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The 1980s produced chart-topping hits in pop, hip-hop, rock, and R&B. Here's a list of the best songs from the time, ranging from Toto to Michael Jackson.
Furtado walking on the seashore in the music video for "All Good Things (Come to an End)". The "All Good Things" music video, directed by Gabriel Coss and Israel Lugo, [12] was filmed in Puerto Rico and shot back-to-back with the music video for "Say It Right", the album's third single in North America. [13]
The 1980s were a wild time for music. From rock 'n' roll hair bands to the debut of Whitney Houston and the launch of a little-known network named MTV, there was no shortage of history-making ...
In a 2024 interview, Jones said that "Hide and Seek" was "even more relevant now because of where we are as a world. It's very easy to give up on things and resign yourself to doom, but it's very important to feel hopeful and positive about the future. That song is definitely about hope." [4]
The salsa music became together with cumbia the two most popular dance music but did not penetrate other countries outside the Caribbean as cumbia did. The 1980s were a time of diversification, as popular salsa evolved into sweet and smooth salsa romantica, with lyrics dwelling on love and romance, and its more explicit cousin, salsa erotica.
Lyrically, "All Through the Night" addresses the concept of love and its tug at heart-strings. [5] Shear recalled in an interview, "[it's] like a big bonus really. Cyndi Lauper does a song ('All Through the Night') that's on a solo record of mine. I just thought, 'No one's really going to hear this.' Then she does it, and it becomes a Top 5 song."
The music video was produced by Paul Flattery and directed by Jim Yukich of FYI. It features Kid Leo , a radio personality who got his start in Cleveland, Carmen's hometown. The video refers to the film American Graffiti by re-creating the scene in which the blonde in the white T-Bird ( Suzanne Somers ) tells Curt ( Richard Dreyfuss ) "I love ...
In his native UK, where Jones had enjoyed numerous pop hits, "Everlasting Love" failed to have as much of an impact as earlier singles, stalling at No. 62 on the UK Singles Chart. [4] The song was co-produced by ex- Tears for Fears band member Ian Stanley .