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What's The Most Totally '80s Song Ever?

Posted Thu Mar 12, 2009 11:07am PDT by Luke Lewis in The NME Blog
Here in London we seem to be living in a time-warp right now. Violence in Northern Ireland. Arthur Scargill bashing Thatcher in The Guardian. Shoulder pads "on trend" (apparently). Tina Turner and Michael Jackson playing arena dates.

Open up a newspaper and you'd be forgiven for thinking you'd been sucked into a wormhole and spat out in 1984. In the indie realm, too, the zeitgeist is looking as luridly 1980s as a stockbroker guzzling Taboo in a Sinclair C5 (insert wildly inaccurate '80s stereotype here).

On the one hand there's La Roux reviving the ice-queen electro-pop of Eurythmics (whose singer Annie Lennox is also on the comeback trail). On the other we've got White Lies and Red Light Company cut-and-pasting the billowing raincoat-rock of Echo & The Bunnymen and Simple Minds.

All of which inspired an office discussion this morning: What is the most quintessentially '80s song ever? This, of course, begs the further question: What do you mean by "'80s"? Synth-pop? Hair metal? Post-punk? New wave? College rock? All these genres "defined" the decade, depending on who you talk to.

It's a huge subject, but here are a few tracks that have been suggested so far. Tell us your own suggestions below.

 

Simple Minds - "Alive And Kicking" (1985)
Not so much for the song--although the expansive synths, blustery dynamics, and Jim Kerr's declamatory holler are all traits that characterised rock music in this decade more than any other--but more the video, which features so many of the tropes we've come to think of as definitively '80s. Namely: arms-wide posturing, lantern-jawed staring into the middle distance, an inexplicable mountaintop setting...

 

Journey - "Don't Stop Believin'" (1981)
Essentially a roll-call of '80s lyrical clichés--the small town girl, the smoky bar, the cheap perfume. From here, the notion of all-American desperadoes livin' on a prayer became a cornerstone of 80s poodle-rock. In all seriousness, though: Steve Perry, what a voice.

 

Donna Summer – "This Time I Know It's For Real" (1989)
Because the '80s was actually mainly about naff, gaudy, commercial pop--we just choose to remember the more epic bits. In reality, British music in the '80s was dominated by Stock Aitken Waterman, whose assembly-line production style is so horribly of-its-time it even renders the voice of Donna Summer, otherwise capable of such brilliance, almost unlistenably cheesy. It's telling that you never hear SAW hits on the radio these days: Nothing in pop history has dated less well.

 

Pet Shop Boys - "It's A Sin" (1987)
Quintessentially '80s in a good way, this one. Yes, it's titanically overblown--all thunder bolts, synthesized choir, and po-faced religious references--but it's also vast and dramatic and ambitious in a way that few artists would attempt in today's cynical, intensely ironized, post-everything climate.

273 Comments

21. Adrienne -
I agree Snowflakes456,Total Eclipse of the Heart, is the songgg

22. secretagent -
well i wasn't born til the mid 80's and the first song i heard on the radio was straight up by paula abdul that was the first song that i heard in the 1980's and i remember hearing it also and i think it was one of paulas biggest hits and to this day i still listen to it and i also love the music video.

23. STAY AWAY FROM ZOOTS THEY R THEIVES -
Dont stop believing (Steve Perry)
Take on me (A-Ha)
Lights (Steve Perry)

But can't forget Innuendo Freddie Mercury

24. Michael S -
Come on!Michael Jackson owned the 80's. Back when he was normal.

25. Eagle -
There is NO BETTER VOICE from the late 70s/90s than Steve Perry. Don't Stop Believin
is Number one for me, but close behind is Bon JJovi's Living on a Prayer and John Cougar Mellencamps Jack and Diane......Go Class of '86!!!!

26. ckandw -
prince, madonna, MJ, run dmc, bonjovi, whitesnake, wham, tainted love,total eclipse, don't put another dime in the jukebox,pat benatar, joan jett, culture club, hall and oates (for all of our moms)barbara was big, cinderella, ac/dc, new edition, billy idol, beastie boys, salt and pepper, ll cool j...wow just so many i can't think anymore

27. jim m -
i agree all good songs but come on the all time best...BLISTER IN THE SUN...come on you know you love it

28. Loyal23 -
Livin on a Prayer by Bon Jovi.

29. David Ballway -
Real Life-Send me an Angel.

30. jim m -
hands down...BLISTER IN THE SUN

31. Lex -
5.don't you want me baby by human league
4.that's all by genesis
3.abracadabra by steve miller band
2.any billy joel song from the 80's
1.every breathe you take by the police

32. SJ D -
all of the above plus Gloria by Laura Brannigan. Also Oh Mickey by Toni Basil and anything by REO Speedwagon. No One Is To Blame by Howard Jones. The Flame by Cheap Trick.

33. Yahoo! Music User -
Pour Some Sugar On Me by Def Leppard!

34. Bob N -
in a world where i was dictator, journey and billy joel would be banned

35. rainbowbrite79 -
OMG i'm so surprised about Journey ! FINALLY! they're so under-rated! they finally made it so a list :) i'm so happy!! but where hte hell is my Bon Jovi?!?!!?

36. Uncle Zippy -
The entire AC/DC "Back In Black" album.

37. __A_YAHOO_USER__ -
Heat Of The Moment

38. lifevibe -
Big Country got overlooked. Musiclly lively. Their album, "Steeltown" was one of best albums of the decade

39. lifevibe -
Big Country "Steeltown". One of the best of the decade.

40. OohAah -
Decent choices, for the most part, but it's a woefully short list.
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