Adam Ant (who later gets six pages to himself – a sign of star status) is described as living in a two room flat near Regents Park decorated by two designers from The Royal College of Art with “blue satin chairs and silvery green walls with matching velvet curtains”.
#Underrated depeche mode songs top ten tv
Pop on TV is given a retrospective with the Old Grey Whistle Test coming in for some severe stick from Neil Tennant’s viperish quill as he describes it as “Greyer than ever” and “it was pretty boring in 1971 and that hasn’t changed much either!”. “I had the first three solo McCartney albums and learned every single bass line off them” Ant trumpeted. The Old-timers piece also explained that Elton John’s career highlight so far was a duet with Miss Piggy:Īdam Ant meanwhile paid tribute to Paul McCartney calling him the “best bass player in the world” which is possibly damning McCartney with faint praise and slightly ignores the whole “best songwriter” title but we’ll let it go. As it happens, Abba split months after publication of the article. “Who is to stop Sweden’s second biggest export?” asked the article (it isn’t clear if they were serious about finding a solution), without clarifying the bigger question: Exactly what is Sweden’s first biggest export? (Porn? meatballs? Ikea?).
That’s like calling The Killers old timers in 2012. Interesting that Abba were considered old timers in 1982 though. It’s still Cliff, Macca, Elton, Bowie and Quo. Who knew Paul Weller wanted to be a private detective?! Or that Suggs used to be a decorator? Or that Nick Heyward wanted to drive a tractor (give it time, Nick – you will one day).Īn article about old-timers was good. In addition, they also had some great quotes. Of course in 1982 Depeche Mode had just released Just Can’t Get Enough and the rather chirpier Vince Clarke had only recently departed…įollowing my posts on old rock stars’ jobs it is sobering to see that I wasn’t the first to write an article on the subject: Look-in had beaten me to it by thirty years. Even better is the comment that “Depeche Mode has allowed Synthesiser music to lose its doom and gloom tag” (Really? I have seen recently bereaved Norwegian Death Metal bands with happier songs and faces than Depeche Mode). More amusing are quotes from Gary Numan: “To be honest, I’m not that good a player at all” (insert your own joke here) and Depeche Mode’s Dave Gahan: “I don’t think people who come to see us now think of us as a synthesiser band” (Sorry Dave: I’ll be honest – I still do). (Contrast with this recent Top of The Pops Magazine headline: “The Wanted – Number Twos and Blocked Loos: Eeeew!”). It’s a serious piece, telling of the rise of the Moog in 1964, how The Monkees were pioneers in 1967, followed by Roxy Music and Kraftwerk. Is this some kind of electronic revolution?” “For many months now” states the article (months!) “the pop charts have been buzzing with synthesisers and thumping to computerised drums. The somewhat highbrow tone continues with an article on Electro Pop. Brilliantly, the author manages to project the story onto an educational backdrop of the war in Korea and The Suez Crisis, an approach that recent issues of modern equivalent Top of the Pops Magazine have, I feel, neglected (sample recent TOTP Magazine headline: Rita Ora Exclusive – “I can just about make scrambled eggs”. Whilst not really rivalling Peter Guralnik’s Last Train to Memphis for breadth of content it does beat it for sheer brevity and number of pictures – telling the story of the rise of Elvis in just eight pages. Perhaps the single greatest thing here is the “Pop Picture Strip” of the life of Elvis Presley, just five years after his death. Edited by none other than Neil Tennant (before he joined The Pet Shop Boys) the book is a fascinating (and frequently amusing) time-capsule of the early eighties pop scene. This was also the year Culture Club’s Boy George first appeared on Top of The Pops with Do You Really Want To Hurt Me prompting a hundred discussions about whether he was a girl or a boy…īrowsing through one of Leigh on Sea’s used bookstores a few weeks ago I stumbled across a rare piece of blogging treasure: The 1982 Look-in Pop Annual. Geils Band’s Centerfold, Survivor’s Eye of The Tiger and a big hit at school was Musical Youth’s Pass The Dutchie. The Human League had a huge hit with Don’t You Want Me. In the UK the biggest selling single was Dexy’s Midnight Runners‘ Come On Eileen. The release of Michael Jackson’s Thriller. Home › Music › A Look Back At Look-in: The 1982 Pop SceneĪ Look Back At Look-in: The 1982 Pop Sceneīy Every Record Tells A Story on Octoġ982 was a big year in pop music.