Posted February 20, 201213 yr Hey all! This is my debut on this forum. Gezza's glorious Top 200 biggest selling female soloist rundown has inspired me to have crack at doing my own personal rundown of my favourite singles of the 80s! Now, this is a bit of a challenge considering I was born in 1983 but with chart music being the dire state it's been of late (yes I'm getting old), I have thrown myself into this wonderful decade. Often ridiculed for horrendous fashion, dodgy cuisine and some terrible songs (some may show up on this list!) I love the 80s all the more for it! For me, the 80s has the greatest legacy culturally (certainly better than the 90s and 00s). So, stick your chicken kiev in the oven, slip on those clip on ear rings... This is the 80s BABY! Edited February 21, 201213 yr by ScottyEm
February 20, 201213 yr Author 80 Jermaine Stewart/We Don't Have To Take Our Clothes Off... HCP:2/1986 http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/7/70/Take_Our_Clothes_Off.jpg The new breed will recognise this in a recent Cadburys ad (with the dancing clothes). Very 1986, and not just production-wise... By this time, AIDS was rarely removed from Headlines and safe sex, or preferably, no sex was the order of the day (of course, safe sex should always be the way but I digress...). The song was, as it says in the tin, about not having sex on the first date. Unfortunately, the outcome was all too ironic... Jermaine died of AIDS nine years later. What was left behind was undisputed joyous pop that has left its mark in the pop vaults! HWZisnZ-RGE&ob=av2n Edited February 20, 201213 yr by ScottyEm
February 20, 201213 yr Author 79 Fresh 4 Feat Lizz E/Wishing On A Star HCP:10/1989 http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41AjgOa8SML._SL500_AA300_.jpg Hip-Hop/RnB was making some seriously impact on the charts. This time, it's a British take on a all-so-familar 70s classic from Rose Royce (also covered by Paul Weller, but I'd rather not talk about his odious retake). The sleepy breakbeats and swirly noises are trippy and gorgeous. Some 23 years on, it still sounds remarkably fresh and easily FeuebY6Cypg Edited February 20, 201213 yr by ScottyEm
February 20, 201213 yr Author 78 M/A/R/R/S/Pump Up The Volume HCP:1/1987 http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/2/26/MarrsPumpUpTheVolumeAD707.jpg The first of a fair few chart toppers to grace my top 80. House music was born in Chicago (or so history suggests) but by 87, the UK were already putting their stamp on it. This was a project consisting of several British DJs and and several hundred samples, one of which got them in a lot of trouble with Pete Waterman!! 'Jack Your Body' got the first house number one 8 months earlier, but this in my opnion, is far superior! A rightful classic! eGPhUr-T6UM Edited February 20, 201213 yr by ScottyEm
February 20, 201213 yr 78 M/A/R/R/S/Pump Up The Volume HCP:1/1987 http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/2/26/MarrsPumpUpTheVolumeAD707.jpg The first of a fair few chart toppers to grace my top 80. House music was born in Chicago (or so history suggests) but by 87, the UK were already putting their stamp on it. This was a project consisting of several British DJs and and several hundred samples, one of which got them in a lot of trouble with Pete Waterman!! 'Jack Your Body' got the first house number one 8 months earlier, but this in my opnion, is far superior! A rightful classic! No it wasn't, it was a collaboration between 4AD artists Colourbox and A.R.Kane with some additional input from Chris "C.J." Macintosh and Dave Dorrell. It is still one of the most genious #1s ever.
February 20, 201213 yr Author 77 David Bowie/Fashion HCP:5/1980 http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/89/Bowie_Fashion.jpg It truth be told, I'm not a Bowie fan BUT I'm convinced there is at least a Bowie track for everyone. For me, it's "Fashion". Slightly leftfield, but aggressively funky. Lyrically, it's as relevant as ever so certainly no sign of ageing any time soon! GA27aQZCQMk&ob=av2e
February 20, 201213 yr Author No it wasn't, it was a collaboration between 4AD artists Colourbox and A.R.Kane with some additional input from Chris "C.J." Macintosh and Dave Dorrell. It is still one of the most genious #1s ever. Did I say "DJs"?? I meant producers/artists... eeek! (Though I'm sure they were sometime DJs too) Edited February 20, 201213 yr by ScottyEm
February 20, 201213 yr Author 76 Kate Bush/Hounds Of Love HCP:18/1986 http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/e/e3/Hounds_of_Love_(song)_cover.jpg Rather like Bowie, another national treasure but an artist who unfortunately doesn't register 100% on my music radar. But "Hounds Of Love" is certainly one I appreciate enormously, dramatic, uncompromising - rather like Bush herself. m6aRdJn5JsM&feature=fvst
February 20, 201213 yr Author 75 Fine Young Cannibals/I'm Not The Man I Used To Be HCP:20/1989 http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/2/2c/Fine_Young_Cannibals_-_I'm_Not_the_Man_I_Used_to_Be.jpg Fine Young Cannibals? Oh well it has to be 'She Drives Me Crazy', right? Nope! Sadly, this underated little gem rarely gets a look in, due to it's modest chart position and being the 4th single off the album "The Raw and The Cooked". The James Brown breakbeat sample (used many a time since, most recently on Emeli Sande) runs along Rolands melancholic (and rather high) vocals and is more than a nod to the emerging dance/RnB sound that would only grow into the next decade, literally just round the corner... TrBYsPJ0rkA
February 20, 201213 yr Author 74 The Human League/The Sound Of The Crowd HCP:12/1981 http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/a/a1/Sotccover.jpg Possibly the greatest band to come from Sheffield, Oakey and Co were rarely out of the charts during the early part of the 80s. While I like a fair few of theirs (and it looks like I'm getting dragged to see them live this December), it's this that just about makes my personal 80s list. What makes it all the more endearing is Oakeys shouty-like vocals, almost demanding you to PUT IT OUT THERE! And in 1981 and in the grip of Thatcherism, there was no better time.. 9ECu-JzaVLY
February 21, 201213 yr Author 73 Madonna/True Blue HCP:1/1986 http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/1/10/Madonna-True-Blue-5380.jpg I shouldn't like this, but I just do. A lot. Totally shameless ode to cutesy 1950s-style love songs, with a sparkly 1980s makeover. The subject matter is Sean Penn, so it's little wonder why Madge ensured it was ommited from both "The Immaculate Collection" and most recent "Celebration" compilations. bb8akXtOCaI
February 21, 201213 yr Author 72 Duran Duran/The Reflex HCP:1/1984 http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/7/7c/The_Reflex.jpg At 72, it's a case of song-you-love-by-a-band-you-don't. Can't say I care for Duran Duran, however "The Reflex" isn't as conventional as their other singles, presumably down to its "shall we add this bit in and hope for the best" production - and all the better for it! It later gave inspiration to a shitty chain of 80s bars! g1UfE731Od8
February 21, 201213 yr 76 Kate Bush/Hounds Of Love HCP:18/1986 http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/e/e3/Hounds_of_Love_(song)_cover.jpg Rather like Bowie, another national treasure but an artist who unfortunately doesn't register 100% on my music radar. But "Hounds Of Love" is certainly one I appreciate enormously, dramatic, uncompromising - rather like Bush herself. m6aRdJn5JsM&feature=fvst Just a glorious pop song..... exciting, joyous and just...perfect.
February 21, 201213 yr Author 71 Black Box/Ride On Time HCP:1/1989 http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/31mI9wFq+XL._SL500_AA300_.jpg I'll spare you the story behind this and how Black Box had to eventually surrender 90% of the royalties. We know it already. 4lOb799cTxM
February 21, 201213 yr No's 75 & 76 are the only ones on your list thus far that I would contemplate putting into my list. That M/A/R/R/S record never appealed at the time and It hasn't improved with age IMO. I don't positively hate any of them yet so you're doing well!! :D :lol:
February 21, 201213 yr Author No's 75 & 76 are the only ones on your list thus far that I would contemplate putting into my list. That M/A/R/R/S record never appealed at the time and It hasn't improved with age IMO. I don't positively hate any of them yet so you're doing well!! :D :lol: Oh well that's encouraging! :D
February 23, 201213 yr Author Bar True Blue, I reckon you're doing a stellar job so far :cheer: Cheers... let's hope you haven't shot yourself in the foot! Anyway I was at a works conference last night so some catching up to do! Let's continue...
February 23, 201213 yr Author 70 A Guy Called Gerald/Voodoo Ray No:12/1989 http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41QckHSaV2L._SL500_AA300_.jpg Considered a landmark house track for several reasons. One of them due to where it was conceived (in a high rise flat in Manchester by Gerald Simpson, hence...) but also it was the first breakthrough acid house track to be 100% British made (and no it wasn't D-Mob "We Call It Acciiiiieed" which ironically was not acid house at all). "Voodoo Ray" is a track that remains close to the heart of any Manc that was out every Saturday in the late 80s (and in my front room at volume 11!) 5ADoBW0c-18
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