When it comes to Kate Bush, I think her 2 best songs are
Hounds of Love
Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)
But despite how much some may love the music of the '80s, let's be honest -- compared to other decades, there was A LOT of music worth forgetting as well. Which is how I feel about some Millennial music also.
For instance, I used to love Survivor until I started listening to entire albums. That's when I realized they really weren't that great. The band simply would get lucky with a couple songs.
Loverboy was another popular band with a lot of bad songs. You just had to listen to the entire albums. And there are a lot of bands like this. That's why a "good" album was one which had at least 3 good songs on it, which considering most albums had 10 songs, is a 30% success ratio. Not exactly awe-inspiring.
But then came Guns n Roses, with something like 8 hits from just 1 album. That marked the beginning of a shift in music. After them, bands might still only have 1 - 3 hits from an album, but they would tend to increase the overall quality of their albums by putting out better, more musically mature songs to fill the rest of the album.
One has to remember that the '80s were a time of musical experimentation, largely because of synthesizers but also guitars. Much of the bad music of the '80s were results of that experimentation. When musicians began taking a more mature approach that was more solidly rooted in music theory and the fundamentals, that kind of experimentation stopped.
Edited by
actionlynx
on Wed 10/10/18 02:08 AM