(edited 7 May 2024)
It occurred to me that most of my first comment was actually part of this post, so I moved it (mostly unmodified). Look at the end of this post to see it.
I was cleaning out the truck this evening, and I found The Tape. I can’t believe it. Over 21 years ago, I was passing the time on a summer afternoon recording songs off the radio on my dad’s cassette radio. Basically, if a song sounded interesting, I kept it. I ended up filling up most of one of those good old cheap “low noise” C-60 cassettes.
A couple of those songs became pretty important to me (see this post and this one for two references). Most of it, though, was just random music I found interesting. It’s a real slice of memory that I’m glad I dug up. The cassette itself is going in a case in my “memory box” for safe-keeping (though I don’t know how much longer it will last).
However, now that I’ve had a chance to listen to it again, I’ve decided to dig up all the music in digital form and turn “The Tape” into “The CD”. A lot of the songs I already had, of course. All but one of the rest were available from iTunes.
Anyway, just for fun, here it is:
Side A:
- Caribbean Queen by Billy Ocean
- Everything She Wants by Wham!
- Smooth Operator by Sade
- Every Breath You Take (AKA “The Stalker Song”) by The Police
- Walking On Sunshine by Katrina and the Waves
- The Search Is Over by Survivor
- I Saw The Light by Todd Rundgren
Side B:
- One More Night by Phil Collins
- Angel by Madonna
- Invisible by Alison Moyet
- Late In The Evening by Paul Simon
- Possession Obsession by Hall & Oates
- Can’t Fight This Feeling by REO Speedwagon
- One Night In Bangkok by Murray Head (from the Chess soundtrack)
(text moved from my comment follows)
This tape is actually pretty odd for a few reasons. For one thing, I really wasn’t that much of a radio listener then (and we didn’t have cable, so no MTV). This is probably one of a handful of times before about 1990 that I listened to pop radio for more than a few minutes at a sitting. I really didn’t get fully into radio until I started working for gas money (see this post).
So, to give you an example, I had no clue who most of these artists were for quite a few years after I recorded the tape (and I still didn’t know at least two of them until [JHM: the night before I wrote this post]). It took three years for me to discover the title (and more importantly the artist) for The Search is Over, which undoubtedly became my favorite song. I can literally trace my love of power ballads back to this exact tape.
Another thing is that it shows that my tastes were actually a little bit broader then. Later, when I discovered who some artists were and started picking out music, my tastes narrowed quite a bit. They’ve since broadened again, but it’s interesting to me, for instance, that I latched onto a Paul Simon song. Even now I wouldn’t really peg myself as a particular fan of his music. I think a lot of it had to do with the fact that I really had no concept of “genre” at that point. I either liked the music or I didn’t. I hadn’t started sorting music into any other kind of mental bin yet.
Finally, keep in mind that this tape was recorded in the space of one day from a single pop hits radio station in Florence, Alabama sometime in 1985. I think that speaks volumes for how much better of a selection of music you used to hear years ago. There’s obviously the hand of a creative DJ behind this list. I can’t see a modern conglomerate-based radio station doing anything like that these days.
2 replies on “The Tape”
I wonder if it’s possible that we are twins separated at birth?
Misty:
Probably not. Did I manage to list all your favorite 80’s songs?