View Full Version : Any 80's music fans out there?
MANIXWORLD
06-04-2009, 11:15 PM
Well,specificaly early 80's pop,new wave,electronica...some of those tracks of the good ol'days..for some i guess..Here's mine...Flock Of Seagulls,Depeche Mode,Human League,Gary Numan.
Bluntrauma
06-05-2009, 02:00 AM
Huge 80's fan here.
Eltob John
Depeche Mode
Joe Jackson
Toto
Blondie
Flock of Seagulls
Marvin Gaye
Level 42
Pet Shop Boys
Crowded House (that might have been the 90's)
April Wine
Aerosmith
G~n~R
There are a lot more I like but these are the ones that come to mind.
mikebandw186
06-05-2009, 02:13 AM
Definitely Duran Duran. And a little bit of KISS, but i'm not sure how 80's they were.
Hannibal Lecter
06-05-2009, 06:24 AM
My Dear Friends,
My wife and I joke about our still being children of the 80's. If I started listing everything from the 80's that I listened to (and still do listen to) I would be here all day. :p
--------
Hannibal
Don't forget Adam Ant.
Crowded House hit big in '89 (as I recall) with their first album so they count. Or, just go back to Split Enz.
Sam Vimes
06-05-2009, 08:29 AM
Crowded House hit big in '89 (as I recall) with their first album so they count. Or, just go back to Split Enz.
Yep, first album appeared in 86/87 but they morphed out of the ashes of Split Enz.
WOTANSON1
06-05-2009, 04:02 PM
Ah the 80's, some of my favorite bands released their first and sometimes best records during that decade, It was also the decade I graduated high school and college in.
Carcass
Napalm Death
Bolt Thrower
Sodom
Kreator
Slayer
MDC
Black Flag
Broken Bones
GBH
Doom
Sepultura
Flux of Pink Indians
Rudimentary Peni
Crass
Agnostic Front
And the list goes on, those were the days.
Cheers,
Rob
Water Bug
06-05-2009, 06:56 PM
KISS is good for any of the years they played. :)
Here's some to add...
ZZ Top
Van Halen
Journey
Huey Lewis and the News
Tom Petty
Stevie Nicks
Stevie Ray Vaughn
Melissa Etheridge
Roxette
Man, those were the years of music!
MANIXWORLD
06-06-2009, 01:42 AM
There's just that feelgoodness you get from music from the 80's..vibrant,purpose driven,love concurs all,feeling..
Doc Pyres
06-06-2009, 05:08 AM
Here's some more (although a lot of this stuff spans more than the '80s):
Joy Division, New Order, Skinny Puppy, Dead Kennedys, DOA, Cabaret Voltaire, Anti Nowhere League, The Exploited, Tangerine Dream, The Residents, The Fixx, Style Council, The Replacements, Hoodoo Gurus, Big Country, The Stranglers, etc...:)
Def Leppard
Van Halen
Ozzy Osbourne
Quiet Riot
ELO
ZZ Top
Howard Jones
Steve Winwood
Oh, man, what a walk down memory lane!! Great thread. I graduated high school in '88, finished colleget in '90, and found myself in the middle of the war in the prison in '90.
Simple Man
06-09-2009, 07:23 AM
I have to agree with the Good Doctor, not enough time or space here.
noodlefish
06-09-2009, 09:56 AM
HERE IS SOME GOOD 80s JAMS
Demented are go
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHgFWoufK00&feature=related
The meteors
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5p3MvwYdnLc
The quakes
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6anSsYOirHE
80s was a good decade for music, it was the decade that birthed Psychobilly
clovisc
06-10-2009, 01:09 AM
i'm a big fan of some of the more ridiculous euro 80s stuff... and "italo." check out some ZYX italo compilations, and see 80s synth dance music being 1000x more epic and outlandish than in the US!
also like lots of the factory records and factory benelux stuff... and the C86 genre.
I was a rocker so when I think 80's its
AC/DC
Iron Maiden
Metalica
Y&T
Quiet Riot
Twisted Sister
Van Halen
Sammy Hagar
Ted Nugent
Loverboy
Tom Petty
Joan Jett
Clawhammer
06-11-2009, 03:55 AM
Has anyone mentioned :
Spandau Ballet, Depeche Mode (how did we miss them being gay? :-), ABC, Dire Straits?
Bluntrauma
06-11-2009, 05:54 AM
Has anyone mentioned :
Spandau Ballet, Depeche Mode (how did we miss them being gay? :-), ABC, Dire Straits?
The same way I had seen Queen in concert 4 times by the time I knew Freddie Mercury was gay. *shrug* :eek::D
Bluntrauma
06-11-2009, 05:57 AM
Maybe it's just me but if I am remembering correctly there were a lot of one hit wonders in the 80's.
Whistles "Tainted love by Soft Cell.
supmonkeyface
06-11-2009, 01:13 PM
Nobody liked shredders? Racer X? White Lion? Jason Becker? Oh well. Some others on my list...
Van Halen (favorite ever)
Def Leppard
Loverboy
Satriani
Ozzy (only Randy stuff)
Yngwie Malmsteen's Rising force.
aebfroman
06-11-2009, 02:19 PM
Shame on you all for not listing NIN.
biagrin
06-12-2009, 11:06 AM
Back then I listened to Alan Parsons Project, Rush, The Tubes, Pink Floyd and Hair Metal...but since then I have come to enjoy songs that I wouldn't have been caught dead listening to before. Like a-ha, Kajagoogoo, Men without Hats, Vapors, Madness, and Asia. Actually, I think that MTV showed those videos so much when they started, that the music is permanently ingrained in my brain.:eek:
Agent Starling
06-12-2009, 02:51 PM
musically, not my favourite decade overall, except for G n' R, Motley Crue and a few others...as well as of course those from previous decades that continued to release new releases....McCartney, Lennon, ELO...really didn't enjoy the fake-synth sounds of the then-new digital synthesizers that permeated most pop and goth rock...like the Yamaha DX-7...):D
Agent Starling
MANIXWORLD
06-12-2009, 03:37 PM
musically, not my favourite decade overall, except for G n' R, Motley Crue and a few others...as well as of course those from previous decades that continued to release new releases....McCartney, Lennon, ELO...really didn't enjoy the fake-synth sounds of the then-new digital synthesizers that permeated most pop and goth rock...like the Yamaha DX-7...):D
Agent Starling
Makes me want to dance like Mr.Roboto...lol.
Water Bug
06-12-2009, 08:38 PM
Makes me want to dance like Mr.Roboto...lol.
Ah, yes, Styx... how soon we forget. I also noted Dire Straits mentioned earlier... again, how soon we forget.
I don't recall Heart or Olivia Newton-John being mentioned in the listings above. Both classics!
This was back in the days when MTV was fun to watch and we stayed up late on a Saturday night to see the Solid Gold Dancers. :)
The same way I had seen Queen in concert 4 times by the time I knew Freddie Mercury was gay. *shrug* :eek::D
Don't forget Halford from Judas Priest. Or Pete Townshend's solo work in the '80s.
Did no one mention The Smiths?
Lord vader
06-13-2009, 05:00 PM
Here`s a good place to find songs from the 50s,60s,70s,and 80s.http://www.onehitwondercentral.com/80s.cfm
The Rolling Stones, Michael Jackson,.38 Special, Fleetwood Mac, Molly Hatchet, Devo, Nazareth, Motörhead, Rainbow, Rush, Judas Priest, 'til Tuesday, Quarterflash, Scorpians, Poison, D-A-D, Clapton, Great White, Pablo Cruise...where does it end????
Some standout(?) One hits:
Romeo Void ~ Never Say Never (I Might Like You Better If I Slept With You)
Wall of Voodoo ~ Mexican Radio
The Buggles ~ Video Killed the Radio Star
Planet P ~ Why Me??
The Vapors ~ Turning Japanese
The Firm (with Paul Rogers & Jimmy Page) ~ Radioactive
Nena ~ 99 Luftballoons
Cutting Crew ~ Died In Your Arms
Thomas Dolby ~ She Blinded Me with Science
Again, where does it end?
And a band that has had a great impact on several others (Tool, Nirvana, and Iron Maiden to name a few) that released 3 albums in the 80s without a single hit.....or for that matter have never had a "hit" but produced some incredibly layered and innovative music - King Crimson. Larks Tongues in Aspic and In the Court of the Crimson King are both in Robert Dimery's musical reference book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.
:D
j
I think there's a REASON we forgot the 80's - It was a musical mess IMHO. The big late '60's to '70's bands - Pink Floyd, Led Zep, King Crimson, ELP, etc. were on the their way out - only to be replaced by the likes of Styx, Journey, and Asia, etc. Ouch! If it wasn't for a few innovative groups LIKE Dire Straits, The Residents, NIN, and Van Halen the 80's scene would be totally forgettable. And, I hate to tell java, but King Crimson's finest stuff wasn't 80's - Larks Tongues in Aspic was 1973 and In the Court of the Crimson King was 1969. Robert Fripp was, and is, one of the most incredible musical geniuses - both as a guitarist, and producer, most folks have never heard of. Give him a listen.
gg
PS - At least during the 80's MTV played MUSIC videos....
Ah, yes, Styx... how soon we forget. I also noted Dire Straits mentioned earlier... again, how soon we forget.
MANIXWORLD
06-14-2009, 02:59 AM
I might just add that i am a huge NIN fan..ther/Trent Reznor'is an iconic figure for alot of the Electronic type music of the 80's and after..Pretty Hate Machine...
I think there's a REASON we forgot the 80's - It was a musical mess IMHO. The big late '60's to '70's bands - Pink Floyd, Led Zep, King Crimson, ELP, etc. were on the their way out - only to be replaced by the likes of Styx, Journey, and Asia, etc. Ouch! If it wasn't for a few innovative groups LIKE Dire Straits, The Residents, NIN, and Van Halen the 80's scene would be totally forgettable. And, I hate to tell java, but King Crimson's finest stuff wasn't 80's - Larks Tongues in Aspic was 1973 and In the Court of the Crimson King was 1969. Robert Fripp was, and is, one of the most incredible musical geniuses - both as a guitarist, and producer, most folks have never heard of. Give him a listen.
gg
PS - At least during the 80's MTV played MUSIC videos....
Ah, young Spydie, it is wrong to assume one can know the mind of java. In his post, the most caffeinated one referenced not which recordings the revered Red Rex released in the 1980s. The dark one, having most all of Mr Fripp’s works himself, merely expressed his desire to have our humble audience aurally anointed with his more artistic accomplishments. Discipline (September, 1981) and Three of a Perfect Pair (March, 1984) alone contain at least one-third of the songs you will find on almost any anthology collection or live album released aft 1985.
I’m also glad you brought up ELP as a big 60/70s band since Greg Lake was the bassist and lead vocalist for most of the great tracks off of Court of the Crimson King. He left the band in early 1970 after being approached by Keith Emerson to join what would become Emerson, Lake and Palmer. Emerson, Lake and Palmer, Tarkus, and Brain Salad Surgery were all released in the early to mid 70s. ELP made one more studio album in 1978 and then disbanded. ELP reformed in 1985, as Emerson, Lake and Powell with heavy metal drummer Cozy Powell (Jeff Beck, Rainbow, Michael Schenker group, Whitesnake, Black Sabbath, and Gary Moore) taking Carl Palmer’s place. Palmer rejoined the band in 1992 for two studio releases and tours. By 2001 the band had dissolved once again and rumors of reunion tours persist to this day.
But Pink Floyd on the way out!?! :eek: The Wall was released in December 1979 so it may as well have been an eighties album. It was followed by the film adaptation of The Wall (1982) and The Final Cut in 1983. When Roger Waters left in 1985, David Gilmour took the band in a new direction with A Momentary Lapse of Reason (1987) and the DVD/CD set from that tour - The Delicate Sound of Thunder (1989) Maybe not as productive or to some persons’ taste – but not out. Complaints of not sounding like the “old” Pink Floyd led to 1994’s The Division Bell (which others then complained, "It sounds too much like the “old” Pink Floyd:rolleyes:) and one of my favorite live CD and DVD performances – Pulse - in 1995. I keep hoping for another reunion and album release (and tour!!!!:D)
To say that the 80s was a musical mess might be a wee bit disingenuous, but I believe it’s mostly because we seem to be restricting ourselves to mostly rock here. However, the 80s were a great time for the Blues, New Age, Jazz, Techno, Country and other genres as well.
Vangelis had some of his best works scoring the soundtracks for Chariots of Fire and Blade Runner. Tangerine Dream (also best or most definitive work in the 70s) was busy as all get out scoring movies and kicking out albums (they have somewhere upwards of 100 albums to date) Stevie Ray Vaughan was at his peak releasing Texas Flood, Couldn’t Stand the Weather, Soul to Soul, In Step, and Live Alive! all in the 80s. Jazz had tremendous growth with the likes of Kenny G (first five albums from the 80s), The Rippingtons, Wynton Marsalis, and the Yellowjackets all pretty much debuting in the Eighties. Stalwarts like Bob James, Lee Ritenour, and Dave Gruisin were also producing some of their best works. Relatively young New Age music with its roots tied in with Robert Fripp (once again:cool:), Brian Eno, Edgar Froese (Tangerine Dream) and Mike Oldfield (Tubular Bells) saw the first releases by Andreas Vollenweider, Susan Cianni, and Enya.
Wow! That’s a lot of info…. Time to shut up and move on:o. But not before I mention Billy Joel released 5 studio albums (Glass Houses, Songs in the Attic, Strom Front, An Innocent Man, The Bridge); a compellation (Greatest Hits: Vol 1 and 2) and a live album (Концерт) in the 80s.
java respectfully submit to all Spydie everywhere - "Good innovative music and can be found any time....there exist limitless opportunities in every genre. Where there is an open mind, there will always be a frontier."
:spyder:
:)
j
On a daily basis, I listen to 80's music on my Sirius satellite radio. :cool: Some of the 'so-called music' nowadays just doesn't cut for me.
type00rev
06-15-2009, 01:38 AM
Ah, yes, Styx... how soon we forget. I also noted Dire Straits mentioned earlier... again, how soon we forget.
I don't recall Heart or Olivia Newton-John being mentioned in the listings above. Both classics!
This was back in the days when MTV was fun to watch and we stayed up late on a Saturday night to see the Solid Gold Dancers. :)
Let's not forget the original "Headbangers Ball".
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