Posted on 04/26/2014 3:28:35 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Ten songs from 1984 that stood the test of time.
Nineteen eighty four wasnt just a landmark year for the film industry. Many classic songs from the 1980s were actually released in 1984. From Wake Me Up Before You Go Go to Whats Love Got To Do With It, some of these songs were the soundtrack of the lives for many who grew up in that era.
Here are 10 songs from 1984 that defined the year and stood the test of time. You can watch all the music videos on our YouTube playlist.
Whats Love Got To Do With It by Tina Turner
Whats Love got to do with it? Everything, it seems, for Tina Turner. After years of abuse (by husband and band member Ike Turner) and down on her lucks, Whats Love Got To Do With It was Turners comeback to the music scene.
At 45 years old, Turner with her spiky wig, short dress and high heels returned to the top. This song also won her three Grammys in 1985 for Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Best Female Pop Vocal Performance. And to think Cliff Richards and Donna Summer who had first dibs turned down this song.
Girls Just Want To Have Fun by Cyndi Lauper
One of the most recognised hits from the shoulder pad era, it is surprising that Girls Just Want To Have Fun never clinched the top spot. The highest position Laupers single went was No. 2 on Billboard Hot 100. However, the song (as well as Laupers penchant for brightly-coloured hair and bizzare outfits) made her a household name.
Girls Just Want To Have Fun has since been covered by a bevy of top female singers of today including Miley Cyrus, Katy Perry and Jessie J.
Hello by Lionel Richie
How does one follow the success of a party tune such as All Night Long? With a slow-burn ballad like Hello, thats how Lionel Richie did it. The single is still being featured in soundtrack of movies as recent as 2010s Shrek Forever After. Goes to show, a good song never goes out of style.
Careless Whisper by George Michael
In hindsight, we should have seen the imminent split of Wham! with the release of Careless Whisper George Michaels debut solo single two years before it happened. It is interesting to note that the other half of Wham!, Andrew Rigeley, actually co-wrote this song with Michael. This No. 1 ballad went on to sell six million copies worldwide.
Against All Odds (Take A Look At Me Now) by Phil Collins
Against All Odds is one of those songs which became bigger than the movie it was featured in. The Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 song won the Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance in 1985 for Phil Collins and was also nominated Best Original Song at the the Oscars. The ballad was revived in 2000 in an unlikely duet between Mariah Carey and Westlife.
I Just Called To Say I Love You by Stevie Wonder
Stevie Wonder Just like Against All Odds, I Just Called To Say I Love You, written specifically for the movie The Woman In Red, became more popular than the film itself. It became the Motown wonders most successful single to date and won him both a Golden Globe and an Academy Award for Best Original Song.
Thriller by Michael Jackson
Michael Jackson Still widely played till today, especially around Halloween, Michael Jacksons Thriller was the seventh single from the album of the same name. MJ was already on the zombie trail before the undead became a pop culture reference thanks to the (expensive) music video directed by John Landis. With spectacular dance moves and spooky makeup, the music video scared the bejeezus out of many young viewers.
Like A Virgin by Madonna
Madonna Like A Virgin is a definitive single for Madonna as it signals her rise as an icon in the music scene; it would be the first of her 12 No. 1 hits (in the US) of her illustrous career. The title of the song, like the singer, was controversial upon release. But that would be exactly how Madonna eventually build her empire based on shock value.
When asked about her thoughts of Like A Virgin when she first heard the song, Madonna said in an earlier interview: How can you be like a virgin? I liked the play on words; I thought they were clever. Theyre so geeky, theyre cool. I never realised (it) would become my signature song.
Karma Chameleon by Culture Club
Culture Club Back when gender bender wasnt exactly a mainstream (yet), Culture Clubs lead singer Boy George took the world by storm with his heavily-made up face and an infectious tune titled Karma Chameleon.
The single hit the top spot in the US in early 1984 and went on to sell five million copies worldwide. It also made red, gold and green the favourite colours for the year.
Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go by Wham!
Wham George Michael (left) and Andrew Ridgeley of Wham!.
I just wanted to make a really energetic pop record that had all the best elements of 1950s and 1960s records, George Michael said of Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go. That explains the reference to Doris Day in the lyrics.
Needless to say, this song which still gets airplay till today became a signature tune for Wham! in their five-year career.
Yet the last 30 years have been a pretty fun ride, too.
I was living in the London YMCA in 1984 and the hallways and elevators had capital radio piped in. It was mostly
Nena - 99 luftballons
Queen - I want to Break Free, Radio GaGa
Madness - Michael Caine
Frankie Goes to Hollywood - Relax
Thompson Twins - You Take Me Up, Doctor Doctor
UB40 - Red Red Wine
Blanc Mange - Don’t Tell Me
Oh wait, someone would have to do a similar list of 85 songs
84 was kind of down year, IMHO
My favorite albums of 1984
Ammonia Avenue-Alan Parsons Project
The Big Express-XTC
Fugazi-Marillion
Joe Bussard (who has 25,000 78s) will tell you that jazz sucked after 1934 and country music after 1950s does...
CLINT HOLMES: PLAYGROUND IN MY MIND (released in 1972, on the charts 23 weeks, #2 in 1973)
And they played this on a syndicated rebroadcast of old Casey Kasem American Top 40 shows recently so it still gets commercial radio rotation.
My fave one by Tina Turner:
Tina Turner - We Don’t Need Another Hero [Official Music Video]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dq4aOaDXIfY&
I got the MP3 for that one. Haunting.
Me too. Class of ‘84 Moore, OK. “Drive” by The Cars will always be one of my favorite songs I remember from 1984.
I like that one, too. :) Very good tune.
MTV killed the rock band. It became all about the vocalist and music died.
We lived in Norman from 1996 to 1999. My brother (Class of 1982) liked The Cars earlier in the 80s. Then he got into Boston, and I can’t stand them to this day. “Oooh, it’s Boston! Mama hates them, change the station!”
Yup, that’s the music that spurred my interest in classic rock... cause when that crap was on the radio I wanted to gouge out my ears.
My ears have always been finely tuned to truly good music.I've found lots and lots of it from the 50's...far more of it from the 60's....an example of it here and there in the 70's....a fair amount of it in the 80's....
To this day, I can still listen to Candy-O from beginning to end. There isn’t a bad song on that album.
Lol...there is SOME excellent music being made today. I find it constantly. And I’m finding some things made today that have shades of 60’s, 70s, and 80s in the songs. The excellence in music of today is very exciting to me.
This one has shades of the 60s in it...very fun song:
Vampire Weekend - Unbelievers
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2_qKmTLbEPc
And another fun one that is very new that has shades of the 60s or 70s in it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nrBrZz7f4nQ
That was the one my brother played over and over.
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