Showing posts with label 1980. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1980. Show all posts

Wednesday 26 May 2021

The Top Ten Best Hit Songs of 1980

So 1980, a tumultuous year in many respects not least of all for music where AC/DC's lead vocalist Bon Scott would be found having passed out in a car and later pronounced dead on arrival at hospital which later saw the band bring in Brian Johnston, John Lennon was shot dead by an obsessed fan outside his apartment building in New York but beyond the world of music...there was a federal election, whatever the hell happened to baby Azaria Chamberlain on that fateful night at Uluru and the controversial Olympics in Moscow. 

So anyway let's get back to the matter at hand because we're here to talk about the best of the popular music in 1980 and in 1980, pop music was in transition moving away from its obsession with disco and into the new wave sound that had planted it's seeds the year before and was beginning to become dominant, disco was still notching success but not quite to the same degree as it had in the years previous while soul and funk had a small amount of success but I still managed to find plenty of fantastic songs for this list (the top five of the year end is stunning)

Rules are this.

1. A song is eligible for this list if it appears on the Kent Music Report's year end list for 1980 or debuted on the 1979 year end list but is higher on the 1980 year end.

2. This list is my opinion so no abuse please!


So without further delays, lets get this top ten best hit songs of 1980 underway!

So there is not going to be too many Australian songs on this list...mostly because a lot of the music the Australian acts were releasing covers like John Farnham with "Help", cliched ballads like Colleen Hewitt's "Dreaming My Dreams With You" or the song is good but stiff competition ultimately meant they missed out but thankfully I did find an ballad from an Australian band I actually liked and it's this...

10. "Downhearted" by Australian Crawl

Full confession...I've never been 100% into Australian Crawl, "Boys Light Up" drives me up the wall and "Reckless" does nothing for me but "Downhearted" is the sort of song I can get behind, it's a song about heartbreak and everything that comes with it. James Reyne frets about the fact love is getting him down because there's no end to his own heartbreak in sight because this girl has stolen his heart...in a way it's a song that's got this kind of 'nice guys' vibe to it (if you've seen the nice guys sub reddit on Reddit, you'll know what I'm talking about) and while that kind of did mean I couldn't put the song any higher on the list, I definitely get what it's trying to do and respect it all the more for it. Good song.


I have a weird relationship with this artist, I don't really particularly care for his music for the most part but there's something about this song I find utterly charming...

9. "More Than I Can Say" by Leo Sayer

If there's anything that could make me lose all credibility...it's admitting that I find this cover of the original The Crickets 1959 version to be utterly charming, yeah it's a cloying and kind of obsessive pop song but there's a sincerity to Leo Sayer's vocals that sells the song for me, he doesn't quite have the words to explain just how much he loves and misses this girl when she's away and questions if she's feeling the same about him. Throw in that guitar and you have me hooked. While I've never really cared for Sayer's other songs, this one will always have a place in my heart, glad it was a number one hit in Australia more than I can say,

Meanwhile there was one band who were more upfront about it and had all the words for love...

8. "What I Like About You" by The Romantics

I got to be honest here, the reason why this song is in the top ten is because of that ridiculously catchy hook coupled with guitars and that handclap as the lyrics rattle off everything he likes about this girl including her dancing and keeping him warm at night. It's just this fun bouncy song that demands your attention and even if you don't mean to, you can find yourself singing along with it. Hey, The Romantics can keep on whispering the things I wanna hear in my ear because yeah ain't going to stop it. It's way too much fun and an easy contender to be on a list like this. Remember when rock music was fun? Can we get back to this because I miss songs like this.


Speaking of having fun, you thought there wouldn't be any disco on this list...wellll...


7. "Blame It On the Boogie" by Jackson 5

Look, this song has a lot in common with The Romantics "What I Like About You", it's catchy and Michael Jackson's energy in his vocal delivery here is as infectious as anything he released solo (I still hare "Don't Stop Til You Get Enough") and the song just has this easy get up and dance energy to it that make the lyrics "I just can't control my feet" ring true  given its a song with an infectious spirit that does make me want to dance also Michael taking lead vocals is inspired because his charisma sells this song so damn well and its part of the reason Michael had a pretty great 1980 within the Jackson 5 and solo.


So I wasn't about to leave Debbie Harry and her cohorts off this list now was I....

6. "Call Me" by Blondie

So this song is probably one of the catchiest pop/rock songs of the 80s, Debbie Harry is killing it at the front of Blondie acting as this prostitute calling on guys to call her any time for love...yes it might surprise you to know that "Call Me" is a song about a prostitute in 1980 film American Gigolo. "Call Me" much like "Blame It On the Boogie" doesn't give you much of a reason to not be on your feet dancing and jumping around to it, with "Call Me" having punchy grooves and that killer middle eight back into the final chorus. Debbie Harry is one hell of a front woman though.


So one of the biggest groups to emerge from the 1970s was UK act Queen following the massive success of "Bohemian Rhapsody", 1980 would turn out to be another fantastic year for them as "Another One Bites the Dust" was huge but there was another Queen song that was even bigger in 1980 and it's on this list...

5. "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" by Queen

Look, it was a tough choice between this one and "Another One Bites the Dust" (that riff is fucking ICONIC!) but in the end "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" won out because...Freddie Mercury's charisma and personality just shines through so much more here and sure the guitar work here is sensational and of the standard you would expect from an act like Queen who by that point had almost perfected their sound, throw in the handclaps and you have the sort of perfect love song that isn't too saccharine and knows when to show off it's cool to the point its effortless especially as Freddie is describing what this crazy emotion called love is doing to him. Great song. 

However if you want the complete opposite of a love song, here's a surprisingly dark song from one of the world's most popular pop acts that in 1980 were falling apart in their private lives and boy, if ever there was a gut punch in 1980, it was this song.

4. "The Winner Takes It All" by ABBA

The first time I heard this piano ballad, I was shocked, people just don't write mature songs about divorce/break ups this way anymore, this is mature and a rather adult way of looking at things, it's a song written by Bjorn Ulvaeus about his break up fellow band member Agnetha but also included a mix of emotions from what Benny and Frida had gone through with their separation, the lyrics are brutally stoic and honest about the end of the relationship and when you realize that there's not really any winners in divorce (according to Bjorn, there were no winners in his divorce from Agnetha) and the fact that proceedings have come to an end and the moment of moving on faced without complaint and not wanting to go back over old ground other than to wish the ex well. Heartbreaking stuff but it's the best song ABBA ever wrote.

Earlier on I mentioned Freddie Mercury as being incredibly charismatic, in 1980, there was a woman in rock music who was more than capable of letting her charisma shine through her vocals and this song was the breakout hit for the band she was in so who needs a little brass and bottle in pocket, right now?


3. "Brass in Pocket" by The Pretenders.

Yes, we can't go without talking about the sensational Chrissie Hynde here because my god she is selling this song with everything and it's kind of what a song like this needs (the irony being that Chrissie actually didn't like the song and hated that it was a number one hit in the UK) and why I cannot stand that Teddy Geiger cover that was done for Spotify, its a song about having the money and courage enough to go out and wanting to be accepted but it just being a front he/she is putting up. I just connect so much with this song and love just how the confidence radiates from Hynde's vocals, I know she doesn't like "Brass in Pocket" but it's a song I just can't get enough of. 

Well... it was the biggest hit song of 1980 and for damn good reason...

2. "I Got You" by Split Enz

Split Enz snuck onto the 1979 year end with "I See Red" but 1980 would see the Tim Finn led band have the biggest song in Australia for 1980 with Tim's brother Neil penning the new wave sounding "I Got You" in 1979, the song spent eight weeks at the top of the Kent Music Report charts in 1980 and what a delight this song is as the narrator ponders how having this significant other with him keeps anxiety and fear at bay but when she isn't around anymore, the anxiety and fear return causing the narrator to retreat back to his room...this song was the moment that new wave really showed that it was ready to dominate the early part of the 80s and this one is still a new wave classic to this day.


Before we get to our number one how about some honourable mentions?

HM1: "Rock With You" by Michael Jackson

For me, 1980 was an off year for Michael Jackson and of his solo songs that made the 1980 year end...this was the song from the lot that got to me the most and connected in a few ways for me (Not like I was ever going to pick "Don't Stop Til You Get Enough"...its the one MJ song I cannot stand). Like most songs on this list, it's a love song that yeah is a bit gooey but it still works 

HM2: "Another One Bites The Dust" by Queen

Iconic guitar riff and Freddie Mercury throwing himself around vocally...what more could you want? There's a reason that this song is a god damn classic...just missed out because well...there was a better Queen song in 1980 that made the list.

HM3: "Working My Way Back to You" by The Spinners

So this one is a bit of a surprise...I wasn't expecting to like this, what would have sounded very much like a pastiche to the early 70s with it's Motown sounding grooves for what is a pretty simple love song and while I am nota fan of some of the spoken word parts, this still works for me. Good song.

HM4: "Romeo's Tune" by Steve Forbert

This song is one of those they play on the radio and they never tell you the name of it when the DJ is on the air but despite some production problems, this song is still pretty cute. Just couldn't justify putting this in the top ten because of the production problems

HM5: "The Wanderer" by Donna Summer

So this grew on me a far bit to the point I nearly replaced "Downhearted" with this song, it's was a sound shift for Donna Summer at the time as she transitioned from disco to a pretty neat pop/r'n'b act and this song does it pretty well...consider it my number eleven.

Back to the list proper, it's time to get to the number one and I will say, it was close between my number one pick, I Got You and Brass in Pocket...all three were number one at some point during the list drafting process but you know....it's all still rock and roll to me...

1. "It's Still Rock 'n' Roll to Me" by Billy Joel

It might surprise you but I dig Billy Joel's music...he'd probably have at least one song on a couple of year end lists for certain years if I really wanted to get down to making those lists for those years (granted I am not a fan of "Uptown Girl"..not a fan of the cover Westlife did either) but "It's Still Rock 'n' Roll to Me" is a damn great song, for one thing Joel is making comment that at the time the new wave sound was arriving thanks to The Police and The Cars however to Joel, it sounded like power pop which to him was nothing new as power pop had been around since the 60s, he didn't like the way the sound had been categorised hence it's all still rock and roll to him and yeah, this song is kind of forward in it's discussion of genre and the blurring of the lines when it comes to genre and look, I just love how catchy and honestly how challenging the song is, does it really matter what genre the song is, as long as you enjoy, the genre shouldn't matter.

"It's Still Rock 'n' Roll to Me" by Billy Joel is the best hit song of 1980.