Thursday 23 July 2009

20 Years Later


This entry consists of my three favorite 80’s pop hits according to three different categories. First up is simply the greatest hit of the decade all in all, material that media almost guaranteed has spoonfed you with at least some time. Then I’ll mention a forgotten hit, which despite having been big in it’s time for one reason or another (double-digit hit, more regionally oriented etc) you just don’t hear anymore. Lastly I’ll focus on electronic dance, just because it’s a fraction of that decade’s mainstream music I really like. The reason to make categories like this is that when it comes to 80’s pop heading for mainstream popularity it usually really was the most famous songs which were the best, and overplayed to this day.

What’s maybe a bit hard to understand now was that early 80’s pop in general was both very rebellious and reactionary music at the same time, trying to distance itself as far away from the hippies as possible both musically with manufactured, slicked and (at the time) high production electronic music not seen before, aesthetically with excessive yuppyish-decadence, and even ideologically with most artists ignoring social issues entirely and often focusing on the excesses of capitalism in a more positive light.

Enjoy.


THE REMEMBERED
Kim Wilde - Kids In America

(03:29)


Who haven’t heard this rocking 1981 new wave track yet, in one form or another. The tense buildup and unforgettable anthemic chorus together with the lyrical content does not only scream of commercial perfection*, but the very beginning of a new era.

*A claim that can be easily supported by the endless stream of consistently popping up covers by everything from alternative rock bands to cartoon shows.


THE FORGOTTEN
Moon Ray - Comanchero

(03:58)


Stomping Italo-pop which was a hit in the summer of 1985, or perhaps 1984, the sources are a bit conflicting; maybe it reached different countries at different time periods. Very kitschy track both intentionally with the spaghetti western-ish chants and unintentionally with it’s extremely 80’s music video, which has led to the song getting a minor non-commercial comeback on the internet.


THE.. ONE TO DANCE TO.
Trans X - Living On Video
(5:54)


Light beams, purple skies, computer fantasies… On video. Behold what the future sounded like in 1981, though the world just didn’t understand the quintessentially early techno until two years later when it became a huge international hit. The backbone of the song is its dark synth line repeated over and over again for the entirety of the song and rightfully so.

Sunday 12 July 2009

Happy Hardcore Compilation

The ''album art'' is a slightly modified snapshot from an Indonesian kids show. For own entertainment I'll throw in these these types of pictures from now on, meant to be descriptive of a musical genres stereotypical visual expression.


Happy hardcore is essentially fast, hard 4/4 beat electronic dance music with an upbeat attitude popular in the 90’s rave scene, eventually going in and out of mainstream popularity the same decade.

It's by many thought of as lame/gay, uncreative low quality trash falsefully proclaiming itself to be hardcore techno played by loudmouthed narcissistic DJs with broken English that only dumb, drugged out pubertal european wigger teens with dyed blonde hair listen to. As with all music that was really popular, the higher up it gets, the harder it falls. Still it's always moronic to judge music depending on how difficult it was to create or it's fanbase rather than the aesthetic experience it generates, or thinking that depth equals to wanting to sit alone and be angsty. In happy hardcores defense I think it has a depth in the sense that it's often the most intense and accurate musical expression of bliss and positive energy; That it can still the music of choice on big festive events and locations like carnies, despite being a dinosaur for the mainstream, shows the lasting strength of that expression the genre provides.

I'll let the tracks speak for themselves this time. Enjoy

Dj Dougal and Mickey Skeedale – Emerald
(03:54, from Happy Hardcore 5 CD 1)

Dj Paul Elstak – Pump This Party
(04:17, from Happy Hardcore 1 CD 1)

DJ Seduction – Samplemania
(03:33, from Hardcore Flashback 2)

Dj Dougal and Mickey Skeedale – Pump It Up
(06:23, from Hardcore Flashback 3)

TKM – Time Out
(04:48, from Bonkers 5: Anarchy In The Universe CD 3 (Dougals Mix)

Update:

Dj Vinylgroover & Dj Quatro - Calypso Summer
(03:38, from Bonkers CD 1 (Hixxys Mix)

Dougal & Gammer - Get Hype [Scott Brown Remix]
(03:53, from Hardcore Flashback 4)

Eruption feat Katherine Wood - Let the Music
(05:38, from Happy Hardcore 4 CD2)

Hixxy - I'm ready
(03:37, from Happy 2B Hardcore Vol. 7)

N.U.K.E - Nana
(03:12, from History of Dance 5: The Happy Hardcore Edition)