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Reply #30 posted 09/13/16 7:50am

MotownSubdivis
ion

I do recall there being complaints of how music was becoming/ became superficial because of the music video in 1985.

Many of the complaints we have about mainstream music today were addressed at the time. Critics complained about how it was more style over substance and how it seemed anybody with a synthesizer was able to have a hit. Despite how much I enjoy the year, I still can't really disagree with the legitimacy of those complaints.

Fans and critics also seemed to have switched places somewhat today with more criticism coming from music listeners and more blind adoration from critics.
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Reply #31 posted 09/13/16 3:46pm

Adorecream

MotownSubdivision said:

I do recall there being complaints of how music was becoming/ became superficial because of the music video in 1985. Many of the complaints we have about mainstream music today were addressed at the time. Critics complained about how it was more style over substance and how it seemed anybody with a synthesizer was able to have a hit. Despite how much I enjoy the year, I still can't really disagree with the legitimacy of those complaints. Fans and critics also seemed to have switched places somewhat today with more criticism coming from music listeners and more blind adoration from critics.

It was a valid point, most of the music of 1985 was very mechanised with electric guitars, electric drums, synthesisers, synth drums, rolands, moogs and clavinovas. Also it was the peak year of leectro pop which relied on heavily rhythmic synthesised melodies. Today we compain about sampling and autotune, well in 85 this was their equivalent of autotune.

.

Until about 1975 the only electric instruments used in most pop music were guitars and bass, the fake sounds flew in the face of the early/mid 1970s long haired hippy act playing a wooden guitar and some more hippies blowing pipes and playing guitars made out of appalcahian forest wood, and girls playing Mandolins and Jethro Tull with their flutes and medieval hippy imagery

.

Some of the sex soul of the mid 70s became very electronic and the first wave of disco in 1975/76 was very synthesised, as disco caught on, so did electronic music, synths, keys, drums and processed vocals. With its death in 1980, synth pop grew out of its ashes. Anything one could dance too (Blue light discos anyone?)

.

There was almost no acoustic guitars or drums in mid 1980s music - a lot of 1990s and even late 1980s music(Travelling Wilburys) saw a return to more organic instruments and of course acts like Garth Brookswho bought back acoustic music. Nirvana and Eric Clapton did unplugged albums as part of a 1990s fad towards more organic sounding music.

.

Meanwhile artificial sounds ruled pop and funk/soul music from this period onwards. Urban grooves and techno would take off in 1987/88 and drew inspiration from the JVC and Roland organ based groups of the 1984/85 era. It was the year too, that keyboard wizards Pet Shop Boys got their start with Westend girls hitting at the end of 1985.

.

Also not all of 1985's synth pop was great or successful, there are many dreadful songs and acts like Baltimora, that gay sounding dude who sang Imagination and even Dead or Alive was overrated keyboard crap. If anything, many of lesser talented Keyboard/synthesiser groups fell off after 1985/86. Groups like THompson Twins, Culture Club, Wham, Kajagoogoo/Limahl and others lost their edge as the 80s wore on. Some synthesiser based acts, only ever had the one hit and faded into obscurity (Can anyone name a second hit song by Kajagoogoo, Dead or Alive, Mathew Wilder, Belouis sans, Baltimora, Freur).

.

Synthesised pop evolved into house and pop rap, songs like 1989's Technotronic's Pump up the Jam and Ride on Time by Black box were the next stage of Synthesised Pop, and then in the 1990s rubbish like Ace of Base andVengaboys came along. It should be noted too that most heavily synthed out music was European in nature as it was German and Italian men who started the first wave of Eurodisco with acts like Donna Summer and Boney M, and then we had post disco with acts like Kano, late 80s house with Black box and then the Nordic groups like Ace of Base, Aha, Aqua and Vengaboys after 1985 to 2000.

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Reply #32 posted 09/14/16 12:53am

SoulAlive

1983 is when the 80s really became the 80s,if you know what I mean smile

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Reply #33 posted 09/14/16 1:38am

Adorecream

SoulAlive said:

1983 is when the 80s really became the 80s,if you know what I mean smile

Yes totally, 1980 and 1981 still have a seventies feel. Especially when many acts still had flares, permed hair, hippy hair and wide lapelled shirts well into the 80s.

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Reply #34 posted 09/14/16 9:33am

scratchtasia

Adorecream said:

Some synthesiser based acts, only ever had the one hit and faded into obscurity (Can anyone name a second hit song by Kajagoogoo, Dead or Alive, Mathew Wilder, Belouis sans, Baltimora, Freur).

Sure, Dead or Alive got to #15 in the US with "Brand New Lover" two years after "You Spin Me Round." I loved both of those songs but did not like any other acts produced by Stock-Aitken-Waterman that I recall. (Dead or Alive also had a handful of big club hits that didn't make it so high on the pop chart.)

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Reply #35 posted 09/14/16 10:37am

namepeace

SoulAlive said:

1983 is when the 80s really became the 80s,if you know what I mean smile


Fair point, the 70's sound on all the charts bled over into the early 80's. Many of the chart-toppers in '82 were holdover acts from the 70s. But 1982 saw 1999 andThriller, drop, along with a bunch of 80's classics, like "I Ran," "Tainted Love," "Don't You Want Me," "Only The Lonely," "Sexual Healing."

That's the reason I;'d argue for '82-'84 being the best stretch of the decade. Overall, IMHO 1982 is a stronger year than 1985.

Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #36 posted 09/15/16 12:42pm

vainandy

avatar

The entire 1980s on the pop/rock side were pretty good. However, on the R&B side, the early 1980s up until 1984 were the absolute best. Damn near everything was good during those early years. 1985 was the beginning of the downfall though. A certain little Miss Goodie Two Shoes made it big doing dull adult contemporary mess, which influenced countless others (some of them even more boring than her) and less and less funk was being made and slow jams stopped having a sexy after midnight "bring a stranger home at 3 a.m." feel and started having a family friendly adult contemporary type feel.

.

.

.

[Edited 9/15/16 12:43pm]

Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #37 posted 09/16/16 6:50am

MotownSubdivis
ion

namepeace said:



SoulAlive said:


1983 is when the 80s really became the 80s,if you know what I mean smile




Fair point, the 70's sound on all the charts bled over into the early 80's. Many of the chart-toppers in '82 were holdover acts from the 70s. But 1982 saw 1999 andThriller, drop, along with a bunch of 80's classics, like "I Ran," "Tainted Love," "Don't You Want Me," "Only The Lonely," "Sexual Healing."

That's the reason I;'d argue for '82-'84 being the best stretch of the decade. Overall, IMHO 1982 is a stronger year than 1985.

1981 planted the seeds for what was yet to come later in the decade. '82 is where the flowers continued growing before blooming in 1983 and doing so en masse and sprouting fruit in 1984.

Like vainandy said, the early 80's were great years, particularly on the black side which was experimental and progressive. However, nothing was really lighting the world on fire those years, sure soft rock was big but nothing extraordinary. Record sales were down and labels were making major cuts to stay afloat. The early 80's were years of transition for music; from 1980-82, the industry didn't really know its identity or what it wanted to be other than financially healthy although the ground was being laid for the explosive years the 80's are remembered for.
[Edited 9/16/16 6:51am]
[Edited 9/16/16 8:55am]
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Reply #38 posted 09/16/16 8:04am

rainbowchild

avatar

Graduated from high school in 1985-- how time flies! And yes, indeed, like they say, the music during your high school years-- Depeche Mode, The Cure, Tears For Fears, Pet Shop Boys, U2, MJ, Madonna, Wham!, among others and most of all, Prince-- defined my high school years! I'm just glad to be alive back then! cool
"Just like the sun, the Rainbow Children rise."



"We had fun, didn't we?"
-Prince (1958-2016) 4ever in my life
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Reply #39 posted 09/16/16 9:05am

MotownSubdivis
ion

Adorecream said:



SoulAlive said:


1983 is when the 80s really became the 80s,if you know what I mean smile



Yes totally, 1980 and 1981 still have a seventies feel. Especially when many acts still had flares, permed hair, hippy hair and wide lapelled shirts well into the 80s.

Usually the first few years of a decade sound the same as what was heard in the preceding decade. I think that while 1983 was when the 80's became the 80's, 1980 and 1981 felt different enough from the 1970s even if they still had that 70s feel. I wasn't alive back then but listening to the average song from 1979 then listening to the average song from 1980 feels like stepping into a different dimension. Synths were a radical change from the grittier, organic sound of the 70s and music up to that point, making the shift from decade to decade not as gradual as usual.
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Reply #40 posted 09/16/16 2:25pm

funkaholic1972

avatar

1980-1985 was an awesome stretch of time for music in my opinion. You could synths and drum machines sneak in further and further over the years and I have to say I LOVE IT!! I was mainly into disco, funk and boogie music but loved the whole new wave thing as well.

1985 is my personal favorite year. The computerized gloss (drummachines, synthesizers, sequencers, vocoders, reverb/delay) was turned up to the max, but the funk was still there.

Things turned sour soon after though. As soon as in 1986 I was getting worried about where music was heading. Digital synths and samplers started creeping in and the sound of the production became less warm to my ears. And much worse even, funk levels were dropping quickly and made way for very safe and bland MOR music.

I spent most of the rest of the 80's delving into 60's and 70's music (classic rock and funk/R&B) as I couldn't really get into the new music that was played on the radio anymore.

[Edited 9/16/16 14:26pm]

RIP Prince: thank U 4 a funky Time...
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Reply #41 posted 09/16/16 2:33pm

SoulAlive

funkaholic1972 said:

1980-1985 was an awesome stretch of time for music in my opinion. You could synths and drum machines sneak in further and further over the years and I have to say I LOVE IT!! I was mainly into disco, funk and boogie music but loved the whole new wave thing as well.

1985 is my personal favorite year. The computerized gloss (drummachines, synthesizers, sequencers, vocoders, reverb/delay) was turned up to the max, but the funk was still there.

Things turned sour soon after though. As soon as in 1986 I was getting worried about where music was heading. Digital synths and samplers started creeping in and the sound of the production became less warm to my ears. And much worse even, funk levels were dropping quickly and made way for very safe and bland MOR music.

I spent most of the rest of the 80's delving into 60's and 70's music (classic rock and funk/R&B) as I couldn't really get into the new music that was played on the radio anymore.

I feel the same way! In the late 80s,I noticed that alot of music was beginning to sound too "cold and mechanical".Synths and drum machines had taken over.On the R&B side,new jack swing was becoming popular and all of a sudden,funk bands were becoming obsolete.I really love the first half of the 80s but after 1986,I began re-discovering the 70s music that I grew up.

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Reply #42 posted 09/16/16 2:41pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

funkaholic1972 said:

1980-1985 was an awesome stretch of time for music in my opinion. You could synths and drum machines sneak in further and further over the years and I have to say I LOVE IT!! I was mainly into disco, funk and boogie music but loved the whole new wave thing as well.

1985 is my personal favorite year. The computerized gloss (drummachines, synthesizers, sequencers, vocoders, reverb/delay) was turned up to the max, but the funk was still there.

Things turned sour soon after though. As soon as in 1986 I was getting worried about where music was heading. Digital synths and samplers started creeping in and the sound of the production became less warm to my ears. And much worse even, funk levels were dropping quickly and made way for very safe and bland MOR music.

I spent most of the rest of the 80's delving into 60's and 70's music (classic rock and funk/R&B) as I couldn't really get into the new music that was played on the radio anymore.

[Edited 9/16/16 14:26pm]

If you want to extend the streak back to 1980 then I'm willing to compromise.

1986, almost like 1980-82 feels like a year of transition. In 1986, the need to cross over for non-pop and adult contemporary black artists had once again become redundant just as it did about 20 years prior in the late 60s up until the very late 70s/ early 80s.

Here's an article on 1986 that makes some other fair points and addresses other things about the year:
http://eightiesclub.tripo.../id217.htm
[Edited 9/16/16 14:42pm]
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Reply #43 posted 09/16/16 4:15pm

Adorecream

To me that year was 1987 with the rise of house music, which in my opinion is rubbish. Songs like Pump up the Volume by MARRS and anything by S Express. Of course I lived in NZ, which is 1987 was stuck in 1952, so this music may have been 1986 for all I know in the modern world.

All this synthesised digital shit with KORGS and MOOGs that had sampled in lines. There was one precursor in 1985 with the song 19 by Paul Hardcastle, just a series of samples and keyboard sounds. The song was a monster hit in the British world and I can not understand why.

.

1989/90 was worse with arrival of so called ecstacy typemusic acts like the Stone Roses, Happy Mondays and other drugged out looking people with sloppy sweatshirts and long hippy hair. Then you had true crap like Guru Josh and Jesus Jones into 1991 - yuk. Even worse was that the era of plaid green shirts, ripped jeans and poor dental health was ushered in with grunge, the worst musical trend of all time with exception of shit hop and heavy/death metal.

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Reply #44 posted 09/16/16 4:27pm

Adorecream

MotownSubdivision said:

funkaholic1972 said:

1980-1985 was an awesome stretch of time for music in my opinion. You could synths and drum machines sneak in further and further over the years and I have to say I LOVE IT!! I was mainly into disco, funk and boogie music but loved the whole new wave thing as well.

1985 is my personal favorite year. The computerized gloss (drummachines, synthesizers, sequencers, vocoders, reverb/delay) was turned up to the max, but the funk was still there.

Things turned sour soon after though. As soon as in 1986 I was getting worried about where music was heading. Digital synths and samplers started creeping in and the sound of the production became less warm to my ears. And much worse even, funk levels were dropping quickly and made way for very safe and bland MOR music.

I spent most of the rest of the 80's delving into 60's and 70's music (classic rock and funk/R&B) as I couldn't really get into the new music that was played on the radio anymore.

[Edited 9/16/16 14:26pm]

If you want to extend the streak back to 1980 then I'm willing to compromise. 1986, almost like 1980-82 feels like a year of transition. In 1986, the need to cross over for non-pop and adult contemporary black artists had once again become redundant just as it did about 20 years prior in the late 60s up until the very late 70s/ early 80s. Here's an article on 1986 that makes some other fair points and addresses other things about the year: http://eightiesclub.tripo.../id217.htm [Edited 9/16/16 14:42pm]

And no mention of Parade or anything Prince did, except for Kiss being a #1 hit. Parade is near perfect album and we all know it.

Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name
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Reply #45 posted 09/16/16 5:28pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

Adorecream said:



MotownSubdivision said:


funkaholic1972 said:

1980-1985 was an awesome stretch of time for music in my opinion. You could synths and drum machines sneak in further and further over the years and I have to say I LOVE IT!! I was mainly into disco, funk and boogie music but loved the whole new wave thing as well.

1985 is my personal favorite year. The computerized gloss (drummachines, synthesizers, sequencers, vocoders, reverb/delay) was turned up to the max, but the funk was still there.

Things turned sour soon after though. As soon as in 1986 I was getting worried about where music was heading. Digital synths and samplers started creeping in and the sound of the production became less warm to my ears. And much worse even, funk levels were dropping quickly and made way for very safe and bland MOR music.

I spent most of the rest of the 80's delving into 60's and 70's music (classic rock and funk/R&B) as I couldn't really get into the new music that was played on the radio anymore.


[Edited 9/16/16 14:26pm]



If you want to extend the streak back to 1980 then I'm willing to compromise. 1986, almost like 1980-82 feels like a year of transition. In 1986, the need to cross over for non-pop and adult contemporary black artists had once again become redundant just as it did about 20 years prior in the late 60s up until the very late 70s/ early 80s. Here's an article on 1986 that makes some other fair points and addresses other things about the year: http://eightiesclub.tripo.../id217.htm [Edited 9/16/16 14:42pm]

And no mention of Parade or anything Prince did, except for Kiss being a #1 hit. Parade is near perfect album and we all know it.

Beats me in all honesty.

That aside, 1986 wasn't bad at all. I view the year as a cool down after the preceding 3 years of white hot activity in preparation for a hype year in 1987. 1988 and especially 1989 were less than impressive outside of a few examples but those were enough good to take away from the 2 most underwhelming years of the 80s.
[Edited 9/16/16 18:01pm]
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Reply #46 posted 09/17/16 9:12am

MotownSubdivis
ion

Furthermore, many artists at or over the age of 35 including many in their 40's tipped the charts in 1986.

Here's an excerpt from the December 27 edition of Billboard (I don't know how to post screenshots so I'm just going to type):

It was also a good year for older artists. Nearly half of the 30 singles to top the Hot 100 through mid-December were by artists over 35. And five of the year's No. 1 hits were by artists over 40. Starship's Grace Slick is 47, Dionne Warwick is 46, and Peter Cetera and Patti Labelle are both 42. Also pushing 40 are Boston's Tom Schotz, 39, and Robert Palmer and Steve Winwood, both 37.

There was no single dramatic comeback in 1986 to compare with Tina Turner's 1984 resurgence, but rather good showings by a wide range of acts, from Starship and Heart to Paul Simon and Moody Blues. In the most surprising comeback, the Monkees placed seven albums on the chart simultaneously in November."


So 1986 not only saw black artists not having to resort to pop or AC sounding music to reach a wider audience (thanks to Janet Jackson, Anita Baker and others) but "over the hill" 35+ year old artists like the aforementioned were scoring chart topping hits and enjoying great mainstream success en masse. Yeah, 1986 if anything is an underrated year. It obviously isn't perfect and has its cons (like any other year) but it was an important year for broadening the scope of who and what was allowed to be popular in a big way, a standard which held up for the next 20+ years. Also, the groundwork was laid late in the year for rock music (particularly metal) to be more successful in the years to come with Bon Jovi rising to the occasion the following year and busting down the doors for many a rock band to have bigger mainstream success.

We could desperately use a 1986 these days.
[Edited 9/17/16 10:00am]
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Reply #47 posted 09/17/16 11:48am

MichaelJackson
5

MotownSubdivision said:

Furthermore, many artists at or over the age of 35 including many in their 40's tipped the charts in 1986. Here's an excerpt from the December 27 edition of Billboard (I don't know how to post screenshots so I'm just going to type): It was also a good year for older artists. Nearly half of the 30 singles to top the Hot 100 through mid-December were by artists over 35. And five of the year's No. 1 hits were by artists over 40. Starship's Grace Slick is 47, Dionne Warwick is 46, and Peter Cetera and Patti Labelle are both 42. Also pushing 40 are Boston's Tom Schotz, 39, and Robert Palmer and Steve Winwood, both 37. There was no single dramatic comeback in 1986 to compare with Tina Turner's 1984 resurgence, but rather good showings by a wide range of acts, from Starship and Heart to Paul Simon and Moody Blues. In the most surprising comeback, the Monkees placed seven albums on the chart simultaneously in November." So 1986 not only saw black artists not having to resort to pop or AC sounding music to reach a wider audience (thanks to Janet Jackson, Anita Baker and others) but "over the hill" 35+ year old artists like the aforementioned were scoring chart topping hits and enjoying great mainstream success en masse. Yeah, 1986 if anything is an underrated year. It obviously isn't perfect and has its cons (like any other year) but it was an important year for broadening the scope of who and what was allowed to be popular in a big way, a standard which held up for the next 20+ years. Also, the groundwork was laid late in the year for rock music (particularly metal) to be more successful in the years to come with Bon Jovi rising to the occasion the following year and busting down the doors for many a rock band to have bigger mainstream success. We could desperately use a 1986 these days. [Edited 9/17/16 10:00am]

The groundwork for rock bands was already set by Van Halen in 1984.

Boston was considered a huge comeback as nobody expected a 70s era song like Amanda to be as huge as it was in 1986. That Third Stage album from Boston sold 3 million units within a month. It took the industry by surprise.

And you had other 70s bands like Kansas trying to cash in on the craze with their album, Power along with the 1987 resurgence of Eric Carmen's Hungry Eyes which was his first hit in 11 years.

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Reply #48 posted 09/17/16 6:05pm

Adorecream

MotownSubdivision said:

Furthermore, many artists at or over the age of 35 including many in their 40's tipped the charts in 1986. Here's an excerpt from the December 27 edition of Billboard (I don't know how to post screenshots so I'm just going to type): It was also a good year for older artists. Nearly half of the 30 singles to top the Hot 100 through mid-December were by artists over 35. And five of the year's No. 1 hits were by artists over 40. Starship's Grace Slick is 47, Dionne Warwick is 46, and Peter Cetera and Patti Labelle are both 42. Also pushing 40 are Boston's Tom Schotz, 39, and Robert Palmer and Steve Winwood, both 37. There was no single dramatic comeback in 1986 to compare with Tina Turner's 1984 resurgence, but rather good showings by a wide range of acts, from Starship and Heart to Paul Simon and Moody Blues. In the most surprising comeback, the Monkees placed seven albums on the chart simultaneously in November." So 1986 not only saw black artists not having to resort to pop or AC sounding music to reach a wider audience (thanks to Janet Jackson, Anita Baker and others) but "over the hill" 35+ year old artists like the aforementioned were scoring chart topping hits and enjoying great mainstream success en masse. Yeah, 1986 if anything is an underrated year. It obviously isn't perfect and has its cons (like any other year) but it was an important year for broadening the scope of who and what was allowed to be popular in a big way, a standard which held up for the next 20+ years. Also, the groundwork was laid late in the year for rock music (particularly metal) to be more successful in the years to come with Bon Jovi rising to the occasion the following year and busting down the doors for many a rock band to have bigger mainstream success. We could desperately use a 1986 these days. [Edited 9/17/16 10:00am]

Yet Tina Turner released her second album of her comeback in late 1986 - Break every rule and I am sure Typical Male was a hit at the end of the year. Turner was 47. The oldest artist though may have been Bill Wyman who had reached 50 that year. Wyman was inthe Stones who hit with the Harlem Shuffle in mid 1986 (Not to be confused with the viral dance craze of a few years ago).

Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name
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Reply #49 posted 09/17/16 7:40pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

MichaelJackson5 said:



MotownSubdivision said:


Furthermore, many artists at or over the age of 35 including many in their 40's tipped the charts in 1986. Here's an excerpt from the December 27 edition of Billboard (I don't know how to post screenshots so I'm just going to type): It was also a good year for older artists. Nearly half of the 30 singles to top the Hot 100 through mid-December were by artists over 35. And five of the year's No. 1 hits were by artists over 40. Starship's Grace Slick is 47, Dionne Warwick is 46, and Peter Cetera and Patti Labelle are both 42. Also pushing 40 are Boston's Tom Schotz, 39, and Robert Palmer and Steve Winwood, both 37. There was no single dramatic comeback in 1986 to compare with Tina Turner's 1984 resurgence, but rather good showings by a wide range of acts, from Starship and Heart to Paul Simon and Moody Blues. In the most surprising comeback, the Monkees placed seven albums on the chart simultaneously in November." So 1986 not only saw black artists not having to resort to pop or AC sounding music to reach a wider audience (thanks to Janet Jackson, Anita Baker and others) but "over the hill" 35+ year old artists like the aforementioned were scoring chart topping hits and enjoying great mainstream success en masse. Yeah, 1986 if anything is an underrated year. It obviously isn't perfect and has its cons (like any other year) but it was an important year for broadening the scope of who and what was allowed to be popular in a big way, a standard which held up for the next 20+ years. Also, the groundwork was laid late in the year for rock music (particularly metal) to be more successful in the years to come with Bon Jovi rising to the occasion the following year and busting down the doors for many a rock band to have bigger mainstream success. We could desperately use a 1986 these days. [Edited 9/17/16 10:00am]


The groundwork for rock bands was already set by Van Halen in 1984.



Boston was considered a huge comeback as nobody expected a 70s era song like Amanda to be as huge as it was in 1986. That Third Stage album from Boston sold 3 million units within a month. It took the industry by surprise.



And you had other 70s bands like Kansas trying to cash in on the craze with their album, Power along with the 1987 resurgence of Eric Carmen's Hungry Eyes which was his first hit in 11 years.

Van Halen laid the groundwork for the use of synthesizers in rock. Most rock music that made the Top 40 was pop or AC oriented up until 1987 with the advent of Guns N Roses and the great success of Bon Jovi, who opened the doors for metal to enter the mainstream.
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Reply #50 posted 09/17/16 7:47pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

Adorecream said:



MotownSubdivision said:


Furthermore, many artists at or over the age of 35 including many in their 40's tipped the charts in 1986. Here's an excerpt from the December 27 edition of Billboard (I don't know how to post screenshots so I'm just going to type): It was also a good year for older artists. Nearly half of the 30 singles to top the Hot 100 through mid-December were by artists over 35. And five of the year's No. 1 hits were by artists over 40. Starship's Grace Slick is 47, Dionne Warwick is 46, and Peter Cetera and Patti Labelle are both 42. Also pushing 40 are Boston's Tom Schotz, 39, and Robert Palmer and Steve Winwood, both 37. There was no single dramatic comeback in 1986 to compare with Tina Turner's 1984 resurgence, but rather good showings by a wide range of acts, from Starship and Heart to Paul Simon and Moody Blues. In the most surprising comeback, the Monkees placed seven albums on the chart simultaneously in November." So 1986 not only saw black artists not having to resort to pop or AC sounding music to reach a wider audience (thanks to Janet Jackson, Anita Baker and others) but "over the hill" 35+ year old artists like the aforementioned were scoring chart topping hits and enjoying great mainstream success en masse. Yeah, 1986 if anything is an underrated year. It obviously isn't perfect and has its cons (like any other year) but it was an important year for broadening the scope of who and what was allowed to be popular in a big way, a standard which held up for the next 20+ years. Also, the groundwork was laid late in the year for rock music (particularly metal) to be more successful in the years to come with Bon Jovi rising to the occasion the following year and busting down the doors for many a rock band to have bigger mainstream success. We could desperately use a 1986 these days. [Edited 9/17/16 10:00am]

Yet Tina Turner released her second album of her comeback in late 1986 - Break every rule and I am sure Typical Male was a hit at the end of the year. Turner was 47. The oldest artist though may have been Bill Wyman who had reached 50 that year. Wyman was inthe Stones who hit with the Harlem Shuffle in mid 1986 (Not to be confused with the viral dance craze of a few years ago).

Yes but it doesn't touch the comeback success of Private Dancer 2 years prior. Tina was just one example of 35+ year old artists having Top 40 success in 1986.
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Reply #51 posted 09/17/16 9:19pm

MichaelJackson
5

MotownSubdivision said:

MichaelJackson5 said:



MotownSubdivision said:


Furthermore, many artists at or over the age of 35 including many in their 40's tipped the charts in 1986. Here's an excerpt from the December 27 edition of Billboard (I don't know how to post screenshots so I'm just going to type): It was also a good year for older artists. Nearly half of the 30 singles to top the Hot 100 through mid-December were by artists over 35. And five of the year's No. 1 hits were by artists over 40. Starship's Grace Slick is 47, Dionne Warwick is 46, and Peter Cetera and Patti Labelle are both 42. Also pushing 40 are Boston's Tom Schotz, 39, and Robert Palmer and Steve Winwood, both 37. There was no single dramatic comeback in 1986 to compare with Tina Turner's 1984 resurgence, but rather good showings by a wide range of acts, from Starship and Heart to Paul Simon and Moody Blues. In the most surprising comeback, the Monkees placed seven albums on the chart simultaneously in November." So 1986 not only saw black artists not having to resort to pop or AC sounding music to reach a wider audience (thanks to Janet Jackson, Anita Baker and others) but "over the hill" 35+ year old artists like the aforementioned were scoring chart topping hits and enjoying great mainstream success en masse. Yeah, 1986 if anything is an underrated year. It obviously isn't perfect and has its cons (like any other year) but it was an important year for broadening the scope of who and what was allowed to be popular in a big way, a standard which held up for the next 20+ years. Also, the groundwork was laid late in the year for rock music (particularly metal) to be more successful in the years to come with Bon Jovi rising to the occasion the following year and busting down the doors for many a rock band to have bigger mainstream success. We could desperately use a 1986 these days. [Edited 9/17/16 10:00am]


The groundwork for rock bands was already set by Van Halen in 1984.



Boston was considered a huge comeback as nobody expected a 70s era song like Amanda to be as huge as it was in 1986. That Third Stage album from Boston sold 3 million units within a month. It took the industry by surprise.



And you had other 70s bands like Kansas trying to cash in on the craze with their album, Power along with the 1987 resurgence of Eric Carmen's Hungry Eyes which was his first hit in 11 years.

Van Halen laid the groundwork for the use of synthesizers in rock. Most rock music that made the Top 40 was pop or AC oriented up until 1987 with the advent of Guns N Roses and the great success of Bon Jovi, who opened the doors for metal to enter the mainstream.



You Give Love A Bad Name & Living On A Prayer still sound like pop to me.


Sweet Child O Mine by Guns N Roses was much more of a gamechanger for hard rock in my opinion. That song was like nothing I ever heard prior.
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Reply #52 posted 09/17/16 9:38pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

MichaelJackson5 said:

MotownSubdivision said:

Van Halen laid the groundwork for the use of synthesizers in rock. Most rock music that made the Top 40 was pop or AC oriented up until 1987 with the advent of Guns N Roses and the great success of Bon Jovi, who opened the doors for metal to enter the mainstream.



You Give Love A Bad Name & Living On A Prayer still sound like pop to me.


Sweet Child O Mine by Guns N Roses was much more of a gamechanger for hard rock in my opinion. That song was like nothing I ever heard prior.
It was pop metal but that's usually how the door is opened for the genre proper to garner mainstream success.

Thriller was a funk and R&B album with some pop mixed in, the success of which broke down barriers for other black artists to be successful again on a grand scale. However, it wasn't until 1986 when Janet with Control and Anita Baker with Rapture built upon that and broke down the walls further, allowing pure R&B, new jack swing and later, hip hop to the upper echelons of the Top 40. This lasted from '86 throughout the 90s and up to the end of the 2000s where shortly after, Top 40 has basically been reduced back to being almost entirely pop.
[Edited 9/19/16 16:02pm]
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Reply #53 posted 09/19/16 9:50am

namepeace

MotownSubdivision said:

namepeace said:


Fair point, the 70's sound on all the charts bled over into the early 80's. Many of the chart-toppers in '82 were holdover acts from the 70s. But 1982 saw 1999 andThriller, drop, along with a bunch of 80's classics, like "I Ran," "Tainted Love," "Don't You Want Me," "Only The Lonely," "Sexual Healing."

That's the reason I;'d argue for '82-'84 being the best stretch of the decade. Overall, IMHO 1982 is a stronger year than 1985.

1981 planted the seeds for what was yet to come later in the decade. '82 is where the flowers continued growing before blooming in 1983 and doing so en masse and sprouting fruit in 1984. Like vainandy said, the early 80's were great years, particularly on the black side which was experimental and progressive. However, nothing was really lighting the world on fire those years, sure soft rock was big but nothing extraordinary. Record sales were down and labels were making major cuts to stay afloat. The early 80's were years of transition for music; from 1980-82, the industry didn't really know its identity or what it wanted to be other than financially healthy although the ground was being laid for the explosive years the 80's are remembered for. [Edited 9/16/16 6:51am] [Edited 9/16/16 8:55am]


I understand; I think we're having a chicken-egg dialogue: what makes a year better -- the year the music was released, or, the year(s) the music hit big? There are valid reasons for either side; I take the former.

You make good points about the early 80's,yet and still, you had the two titans of the decade, Prince and Michael Jackson, releasing 2 of the top 10 albums of the entire decade (if not rock music all-time) in the same year. I can't think of any albums released in 1985 that match 1999 or Thriller, and I think there is a critical mass of singles from '82 that belong in the 80's canon of pop classics. Taken as a whole, 1982 is my year in the trio, as opposed to 1985.

Fun dialogue!

Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #54 posted 09/19/16 11:08am

MotownSubdivis
ion

If I were to rank the 80's year by year it would be something like this and even so I'm not completely sure about the placement of 4-8:

1. 1984 (Spectacular year for music. Pop music had never been so diverse and colorful before and it's fun just looking at how much variety this year possessed. This year possessed just about everything that made the 80's such an overall awesome decade for music)
2. 1983 (The year that the 80's became the 80's and the gray Kansas years lit up and bloomed into full Oz-like color. MTV became more integrated and new wave was killing it with this year being its peak IMO)
3. 1985 (A step down from the sheer everything of 1984 but still an eventful year with just about everything that made the previous year awesome albeit on a smaller scale)
4. 1987 (Very good year which possessed variety, star power from various sources and more importantly, strong quality music from many genres)
5. 1982 (The peak of early 80's R&B which is a somewhat unsung era for the genre but nevertheless a vibrant one during an otherwise confused and somewhat dull musical scene at the time. The last of the seeds were planted for the impending boom however...)
6. 1986 (Not a bad year at all. Underwhelming compared to the '83-'85 hot streak but still a solid at worst and pivotal year in music where genres outside of pop were beginning to succeed on a pop level)
7. 1981 (The year of MTV's arrival is important for that reason alone but while the most popular music was milquetoast overall, lower tier mainstream and underground artists were booming and setting the stage for what was to come in earnest. Black music was almost consistently knocking it out of the park and the Second British Invasion began with new wave making it big in America)
8. 1980 (A fine year largely due to the experimentation within black music and the underground scene with post-disco was going strong as well. New wave had yet to make a (major) appearance so outside of the above, 1980 saw mostly soft rock and AC dominate with record sales steadily declining)
9. 1988 (The holdovers of 1987, the popularity of new jack swing and R&B as well the rise of hip hop (one of the genre's best years) is what makes this a solid if overall unimpressive years of the 1980s. I feel like I'm underrating it myself but 1988 never stood out to me like earlier years have)
10. 1989 (Just a plain, simple year compared to the rest of the decade with few really bright spots)
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Reply #55 posted 09/19/16 11:47am

Comser

^ 1984 did have just about all the big names who formed the 80's

(with at least 1 hit) and quite a few big names leftover from the 70s,

along with many memorable one hit wonders....

Michael Jackson, Prince, Madonna, Huey Lewis, Phil Collins, Lionel Richie, John Cougar,

George Michael (Wham!), Bruce Springsteen, Whitney Houston, Hall & Oates, Stevie Wonder,

Elton John, Billy Joel, Sheena Easton, Pointer Sisters, Kool & The Gang, Chicago, Rod Stewart,

Cyndi Lauper, Olivia Newton-John, Diana Ross, Billy Ocean, Kenny Loggins, Donna Summer,

Rick Springfield, Culture Club.....

and there was no shortage of a Jackson: The Jacksons, Michael, Jermaine, Janet, Latoya & Rebbie all made an appearance on some kind of music chart in 1984!

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Reply #56 posted 09/19/16 3:58pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

Comser said:

^ 1984 did have just about all the big names who formed the 80's


(with at least 1 hit) and quite a few big names leftover from the 70s,


along with many memorable one hit wonders....



Michael Jackson, Prince, Madonna, Huey Lewis, Phil Collins, Lionel Richie, John Cougar,


George Michael (Wham!), Bruce Springsteen, Whitney Houston, Hall & Oates, Stevie Wonder,


Elton John, Billy Joel, Sheena Easton, Pointer Sisters, Kool & The Gang, Chicago, Rod Stewart,


Cyndi Lauper, Olivia Newton-John, Diana Ross, Billy Ocean, Kenny Loggins, Donna Summer,


Rick Springfield, Culture Club.....



and there was no shortage of a Jackson: The Jacksons, Michael, Jermaine, Janet, Latoya & Rebbie all made an appearance on some kind of music chart in 1984!

True, true! In conjunction with your first point, I find it too intriguing how MJ opened the year with "Say, Say, Say" at #1 with Prince holding down the #1 spot in the middle of the year with "When Doves Cry" and Madonna closing out the year with "Like a Virgin" at the top of the chart. It seems there's no shortage of symbolism when it comes to these 3.

In terms of #1 albums, the fact that there were only 5 throughout all of 1984 is testament to just how extremely popular those acts were; they were mountain lions on top of the mountain, true megastars standing tall in a sea of true superstars. And extra, extra, extra credit to Huey Lewis and the News for managing to get Sports to #1 with such rock hard competition as Thriller, the Footloose soundtrack, Purple Rain and Born in the U.S.A.. Any of these albums would have dominated a year on their own but they all dominated at the same time; Huey Lewis and the News took them all on successfully and engraved their album's name in the history books next to Prince's, Michael Jackson's, Bruce Springsteen's and Footloose's as one of the only 5 albums to go #1 in 1984.

Whitney's debut wasn't released till the next year but she did duet with Teddy Pendergrass on what became a Top 5 R&B hit in 1984; a mere taste of what would come in 1985 and beyond.

It's crazy how each Jackson was involved in a charting project that year. While 1984 was the year of Purple Rain and Prince, I think it's fair to say that it was the year of the Jackson family as well.

With the Jacksons in 1984 we got:

-Latoya hitting #149 pop with Heart Don't Lie and spinning off 2 top 100 singles and a top 40 R&B single
- Janet's sophomore album Dream Street which made #19 R&B and didn't even make it up to the top 100 on the pop side but still charted at #147 with a top 40 and top 10 R&B single, the latter of which also topped out at #101 pop
- Rebbie's Centipede album which made it to #13 R&B and #63 pop, having a Top 40 single in "Centipede" on the R&B (#4), pop (#24) and dance (#29) charts
-Jermaine's Arista debut which hit #1 R&B and #19 pop with "Dynamite" going #8 R&B and #15 pop, "Do What You Do" going #14 R&B and #13 pop and "When the Rain Begins to Fall" hitting #61 R&B and #54 pop
-The Jacksons' Victory album and accompanying record breaking tour which was the highest grossing of 1984. The album hit the top 5 on both the R&B and pop charts at #3 and #4, respectively and landed "State of Shock" in the top 5 of the R&B and the pop charts also at #3 and #4 respectively, "Torture" was a top 20 pop and R&B hit at #17 and #12 and "Body" making it to #47 pop and #39 R&B
-Michael was still dominating album sales with Thriller being the #1 selling release for the second year in a row, having a #1 hit in "Say, Say, Say" with Paul McCartney and later a #3 hit with Mick Jagger on "State of Shock" and being the selling point of the Victory Tour

Absolutely insane and that's not even accounting for all those outside the Jackson family (besides Prince) who contributed to the behemoth of a musical year that 1984 was. Anybody who released an album, wrote, produced, played an instrument, performed or was musically active in some capacity in 1984 deserves a badge of honor, especially those who scored high or topped the charts for anything whether it be a song or an album or had a music video in (heavy) rotation on MTV.
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Reply #57 posted 09/19/16 4:21pm

MichaelJackson
5

MotownSubdivision said:

Comser said:

^ 1984 did have just about all the big names who formed the 80's


(with at least 1 hit) and quite a few big names leftover from the 70s,


along with many memorable one hit wonders....



Michael Jackson, Prince, Madonna, Huey Lewis, Phil Collins, Lionel Richie, John Cougar,


George Michael (Wham!), Bruce Springsteen, Whitney Houston, Hall & Oates, Stevie Wonder,


Elton John, Billy Joel, Sheena Easton, Pointer Sisters, Kool & The Gang, Chicago, Rod Stewart,


Cyndi Lauper, Olivia Newton-John, Diana Ross, Billy Ocean, Kenny Loggins, Donna Summer,


Rick Springfield, Culture Club.....



and there was no shortage of a Jackson: The Jacksons, Michael, Jermaine, Janet, Latoya & Rebbie all made an appearance on some kind of music chart in 1984!

True, true.

Whitney's debut wasn't released till the next year but she did duet with Teddy Pendergrass on what became a Top 5 R&B hit in 1984; a mere taste of what would come in 1985 and beyond.

It's crazy how each Jackson was involved in a charting project that year. While 1984 was the year of Purple Rain and Prince, I think it's fair to say that it was also the year of the Jackson family as well.

With the Jacksons in 1984 we got:

-Latoya hitting #149 pop with "Heart Don't Lie" and spinning off 2 top 100 singles and a top 40 R&B single
- Janet's sophomore album Dream Street which made #19 R&B and didn't even make it up to the top 100 on the pop side but still charted at #147 with a top 40 and top 10 R&B single, the latter of which also topped out at #101 pop
- Rebbie's Centipede album which made it to #13 R&B and #63 pop, having a Top 40 single in "Centipede" on the R&B (#4), pop (#24) and dance (#29) charts
-Jermaine's Arista debut which hit #1 R&B and #19 pop with "Dynamite" going #8 R&B and #15 pop, "Do What You Do" going #14 R&B and #13 pop and "When the Rain Begins to Fall" hitting #61 R&B and #54 pop
-The Jacksons' Victory album and accompanying record breaking tour which was the highest grossing of 1984. The album hit the top 5 on both the R&B and pop charts at #3 and #4, respectively and landed "State of Shock" in the top 5 of the R&B and the pop charts also at #3 and #4 respectively, "Torture" was a top 20 pop and R&B hit at #17 and #12 and "Body" making it to #47 pop and #39 R&B

Absolutely insane and that's not even accounting for all those outside the Jackson family (besides Prince) who contributed to the behemoth of a musical year that 1984 was.

MichealMania was still going strong in 1984. The public couldn't get enough Jackson music. Even Freddie Jackson's sales increased. lol
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Reply #58 posted 09/19/16 5:47pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

The star power of the Jackson family had some hand in boosting Freddie's debut the following year? I don't know why I'm surprised...
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Reply #59 posted 09/20/16 7:45am

Comser

lest we forget MJ lending his voice to Rockwell's huge hit "Somebody's Watching Me"

and the #1 Dance song "Tell Me I'm not Dreaming" (featuring both Michael & Jermaine)

Whitney was also featured on Jermaine's 1984 album with "Take Good Care Of My Heart"

and a PS to my earlier post....how the hell did I forget Ms Tina Turner, who had one

of the best comebacks ever with Private Dancer!

and don't overlook the fact Lionel Richie got the Album Of The Year Grammy

for Can't Slow Down

[Edited 9/20/16 7:52am]

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