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00:0010 One-Hit Wonders From 1980 That Still Deserve A Spot In Your Heart
00:04Number 10. Video Killed The Radio Star, The Buggles
00:09Trevor Horn and Jeff Downes' One-Hit Wonder became MTV's first ever broadcast in 1981,
00:15symbolizing the coming video revolution.
00:18Built with the Fairlight Sampler, it shaped 80s pop culture and influenced Hornes' later productions,
00:24and Downes' work with Yes!
00:25Number 9. Echo Beach, Martha and the Muffins
00:30Martha and the Muffins' 1980 hit turns workplace boredom into nostalgic escape,
00:35powered by the same drum machine later used in In the Air Tonight.
00:39It reached number 10 in the UK and remains the band's defining unmatched masterpiece.
00:44Number 8. Pop Music, M
00:47British musician Robin Scott's 1979 satire,
00:51Pop Music, Blended Disco, New Wave and Synth Pop, later topping the US charts in 1980.
00:58Number 7. Let Me Love You Tonight, Pure Prairie League
01:02This May 1980 country pop crossover highlighted young Vince Gill's smooth vocals,
01:08pairing gentle harmonies with romantic lyrics and climbing to number 10 on Billboard.
01:12Number 6. Tired of Towing the Line, Rocky Burnett
01:16Johnny Burnett's son kept Rockabilly alive in 1980,
01:20with Rocky's May release reaching number 8 on Billboard and topping the charts in Australia.
01:26Number 5. Pilot of the Airwaves, Charlie Doerr
01:29Doerr's 1980 folk pop song about finding comfort through late-night radio resonated during FM radio's peak,
01:36reaching number 13 on Billboard.
01:38Though she later wrote for major artists like Tina Turner,
01:41this remains her signature tribute to the era when DJs felt like unseen friends.
01:45Number 4. Whip It, Devo
01:48Devo's August Breakthrough cracked number 14.
01:52Minimug riffs and primitive machines forged mechanized pop,
01:55presaging industrial and far outlasting Devo's chart success.
01:59Number 3. Romeo's Tune, Steve Forbert
02:03This January 1980 Heartland track, driven by Forbert's raspy vocals and piano,
02:08reached number 11 and earned him New Dylan comparisons.
02:12Number 2. Hot Rod Hearts, Robbie Dupree
02:16Dupree's Yacht Rock follow-up to Steal Away reached number 15,
02:21capturing polished soft rock transition and enduring escapist nostalgia despite limited later chart success.
02:28Number 1. Funkin' For Jamaica, Tom Brown
02:31August 1980. Jazz funk celebration topped R&B, hit UK number 9.
02:38Tony Smith's vocals and Brown's trumpet inspired extensive hip-hop sampling.
02:43hod say.
03:03Northwest The Pearl
03:03Ch нами
03:05Fat
03:06Welcome
03:07liter
03:08Welcome
03:09Montage
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