Get the playlist here.
Picture: Park Lane College
Here’s the full rundown.
100. AC/DC – Back In Black
99. Gary Byrd & The GB Experience – The Crown
98. The Monochrome Set – Jetset Junta
97. The Fall – Cruiser’s Creek
96. Stakker Humanoid – Humanoid
95. The Gun Club – She’s Like Heroin To Me
94. Minor Threat – Straight Edge
93. Eurythmics – Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)
92. De La Soul – Me, Myself & I
91. The Church – Under The Milky Way Tonight
90. Wall of Voodoo – Mexican Radio
89. Change – Change of Heart
88. The Beat – Mirror In The Bathroom
87. Visage – Fade To Grey
86. Icehouse – Hey Little Girl
85. Sueño Latino – Sueño Latino
84. Momus – A Complete History of Sexual Jealousy, Parts 17-24100 Greatest Songs of the 1980’s #84 Momus – A Complete History of Sexual Jealousy, Parts 17-24
83. Grace Jones – Slave To The Rhythm
82. Black Flag – Six Pack
81. Thomas Dolby – Airwaves
80. Marshall Crenshaw – Someday, Someway
79. Lil Louis – French Kiss
78. Finitribe – De Testimony
77. Echo & The Bunnymen – The Cutter
76. Belouis Some – Imagination
75. Cabaret Voltaire – The Crackdown
74. Boogie Down Productions – The Bridge Is Over
73. Motorhead – Ace of Spades
72. Tom Tom Club – Genius of Love
71. Soft Cell – Say Hello, Wave Goodbye
70. Japan – Ghosts
69. Primal Scream – Velocity Girl
68. Fine Young Cannibals – Funny How Love Is
67. Joe Smooth – Promised Land
66. EPMD – Strictly Business
65. Celtic Frost – Into The Crypts of Rays
64. Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five – The Message
63. Fugazi – Waiting Room
62. Dexy’s Midnight Runners – Geno
61. Robert Wyatt – Shipbuilding
60. NWA – Straight Outta Compton
59. Guns N’ Roses – Welcome To The Jungle
58. U2 – Sunday Bloody Sunday
57. A Guy Called Gerald – Voodoo Ray
56. Dinosaur Jr. – Freakscene
55. The Sugarcubes – Birthday
54. The Stranglers – Golden Brown
53. Big Black – Bad Penny
52. Don Henley – The Boys of Summer
51. M/A/R/R/S – Pump Up The Volume
50. Big Audio Dynamite – e=MC2
49. Kraftwerk – Tour De France
48. Slayer – Raining Blood
47. The Go-Betweens – Streets of Your Town
46. The Specials – Ghost Town
45. The Wedding Present – My Favourite Dress
44. Rhythim is Rhythim – Strings of Life
43. Pixies – Monkey Gone To Heaven
42. 808 State – Pacific State
41. Orange Juice – Rip It Up
40. R.E.M – It’s The End of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)
39. Kate Bush – Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)
38. Prince – Sign O’ The Times
37. Big Country – Where The Rose Is Sown
36. China Crisis – African And White
35. Eric B & Rakin – I Know You Got Soul
34. XTC – Senses Working Overtime
33. Chris Isaak – Wicked Game
32. The Clash – Straight To Hell
31. Hüsker Dü – Don’t Want to Know If You Are Lonely
30. Gang of Four – I Love A Man In A Uniform
29. Electronic – Getting Away With It
28. The Cramps – Fever
27. Scritti Politti – Absolute
26. Talk Talk – Life’s What You Make It
25. Pet Shop Boys – King’s Cross
24. ABC – Poison Arrow
23. Soul II Soul ft. Caron Weaver – Back to Life
22. The Jesus & Mary Chain – Never Understand
21. David Bowie – Ashes to Ashes
20. Metallica – Seek & Destroy
19. Happy Mondays – Wrote For Luck
18. The Human League – Love Action (I Believe in Love)
17. Madonna – Into The Groove
16. Lloyd Cole & The Commotions – Perfect Skin
15. Joy Division – Isolation
14. This Mortal Coil – Song To The Siren
13. The Cult – She Sells Sanctuary
12. The Associates – Party Fears Two
11. Simple Minds – New Gold Dream (81-82-83-84)
10. Talking Heads – The Great Curve
9. The Cure – A Forest
8. Aztec Camera – Oblivious
7. Public Enemy – Fight The Power
6. New Order – Thieves Like Us
5. The Stone Roses – I Am The Resurrection
4. The Smiths – There Is A Light That Never Goes Out
3. Prefab Sprout – Bonny
2. The the – Uncertain Smile
- The Blue Nile – Tinseltown In The Rain
Over the year the list will be regularly updated. Find it without the blurb here.
Or read on…
For all the nineteen eighties have been misrepresented, misunderstood and subsequently mined for profit, at least one aspect of the decade will always remain indisputable; during the most artistically diverse period in the history of the art form, if you didn’t like something you could rest assured that a new sound would be along at any minute.
The former executives at MTV might have you believe that this was somehow partially down to their evangelisation, but much of the era’s best music grew in the weeds, in fire hazard clubs or dingy recording studios. Of course drugs played a part – the pre-eminence of cocaine and ecstacy shaping the music their users made – but in reality the establishment became reflectors, not taste makers, as dozens of new underground scenes from…
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