New Wave 80s ⟶
New Wave taught us that it was okay to be strange. It was okay to be smart. It was okay to dance badly if you did it with conviction.
If you grew up in the 80s, you remember the moment the guitar solo died. Or rather, it got chopped up, fed through a chorus pedal, and buried under a sequencer.
Posted by: The Synth Wrangler Mood: Choppy, melancholic, but make it danceable. NEW WAVE 80s
Modern pop is safe. Modern rock is safe. But put on "Love Will Tear Us Apart" by Joy Division. That song is 45 years old, and it still sounds like it’s peeking through the blinds, suspicious of the outside world.
Sandwiched between the raw punk of ‘77 and the excess of ‘80s corporate rock, New Wave was the awkward, brilliant cousin who showed up to the party in a skinny tie, rolled-up blazer sleeves, and a pair of two-tone shoes. Let’s be honest: half of New Wave was the aesthetic. It wasn’t macho. It was angular . It was the girl with the asymmetrical haircut reading Nietzsche in the art house cinema. It was the boy wearing more eyeliner than Debbie Harry. New Wave taught us that it was okay to be strange
What’s your deep cut? Tell me you own a vinyl copy of "Remain in Light" in the comments. Tags: #NewWave #80s #Synthpop #TalkingHeads #SkinnyTie
We aren’t talking about stadium rock. We aren’t talking about hairspray and power ballads. We are talking about . If you grew up in the 80s, you
So go ahead. Dig out that old Cure cassette. Put on your Ray-Bans indoors. And turn up the treble.