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-   -   80's classic rock songs??? (https://www.musicbanter.com/rock-n-roll-classic-rock-60s-rock/61539-80s-classic-rock-songs.html)

sopsych 11-01-2012 08:43 PM

Er, I bet you could have found that with Google, but the answer is Rock the House Live! Which I knew from memory. The song probably is the best thing from the album, at least to me. (It's a studio track, and I think everything else is live.)

VEGANGELICA 11-02-2012 10:35 PM

My favorite '80s classic rock songs include:

Foreigner - "Urgent"
I didn't hear it until the late '80s, but once I did, it was hard to forget. :) I don't usually like the sound of sax, but I love it in this song. Watching the video, I am also impressed that Lou Gramm sounds so at one with the lyrics as he sings them. Like a good actor, he isn't really acting: he appears to be feeling the emotions behind what he sings.


Foreigner - Urgent (1981) - Original Video - YouTube


Foreigner - "Dirty White Boy"
Reminds me of someone I knew and so the song is meaningful to me. Nicely energetic guitar and drum beat intro. I usually prefer the sound of simple rhythm guitar to flashy solo guitar, so this is a good song for rhythm guitar fans such as myself.


Foreigner-Dirty White Boy - YouTube


Joan Jett & The Blackhearts - "I Love Rock 'n Roll" (Cover)
A catchy song with a pleasant gritty sound.


I Love Rock 'n Roll- Joan Jett and the Blackhearts - YouTube

And again...

Joan Jett & The Blackhearts - "Crimson & Clover" (Cover)
I like it better than the original. Also, this is the video that made me realize I feel Joan Jett is pretty damn hot!


joan jett - crimson and clover 1983.avi - YouTube

Unknown Soldier 11-03-2012 03:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by VEGANGELICA (Post 1247023)
My favorite '80s classic rock songs include:

Foreigner - "Urgent"
I didn't hear it until the late '80s, but once I did, it was hard to forget. :) I don't usually like the sound of sax, but I love it in this song. Watching the video, I am also impressed that Lou Gramm sounds so at one with the lyrics as he sings them. Like a good actor, he isn't really acting: he appears to be feeling the emotions behind what he sings.


Foreigner - Urgent (1981) - Original Video - YouTube


Foreigner - "Dirty White Boy"
Reminds me of someone I knew and so the song is meaningful to me. Nicely energetic guitar and drum beat intro. I usually prefer the sound of simple rhythm guitar to flashy solo guitar, so this is a good song for rhythm guitar fans such as myself.


Foreigner-Dirty White Boy - YouTube


Joan Jett & The Blackhearts - "I Love Rock 'n Roll" (Cover)
A catchy song with a pleasant gritty sound.


I Love Rock 'n Roll- Joan Jett and the Blackhearts - YouTube

And again...

Joan Jett & The Blackhearts - "Crimson & Clover" (Cover)
I like it better than the original. Also, this is the video that made me realize I feel Joan Jett is pretty damn hot!


joan jett - crimson and clover 1983.avi - YouTube

Lou Gramm was such a great vocalist and sure that sax is unforgettable.

sopsych 11-03-2012 09:40 AM

I haven't even listed my favorites in this thread. That would be very difficult for me. But "Urgent" probably would be in there, because it's good in every way. Except for the video, which apparently is so stupid that music video stations won't play it.

Unknown Soldier 11-03-2012 09:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wisdom (Post 1247105)
I haven't even listed my favorites in this thread. That would be very difficult for me. But "Urgent" probably would be in there, because it's good in every way. Except for the video, which apparently is so stupid that music video stations won't play it.

What's so stupid about it, it looks like any other band video performance from the late 70s and early 80's.

VEGANGELICA 11-03-2012 10:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Unknown Soldier (Post 1247049)
Lou Gramm was such a great vocalist and sure that sax is unforgettable.

Your use of "was" made me worried that Lou Gramm was no more :(, so I looked him up, expecting the worst...and am glad to see see he is alive! :)

I read that he had a brain tumor that was successfully removed, allowing him to survive but with a permanently altered voice. I was also surprised to learn that he turned to Christianity to help him in his fight against addictions, so that his recent album is a Christian one. I hadn't expected that.
Lou Gramm brings new voice to old songs at Celebration

About Lou Gramm's voice when he was part of Foreigner:

I was interested to learn that my positive reaction to his voice is the same as many other people's reactions (including yours, US). I had never read anything about Foreigner until today, so my impressions of his voice were based on the songs alone rather than hype about them. I read on Wikipedia that "Circus magazine in 1978 upon release of 'Hot Blooded' commented that Lou Gramm had a voice that Robert Plant might envy." (I also like Robert Plant's vocals, so I appreciated the analogy.) And, Gramm's "unique vocals have made Foreigner one of Billboard's Top 100 Artists of All Time in hit songs history."

The "Urgent" video of the Foreigner TV performance: I like it because although it isn't flashy or particularly creative (although notice the "smoke" used to make the set look "exciting"), it lets me see the band perform as if I were there. I liked watching Gramm's expressions and the sax player. I especially liked how Lou Gramm watched appreciatively and clapped along as the saxophonist performed. That was very respectful and made me feel the band were a cohesive unit.

Also, I was surprised to see the drummer in the *front* of the stage, since usually drummers are stuffed in the back somewhere. Do many bands play with the drummers in the front? I didn't think so. I liked it, though. Drummers usually have to play "second drum" (as opposed to fiddle) to the vocalist and the guitarists. I'm thinking that the drummer was placed up front in this performance partly because the kit isn't miked, so they wanted to make sure the sound of the drums was prominent in the mix.

Unknown Soldier 11-03-2012 01:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by VEGANGELICA (Post 1247127)
Your use of "was" made me worried that Lou Gramm was no more :(, so I looked him up, expecting the worst...and am glad to see see he is alive! :)

I read that he had a brain tumor that was successfully removed, allowing him to survive but with a permanently altered voice. I was also surprised to learn that he turned to Christianity to help him in his fight against addictions, so that his recent album is a Christian one. I hadn't expected that.
Lou Gramm brings new voice to old songs at Celebration

About Lou Gramm's voice when he was part of Foreigner:

I was interested to learn that my positive reaction to his voice is the same as many other people's reactions (including yours, US). I had never read anything about Foreigner until today, so my impressions of his voice were based on the songs alone rather than hype about them. I read on Wikipedia that "Circus magazine in 1978 upon release of 'Hot Blooded' commented that Lou Gramm had a voice that Robert Plant might envy." (I also like Robert Plant's vocals, so I appreciated the analogy.) And, Gramm's "unique vocals have made Foreigner one of Billboard's Top 100 Artists of All Time in hit songs history."

The "Urgent" video of the Foreigner TV performance: I like it because although it isn't flashy or particularly creative (although notice the "smoke" used to make the set look "exciting"), it lets me see the band perform as if I were there. I liked watching Gramm's expressions and the sax player. I especially liked how Lou Gramm watched appreciatively and clapped along as the saxophonist performed. That was very respectful and made me feel the band were a cohesive unit.

Also, I was surprised to see the drummer in the *front* of the stage, since usually drummers are stuffed in the back somewhere. Do many bands play with the drummers in the front? I didn't think so. I liked it, though. Drummers usually have to play "second drum" (as opposed to fiddle) to the vocalist and the guitarists. I'm thinking that the drummer was placed up front in this performance partly because the kit isn't miked, so they wanted to make sure the sound of the drums was prominent in the mix.

Me using "was" was a typo and sounds like I did it in bad humour, I'd forgotten that he had been very ill. The positive reaction to his voice is nothing new though. Most reviewers along with myself would easily include Lou Gramm in the first division of AOR vocalists along with the likes of Bobby Kimball, Jimi Jameson, Steve Perry and Brad Delp.

It was a surprise to see the drummer pushed so far forward but it's not unheard of either. There is a definite comparison between Lou Gramm and Robert Plant as a vocalist, but of course Lou Gramm had a much stronger voice.

Kristina85 11-03-2012 01:20 PM

I'm a big fan of 80's music. I know songs from that era better than my parents. :hphones:

My favorite rock groups are: Queen, Dire Straits, Foreigner.
Favorite rock singers: Freddie Mercury, Ann Wilson, Stevie (Stephanie) Nicks.

Kristina85 11-03-2012 01:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by VEGANGELICA (Post 1247023)
My favorite '80s classic rock songs include:

Foreigner - "Urgent"
I didn't hear it until the late '80s, but once I did, it was hard to forget.......

What a coincidence that just above my post I find also the fans of Foreigners. :yeah:

I just listened to their "That was yesterday" because it clearly describes my current situation - I'm in a bad mood because of the pride of my beloved. :(

sopsych 11-03-2012 01:46 PM

The video looks like footage from American Bandstand, the song is truncated, and the saxophonist isn't the person who played in studio (and I'm not sure that band member can even play the saxophone).

Anyway, I'm making some progress in thinking of my own list of best 80's classic rock songs.


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