Not all Australian bands were punk-inspired indies, suburban oz-rockers or paisley-wearing jangly guitar bands. There was an acoustic revival here too.
Evidence? Well, the Go-Betweens consistently applied a sound based on acoustic guitars (and outstanding songwriting). They ignored musical fashions and were utterly dedicated to their art. They only had one chart hit, ‘Streets of Your Town’ (1988), but their reputation has grown since the 80s.
Kev Carmody’s debut album Pillars of Society (1989) had acoustic arrangements and protest-style lyrics. It is great that he has just been inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame.
There was Paul Kelly’s magnificent acoustic album Post. Kelly had disbanded the Dots in 1982 and, after two years without a record deal, he moved to Sydney. I was already a Kelly fan – I loved his first two albums Talk and Manila. I remember seeing him on a succession of Sunday nights at the Strawberry Hills Hotel (it must have been 1985), playing acoustic with Michael Barclay on harmonies and Spencer P Jones on guitar. It was clear that Kelly was writing songs at a phenomenal rate. That’s where I first heard him do ‘From St Kilda To Kings Cross’, ‘Laughing Boy’ and ‘Bradman’. These were brilliant songs — dark, acoustic and intense. Except one night when he sang Culture Club’s ‘Karma Chameleon’.
The Lighthouse Keepers recorded country-flavoured acoustic rock for the Sydney independent label Hot. In fact country music became cool at inner city venues, with bands like Dancehall Racketeers, the Happening Thang and Fifty Million Beers. But that’s another post.
What Australian acoustic music appealed to you in the 80s?
Quote: ‘I’ve always wanted to do a collection of my acoustic numbers with the London Philharmonic.’ (David St Hubbins, This Is Spinal Tap, 1983)
When we think of 1980s music, acoustic and folk are not styles that immediately come to mind. We tend to think more of pop music performed by attractive, well-groomed performers accompanied by synthesizers, drum machines and sequencers. Acoustic music was unfashionable. This, for me, made it appealing. I’d like to talk about some of my favourite 80s acoustic music, albums that managed to penetrate the synth pop jungle. Up-to-date production values were not what made these albums good. It was the songs.
In 1982 Bruce Springsteen released Nebraska. He had recorded the songs at home as demos for his band but decided to release them as they were. Pared back to the basics of acoustic guitar and harmonica, his songs held up as haunting narratives of working class desperation.
I remember my friend Tim Toni telling me around 1985 about new British music from Tracey Thorn, Ben Watt and Billy Bragg. Thorn and Watt released acoustic-ish solo albums before joining forces to form Everything But the Girl.
The folk revival of the 1950s accommodated a set of ideological presuppositions from the political left and included minority voices. Billy Bragg conveyed this kind of folk protest sensibility with a solo electric guitar. It wasn’t acoustic, but he was an angry young man standing alone on stage railing against the establishment. I saw him at Selina’s. I think it was in 1988.
Elvis Costello went acoustic in 1986 with his gem of an album King of America (his best work in my book). Then he toured Australia, playing acoustically with T-Bone Burnett at the Sydney Entertainment Centre. I seem to recall that the album flopped, and Elvis went back to recording with the Attractions, quickly releasing the mediocre Blood and Chocolate, which was well received. Go figure.
Meanwhile stateside, Michelle Shocked appeared with a punk-folk attitude on her roughly recorded debut album The Texas Campfire Tapes. Suzanne Vega emerged from the New York folk scene to sing smart, poetic songs in a gentle voice. Overseas she is remembered for ‘Luka’, her 1987 song about domestic violence, but here in Australia we had already latched on to her first album, the one with ’Marlene on the Wall’.
Tracy Chapman bobbed up with a cracker of a first album. She was one of the few Americans in the Reagan era who were ‘talking about a revolution’.
The Indigo Girls had a radio hit in 1989 with ‘Closer to Fine’, from their self-titled album. There were other acoustic acts too, like the Roches and Bruce Cockburn. Can you think of more examples? Is it drawing a long bow to call this 80s phenomenon ‘the second folk revival’?
The Violent Femmes used acoustic instruments to play a kind of punk folk. ‘Blister in the Sun’ is one of those 80s songs whose appreciation has grown over the years. Another is Leonard Cohen’s ‘Hallelujah’, which he wrote in the 80s. It appeared on his 1984 album Various Positions. Bob Dylan helped to popularize it by performing it in concert in 1988. Speaking of Dylan, for whom this is regarded by many as a low period, he wrote some of his best songs in the 80s — ‘Every Grain of Sand’, ‘Jokerman’, ‘Blind Willie McTell’, ‘Dark Eyes’, ‘Brownsville Girl’ and the entire Oh Mercy album. When he was persuaded in 1985 to go for a 1980s approach to production, Arthur Baker was recruited to mix the recordings. The result was Empire Burlesque, which, with its gated snare drums and synths, now sounds horribly dated, despite the good songs.
And what of folk music in the 80s? Of course there were artists who had stuck to playing folk styles for decades. But in terms of new music, the label had lost its meaning. Unsupportable notions of authenticity had been exposed long ago. Ethnic or folkloric musical styles from Latin America, Africa and elsewhere were re-branded as world music, enabling record shops to group them in a category. In 1986 Paul Simon introduced world music to the masses with the huge-selling Graceland.
At the end of the decade (November 1989 in fact), MTV Unplugged first went to air in the US. And so began the 90s phenomenon of rock stars who usually use electric instruments reinterpreting their hits with acoustic guitars.
It’s Friday afternoon and here’s my latest theory. In the 1980s baby boomers grew up and took pop music with them. As they gained employment, many enjoyed the benefits of the economic surge. Boomers sought music more suited to their newfound adult sensibilities. As a result, the decade saw the rise of suave, well-dressed singers like Robert Palmer, whose ‘Simply Irresistible’ video encapsulates the suave yuppie 80s ethos.
There was the elegant and classy Sade, singing in 1984 about affluent lifestyles on Diamond Life (‘Smooth Operator’ told the story of a jet-setting ladies’ man.) And what about Huey Lewis and the News? ‘Hip to be Square’ was an anthem of 80s conservatism. Even Mick Jagger recorded a sophisticated, dance-inflected, highly produced, solo album, She’s the Boss. (Remember when he performed at Live Aid backed by Daryl Hall & John Oates’ band?)
Australia had its own exponents of 80s adult pop, such as the Eurogliders and Mondo Rock.
You can point to a more specific genre of sophisticated adult-oriented pop, that was smooth and radio friendly, with a jazz tinge. I’m thinking Terence Trent D’arby, Kenny G, Style Council, Matt Bianco, Everything but the Girl, Swing Out Sister, Joe Jackson (post-Beat Crazy), Prefab Sprout, Level 42 and, most prominently, Sting. Australia had new exponents of popular jazz like Vince Jones and James Morrison. And Kate Ceberano went jazzy with her septet.
Then there were those purveyors of new age music on the Windham Hill label, like Vangelis.
Some ageing baby boomers and disgruntled hippies resisted the trend to sophistication in the 80s. They used to argue that mainstream pop music had become more slick, produced, processed, synthetic, manufactured and corporatised. To them, music seemed to have become more dependent on image, style (and classy saxophone solos) than substance, sincerity and songwriting.
Before digital technology allowed for cheap home recording and DIY distribution, multinational record companies were at the peak of their power, ensuring corporate control over music. In 1986 the Electric Pandas appeared in a TV commercial for Coca-Cola and Eurogliders appeared in one for Faberge jeans! I don’t see anything wrong with this – good luck to them! However you can understand why people felt music had gone corporate. Robert Palmer even turned ‘Simply Irresistible’ into a Pepsi commercial. Apologies for the picture quality in this embedded clip but you’ll get the idea.
The 80s was also a time of indulgent celebrity record producers. Kylie Minogue’s hits were produced on the assembly line of Stock, Aitken, Waterman, whose name sounded like a firm of accountants.
Those who tired of synth pop, haircut bands, glam metal, overwrought power ballads, Farnsie & Barnsie and over-the–top gated snare drums sought alternatives, like hardcore punk, dance music, rap and indie rock. Some looked for acoustic music, but that’s another story.
The music and style of late 70s punk had a back-to-basics aesthetic that rejected anything synthetic, artificial and embellished. However by the early 80s many new wave bands were moving beyond punk’s limited musical palette and trading in their guitars for synthesizers (synths) and drum machines. Synths were a major part of the sound of the 80s.
Synth pop was popularised by British artists like Soft Cell, Depeche Mode, Gary Numan, Joy Division/New Order, the Human League, Tears for Fears, the Pet Shop Boys, Eurythmics, the Bronski Beat, Howard Jones and many others.
With liberal doses of hair gel, make-up and marketing, snazzy groups like A Flock of Seagulls, the Thompson Twins and Haircut 100 were suited to the new video medium. They came to be denigrated as ‘haircut bands’.
Synth pop’s use of new technology came with the rise of video games and computers. In fact New Zealand synth pop outfit Mi-Sex wrote a song about ‘Computer Games’ and cultivated a computerised, futuristic image.
Australian major record companies found their own synth pop talent. One act was Real Life, who had an international hit with ‘Send Me an Angel’. Another was a Melbourne outfit called Pseudo Echo, whose early fans identified themselves as part of a goth subculture. Influenced by Ultravox, Duran Duran and Japan, the band came to be labelled as new romantic. Although they did not have a record contract, in 1983 Ian ‘Molly’ Meldrum put them on Countdown. Quickly signed by EMI, Pseudo Echo became known as Australia’s foremost exponents of synth pop. By the end of 1983 they had gone Top 5 with their debut single, ‘Listening’. Dig the classic 80s drum and synth sounds on this clip.
Expect to see some original 80s gear from Pseudo Echo in our 1980s exhibition. The band has generously agreed to lend some great stuff, like one of those 80s keyboard guitars (‘keytars’), some drums, clothing and awards. Singer/guitarist Brian Canham, who runs a studio in Melbourne, even has the shirt he wore in the video clip for ‘Funkytown’, which was an international hit for Pseudo Echo in 1986. The video is living proof that this band could rock.
The 1980s exhibition will feature an exclusive interview with Brian, in which he reveals that the band took its name from one of the settings on a synth.
When you think early 80s, ‘new romantic’ bands come to mind. What was it all about – music, fashion or both?
They say that the ‘new romantic’ look emerged from the nightclubs of London, inspired by the fashion designer Vivienne Westwood, who launched her ‘Pirate’ collection in 1981.
A contrast to the drab punk fashions of the late 1970s, this was a shift towards glamour, fantasy and dressing up. The new romantic look included androgynous clothes, frilly shirts, velvet, smart suits, make-up, eyeliner and quaffs. It made reference to historical dress, c1700s (pirates, tricorn hats etc). Check out Adam Ant’s ‘dandy highwayman’ clobber in this video clip.
‘Antmusic’ certainly had a different sound. To me it sounds strangely unmelodic. The backing sounds like the Glitter Band with extra tom toms.
As well as Adam Ant, the new romantic fad was associated with English bands like Visage, Duran Duran, Ultravox and Spandau Ballet. I have tried but cannot differentiate a ‘new romantic’ sound from the rest of the synth pop that ruled the charts in the early 80s. The songs were conventionally structured and performed without the anarchy and angst of punk. New romantic bands espoused no particular ideological messages and were unthreatening. Ergo, it was more about the look.
Culture Club are often cited as new romantic but the label is inadequate to describe the incredible style of Boy George. By the time they had conquered the charts, the distance between Culture Club and punk was so great that Dave Rimmer titled his 1986 book Like Punk Never Happened: Culture Club and the New Pop. I never read it but I could understand the title.
Through the 1980s (and beyond), I loved recording cassette tapes of my favourite albums. I also enjoyed making my own customised mixtapes, especially if I was about to go away on holidays. Cassettes provided mobility that Long Playing records (LPs) did not have. Most cars were fitted with cassette players. In fact, until a few years ago, my car had a cassette player, not a CD player. I still miss it. When I bought a new car in 2005, I asked the dapper young Honda salesman at Rick Damelian’s if the car came with a cassette player and he looked at me like I was an idiot.
I used to buy blank 90 minute cassettes (C90). Most LP record albums were about 40 minutes, so a C90 could hold an album on each side, usually with space to add a few carefully selected bonus tracks. Making these tapes was a solitary pleasure and an end in itself, just as much fun as listening to them later.
Some people created special covers for the cardboard sleeves that went inside the transparent cassettes boxes. Here is a picture of some of Adam Takesce’s beautifully decorated cassette sleeves. Sometimes he would copy the album cover art, others were his own creations.
I avoided buying pre-recorded cassettes, thinking it was better to own the LP and tape it for the car. Cassettes in the car were exposed to sunlight and rough treatment. And there was the hazard of having tapes chewed up by cassette players. LPs lasted longer, sounded better (no hiss) and were more substantial artefacts. Not everybody agreed. Pre-recorded cassettes accounted for more than 50% of global music sales in the mid-1980s.
Launched in 1979, the Sony Walkman was a groundbreaking personalised wearable hi-fi product that boosted the boom in cassette sales.
The Walkman was the iPod of its day, although cumbersome and heavy by comparison. It had clunky buttons, short battery life and no shuffle mode. But people loved it. It was the perfect accessory for the 80s exercise craze.
I had a sporty yellow version of the Sony Walkman when I was working in Europe in 1984 and 1985. It was comforting on cold alpine nights to listen to my Elvis Costello tapes, the Jam and a precious mixtape of Big Chill-ish 1960s songs sent by a friend.
Although the consumption of recorded music was dominated by albums and cassettes until the end of the 1980s, the arrival of the CD was a major shift. Cassettes were quickly cast aside or stashed in the back of the wardrobe, where mine still languish today. I just can’t bring myself to throw them out. They are part of me.
Hi, I’m an assistant curator working on the 1980s exhibition, and I’ve been asked to guest-blog about heavy metal in the 1980s.
British hard rock groups of the 1970s such as Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath were popular in Australia well into the 1980s. However, it was really, in the early 1980s, the New Wave Of British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM) bands, as the movement was known in the music press, which started the culture of headbangers or metalheads in the suburbs of Australian towns and cities. Bands like Iron Maiden, Saxon, Def Leppard and Motorhead spoke to teenagers, primarily male, and primarily European, in a language that was distinct from, and in opposition to the benign pop music of the time. The local band scene was slower to react to what was happening in the UK though. Sydney bands like Surrender and Cobra were still playing Deep Purple, Rainbow and Jimi Hendrix covers and sticking to the 70s hard rock formula.
In the early to mid 1980s, American metal bands were becoming hugely popular: Van Halen, Motley Crue, Ratt, Dokken, and WASP offered a more polished, though still heavily guitar driven sound. These bands also put emphasis on stage show and image – drawing on the earlier 1970s glam image, but cutting it with the leather and studs of bands like Judas Priest and Black Sabbath. These American bands showcased innovative and skilful guitar playing, and this inspired local headbangers to practice what chops they had non-stop. Although these bands had limited exposure here in Australia, the Sydney metal scene responded with bands like Shy Thunder, Lightning Rock, Roxx, Assassin, Lotus, and White Widow – all aspiring to be the Australian Van Halen or Ratt. These bands played in Sydney pubs regularly and gathered a following. The metal scene was born.
In America, the flashiness of Motley Crue and Ratt (who had gotten progressively glammier) wore thin on fans. Enter San Francisco band Metallica. The band’s 1984 debut album Kill ‘em All was raw, honest and addictive to metalheads. Other bands quickly followed: Anthrax from New York, Megadeth from LA, and Slayer (much heavier and rawer than the others) all started to garner massive followings.
In Sydney, the only place to obtain heavy music not on major labels was Utopia Imports in Martin Place. The tiny shop was always full of headbangers, some of whom would travel hours to get there. The shop was a micro-scene itself. The latest metal from OS would be playing through the stereo, and the guys who worked there were aficionados of all things metal. Metallica, et al, were discovered there by countless ’bangers.
The Sydney scene too was bored of would-be guitar heroes and men in tights. In the Western suburbs – Blacktown, Parramatta, guys started jamming much heavier, less pretentious stuff. Slaughter Lord, Death Mission, Massive Appendage all started gigging at the same places Roxx, Lightning Rock, and Lotus, et al had been playing, and bringing crowds that got drunker, looked heavier, and had a far more conspicuous good time than previous hard rock crowds had. Other bands joined the scene: Addictive, Detriment, and Mortal Sin – who went on to lead the scene, getting a major record deal with Polygram and scoring big supports (Metallica, Anthrax), and touring Europe with burgeoning thrash group Testament.
The scene revolved around several pubs and clubs: The St James Tavern in the city had metal every Thursday night, The Hills Inn at Seven Hills every Saturday night, The Coogee Bay had metal bands regularly, The Sutherland Inn was a regular, as was The Den at Penshurst and The Bexley Hotel; The Cobra Club at Parramatta had metal on Fridays, and other smaller pubs regularly had metal bands: The Lewisham Inn, The Vulcan Hotel, The Teacher’s Club in the city, The Lansdowne, The Hopetoun, The Mortdale Hotel, The Wagon Wheel at St Marys. Crowds and bands alike inevitably moved afterwards to someone’s house for a party. All headbanger group-houses were decorated with the trophies of such parties: tens, even hundreds of consumed bourbon and vodka bottles!
The metal scene was mortared together by a deep passion for heavy music and like-mindedness, but it ran on alcohol – the drug of choice. A close second was marijuana, and then speed. There were very rarely fights though. If there were they were over girlfriends – who were in limited supply in the scene. Self mutilation was something some headbangers practiced as a ritual at gigs: Some headbangers had to be carted off in ambulances several times when the glass-inflicted cuts on their arms and torso bled uncontrollably. Every weekend there were parties or a gig somewhere. No one cared how wasted you got. It was a badge of honour. No one cared how poor you were. Heavily worn and ripped clothes were preferred. There was camaraderie in ‘chucking in’ with your mates to buy a case of beer and a ‘stick’ of pot, and consuming the above while listening to Slayer. Band T-shirts, tight black jeans or faded blue jeans, white hi-tops, denim or leather jacket, and long hair was the uniform. Though the hair was an option, most ’bangers grew it as long as they could. Mundane society was to be laughed at. As were pop music, pop culture in general, politics, and the police. Sydney headbangers in the 1980s aligned themselves with the punk movement. There were a few bands that crossed the punk/metal divide: Death Mission, Mass Appeal, The Hard Ons. Headbangers saw themselves as anti-establishment, and as a definite sub-culture. The hair band trend that saw a resurgence in the US and subsequently in the Australian mainstream charts – bands like Bon Jovi, Europe, Poison and Whitesnake (post 1987) – brought metal out of the underground, but by and large these bands were ignored by the Sydney metal scene, or were at least laughed at. Headbangers still wanted harder and heavier bands. Mortal Sin, Addictive, Detriment, and Frozen Doberman – all ‘thrash’, street clothe image metal bands – were the biggest crowd drawers in Sydney during the hair band era. Death Metal took the metal scene into the 1990s, where it remains the predominant metal genre for the current scene. Glammier bands have seen a resurgence, though really purely for a nostalgic aesthetic. Mortal Sin have continued, in one form or another, through the 1990s to now.
To all you 1980s headbangers – the Powerhouse Museum would like to hear from you. Tell us about your experiences of gigs, parties, life as a ’banger in the 1980s in Australia. We’d also like to see any photographs you may have kept, or if you’ve kept any of those 80s metal T-shirts, old jeans, hi-tops or jackets, we’d like to know about them as well.
Just a quick Friday afternoon post about something that’s on my mind. You may have noticed that our current decade (the noughties) has seen a revival of interest in the eighties. You can see it in fashion, music, graphics, even in politics. It can’t all be due to the Bangles re-forming for their 2000 tour. Since then we have seen Rick rolling, the return of the Hoff and retro computer games. I mean, you can buy hypercolour t-shirts again. Current local bands like Van She use analogue synthesizers as an ironic homage to the 1980s. It was great to see the Presets at the 2008 ARIA awards, self-professed synth nerds who are so into the 80s.
We want to include in our 80s exhibition references to the 80s revival. What items should we display?
So, what were your favourite Australian clips of the 80s and do you know who made them?
Before he became a Hollywood film maker, Russell Mulcahy produced some imaginative clips, despite having lower budgets that his overseas counterparts. Mulcahy made clips for people like Air Supply, Little River Band, Icehouse and Richard Clapton. He moved to London and made videos for Elton John, Paul McCartney and most other members of the English rock royalty.
Crowded House and INXS always seemed to have great clips. ‘Don’t Dream It’s Over’ and ‘Kiss the Dirt (Falling Down the Mountain)’ come to mind and I recall that they were both made by Alex Proyas’ production company Meaningful Eye Contact. Proyas was a prolific clip-maker and he too became a Hollywood film director (The Crow, Dark City, I Robot).
Richard Lowenstein made an amazing clip for the Hunters and Collectors song ‘Talking to a Stranger’. My namesake Peter Cox made a stack of excellent music videos, including the clip for Cold Chisel’s ‘Cheap Wine’. There was an adults-only clip for the Stephen Cummings song ‘Gymnasium’, directed by Kimble Rendall. Midnight Oil’s classic ‘Beds Are Burning’ had a great clip directed by Claudia Castle.
On the humorous side, there was that clip where Paul Kelly was driving a taxi – was it ‘Before Too Long’? — and just about anything that involved Mental as Anything.
Some of the notable clips that I recall from overseas artists in the 80s are ‘I Wanna Be Loved’ by Elvis Costello, ‘Cry’ by Godley & Crème, ‘Girls Just Wanna Have Fun’ (Cyndi Lauper), ‘Relax’ (Frankie Goes to Hollywood), ‘Sledgehammer’ (Peter Gabriel), ‘Money for Nothing’ (Dire Straits), ‘The Boys of Summer’ (Don Henley), ‘You Might Think’ (The Cars), ‘Take on Me’ (A-Ha), ‘Dancing in the Street’ (Jagger and Bowie), ‘Rockit’ (Herbie Hancock) and ‘Jump’ (Van Halen). There are literally hundreds, thousands of others but the big daddy was Michael Jackson’s epic clip for ‘Thriller’.
And what about those Robert Palmer clips? Does anybody epitomise the suave, affluent 80s more than that guy?
I love the literal versions of 80s video clips that have appeared on the web, with revised, banal lyrics that match what’s happening on the screen. Check out literal versions of ‘Take on Me’ by A-Ha and ‘Head Over Heels’ by Tears for Fears.
What do you remember as the iconic 80s music video clips of the 80s?
I’m hoping we can show some classic video clips in this 1980s exhibition we are planning. Video clips were crucial to the development of both music and television in the 1980s. This was the decade when, as the Buggles had predicted, ‘Video Killed the Radio Star’. In fact when MTV, the 24 hour-a-day music television cable channel, commenced in the USA in 1981, the first item shown was the Buggles’ prophetic clip. From this time music was consumed increasingly on TV rather than just on radio. It came with an explosion of imagery and movement, as artists would use clips to parade their style and update their look. Celebrated as an original way to promote recording artists, video clips had a profound influence on record and concert sales and shifted the place of music in daily life.
I found some useful internet resources associated with the USA’s Rock ’n’ Roll Hall of Fame. There are some great 80s music web links here.
Music video existed for years before MTV, in the form of film clips inserted into TV shows, as far back as Brian Henderson’s Bandstand . Without buying into insoluble arguments about what was the first music clip, I would point to Crash Craddock’s ‘Boom Boom Baby’, which got a lot of airplay on Bandstand around 1960. It made the singer a star in Australia, although he was relatively unknown back in the States. In terms of creativity and originality, the trail was blazed by Bob Dylan’s ‘Subterranean Homesick Blues’, a clever black and white clip filmed in 1965 by D A Pennebaker. Included as the first scene in the film Don’t Look Back, it didn’t get much TV airplay until later but was highly influential.
In Australia, the ABC’s Countdown is remembered as a 70s phenomenon but it was equally an 80s thing, as it continued until 1987. Aimed specifically at a teenage audience, Countdown helped to consolidate the age of music video by screening the latest clips from overseas. It introduced hundreds of Australian performers to a mass audience and developed a capacity to create stars and hit records. Being a national program, it had the power to make Australian acts well-known all around the country.
Also in the 1980s, a lot of clips were seen on the Saturday morning TV show Sounds. It was an important vehicle for promoting music but rarely receives the recognition that Countdown gets. I think I am right in saying that in 1974 Graham Webb had started The Sat Today Show, which only showed music video clips. Sydney DJ Donnie Sutherland took over as host and the show became Sound Unlimited (later Sounds) and ran until December 1987, live for three hours a week, 52 weeks a year. Sounds not only introduced a generation of Australians to rock music, but, in the years before MTV hit American screens, it ushered in the era of music video. Sounds could not compete with Countdown’s insistence on the right to premiere new clips, but it presented an unparalleled breadth of Australian and overseas talent. Check out this 1980 promo for Sounds.
Around the time of Countdown’s demise in 1987 (I won’t mention the short-lived Countdown Revolution!), the ABC launched its long-running weekend music program Rage, playing clips through the night and into the morning. Rage remains an important platform for emerging Australian talent, screening videos from various genres and eras without commercial pressures.
Just weeks later, the Nine network launched its new music program MTV, a kind of local, free-to-air franchise of the American cable channel. You will remember Richard Wilkins as the genial host. Now there’s a character who emerged in the 80s. He was actually a singer in the early 80s and I recall that he toured Australia with Grace Jones. More about her later!
What are your memories of music video on TV in the 80s?