta be "We built this city", right?