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This year marks the 30th anniversary of 4 seminal albums I just realized this but 2017 will be the 30th anniversary of Michael Jackson's Bad in August, Prince's Sign O The Times in March, Whitney Houston's Whitney in June and George Michael's Faith in October.
All landmark releases from 4 of the 5 megastars of the 1980s, all of which have passed on. Man... 1987 was stacked. [Edited 2/10/17 14:56pm] | |
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And Whitney's 'Whitney' | |
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Comser said: And Whitney's 'Whitney' Just edited the OP.Thanks for reminding me! I always thought that album came out in '86. | |
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damn, and to think all 4 have left us in these last years and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
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IstenSzek said: damn, and to think all 4 have left us in these last years The fact that Madonna is the only 80s megastar left and all the others have died within the past near 8 years is disheartening. Thankfully, their music will live on continuously. | |
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Also the deserved Grammy-winner The Joshua Tree, Apetite for Destruction, Floodland, Tango in the Night, Dawnrazor, Electric, Diesel and Dust, Surfing with the Alien, Kick, That Total Age, Within the Realm of a Dying Sun, Music for the Masses, Document, Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me, Sister and Songs About Fucking. [Edited 2/10/17 16:05pm] I'm afraid of Americans. I'm afraid of the world. | |
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and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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spacedolphin said: Also the deserved Grammy-winner The Joshua Tree, Apetite for Destruction, Floodland, Tango in the Night, Dawnrazor, Electric, Diesel and Dust, Surfing with the Alien, Kick, That Total Age, Within the Realm of a Dying Sun, Music for the Masses, Document, Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me, Sister and Songs About Fucking. [Edited 2/10/17 16:05pm] Let's look at the rundown: 1978 Prince and Michael (with The Jacksons) 1979 Michael and Prince 1980 Michael (with The Jacksons) and Prince 1981 Prince and Michael (with The Jacksons; live album) 1982 Prince and Michael 1983 The debuts of George (with Wham!) and Madonna 1984 Prince, George (with Wham!) and Madonna though one can count Michael with Victory 1985 Whitney and Prince 1986 Prince and Madonna 1987 Prince, Whitney, Michael, George, Madonna (soundtrack) 1988 Prince 1989 Prince and Madonna 1990 Prince, Madonna (soundtrack), George and Whitney 1991 Prince and Michael 1992 Prince, Madonna and Whitney 1993 N/A 1994 Prince and Madonna 1995 Michael and Prince 1996 George, Prince, Madonna (soundtrack) and Whitney (soundtrack) 1997 N/A unless one counts Michael for Blood on the Dancefloor 1998 Prince, Madonna and Whitney 1999 Prince and George 2000 Madonna 2001 Michael and Prince 2002 Prince and Whitney 2003 Prince, Madonna and Whitney 2004 Prince and George 2005 Madonna 2006 Prince and Madonna (live album) 2007 Madonna (live album) and Prince 2008 Madonna and Prince (live album) 2009 Prince and Whitney 2010 Madonna (live album) and Prince 2011 N/A 2012 Madonna 2013 Madonna (live album) 2014 Prince 2015 Prince and Madonna So yeah, 1987 wins. However, the closest year we get for the Big 3 of the 80's (Michael, Madonna and Prince) each releasing an album is 1984 when Prince had Purple Rain, Michael had his contributions on Victory and Madonna had Like a Virgin. [Edited 2/11/17 19:49pm] [Edited 1/13/18 15:21pm] [Edited 1/13/18 15:40pm] | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
Generally speaking about seminal 1987 albums, The Joshua Tree definitely counts. [Edited 2/11/17 11:20am] | |
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Not sure if you guys will think this belongs on your list but also in 1987, Terence Trent D'arby released his very successful debut, "Introducing The Hardline According To Terence Trent D'arby." I know he may not be as famous as the others mentioned in this thread but many consider him a contemporary of the many of the artists mentioned in this thread. | |
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Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.” | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
As for 1987 in general, that year saw many significant releases. It's probably the most stacked year of the decade next to 1984. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Yes, I certainly agree about those Pop names making their grandest artistic statements in 1987. Don't taze me bro but I subscribe to the thought that Bad presents his most unified sound and cohesive production, it functions brilliantly as a concept album and captures a fragment of time more effectively than any of his other work (aside from the god-awful title track, thankfully I only have to push skip at the very start on that album). Faith was George at his very best as a songwriter and SotT as we know is Prince's magnum opus. That whole year in general, so many artists left their most creative stamps, from a non-US perspective I do have to mention Diesel and Dust by Midnight Oil. It was huge in Australia and was the first high-profile album to address white history, Indigenous issues and land rights; even to this day white racists squirm in fury and resentment when it is named in any top 20 countdown, I love it so much.
The more I think about 87, the more I believe it to be the most solid year of the decade - but then, upon reflection, I just miss the 80s overall and every year had shining lights for me. We did touch on 1984 in your other thread, so I think we could also throw Born in the USA into that mix there, ol' Bruce was certainly quite a big name around then, although he was on that threshold between pop and rock. If we look at that year purely from a seminal viewpoint again, there was also Ride the Lightning by Metallica, The Smiths and Diamond Life by Sade, so yeah, another strong year altogether.
[Edited 2/11/17 18:32pm] I'm afraid of Americans. I'm afraid of the world. | |
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1987 is my favorite year of music overall. | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
As for your last point, I don't think George ever got any recognition for being the multifaceted artist he was. His defining trait was his soulful singing voice but that's only skin deep compared to what others skilled he displayed in-studio. | |
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I love all of those albums, SOTT is the clear #1, but Bad is real close. Bad is my favourite Michael Jackson and it is just perfection but not as adventorous or as varied as Sign. Still nothing on Sign sounds as good as Smooth Criminal or the Way you make me feel, yet Michael could never pull off a ballad like Adore. . Faith and Whitney are up there too. Howcome no one is counting the 2 Madonna releases - You Can dance and Whose that girl soundtrack (Okay it only had 4 songs of her, but Whose that girl" is a great song). . Not only are Sign and Bad classic albums, they are really peaks for both artists in my opinion and pretty much defined the trajectory of each artist's career. They are also surrounded by brilliant albums. Michael with Thriller and Dangerous and Prince with Parade and Lovesexy (Black does not really count, as it only saw official release in 1994). . There was a 5th seminal album too - Terence Trent D'Arby's intorducing the Hard Line. Although here in NZ, it only really hit in early 1988. . Fleetwood Mac also released the brilliant comeback album - Tango in the night. [Edited 2/12/17 2:08am] Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name | |
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my album: https://soundcloud.com/theroseparade
2004-2008 demos: https://soundcloud.com/th...aradedemos | |
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Dasein said:
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Adorecream said: I love all of those albums, SOTT is the clear #1, but Bad is real close. Bad is my favourite Michael Jackson and it is just perfection but not as adventorous or as varied as Sign. Still nothing on Sign sounds as good as Smooth Criminal or the Way you make me feel, yet Michael could never pull off a ballad like Adore. . Faith and Whitney are up there too. Howcome no one is counting the 2 Madonna releases - You Can dance and Whose that girl soundtrack (Okay it only had 4 songs of her, but Whose that girl" is a great song). . Not only are Sign and Bad classic albums, they are really peaks for both artists in my opinion and pretty much defined the trajectory of each artist's career. They are also surrounded by brilliant albums. Michael with Thriller and Dangerous and Prince with Parade and Lovesexy (Black does not really count, as it only saw official release in 1994). . There was a 5th seminal album too - Terence Trent D'Arby's intorducing the Hard Line. Although here in NZ, it only really hit in early 1988. . Fleetwood Mac also released the brilliant comeback album - Tango in the night. [Edited 2/12/17 2:08am] I guess I was wrong then! 1987 is the only year MJ, Prince and Madonna have all released full-fledged solo albums and the only time the 5 biggest names of the 80's released an album in the same year. Add Springsteen's Tunnel of Love to the count and that makes 1987 star-studded still. Amazing... | |
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Bad definitely didn't have the same impact that Thriller had, but it's almost impossible to top that. 1987 also saw the release of Introducing the Hardline Acvording to Terence Trent d'Arby. But, you know what, I think you could easily make 20, 40 & 50 year anniversaries this year... Or any other year... | |
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spacedolphin said:
Yes, I certainly agree about those Pop names making their grandest artistic statements in 1987. Don't taze me bro but I subscribe to the thought that Bad presents his most unified sound and cohesive production, it functions brilliantly as a concept album and captures a fragment of time more effectively than any of his other work (aside from the god-awful title track, thankfully I only have to push skip at the very start on that album). Faith was George at his very best as a songwriter and SotT as we know is Prince's magnum opus. That whole year in general, so many artists left their most creative stamps, from a non-US perspective I do have to mention Diesel and Dust by Midnight Oil. It was huge in Australia and was the first high-profile album to address white history, Indigenous issues and land rights; even to this day white racists squirm in fury and resentment when it is named in any top 20 countdown, I love it so much.
The more I think about 87, the more I believe it to be the most solid year of the decade - but then, upon reflection, I just miss the 80s overall and every year had shining lights for me. We did touch on 1984 in your other thread, so I think we could also throw Born in the USA into that mix there, ol' Bruce was certainly quite a big name around then, although he was on that threshold between pop and rock. If we look at that year purely from a seminal viewpoint again, there was also Ride the Lightning by Metallica, The Smiths and Diamond Life by Sade, so yeah, another strong year altogether.
[Edited 2/11/17 18:32pm] Bruce was a star even before Born in the U.S.A. and though that release catapulted him to megastar status, overall he didn't seem to quite capture everyone's fancy like the others did although his popularity was comparable. I did note in my previous post that Bruce dropped an album in 1987 alongside the others so his contribution bolsters 1987's reputation as a packed year for music that much more. Albums from Prince, Whitney, Madonna, Michael, Bruce and George all in a single year... truly awesome. [Edited 2/12/17 11:42am] | |
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NorthC said: Bad definitely didn't have the same impact that Thriller had, but it's almost impossible to top that. 1987 also saw the release of Introducing the Hardline Acvording to Terence Trent d'Arby. Sure you can but those deserve their own topics.But, you know what, I think you could easily make 20, 40 & 50 year anniversaries this year... Or any other year... | |
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Sorry, I missed Spacedolphin's post, but yeah, Diesel and Dust was Midnight Oil's big breakthrough, I bought it back then and still love it. (Which I can't say about Bad and Faith.) And it adressed the problems the Aborigines have in Australia; Midnight Oil always were a band that had something to say. I also saw a great concert in Utrecht in 1993 to promote their excellent Earth and Sun and Moon album. | |
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my album: https://soundcloud.com/theroseparade
2004-2008 demos: https://soundcloud.com/th...aradedemos | |
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my album: https://soundcloud.com/theroseparade
2004-2008 demos: https://soundcloud.com/th...aradedemos | |
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Dasein said:
[Edited 2/12/17 12:50pm] | |
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Dasein said:
Okay... I just looked at classic albums, didn't pay much attention to whether or not the artists were still alive... | |
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