....PROF., with these LOADED questions! ...ha-HAA!! ....I would-would-WOULD say "Careless Whisper", but TECHNICALLY it was Oct., 1984, so.... I'll say, Paul Young's "Everytime You Go Away" for the greatest tune (in terms of Worldwide popularity)....The ALBUM, is Tears For Fears' "Songs For The Big Chair"....It is ART, personified....
Albums 1985: Howard Jones- Dream Into Action; Bryan Adams- Reckless; Heart- Heart(8th album); Dire Straits- Brothers In Arms; Tears For Fears- Songs From The Big Chair. Songs 1985: Dire Straits- Money For Nothing; Huey Lewis/News- The Power Of Love; Phil Collins- Sussudio; Eurythmics- Would I Lie To You?; Howard Jones-Things Can Only Get Better; Run To You- Bryan Adams.
I know what happened to music. Record companies began to be run by bean counters, and music started being created by producers rather than artists. It's absolutely astounding to me that we have recording Stars who can't carry a tune, who don't write their own songs, and who are practitioners of the most banal orthodoxies. Music has become audio product, it is simply no longer art
That's what's on commercial radio. Real music still exists, but not on the airwaves. This applies to architecutre, painting, cooking, and all other art forms. Corporatism has coopted human expression to make bank.
@@wordup897 So what? All you are saying is popular music has become a fetishistic pursuit instead of a broad, unifying force in popular culture. Don't you still morn the loss of the widespread pursuit of innovation, excellence and quality?
@@wordup897 I agree. Today you have to look for good music, while in the past good music found you. You just had to turn on the radio and flick through channels and easily find great music that you wanted to blast and sing along, Today, radio stations stick to formulaic and boring pop music that all sounds very much the same, like Justin Bieber, Ed Sheeran, Arian Grande, etc.
@@Xman156 I haven't listened to commercial radio in about 15 years. The music became so bad, redundant and the ads and talk took about 40pc of the time, radio became more annoying than anything else. So far this is a stalled century culturally speaking, but as you know prior to 2000 there was a lot of fantastic and diverse music on the airwaves. Many people will say "you're just getting old / every generation says that," but in reality a lot of young people are very aware that today's music scene cannot hold a candle to the 60s - 90s. I grew up in Chicago and we had a phenomenal station called WXRT that was all over the place, from punk to jazz, and they went deep into albums, not just the singles, and the DJs knew their stuff. The station got bought ca 2005 and quickly became just a simulacra of the original format - what I labelled 'housewife alternative' at the time haha.
I'll never understand why Billy Joel seems to have been continually singled out for catching heat. He's a brilliant songwriter with a powerful, versatile voice, and he was one of those rare artists who captured my imagination deeply. He's one of the greats and the critics can go deal with it.
Amen. I have seen Billy Joel 3 times in concert and every time was a blast. The man can command a stadium, arena, or bar lounge. He's written so many different songs -- he's got soul, rock, pop, doo wop, etc. He's freely admitted his not so great moments (which fans don't agree with of course) and where he shamelessly borrowed from other artists, but for me you can't deny his brilliance. When you get to the bridge of You're Only Human - "You've been keeping to yourself these days cause you're thinking everything's gone wrong. Sometimes you just want to lay down and die, that emotion can be so strong." That is reality of depression. But he decided to make it an uplifting song. "But hold on Till that old second wind comes along." The video is great too. Billy playing Piano Man on the harmonica... The other new song on his Greatest Hits Volume 1& 2 album released in 1985 was The Night is Still Young. I was 14, didn't know a damn thing about sex, but I loved the song more than You're Only Human. Keep the faith and don't take shit from nobody.
Back then, critics were often hostile to artists who were super popular and who did mainstream Pop music. I guess they felt it was too safe or it was corporate rock (which meant they were sell outs). It’s all bullshit though. Guys like Phil Collins, Bryan Adams and Billy Joel knew what ppl wanted to hear and gave it to them in spades while still being true to themselves. They also were making really intelligent & well crafted albums that will be classics for all time.
85 was an awesome year. I was 10 years old and lived in a little town of about 900 people. Back then even a town that small had a drive-in theater, and we went to Back to the Future. We brought our own popcorn in a big paper bag and a pitcher of Coolaid with enough plastic cups for the family. We didn't have much money back then, and my mom would always make a couple of us kids hide under a blanket in the back of the car so it wouldn't "cost as much." We would lay there as motionless as possible, scared to death we'd get caught. It wasn't until we were adults that she told us they charged by the car load, not by the person; she'd been messing with us the whole time! Every summer we'd make it to the drive-in a time or two, and it reamains one of my most charished memories.
Sting singing "I want my MTV" to the melody of "Don't Stand So Close to Me" on "Money for Nothing" actually ended up getting him a songwriting credit on it, and therefore a cut of the profits. Yeah, that guy ain't dumb.
Do the records show whether Sting got a blister on his little finger? ... This may be apocryphal, but AFAIK that recording was done by pure chance as Sting and Queen were both in NY at the same time and in the same building. A chance meeting and ... voilà. If this is true, Sting had no time to prep and this was entirely freeform. Interestingly, it had never occurred to me that the overall tune was "don't stand so close to me". Thanks, that's very fun!
1985 will always be known as the year of Live Aid. Everyone who performed there got a bump in record sales. You should do a show dedicated to Live Aid and the number of rock and roll hall of famers.
Honestly, Live Aid was something that, as I watched it that day, I thought "what's the big deal?" but now look back on it with the thought "damn...why aren't there live global musical events like that today? We have the technology to do it better than it was done in 1985, but we just don't have anything like that now. Why?" And I get a bit misty when I go back and watch the clips on the Live Aid RU-vid channel. Queen's performance was, obviously, legendary. But so many performances were great, and being a New Waver, I really enjoyed Nik Kershaw, Sting, Elvis Costello, and Howard Jones, among others, on the Wembley stage.
I remember the first time I heard "Shout", I was pulling out of my driveway and my girl friend was belting the song out into my ear as she was behind me on my motorcycle. Every time I hear the song I remember her exuberance and the day we had riding was an awesome beautiful day.
We used to sleep outside in the yard all summer in the 80s. One night me and 2 friends were coming back from roaming the neighborhood at 2:00 am and noticed 3 of our friends were sleeping in my next door neighbors front yard. So we hopped the fence and unplugged their radio that was playing quietly. I snuck over and turned the volume up full blast and started running while Chuck plugged it back into the outlet. Just as we hit the ground on my side of the fence, SHOUT! SHOUT! LET IT ALL OUT! echoed through the silence of the night. After they got it shut down all you could here was us laughing our asses off. Good times.
1985 was bitter sweet for me. Sweet for music but bitter losing a good friend at a young age. Thank goodness the music pulls you through the bitter passages in life.
Me too…. The 1980’s were the worst of times…. The best of times for me. Horror Dark Night of the Soul…. Grand Life revelations… yes, and dealing with death for the first time in my life. I do not think I would have made it without the Grace of God and waking up each morning to the wild, unique back drop of NYC… MTV… Fashion… movies of the 1980’s
Good God man! This Nostalgia is just off the charts! This is such bittersweet memories. This channel is such a time machine for those of us who were kids the 80's. Thank you.
Bryan Adams was the opening act for Prince at the Rosemont Horizon in Chicago in 1985 and what a miraculously awesome concert. I was pleasantly surprised at how good Bryan Adams was even going so far as climbing up the power cords for the overhead lights at one point during the concert. Between Bryan’s energy and enthusiasms and Prince, it was one of the best concerts of my young life.
1985 was a great year for music. I often go back to those songs. Must include "Kyrie," "Never Surrender," "King For a Day," "Lay Your Hands On Me" (Thompson Twins, Bon Jovi did their own song in 1989), "Take On Me," and "The Sun Always Shines on TV," "The Search is Over" just to name a few of my favorites from that time.
1985 was MY year of MTV. My son was born that summer and I had the 4am bottle feeding. I remember so many of these hits from their videos falling asleep on the couch with my son in my arms…
85 was also a great Rock period, Journey released 'Only the Young', Survivors 'Vital Signs' and Toto's 'Isolation' both released in late 84 were still rockin' thru the radio, Shooting Star 'Silent Scream' was a largely overlooked album while Mr.Mister earned the success they deserved with 'Welcome to the real world', Dokken released their 'Under lock and key' masterpiece and there was Dio's 'Rock n Roll children'...timeless music, a great year to blow 16 candles, wouldnt hesitate too much travelin' back doin' it all over at any time!
Damn I loved 85 sooo much good music, today's stuff is crap ,my grandson 13 is playing stuff like foghat , ozzy and hagar he says "the 70s and 80s is real music " I'm so proud of him . I was a little influence in his love of 80s though! Hehe
"Shout" was my first favorite song as a 5 year old. Music has always been my world. 1985 was the year that it all really started for me on my musical journey. Couldn't have timed that better if I tried.
I remember reading a magazine article and the guy who wrote it stated that his daughter was swaying and singing along to Shout while he was watching the music video. It was such a cute moment.
I remember going to the drive in to see Back to the Future with my pregnant wife. I also recall driving home from the hospital after my daughter was born jamming to Money for Nothing. This entire list is truly the soundtrack of my young adult life. Great music and memories . thanks
I saw Top Gun at the drive-in in Austin, TX. Although crappy by today's standards, the movie was magnificent on that big screen! We must be about the same age...I had my three children in the 70s, 80s and 90s,,,one for each decade LOL
Bryan Adams has always been one of my favs since I was a youngster growing up in the 80’s. Summer of ‘69 has been and always will be my favorite song of all time. It almost brings a tear to my eye when I hear it now because it reminds me of how great those days were, especially now how we’re living in such a shitty time in history
I must say 1983-1986 was the true height of 80's culture. 1984 & 1985 being the heart of the decade. After 1987, (1988 & 1989), it felt like a transitional era. Still 80's but, yeah.
@@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 I can see why you'd say that. For me, it's 1983, 1985, and then 1984. Music-wise, anyway. As far as general life, I always say that "I haven't enjoyed anything since 1985," ha.
In 1985, I was 21-22 yrs old. What an awesome time to dance, skate, party, or just kick back and listen- to great music! Nice seeing Kool & The Gang getting some props...
I am thoroughly convinced that 1985 was the high-water mark for western pop culture, music, television, movies etc... In addition to everything you mentioned in the intro and the ten classic songs on this list, '85 also gave us Cherry Coke, MacGyver, the Nintendo NES, the Casio SK-1 keyboard and so much more...
It truly was. It was my first official year as an adult. I had graduated from Nursing school and moved from a small town in N Central Texas to New Orleans. I packed everything I could fit into my Dodge Colt compact car and embarked on the twelve hour drive. I was carrying a bruised, but not broken heart, a love for SE Louisiana, and clear eyed dreams for finding love, and building a family. Many of these songs serenaded me on the cheap speakers of that car. To this day hearing Lionel Richie’s Stuck on You gives me a tiny bit of melancholy, it must of played once an hour during that drive.
From 1985 - Phil Collins had several (courtesy of exposure on Miami Vice, maybe?), Eddie Murphy - Party all the Time (one hit wonder candidate?), but dude - the absolute has to be Dire Straits. Money For Nothing is still one of my all-time favs; the first three seconds of the intro are just iconic and distinctive - you know immediately it is THE song.
Have to say, this video bringing tears to me. Born in 74, I remember all this being 12 and 13 years old. reason i like stranger things so much, I was there age at the time and did the same things. Born in a very small town with no stop lights. Hell, still in the same town and still no stop lights. This was the best time for music and movies. not like the crap we have today. The Alexa (echo) here only knows how to play 80's rock, and 80's metal
Adam, I love the "Countdowns on this day"! Keep them coming and don't forget the 70s! I agree with you "what has happened to music?" I kept up with music until about 2006 and then I stopped. I just didn't enjoy the new stuff anymore. I do listen to some local college stations that play current artists that do "real: music but mostly I listen to 1970s thru 1990s..
Funnily enough, I too stopped listening to mainstream radio around 2006, but I think it was more than just no longer liking the current pop music, it was also around the time I really started getting into Heavy Metal as well. I feel like the game has changed though, there's still great music today, but you may not find it on mainstream radio, you have to dig deeper now.
And one more small thing - while it wasn’t anywhere near the massive hit that St Elmo’s Fire was, John Parr did also have some chart success with Naughty, Naughty - peaked at #27 on March 16, 1985 and was on the charts for 20 weeks.
Not sure where you got your Info or if he peaked at #27 in another country? According to Billboard's Book of top 40 Hits Naughty Naughty peaked at #23 and spent 8 weeks in the top 40.
@@jeffvanderpool4039 I stand corrected - I was manually looking it up in the Billboard Hot 100 Charts book by Joel Whitburn and must have skipped the two pages where it was #24 (3/2/85) and #23 (3/9/85) before falling to #27 on 3/16/85. Good catch!!
I love these episodes as well. I don't know how many people mention it, but Money for Nothing was really well engineered from a studio standpoint, too. It continues to hold up on the short list of songs to test the fidelity of a new sound setup. That actually might be a fun list someday.
1985 was my HS graduation year. The music of that year has long been iconic for me. In the 90’s I was DJ’ing on the military radio while deployed to Honduras. I did an entire show of just rock hits from 1985. Great to see Huey Lewis with number 1 here. Saw them 3 times, 1983, 1984, and 2004. The last one they still didn’t disappoint with the same great energy! Thanks for as always, a great video.
Man in motion for me was introduced through the instrumental version done by David Foster that was played for the Canadian air forces aeronautical show team the snowbirds. I couldn’t get enough of that song I didn’t even know it had words until I was about 10 in 1990
My son was 3 when Shout came out. It was the song that got him into music. We listened to everything. His friends wound sing along for the 2.5 hour drive to our cabin in NW Alaska. He shares his love of music with his daughters now. They listen to Led Zeppelin, Johnny Cash, Streisand, Michael Jackson, Belefonte and more. Makes me so happy.
I was serving in the Marine Corps in the 1980s. Stationed at Tustin, CA. I was able to see all the great bands at the time. I always ask “Where did all the great musicians go?”
Thanks again, Professor! For my money, 1984-1986 had some of the best music. 1985 was stellar, since we're still listening to those tunes to this day. That's some staying power.
The best part of 1985 for me was the Fall and Winter of 1985 (September to December) - the best songs that year - I was in 8th grade ! My best year of junior high ! My favorite hits - 1 Life in a northern Town 2 I Miss You 3 Tender Love 4 Tarzan Boy 5 Broken Wings 6 Kyrie 7 Silent Running 8 You Belong in the City 9 Money For Nothing 10 Say You Say Me 11 We Built This City 12 Overjoyed 13 Party All The Time (Eddie Murphy ) 14 Dress You Up (Madonna’s last huge hit of ‘85) 15 Rock Me Amadeus 16 Alive And Kicking 17 Take On Me (Ah Ha) 18 How Will I Know 19 Dance With Somebody 20 Miami Vice theme by Ian Hammer 21 Never (Heart ) 22 Separate Lives Mister Mister released two huge hits in the Fall and Winter of 1985 Overjoyed gave me comfort - Stevie Wonder classic
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers "Don't come around her no more" came out in Feb and was the song that got me hooked on them, and are still my absolute favorite band.
@@duromusabc ...Man, between that tune, and "I Wanna Be A Cowboy" (Boys Don't Cry), I had to HIDE my Radio under the BED! ...ha-HAAA!! ...I don't mind either, now...
@@RBS_ Tarzan Boy is a special song because I remember I was enjoying Christmas/New Years Eve/ Winter break vacation in the last week of December 1985 and my cousins and relatives came over and we went skiing at the ski resort next to my home - the best winter break in 1985 for me ! So much fun ! This song was a huge hit in late December 85 on the radio and on MTV
Never knew the connection of Saint Elmo's Fire theme to the wheelchair adventure. Very very COOL! GOTTA SAY, love love love when your voice takes on those inflections of THE MAN of the top 40. 🤍 spent SO MANY afternoons into the evening enjoying/ recording portions of his work. Your respect for him is deserved and appreciated. He was a big part of SO MANY LIVES!!!
My first son was born June 26, 1985. He was 9lbs 3ozs and 20" long. My parents came up to the hospital. My dad was so excited saying "can't miss him, he's the biggest baby in there!" It still makes me laugh.
WOW. Great music overload!!!! I'm gonna listen to every one of these after this while I fix the car. What a year for us Canucks, Cory Hart, Brian Adams, (Boy in the Box and Reckless are awesome albums) Rick Hanson... and St Elmo's Fire was adopted by the Canadian Forces Snowbirds as one of their anthems. You just put me in the perfect mood Professor!
I've probably already said this before, but my friends and I really took that line, "I want my two dollars!", and we ran with it. I can remember playing outside with them, riding around on our bikes just belting out the line to each other. One of my favorite 80s movies. In 1985 I was 6 years old and Shout was one of my favorites. I have this distinct memory of being in my neighbor friend's back yard, sitting in a swing on the swing set, and her and I talking about how much we loved the song. Just one of those random memories from my childhood that stuck with me for whatever reason.
LOVE your countdowns. You should do this type of video every week. With four decades to choose from, the 60's, 70's, 80's and 90's you have enough material to last for years. :)
One of the things I love about the ‘80’s music industry is how many artists from the 60’s & ‘70’s just kept on rocking right into the ‘80’s. This list has Tina Turner and Aretha Franklin, I’m sure the Professor of Rock brain trust could extend the list a mile long! 😌
I remember going to see Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome and Silverado as a double feature for 1 dollar. The air conditioning was out at the theater, so it was like an interactive experience watching those hot dusty movies while basically sitting in a sauna. The moment the credits started at the end of Thunderdome, i was out of there, lol.
I feel lucky that I was 12 years old when MTV began in 1981, and I was able to experience not just all the great music of the 80's and 90's as a young person, but being able to buy albums and CDs instead of just downloading songs like kids do today.
1985 was leading up to the last year I really followed the top 40 charts before becoming more of a fan of alternative/college music (Smiths/Replacements/REM were and really still are my favorite bands). So I still dig 85 - I love when you do these!! It really does show how much music has changed over the thats 37 years - and in my opinion not for the better. I also love how you cover not just the music but things like movies and TV. Really takes me back. Thanks Adam!
In 1985, Tears for fears "everybody Wants to Rule The World" I first heard in a colorful shopping mall store while on a student exchange trip with my high school band. It was also the year I graduated high school. I'll never forget those times. I think about them every day.
Love these segments!! They are my wife and I favorites. We re-rank the songs and usually come pretty close until this week. For sure thought Dire Straits Money for Nothing was going to be #1 but nope. Love it
Best album - Scarecrow . That was so much more than an album and brought awareness to the plight of the american farmer . It' also helped drive what would become Farm Aid . Best song - St. Elmos Fire . Some heavy hitters involved with the writing and production of that song . David Foster , Jerry Hey ,Dave Amato , Richard Paige and there's those gents from Toto again ....
Billy Joels best song from the 80's is the Longest Time. I still sing it word for mmm. And if you hear it every voice is his and there's no instruments!
Summer of 69 is just one of those timeless classics. It was a classic the first time it played, it’s just one of those songs. The only song I can think of, at the top of my head, that’s comparable is Jack and Diane by John Cougar Mellencamp. It too was a classic the second it was played on the radio.
You really made me feel nostalgic with this one! The guitar rift of Dire Straits song Money for Nothing, still strikes a cord, I mean how can you hear that and not want to jam! Of course any list of songs that include such greats as all of these amazing bands and artists is going to be awesome. Thanks for sharing these amazing stories behind the songs. Fun fact: in the Summer of 69 music video the girlfriend featured is the actress Lysette Anthony that played the lead in one of my favorite 80’s movie “Krull”
I understand the 80s nostalgia, and this reminds me of junior high, but it also reminds me of why I was completely into the Beatles and 60s rock at the time.
This week in 1985, I was in USAF Tech training at Lowery AFB in Denver. New to the regimented culture of the military, music, and not a small amount of off hours beer, was what I used to remember who I really was. Don’t get me wrong, the military was great but I still needed to hold on to a part of that care free teen I had been just a few months before.
Run to You was my favorite track from Reckless, not Summer of ‘69. Heaven would have been my second. Power of Love is the one song that truly brings me back. It was incredible.
The thing that stands out is these songs from the 80s sound unique even though some of the songs were recycled melodies and such. Most of Today top music sounds manufactured and the same. Interchangeable for djs to remix with little to no adjustment in the beats
Just have to say how fun this one was today. Great memories!! Although, I now feel very silly that I never got the Summer of 69 reference. I always wondered why Bryan Adams was singing a song about a year when he would have been 7 years old. 🤣
Better off dead is one of those forgotten comedy masterpieces. I know a lot of people who are my age who have never heard of that movie. Which is sad, because it is funny as hell. "Shame, people throwing away a perfectly good white boy." "Gee ricky, sorry i your mom blew up." Classic! Oh, and the two Asians who were commentating all the time! LOL!
"This is pure snow! Do you have any idea of the street value of this mountain?!" "What's a little boy like you doing with big boy smut like this??" "TWO DOLLARS!!!"
As a kid of the 1980s and a teenager of the 1990s, there is no greater decade of music than the 80s. It is a time filled with positive entertainment in every aspect. Music was upbeat and had uplifting lyrics, movies had heroes that we cheered for, cartoons were living movies with beautiful animation and dare I say...stories, and TV of the 80s taught us something at the end to help us become a better person......"because knowing is half the battle!"
I don't recall any controversy arising from Money for Nothing's lyrics at the time. People understood the context. Like Archie Bunker in the previous decade, the person speaking the bigoted words is intended as an object of ridicule, and we got that. In this century, however, context no longer matters. The offending verse is now omitted, just like Archie's bigoted dialog during "All in the Family" reruns.
I’m 57 years old. You can all guess the era I grew up with. New wave or rock at the time. I still to this day like music from the 60s or 70s. It is so real.
I talked to a teacher at my school who helps students with disabilities get into careers. She graduated high school in 1982 to the tune of the Go-Go’s, Human League, and Joan Jett! I bet she wanted to put another dime in the jukebox back then! 80s new wave rocks!
Definitely give us the vignette, please. Love these. By the way, any chance you feel like doing a video on Midnight Oil’s Power and the Passion (and/or the whole amazing album 10, 9, 8, 7…) or INXS’s album Shabooh Shoobah, both of which, IMO, really never got the full credit that they deserve. I was living in San Francisco at the time, and thanks to one of the best progressive stations to ever exist - KQAK - I was turned on, in my very early 20s, to some absolutely phenomenal music that I never would’ve heard otherwise. Keep on keepin’ on, my friend. Love what you’re doing.
Love these episodes! What a great week for music! My 20 something daughter told that when her and her friends are having a party they don't play today's music they play 80s music like Summer of 69 and Don't Stop Believing. She says this music just wants to be sung out loud by everyone in the room. Just shows the best music was our music, lol. You should do these every Saturday these episodes are a blast and filled with content
It is a great week for music. There is an English teacher at my school who was born to this exact same list of songs, on August 23, 1985. She said she loves The Power of Love and Back to the Future. She also loves Aretha’s comeback with Freeway of Love, and of course, playing the guitar on MTV!
@Anna Trail i love when they like our music and listen to it. Dwight was fantastic. He hasn't lost a thing, voice still great, guitar playing fantastic and he still has those classic Dwight moves, lol
This came couple of years before I got fed with the food service industry, and determined it was time go after my biggest passion, radio! I played this song quite a number of times, after getting first hired as Weekend DJay in NorCal. So , I became the afternoon drive dj, and all played this on a regular basis. Always loved playing it. it’s got such an uplifting!!!
I knew Summer of '69 would finish #1 before he even started the list. It's one of the most memorable and iconic hits from the 80's still on radio rotation to this day.
Man 80s had it all ......plethora of great music all genres, great television and great movies....so glad I was a pre-teen to teen in those golden years 🕊️💗
as Ferris Beuller would say, this video is "so choice" man, thank you sir!!! 1985 was the most memorable for me from Music to Movies to just my Life...wish we could go back...so many, I loved were still in my life and alive here...oh well... today, well, just ain't the same...everything changes and nothing last forever... love your channel man!!!
So many good movies! They technically filmed Ferris Bueller’s Day Off in the fall of 1985 and it was released in June 1986, but I still love that movie and Adam’s shirt nonetheless!
On a channel with so many great features, these are my favorite segments. I am of the opinion that not only popular music, but humankind in general, reached its summit sometime around 1985 or 1986. This top 10 list serves to reinforce my theory. The fact that every popular show on TV worth its salt heralds back to that time is no coincidence, either.
I was stationed in Germany when I bought my Sony D50 in early '85 (" world's first portable CD player") and Brothers in Arms was my first CD. I still have the original battery case, but using the AC dock that same cd player is still working great in my shop.
Tears for Fears, my very first concert! Phenomenal! I sold the most new subscriptions for my paper route and won the tickets. My father couldn't say no!! Great memory, great artists 🤟😎 Love your show Adam, I'm always sharing the videos and talking you up to my audiophile friends ✌️
In 1985 my father started recording music from MTV and VH1. A lot of these songs are in that tape. I cry whenever I hear any of the songs on it. I wore that tape out!
When I graduated high school in 1985, I had never heard of Pee Wee Herman. By the time I got to college in August, he was all anybody was talking about! All those movies you mentioned were awesome, but Pee Wee's Big Adventure has to get a mention
So many great songs from that year, hard to pick one that was the best. Probably the most memorable for me is Dire Straits “Money For Nothing”, I remember that song and video so well, it’s just iconic and awesome. 😎🎵🎶💯
Wow, never knew that about Billy Joel. How interesting and sad. He was actually the singer who got me really interested in music when I was young. I heard Movin' Out and got hooked. Had my mom buy me every album of his she could find.
1985 had great music. I didn't think it could produce anything as well as 1984's triumphant year in musical genius. "Songs from the Big Chair" was definitely in the tops.
I remember riding in the back of my friend’s Datsun 280z with the hatch back open and my feet dangling out the back while belting out “Summer of 69” with 7 of my friends on the way to go fishing. One of my favorite memories from high school.
1985 was a great year for music! Here are a few of my favorites from 85: A-ha, Hunting High and Low Howard Jones, Dream Into Action Mike and the Mechanics debut album Talking Heads, Little Creatures John Fogerty, Centerfield John Mellencamp, Scarecrow Sting, Dream of the Blue Turtles
....whooooooo!! ....Man I remember going to the Record Store to snatch "Scarecrow" Dec., 1985 (and, WHAM"s "I'm Your Man" 45)....I went to Sam Goody, and knew SO MUCH more than the Employees', the Manager gave me a Job, RIGHT ON THE SPOT! ....but I was 19, and just started College...I got the gig in 1990....
How did we go from all those good songs ,movies ,TV shows to what we have today ? Am I just a grumpy old man or did things really go that far down hill ?
I totally agree with you, Carl! And I’m still in high school. The music my peers play around me is just not good. I like to stand out. I try several times to show some of my peers cool music from the 80s, but then they just go back and listen to that creep Drake.
@@ProfessorofRock hey Ty for the response. Love all the content I’m 45 and it’s nice to walk down memory lane . I understand why and what a mid life crisis is now . All the music and movies from the past are just that much better then today’s nonsense. Wish there was more to look forward to .
@@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 I feel for you but you keep playing and listening to what makes you happy . I mean if bad music makes them happy then more power to them lol . As far as me I’m sticking to classic rock grunge and metal . As AC/DC said Rock and roll ain’t noise pollution rock and roll it will never die .
Dude you got me crying just in the first 5 minutes of this video. The movies and tv shows are bringing back so many good memories. I subscribed immediately! I need this channel in my life.
Best times of my life for sure ~ my college days. Yeah, Bryan Adams was only a pre-school kid in 1969, so had to be about something else.... Love that he was inspired by Bob Seger and it's a fantastic song too. I recently heard it was the all time #1 song in Canada, so it deserves that spot here as well. Great story about Man in Motion too! I remember my college roommate being in tears after watching St. Elmo's Fire since it was hitting close to home that those days were coming to an end.
I have all these songs in my personal song listening collection. In 1985, I was 17 and born in the same city as Corey Hart, in Montreal, Canada. Hearing Shout by Tears for Fears always brings me back to my high school days, the song was played at our lunch hour on a continuous basis in our school's student lounge in 85. But Huey Lewis & the News was my all-time favourite musical artist and Power of Love was my most favourite song from this group.
To be fair, the term is one HIT wonder, not one charted wonder. It takes more than just having some good sales for a couple of weeks for a song to really be considered a hit. The work also has to enter the public consciousness to a reasonable degree, so that even years later a good number of people will go "hey yeah, I remember that one" when mentioned. In short, OHWs are artists who are remembered by the general public for having produced just one culturally significant work, regardless of whether they had a relatively successful (if lower key) career before or after that.
@@broncodeviltexas No, that is just journalist Wayne Janick's definition of OHW, which is not universally accepted. The more general meaning, as posted on Wikipedia is "any entity that achieves mainstream popularity, often for only one piece of work, and becomes known among the general public solely for that momentary success".
@@broncodeviltexas That's just one way to think of it, but it's actually more about perception then actual facts. For example, look at the band A-Ha, known for "Take On Me" and considered a one hit wonder in the US. That band had several hits in other countries and stayed together until 2010. On the other hand, look at a band like the Grateful Dead, they had a massive fan following yet they literally only had one top 40-hit in their entire career and nobody called them a one-hit-wonder.
In 1985 I passed my driving test and was born in 1969 - I was 16 and loved driving my little mini fast with Bryan Adams blasting from my stereo - the whole "Reckless" album rocked!
Bryan Adams “Heaven” was number one on my birthday, June 25 1985 and exactly ten years later he had another number one with “Have You Ever Really Loved A Woman”. Such a great artist!