12/24/2023 0 Comments Tell me why why 80's song![]() ![]() It would have been described as pop or a kind of rock but deffo not heavy metal. No way was it techno, rave or anything like that style. it's been over 20 years since I last heard it. It was *definitely* 92 or before that's all I know, no way was it later. Hell, I can't even remember if there were lyrics in it or not that's how bad my memory is. I'm not heavy into music so wish I could be more descriptive. It had a fast, really catchy beat to it.īut it's not techno, sort of late 80s fast-paced pop/rock but with a much more modern, intelligent, thoughtful beat and an amazing melody. It starts off with like bells/chimes or perhaps a synthetic version of that, with repetitions of three bells "b b b - pause - b b b - pause - etc. We’d love to see scans of your personal pop scrapbooks and learn the stories behind them: what motivated you to compile them, what ages of your life they span, what you felt you were documenting in them at the time and how they appear to you now, why you finally called it quits, and what possessed you to keep hold of them.It's driving me nuts, I remember listening to this song over and over in late 92' when I was away at college and absolutely loved it. ![]() Even though we only see snippets of them, they’re clearly beautiful, loving, personal documentations of pop fandom, the kind that even those of us who don’t have children in leading pop bands are prone to keeping as young pop fans. Because God made the stars to shine, Because God made the ivy twine, Because God made the sky so blue, Because God made you, thats why I love you. She kept them up through their subsequent superstardom, right up until Ridgeley and George Michael called it quits in 1986. Tell me why the stars do shine, Tell me why the ivy twines, Tell me why the skies are blue, And I will tell you just why I love you. She stuck in their earliest press clippings and dutifully labelled them in her rounded handwriting, rendered in blue felt-tip pen. ![]() In Netflix’s new Wham! documentary (helpfully titled Wham!), part of the 80s pop duo’s story is told via the medium of the scrapbooks that Andrew Ridgeley’s mum Jennifer kept on the band from day one. ![]()
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