Song that epitomizes the 80s

I graduated HS in '86 in the US, and I have a ton of 80s music on my iPhone, and I’ve never heard it either.

No. I’ve heard of The Stranglers but I’ve never heard that song or any other song by them that I can recall.

OK. What’s it about?

+1

Bear in mind that Rick Springfield was at #1 the day MTV launched, with Jessie’s Girl.

His current flame is out of town and he’s talking to an old flame.

Fantastic song. :smiley:

That’s what I thought it was about but according to nearwildheaven it’s:

I thought maybe I was missing something.

Day bow bow.

The rest of the world had the '80s too, you know. :slight_smile:

Never heard it before (I graduated high school in 1984 and listened to a lot of everything then and now).

There are a number of different ways you can parse the question of, “What song epitomizes the '80s,” but I don’t think the OP has the right answer. If he was asking the question, “What sound epitomizes the '80s,” then he might be onto something, but the particular song has to be something that everyone who was alive in the '80s recognizes. It should be ubiquitous, universal, and as soon as someone who was a child of the '80s hears it, it puts them right back into their acid-wash jeans and neon hair scrunchies. :slight_smile:

Actually, his SO, Josie, is on a vacation far away, and he’s having a fling with an underage girl.

Yeah.

Epitomizes the 80’s, was the defining mood of the 80’s monster dancing?

Now that I think of it though, ‘video killed the radio star’ may be up there.

“Hot For Teacher”:smiley:

Near the beginning of the 80s and was by a British band. I guess its not exactly ubiquitous for most people, but I can’t get enough of it. One of the posters worded it quite right, the song I chose isn’t very well known but that type of song is what epitomizes the 80s for me.

Before even opening the thread, the title made me think of “Don’t You Forget About Me” and “Take on Me”.

It’s ironic because it was the seventies that was the Me Decade. But I guess there were no hit singles about Al Franken.

The only reason I recognized it was that it was on a “various artists” sampler that I bought back in the late 80s, but other than that I’d never heard of the band or the song.

Y’know, in December of '89, the #1 song was a retrospective recap: Menachem Begin, Ronald Reagan, the Ayatollah’s in Iran, Russia’s in Afghanistan; on the one hand you’ve got Wheel of Fortune and Sally Ride; on the other hand you’ve got AIDS, crack, Bernie Goetz; there’s punk rock and heavy metal, there are homeless vets,

[QUOTE=We Didn’t Start The Fire]
Hypodermics on the shore, China’s under martial law, rock’n’roller Cola Wars . . . I can’t take it any more.
[/Quote]

In this spirit, in addition to “Safety Dance”, “Don’t You Forget About Me”, “Rock Me Amadeus” and “Take On Me” I would add:

“Billie Jean”, Michael Jackson (more than any other)
“Tainted Love”, Soft Cell
“Here Comes The Rain Again”, the Eurythmics (aka “Here Comes That Song Again”)
“She Blinded Me With Science”, Thomas Dolby
“Sunglasses At Night”, Corey Hart
“Mr. Roboto”, Styx
“Livin’ On A Prayer”, Bon Jovi
“Walk Like An Egyptian”, The Bangles
“Popmusik”, M
“Electric Avenue”, Eddie Grant

And (cough) “Hot For Teacher”, Van Halen, esp. if you were in HS in 1984-85 and were also, in fact, hot for a teacher, perhaps a braless English teacher in her 20s. Just saying that as a hypothetical thing, of course.

When I hear a song like “We Are the World”, I get a massive flood of 80s images and feelings that I don’t get with “Don’t You Forget About Me”. I admit it’s cheesy, but when Cyndi Lauper goes “WAH WAH WAH WAAAH!!” I’m transported back in time, dressed as Punky Brewster and chewing on a big wad of Hubba Bubba, with the Iran-Contra Scandal and the Cold War weighing heavily on my brain.

There is no single song that represents the 80s for me. I have my favorite songs, but a single one? Uh-uh. But if I had to recommend a criterion for the makings of a “type specimen” song, it would be that it is has to have a great video. Preferably with a lot of dancing, like Stevie Nicks “Stand Back” or MJ’s “Beat It”, since ensemble dancing is what makes the 80s music video an 80s video. I think it should also have at least a little hint of inclusiveness/racial or genre cross-over appeal to it. The 80s were when black folk really began be included into mainstream pop culture. The duets by MJ and Paul McCartney, The Culture Club, The Thompson Twins, and Prince and The Revolution made it okay to have an interracial acts. Run DMC and Aerosmith’s collaboration was also historic. They epitomize the 80s “gestalt” of black and white folk getting along (see “Silver Streak”, “Trading Places”, “48 Hrs”, and who can forget “Diff’rent Strokes”).

I suppose that’s why “We Are The World” is my choice over more obvious picks.

It isn’t the best song of the decade or my favorite but the to me the song that screams “80s!” and probably only could have been made in the 80s is “I Ran” by Flock of Seagulls.