Decoding the Cultural Impact of 80s Music

555 Words2 Pages

The 80s were interesting times. There was angst in the air and no one really know what they were anxious for, change maybe but looking back at the culture that define that period one thing is clear, music played a huge role. It was fun and provocative, it was laced with unfulfiled teenage dreams and the bleakness of life. It was a decadent time where artists could experiment and musicians put on theatrical shows in tight leather pants and gauche colored shirts. Musicians from the 80's would be labelled as eccentric by today's standards. It was an age where convention was being ridiculed and prejudices flung back at those who perpetuated them and musicians were gods. There was some good music and great bands. Remember the song " Forever young" …show more content…

Their single "Send me an angel" from their debut album, "Heartland", made it to the top-ten charts in Australia, New Zealand as well as Germany. The single also made its way into the top U.S. charts. They recorded their second album "Flame" but singles like "No shame" and "Face to Face" had marginal success and just could not crack the charts. For a while there seemed to internal strive amongst the band members culminating in Richard Zartoski leaving the band and going off to become a lawyer. He was then replaced by Steve …show more content…

When George Pappas joined the band after Steve Williams' departure, Real Life released "Lifetime", their first album of all-new material in 1990. The album had minor hits like "God Tonight". The band went on to release "Happy" in 1998 and "Imperfection" in 2004 but by this time the band had become a two man band after the other two original band members left. In 2005, George Pappas also left the band to form his own and David Sherry continued carrying the name and the music that had made Real Life Australia's greatest synthpop

More about Decoding the Cultural Impact of 80s Music

Open Document