I grew up in the 80's (old enough to care about music), and my favorite music is from the 60's and 70's. Don't get me wrong, I liked it all then (loved metal as a teenager), but there's something a bit too shallow about a lot of it.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Yeah, I'd say '80's pop music is better than the '70's or '90's...but for that decade, 1980 to 1989, some really remarkable cutting edge non pop albums came out; Metallica's Kill 'Em All, Sonic Youth's Daydream Nation, Pixies Surfer Rosa, Jane's Addiction's Nothing's Shocking, Beastie Boy's Paul's Boutique... Plus the formation of all rap and hip hop as we know it.
And the Go Go's...so yeah, 80's, you win.
Of course music in the '80's meant FM radio and MTV. Anyone who did a lot of traveling then knows that the Midwest had huge spans of radio wasteland. Tip of the cap to KKRL-FM in the early '80's, but if you lived in the Omaha area then you will understand this.
View attachment 83675
Of course music in the '80's meant FM radio and MTV. Anyone who did a lot of traveling then knows that the Midwest had huge spans of radio wasteland. Tip of the cap to KKRL-FM in the early '80's, but if you lived in the Omaha area then you will understand this.
View attachment 83675
JFC, no wonder you dissed my Clash post. I feel confident our libraries would have little overlap.We had KKEZ out of Fort Dodge and KTLB out of Twin Lakes in NW Iowa. Casey Kasem top 40, baby.
JFC, no wonder you dissed my Clash post. I feel confident our libraries would have little overlap.
Hey folks, any fans of the King Biscuit Flower Hour out of an AM station in Little Rock back in the day?
I remember meeting the morning disc jockey from KKEZ. It felt like I had met a real celebrity. Perspective can be a weird thing when you are a child.We had KKEZ out of Fort Dodge and KTLB out of Twin Lakes in NW Iowa. Casey Kasem top 40, baby.
Hunters and Collectors - Throw Your Arms Around Me is one of the all time great pop songs.XTC, have you seen the Documentary "This is Pop". It's excellent.
The other cool think about the 80s was OZ rock. So many great bands hit from Australia hit the international stage. The Go-Bewtweens, INXS, Crowded House, The Triffids, Midnight Oil, The Underground Lovers, Men at Work, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, The Divinyls and my favavorte The Church.
The Big 1090JFC, no wonder you dissed my Clash post. I feel confident our libraries would have little overlap.
Hey folks, any fans of the King Biscuit Flower Hour out of an AM station in Little Rock back in the day?
I remember meeting the morning disc jockey from KKEZ. It felt like I had met a real celebrity. Perspective can be a weird thing when you are a child.
Yup, KAAY clear channel in Little Rock. Also had Beaker Street with Clyde Clifford in the early '70's.The Big 1090
Beaker Street with Clyde Clifford was the first underground music program broadcast regularly on a commercial AM radio station in the central US. The station's signal carried far and wide. In early 1967 Beaker Street was a staple for adherents to the burgeoning underground communities in the upper Mid-West especially in Des Moines, Iowa, where it was the only access to Dr. Demento and Firesign Theatre...
One example of the impact of Beaker Street can be seen in the evolution and success of the band Headstone, formed in 1969 by five students at the University of Northern Iowa. The band released a 45-rpm record "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere" which attracted the attention of Clyde Clifford and was placed in regular rotation on Beaker Street. Headstone co-founder Tom Tatman characterized Beaker Street as "the ultimate Midwestern underground radio program of the day." The popularity generated by the Beaker Street exposure allowed the band to move to bigger and better performances, and in August 2006, the band was inducted into the Iowa Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
It was a very common mantra of the punk aficianados of the day, but you must not have been exposed to that.You said the Clash is the only good thing to come out the 80s and accuse me of being ignorant? K.![]()
I always thought it was Bleeker or Bleaker Street.Yup, KAAY clear channel in Little Rock. Also had Beaker Street with Clyde Clifford in the early '70's.![]()
1984 alone features a ridiculous amount of pop culture and its corresponding music:
GREMLINS
KARATE KID
GHOSTBUSTERS
THE TERMINATOR
FOOTLOOSE
TEMPLE OF DOOM
SPINAL TAP
NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET
CHILDREN OF THE CORN
AMADEUS
THE NEVERENDING STORY
POLICE ACADEMY
FIRE STARTER
BEVERLY HILLS COP
SIXTEEN CANDLES
View attachment 83626View attachment 83627View attachment 83628View attachment 83629View attachment 83630View attachment 83631View attachment 83632View attachment 83634View attachment 83635
The Clash suck!The only band that matters. All the rest of the 80’s was limp-wristed rubbish.
View attachment 83674