80s music
The 80s were chockful of New Wave power ballads, synthesizers, drum machines, and no shortage of Madonna and Michael Jackson.
Five Songs That Should Find A Permanent Home In The Red Hot Center Of A Collapsing Star
I wasn’t going to participate in this. Music is like pizza toppings… most people like normal, good quality things, and some people are wrong and like pineapple. It’s not worth my time to argue with the neanderthals who like the latter. There’s plenty around to make my blood boil and delving into those songs I spend time consciously avoiding isn’t exactly what I want to do with my free time.
By Matthew J. Fromm5 months ago in Beat
Breaking Barriers, Building Legacy: Moet Ro$e is A Rising Force
When it comes to artists who embody energy, passion, and vision, Moet Ro$e is proving herself to be a rising force you can’t ignore. From captivating performances to bold new partnerships, she is blazing her own trail in the music scene—and fans everywhere are taking notice.
By Independent Indie Artist Radar5 months ago in Beat
Moet Ro$e Is Redefining Hip Hop and Soul on Her Own Terms
Moet Ro$e is more than an artist—she’s a movement in the making. With roots in gospel choirs and a foundation shaped by both discipline and faith, she has crafted a sound that transcends genre lines. Her music fuses the raw honesty of hip hop with the soul-stirring richness of gospel-inspired vocals, creating a style that is at once authentic, ambitious, and deeply resonant. From her early days directing choirs and DJing campus events to building a growing catalog supported by her label, Moet Ro$e has proven that she doesn’t just perform music—she embodies it. Every verse carries her story, every note echo resilience, and every stage she steps on becomes a space for connection.
By The Blacksheepkid Collective by: El Pablo 1x5 months ago in Beat
Five Songs that Irritate My Ears
The Five Songs That Really Irritate My Ears Some of my essay here is going to focus on the technical parts of singing and recording a song. I’ll also take a look at how these songs were received by the public and how they performed on the charts. I’m not necessarily going to say I hate or dislike any of them, but I’ll explain why they made my list of five songs that irritate my ears. For context, I was a teenager in the 1970s, I was 15 for the entire year of 1975, so most of my picks come from the late 1960s through the early 1980s.
By Rick Henry Christopher 5 months ago in Beat
Songs That Should Not Exist. Top Story - September 2025.
There are so many songs I could add to this list. 1. “Friday” – Rebecca Black Listen here “Friday” is the aural equivalent of stepping barefoot on a Lego. Every note is a testament to what happens when ambition meets no discernible talent. The autotuned vocals are robotic, the lyrics read like a diary of a caffeinated thirteen-year-old, and the beat is an unrelenting metronome of despair. Listening to this song is simply unpleasant. It is an experience of existential torment wrapped in a pop veneer.
By Tim Carmichael5 months ago in Beat
How Dolly Parton Wrote “9 to 5” — Her Casting in 9 to 5 and the Song’s Unforgettable Sound
Introduction Released in 1980, “9 to 5” is not just one of Dolly Parton’s most iconic songs — it’s also inseparable from her film debut in 9 to 5, a comedy about working women dealing with discrimination, low pay, and an overbearing boss. The song, its creation, and Parton’s casting are deeply intertwined, offering a window into her creativity, negotiation skills, and her ability to turn lived-in workplace frustrations into art.
By Movies of the 80s5 months ago in Beat
I Will Find You
Introduction This snippet is from a Seven Days In post that I did in 2013, when I discovered this amazing song: It's one of those things. I have lots of albums I've not listened to, Today, for the first time, I decided to play "Fireships" by Peter Hamill and was stunned by the first song "I Will Find You", an amazing alien splicing of Blondie's "Presence Dear" and The Police's "Every Breath You Take". You haven't a clue whether the protagonist is a love-struck, caring admirer or an evil, devious stalker, with the latter being the favoured outcome. I've included the song just because it really is a case of you don't know what you're missing.
By Mike Singleton 💜 Mikeydred 5 months ago in Beat
When Talent is Non-Existent
When I saw Sam Spinelli's challenge, asking us to name and shame our five least favourite songs, I got very excited. I can be a grumpy, judgemental, opinionated ass at the best of times (ask Ruth, the good lady wife!), but when it comes to music, I've learned to try and keep schtum when I think something is terrible. All because I'm just trying to be a better person (My Name is Earl opening ref, anyone?).
By Paul Stewart5 months ago in Beat
d4vd: The Rise of David Anthony Burke, Beyond Rumors and Viral Searches
The internet moves fast. In the age of TikTok trends and overnight fame, artists like David Anthony Burke, better known as d4vd, have emerged as powerful voices in the music industry. But along with fame comes another side of online culture: viral misinformation.
By KAMRAN AHMAD5 months ago in Beat
Queen’s Flash Gordon: How a Rock Band Scored a Space-Opera Cult Classic
When Mike Hodges’ candy-colored Flash Gordon hit theaters in 1980, critics were divided on the camp, the box office was middling, and yet one thing cut through like a laser beam: Queen’s soundtrack. Four musicians at the peak of their pop power took on a full feature score—folding in synthesisers, film dialogue, heroic guitar fanfares, and that indelible call-and-response hook: “Flash! Ah-ahhh!” Here’s how the band got the gig, how they built the music, and why the record’s legacy ultimately outpaced the movie’s first-run fortunes.
By Movies of the 80s5 months ago in Beat
10 Music Videos That Shaped Me. AI-Generated.
### 10. *Wannabe* – Spice Girls **The music video that made girl power global.** The first time I saw this video, I didn’t even know who they were—but I knew they were *something*. They came in loud, confident, and totally unbothered. It was silly, catchy, wild, and bursting with personality. This video introduced a cultural moment that never really left.
By Travis Johnson5 months ago in Beat








