1001 Song You Must Hear Before You Die - 1987

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About time to get these going again.

Poll Results

OptionVotes
Public Enemy: Bring The Noise 24
Salt-N-Pepa: Push It 14
The Cure: Just Like Heaven 11
The Pogues: Fairytale Of New York 10
The Church: Under The Milky Way 9
The Sugarcubes: Birthday 8
New Order: True Faith 6
Mory Kante: Yé Ké Yé Ké 4
INXS: Need You Tonight 4
U2: With Or Without You 4
M/A/R/R/S: Pump Up The Volume 3
Guns N'Roses: Paradise City 3
The Sisters Of Mercy: This Corrision 3
R.E.M.: The One I Love 2
Depeche Mode: Never Let Me Down Again 2
Franco: Attencion Na SIDA 2
Midnight Oil: Beds Are Burning 1
Pet Shop Boys: It's a Sin 1
Ali Farka Touré: Amandari 0
Pata Negra: Camarón 0
George Michael: Faith 0
Gipsy Kings: Bamboleo 0


Hongroe (Geir Hongro), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 08:25 (thirteen years ago)

Notice now there is a typo in the header.

Otherwise, I don't understand they there are suddenly more songs from this particular year, because 1987 was a rather horrible vintage IMO.

Still there's "Just Like Heaven" to vote for, so that pick is easy for me. (Nice songs from The Church, Gipsy Kings and U2 as well, while the ones from Depeche Mode and Pet Shop Boys I have never considered to be among their best)

Hongroe (Geir Hongro), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 08:26 (thirteen years ago)

Just Like Heaven

Logg \ O / Logg (crüt), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 08:27 (thirteen years ago)

Yeke Yeke vs Bring The Noise

master musicians of jamiroquai (NickB), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 08:36 (thirteen years ago)

In 1987 I would have said Birthday easily, but I just don't feel that song anymore /dead-inside

master musicians of jamiroquai (NickB), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 08:40 (thirteen years ago)

speaking of birthdays, this is the year I was born!

Logg \ O / Logg (crüt), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 08:42 (thirteen years ago)

A pretty good year imo.

master musicians of jamiroquai (NickB), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 08:44 (thirteen years ago)

push it real good

Cosmo Vitelli, Tuesday, 4 October 2011 08:56 (thirteen years ago)

It's the Cure, here, isn't it?

Mark G, Tuesday, 4 October 2011 09:03 (thirteen years ago)

Always had a soft spot for Yeke Yeke

dog latin, Tuesday, 4 October 2011 09:06 (thirteen years ago)

This list is very euro/afro innit?

dog latin, Tuesday, 4 October 2011 09:06 (thirteen years ago)

push it, over the pogues

symsymsym, Tuesday, 4 October 2011 09:52 (thirteen years ago)

"Push It" was the first rap track I really hated with a passion. I was disappointed by the "harder" musical direction taken by the likes of Run DMC, Beastie Boys and LL Cool J, but "Push It" was when I really realized I absolutely hated rap.

Hongroe (Geir Hongro), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 09:59 (thirteen years ago)

To quote the song: "This dance ain't for everybody / Only the sexy people"

master musicians of jamiroquai (NickB), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 10:02 (thirteen years ago)

Sexist even.

Hongroe (Geir Hongro), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 10:08 (thirteen years ago)

Hand in your sexy badge Geir, you just got busted by Salt-N-Pepa.

master musicians of jamiroquai (NickB), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 10:10 (thirteen years ago)

Interesting to see all those songs listed at together. REM and U2 are both enjoying big success, but demonstrably into their decline. A good comeback for the Cure. And the Church! I saw em on that tour and they were great. Also the Pogues. But as ever in this period, you have to vote for the hip hop. It's just so far ahead of everything else.

broom air, Tuesday, 4 October 2011 11:46 (thirteen years ago)

PE, pretty easy.

EZ Snappin, Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:03 (thirteen years ago)

No love for "True Faith" so far? The bounciest and most uplifting song they ever did.

ban this sick stunt (anagram), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:11 (thirteen years ago)

I'd have said "With or without you" was U2 at their peak, after that it was Fonzie on the waterski.

Mark G, Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:14 (thirteen years ago)

Another one where I won't vote. The songs on there that I once really liked--"The One I Love," "Paradise City"--I'm tired of. I'd rather have "Father Figure" than "Faith," and would much, much rather have "What Have I Done to Deserve This?" than "It's a Sin." From the names on
Billboard's Top 100, I like these songs better than what's there: Heart's "Alone," Madonna's "Open Your Heart" (released '86, a hit in '87), Prince's "I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man," Fleetwood Mac's "Mystified," Bruce Springsteen's "Tunnel of Love," and Michael Jackson's "The Way You Make Me Feel"; more subjectively I'd add Company B's "Fascinated," Rhythim Is Rhythim's "Strings of Life," the Replacements' "Alex Chilton," Dumptruck's "Going Nowhere," Eric B & Rakim's "Paid in Full," Sonic Youth's "Kotton Krown," Squirrel Bait's "Kid Dynamite," Dinosaur's "Raisans," the James Dean's Driving Experience's "Oh, Grateful," and the Stupid Cupids' "Big Blue Bus."

clemenza, Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:15 (thirteen years ago)

No Tiffany, No Belinda Carlisle, no Eric B&Rakim, and this is just huge hits missing.

Young Swell (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:26 (thirteen years ago)

lol, Tiffany? really?

Logg \ O / Logg (crüt), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:26 (thirteen years ago)

I Think We're Alone Now <3

Young Swell (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:27 (thirteen years ago)

I would've voted 'Heaven is a place on Earth' tbf

Young Swell (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:28 (thirteen years ago)

I Think We're Alone Now isn't even the best Tommy James cover to hit #1 that month!

Logg \ O / Logg (crüt), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:28 (thirteen years ago)

lol

Young Swell (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:29 (thirteen years ago)

The only "I Think We're Alone Now" cover that matters is by The Rubinoos. :)

Hongroe (Geir Hongro), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:33 (thirteen years ago)

I Think We're Alone Now isn't even the best Tommy James cover to hit #1 that month!

Dunno what month this was...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IAmgTNATJkk

master musicians of jamiroquai (NickB), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:37 (thirteen years ago)

that's what I was referring to - it actually replaced Tiffany's cover at the #1 spot!!!

Logg \ O / Logg (crüt), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:38 (thirteen years ago)

no way! must have been mad wealthy that month

master musicians of jamiroquai (NickB), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:39 (thirteen years ago)

yeah, dude had a bizarrely good year!!

Logg \ O / Logg (crüt), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:40 (thirteen years ago)

Mafia stole his money though I think? Something like that.

Juice Should Be Sterliized (Tom D.), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:42 (thirteen years ago)

Whoa I really had no idea! o_O

xxp

Young Swell (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:42 (thirteen years ago)

The only "I Think We're Alone Now" cover that matters is by The Rubinoos. :)

― Hongroe (Geir Hongro), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:33 (18 minutes ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

Or the Lene Lovitch one.

Mark G, Tuesday, 4 October 2011 12:53 (thirteen years ago)

If Public Enemy: Bring The Noise doesn't win, I have wasted 10 years of my life in this place.

███★★★███ (PappaWheelie V), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 13:12 (thirteen years ago)

Another vote for PE.

shake it, shake it, sugary pee (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 13:23 (thirteen years ago)

^^^^^^

You people are supposed to be some kind of music culture intelligentsi (Phil D.), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 13:23 (thirteen years ago)

I would've voted 'Heaven is a place on Earth' tbf

― Young Swell (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, October 4, 2011 8:28 AM (53 minutes ago) Bookmark

Me too . . . maybe.

This year has some awesome songs in it tbh.

Considering

The Church: Under The Milky Way
Salt-N-Pepa: Push It
The Cure: Just Like Heaven
George Michael: Faith

Man, I can't decide.

Juggy Brottleteen (ENBB), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 13:29 (thirteen years ago)

It's almost insane that I'm not immediately voting Just Like Heaven considering how much I loved that song at one point. Fuck it, I'm going with Under The Milky Way. It's probably the only song I actually know by The Church but it gives me chills when I hear it.

Juggy Brottleteen (ENBB), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 13:30 (thirteen years ago)

This list has a ridiculous number of songs I absolutely love on it.

No love for "True Faith" so far? The bounciest and most uplifting song they ever did.

"True Faith" is many wonderful things and I could maybe see "bouncy" in a stretch but that song is not at all uplifting! As close as I can tell it's either about a massive betrayal or a crippling addiction.

lol okay, thx Google; here's something that might possibly be something someone made up but has a cite:

this is from the songwriter, Bernard Sumner himself, during an interview for Q magazine in 1999.

"(True Faith) is about drug dependency. I don't touch smack but when I wrote that song I tried to imagine what it's like to be a smackhead and nothing else matters to you except that day's hit. There's a line in the song, 'When I was a very young boy, very young boys played with me/Now we've grown up together, they're afraid of what they see." The original was, 'Now they're taking drugs with me,' but Stephen Hague our producer made us change it because he said it wouldn't be a hit if we kept that line in. He was right. It was a very big hit, but we chickened out. I change it back sometimes live."

the tax avocado (DJP), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 13:47 (thirteen years ago)

helluva lineup:

Ali Farka Touré: Amandari
Salt-N-Pepa: Push It
Public Enemy: Bring The Noise
New Order: True Faith
Pet Shop Boys: It's a Sin
M/A/R/R/S: Pump Up The Volume

Anakin Ska Walker (AKA Skarth Vader) (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 13:50 (thirteen years ago)

Franco, no second thoughts

epigram addict (outdoor_miner), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 13:52 (thirteen years ago)

"True Faith" is many wonderful things and I could maybe see "bouncy" in a stretch

video was pretty bouncy iirc

master musicians of jamiroquai (NickB), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 13:54 (thirteen years ago)

ha yes, a side-effect of all of the trampolines

the tax avocado (DJP), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 13:55 (thirteen years ago)

The video was originally going to show a giant rubber bounceable syringe.

Anakin Ska Walker (AKA Skarth Vader) (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 13:56 (thirteen years ago)

anyway my feelings go from "really like" to "love unconditionally" on:

The Church: Under The Milky Way
Gipsy Kings: Bamboleo
The Sisters Of Mercy: This Corrision
Salt-N-Pepa: Push It
Public Enemy: Bring The Noise
New Order: True Faith
Pet Shop Boys: It's a Sin
M/A/R/R/S: Pump Up The Volume
The Sugarcubes: Birthday
Midnight Oil: Beds Are Burning
The Cure: Just Like Heaven
R.E.M.: The One I Love
Guns N'Roses: Paradise City
Depeche Mode: Never Let Me Down Again
George Michael: Faith
INXS: Need You Tonight
U2: With Or Without You

The only songs I cut from the list are songs I don't know by name.

the tax avocado (DJP), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 13:57 (thirteen years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=impkAS_8MbE
in case anyone is wondering, Franco's Aids warning to Africa - Att. Na Sida

epigram addict (outdoor_miner), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 14:03 (thirteen years ago)

It's no surprise that I was 19 and on my own, given my love for many of these songs; there's hardly a song here I didn't hear in a nightclub.

What does one wear to a summery execution? Linen? (Michael White), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 14:04 (thirteen years ago)

uh, nothing from Sign 'O' the Times?

incredibly middlebrow (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 4 October 2011 14:11 (thirteen years ago)

Please to explain how Limp Bizkit are the spiritual successors of PE? They were vital influences on early 90s bands incl. Rage Against the Machine, the Prodigy, the Chemical Brothers, the Manic Street Preachers… Long-term influence harder to gauge but Limp Bizkit? Nah.

Science, you guys. Science. (DL), Thursday, 6 October 2011 12:37 (thirteen years ago)

what kind of disgusting savage would not vote for "push it" here?

lex pretend, Thursday, 6 October 2011 12:41 (thirteen years ago)

Public Enemy. Not only is the song great, it was a gateway into the extremely political and insanely great music they put out for the next few years. Enough to obsess this 14 year-old white girl.

thinveneer, Thursday, 6 October 2011 12:57 (thirteen years ago)

PE is not about the politics, it's about that motherfucking' noise

gospodin simmel, Thursday, 6 October 2011 14:11 (thirteen years ago)

scratch the '

gospodin simmel, Thursday, 6 October 2011 14:11 (thirteen years ago)

Thought maybe you meant to write "motherfucking's" and we were about to move this to the "turning non-nouns into nouns" thread.

You people are supposed to be some kind of music culture intelligentsi (Phil D.), Thursday, 6 October 2011 14:16 (thirteen years ago)

It's about the politics and the noise. Medium = message and all that.

Science, you guys. Science. (DL), Thursday, 6 October 2011 14:23 (thirteen years ago)

Medium = massage as any fule kno

Mark G, Thursday, 6 October 2011 14:54 (thirteen years ago)

Chuck D
never meant shit to me

A bartender once unplugged a jukebox on me when I played "Fairytale of New York"

incredibly middlebrow (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 6 October 2011 16:14 (thirteen years ago)

was it Christmas?

Number None, Thursday, 6 October 2011 16:15 (thirteen years ago)

Aw, Fairytale is a great song.

Juggy Brottleteen (ENBB), Thursday, 6 October 2011 16:16 (thirteen years ago)

it was, I believe, October

incredibly middlebrow (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 6 October 2011 16:17 (thirteen years ago)

As this list contains about eight of my favourite songs I'm actually incapable of choosing.

Science, you guys. Science. (DL), Thursday, 6 October 2011 16:21 (thirteen years ago)

Never Let Me Down is my favorite Depeche Mode song, perfect intersection of the hyperdramartic and the mundane.

per metal injection (Eazy), Thursday, 6 October 2011 16:38 (thirteen years ago)

Since actually paring this down was going to prove too hard, I just semi-randomly went with "Need You Tonight". Which is a great song, but no reason to believe it's any greater than several others on the list.

justfanoe (Greg Fanoe), Thursday, 6 October 2011 16:49 (thirteen years ago)

Great use of the word "trousers" in Never Let Me Down Again.

Science, you guys. Science. (DL), Thursday, 6 October 2011 17:03 (thirteen years ago)

lol true

I do love NLMDA. I could easily have voted for 4 or 5 of these.

Juggy Brottleteen (ENBB), Thursday, 6 October 2011 17:04 (thirteen years ago)

I'm not voting, I love too many of these for too many reasons

the only things I managed to cull off of my list were Gypsy Kings, Midnight Oil and Guns N Roses

the tax avocado (DJP), Thursday, 6 October 2011 17:05 (thirteen years ago)

I voted for the Pogues.

Inevitable stupid samba mix (chap), Thursday, 6 October 2011 17:06 (thirteen years ago)

I would be inflicting too much pain on teenage me to choose between New Order, Depeche, PSBs, MARRS, PE, Pogues, Sisters, Sugarcubes, REM and Salt-n-Pepa (in some cases their best songs as well).

Science, you guys. Science. (DL), Thursday, 6 October 2011 17:12 (thirteen years ago)

http://troubleddiva.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/bestof1987580.jpg

mike t-diva, Thursday, 6 October 2011 18:29 (thirteen years ago)

(Expected to see Jaymc at the bottom of that photo.)

per metal injection (Eazy), Thursday, 6 October 2011 18:36 (thirteen years ago)

Yeah now I think about it, it could have been even harder with Eric B & Rakim, J&MC, Nitro Deluxe, Suzanne Vega, Smiths, Prince, Spacemen 3, Frankie Knuckles, Belinda Carlisle and Fleetwood Mac.

Science, you guys. Science. (DL), Thursday, 6 October 2011 18:46 (thirteen years ago)

stylistically, PE had more of an influence on limp bizkit and 311 than anything else. thematically, they influenced RATM and MIA, so that's ok, i guess, but at the same time, you could argue that those acts took more from the clash than PE. well, MIA definitely did, at least.

geir's actually pretty otm with the NWA comp... PE may have sold more records but NWA definitely shaped music for the next like 15 years at least. also shaping my opinion of PE is that i always thought they were self-righteous blowhards, which doesn't seem to bug folks like christgau but definitely annoys me. everyone seems convinced PE was the biggest thing to happen to music like ever and i don't know whyyyyyyy

fennel cartwright, Thursday, 6 October 2011 21:22 (thirteen years ago)

Speaking of political, Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy were rather political, weren't they? Although it could be argued that their lyrics seemed had more in common with some presidential candidate from the Democrats (probably too leftist to become nominated) than with Public Enemy...

Hongroe (Geir Hongro), Thursday, 6 October 2011 21:28 (thirteen years ago)

Pictured: self-righteous blowhard

http://www.netpaths.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/flavor-flav.jpg

You people are supposed to be some kind of music culture intelligentsi (Phil D.), Thursday, 6 October 2011 21:45 (thirteen years ago)

I know the first song I think of when I hear "All Mixed Up" is "Fight The Power"

the tax avocado (DJP), Thursday, 6 October 2011 21:52 (thirteen years ago)

don't really get why it's controversial (aside from the dramatic and negative comps in 311 and limp bizkit) that i talk about PE paving the way for the rap-rock of the late 90s. i mean, only rage did it political style, but rap-rock was the genre that they worked in.

my point is that there aren't very many acts derived from PE's schtick that aren't wack. off the top of my head i got:

dead prez (wack)
immortal technique (mega wack)
rage against the machine (wack imo but other ppl seem to like them)
mia (hit and miss)
probably a bunch of punk rock acts that i don't listen to: nofx? against me??? (i assume they are all wack)

i refer to wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Enemy_(group)#Legacy

also lol, phil d, flav was on some other shit entirely and i have NO IDEA how he ever got mixed up with chuck d and griff.

fennel cartwright, Friday, 7 October 2011 04:42 (thirteen years ago)

also did u hear PE is gonna play a secret occupy wall st show

fennel cartwright, Friday, 7 October 2011 05:04 (thirteen years ago)

It Takes A Nation... sound more contemporary than Straight Outta Compton

gospodin simmel, Friday, 7 October 2011 06:55 (thirteen years ago)

NWA definitely shaped music for the next like 15 years at least

To me, though, Schoolly-D helped shape NWA--I don't think his influence is fully appreciated.

clemenza, Friday, 7 October 2011 11:44 (thirteen years ago)

Schoolly-D and Ice-T > NWA

gospodin simmel, Friday, 7 October 2011 13:24 (thirteen years ago)

Wow fennel, you're so wrong about PE that I don't even know where to start. I don't even know what records you think you're listening to that leads you to conclude they spawned Limp Bizkit.

Science, you guys. Science. (DL), Friday, 7 October 2011 13:29 (thirteen years ago)

Actually yes I do - Channel Zero and the Anthrax version of Bring the Noise. The sum total of their rock-rap output during their peak.

Science, you guys. Science. (DL), Friday, 7 October 2011 13:30 (thirteen years ago)

Limp Bizkit is way more closely connected to Run-DMC than PE

the tax avocado (DJP), Friday, 7 October 2011 14:06 (thirteen years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcfSAXksePc

master musicians of jamiroquai (NickB), Friday, 7 October 2011 14:18 (thirteen years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m8st0m2fLuk

EZ Snappin, Friday, 7 October 2011 14:29 (thirteen years ago)

how much time do I have? I might have to listen to all of these...

revelatory juxtaposition there, bro (Drugs A. Money), Friday, 7 October 2011 14:45 (thirteen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

System, Saturday, 8 October 2011 23:01 (thirteen years ago)

Schoolly-D and Ice-T > NWA

― gospodin simmel, Friday, October 7, 2011 9:24 AM (Yesterday) Bookmark

OTM, although to be fair, Schooly D > Ice T > ICECUBE written 1987 era NWA > DOC written 1988 era NWA > Ice Cube + DOC written era 1989 NWA

Hank Schocklee era 87-89 PE is still infinitely better, and Dre openly confesses to the 88/89 era NWA being PE derived.

███★★★███ (PappaWheelie V), Sunday, 9 October 2011 00:03 (thirteen years ago)

Educational thread.

Pete Scholtes, Sunday, 9 October 2011 04:08 (thirteen years ago)

Regarding influence on rock rap acts such as Limp Bizkit and RATM, wouldn't Run DMC or Beastie Boys be more important than Public Enemy? Surely, PE were rather harsh around the ages at times, but unlike the two others, their albums weren't exactly crowded with rock guitar samples.

Hongroe (Geir Hongro), Sunday, 9 October 2011 12:15 (thirteen years ago)

Don't blame the parents for the sins of the children. Anthrax birthed the genre with "I'm The Man" in this very year of '87. It's still a hoot:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GiHdr4rWG98

EZ Snappin, Sunday, 9 October 2011 12:26 (thirteen years ago)

some challenging opinions itt

zvookster, Sunday, 9 October 2011 12:29 (thirteen years ago)

Hank Schocklee era 87-89 PE is still infinitely better, and Dre openly confesses to the 88/89 era NWA being PE derived.

― ███★★★███ (PappaWheelie V), Saturday, October 8, 2011

yep. they were inspired by schooly's booming 909s, and the first copies of It Takes a Nation... chuck had he gave to dre and eazy-e.

lotta false dichotomies and confusion upthread

zvookster, Sunday, 9 October 2011 12:32 (thirteen years ago)

i'm not sure he was talking abt Limp Bizkit when he called rap black cnn

zvookster, Sunday, 9 October 2011 12:39 (thirteen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.

System, Sunday, 9 October 2011 23:01 (thirteen years ago)

suck it, bamboleo

mookieproof, Sunday, 9 October 2011 23:43 (thirteen years ago)

Not surprised the two worst tracks made it here.

Hongroe (Geir Hongro), Monday, 10 October 2011 10:49 (thirteen years ago)

This is such a horrible messageboard with bad taste in music. You should find one where people agree with you.

Antonio Carlos Broheem (WmC), Monday, 10 October 2011 14:55 (thirteen years ago)


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