20- I'm Alive, Electric Light Orchestra, #16, 1980. This is the other of the hits from the Xanadu soundtrack.

19- Desperadoes Waiting On A Train, Kristofferson/Jennings/Cash/Nelson, #15 country, 1985. Not hard to figure this would be up here, as it was on the charts as I was trying to settle my dad's estate.
18- Amarillo By Morning, George Strait, #4 country, 1983. "I ain't got time, but what I've got is mine/I'm not rich, but Lord, I'm free..."
17- South Central Rain, REM, #85, #43 Mainstream Rock, 1984. The first REM tune most of us ever heard. I'm sorry....
16- The Voice, Moody Blues, #15, #1 MSR, 1981. Long Distance Voyager marked a whole new life for this classic band.
15- Everytime You Go Away, Paul Young, #1, 1985. Another slow grower that is best when you can find the full, uncut-for-pop-airplay version.
14- Time (Clock Of The Heart), Culture Club, #2, 1982. As anyone can tell you, I'm a pushover for bells tolling at the end of a song (see How Do You Mend A Broken Heart).
13- In The Shape Of A Heart, Jackson Browne, #70, #15 MSR, #10 adult contemporary, 1986. The hands-down biggest tear producer on the list for me.
12- Fall On Me, REM, #94, #5 MSR, 1986. "Well, I could keep it above/but then it wouldn't be sky any more/so if I send it to you, you gotta promise to keep it whole..."
11- 867-5309/Jenny, Tommy Tutone, #4, #1 MSR, 1982. Still blows me away that the founder of this band was a founder of the Cowsills.
10- That Girl Could Sing, Jackson Browne, #22, 1980. I don't know if she could, but I do know he could.
9- Money For Nothing, Dire Straits, #1, 1985. Waking up under some girl's pool table. Beer for breakfast. And music still on MTV. Good Times.
8- Making Love Out Of Nothing At All, Air Supply, #2, 1983. Producer Jim Steinman sure had a run that summer- and the biggest one is still to come.
7- For You, Manfred Mann's Earth Band, #106, 1981. The best of his Bruce Springsteen covers- don't let the low charting fool you.
6- Her Town Too, James Taylor with JD Souther, #11, #5 AC, 1981. I spent a semester taking night classes at IPFW and this song played in the same spot, on my last turn-off, a mile from home- at least once a week. Kinda becomes a comfort after a while.
5- Coming Up (live), Wings, #1, 1980. C'mon, has anyone even HEARD the studio version that was the a-side?
4- Take Me Home Tonight, Eddie Money, #4, #1 MSR, 1986. "Listen honey, just like Ronnie sang... be my little baby..."
3- Heat Of The Moment, Asia, #4, #1 MSR, 1982. A breath of fresh air in a music era that was dying.
2- Total Eclipse Of The Heart, Bonnie Tyler, #1, 1983. The other Steinman tune, and the song that rode the pop chart for 4 weeks and mine for 8.And now, at long last, my #1 song of the 1980s- a tune that was top ten in my sixties countdown as well:
1- Angel Of The Morning, Juice Newton, #4, 1981. A song so seared into my primal soul by Merilee Rush when I was little, that it only took the first few notes when Juice redid it.
And there you have it! Hope everyone enjoyed, did some humming, brushed back a tear, or smiled at some memory. Because that's what music is really all about- a blank cassette upon which we tape the good times. See ya next week- on Time Machine, that is.


CWM:
ReplyDeleteGot some GREAT songs in the mix this week...
--Air Supply - very good.
--Dire Straits - excellent (best video of it's time, imho)
--Eddie Money - well chosen
--Asia - nice pick.
--Bonnie Tyler - and STEINMAN...a REAL keeper!
--Juice Newton - my 2nd fav song of hers (Queen of Hearts is #1 with me)
Wow..it's OVER already???
That FLEW by.
Next stop...the 90s???
(id we dare)
Stay safe up there.