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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

41. CarleenP -
I think "separate ways" from Journey should be on the list

42. Gordon -
Video Killed The Radio Star - the buggles
Space Age Love Song - flock of seagulls
She Blinded Me With Science - name?

43. OohAah -
I'm amazed by how many horrible songs other people would like to add to your list...are they really thinking "BEST" song of the 80's, or "WORST"???

44. Vegas Kelly -
Definitely Prince Must Be on the List "Purple Rain", Eurythmics Debut Album was the Bomb, Journey, Tina Turner's comeback, there are soooo many tunes that take me back to the 1980's but my favorite, by the Cars, "Let the Good Times Roll!!!" What a great time for music, experimentation, new stuff, I loved every minute of it!!! Vegas Kelly

45. Vegas Kelly -
FYI whoever wrote the intro article, Annie Lenox is not on the come back trail she never left, it is just "not all her music" is commercial, her last album released in 2007 Songs of Mass Destruction, is a musical masterpiece with one particular tune Big Sky, singing of the Big Sky in Africa which has been her quest and mission helping those in Africa for many years, unfortunately her charitable work has taken her away from touring, but if you ever get the chance, do not hesitate to buy tickets, SHE IS ABSOLUTELY AWESOME...I can't wait for her next album!!! Annie Rules...Vegas Kelly

46. Yahoo! Music User -
You Spin Me Round-DOA
Absolute-SP
Be Near Me-ABC
Cities in Dust-SB
Everyday-M
Fine Time-NO
Goodbye Seventies-Y
Passion for the Future-M
Wood Beez-SP

Everything defined the 80's, really. How can there be a wrong answer here? Great Fun!!!

47. Yahoo! Music User -
Michael S. How could u say Michael Jackson owed the 80s? Not 1 guy i new EVER listened to Michael Jackson.

48. Michele -
Don't stop believing or any other Journey sonG

49. Yahoo! Music User -
how about taco-puttin on the ritz
atlantic starr-always
laura branigan-gloria
denise williams-let's hear it for the boy
starship-sara

50. Bruce L -
What? Rick Astley was the 80s! Jefferson Starship was as overdone as Steve Perry and Journey.

51. Bruce L -
No question Maddonna owned the 80s though.

52. Lisa D -
Anything and Everything by Rod Stewart!!!

53. Sekino -
Hungry Like The Wolf or The Reflex- Duran Duran

Eurythmics- Here Comes The Rain Again

Gary Newman- Cars

Take On Me- A-Ha

54. NUGE -
bon jovi livin on a prayer

55. Andrew -
Boston anyone?? More than a feeling, Foreplay/Longtime, Rush, Aerosmith?

56. ADB -
Mike Jackson--'Billie Jean'
Biggest song on the biggest album of all-time...pretty simple math.

57. Torch -
Wild Sex, Grey Matter, Little Girls, and Private life, all by OINGO BOINGO

58. Lauren -
come on! how can you be forgetting motley crue, aerosmith, ac/dc, judas priest, all the great rock and metal! that is definitely the 80s!

59. Julie -
Anything by the Clash. Love is the Law by the Suburbs, Love My Way by the Psychedelic Furs--they are the sound of the best of the 80s

60. Couple in Cookeville -
How about something from Guns and Roses?
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