A lot depends on the luck that comes your way

Many people disagree about how important a part luck plays in determining the path our lives take.

Some believers think it’s all preordained. Others are convinced that our ambitions and actions are instrumental in causing our lives’ events to go a certain way. We may never know the answer until after we’ve passed on (and maybe not then either).

Regardless, songwriters have found the subject of luck — good and bad — to be a meaty subject for lyrics. Indeed, whether a song becomes popular is contingent on many factors — quality, connections, promotion, good timing, personnel — and luck is certainly on that list.

I’ve found many dozens of songs from the past 60-70 years that focus on luck, or the lack of it, and have selected 15 from the ’60s, ’70s, ’80s and ’90s to discuss here. As always, there’s a Spotify playlist at the end that also includes another 15 “honorable mentions” that weren’t, um, lucky enough to make the cut.

Take a chance on these tunes!

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“With a Little Luck,” Paul McCartney and Wings, 1978

McCartney’s catalog, and the man himself, have never been short on sunny optimism, but that has sometimes led to lightweight material that drags down the truly wonderful songs he has written. Case in point: his 1978 LP with Wings, “London Town,” is one of his weaker efforts, littered with disposable, half-finished ditties that don’t measure up. True, he was in the midst of another shakeup in the Wings lineup, but the last time that happened, the result was the exemplary “Band On the Run” LP. This time, only the album’s single, “With a Little Luck,” is even remotely worthy, a smooth, lightly synthesized melody with lyrics that examine life’s mystery and how luck can certainly help matters: “With a little luck, we can help it out,/We can make this whole damn thing work out…”

“Good Luck Charm,” Elvis Presley, 1962

Between 1956 and 1962, Presley topped the US pop charts an incredible 16 times with hit singles (and barely missed the #1 spot another nine times). The last of these came in April 1962 with his recording of “Good Luck Charm,” one of 17 written for Presley by veteran songwriter Aaron Schroeder (including “Stuck on You” and “It’s Now or Never”). Schroeder said about Presley, “Elvis wanted everything to be right, almost to the point of having tears in his eyes, because he felt himself to be struggling to get the results he wanted. He told me he was fond of the lyrics of ‘Good Luck Charm.'” “Don’t want a four leaf clover, don’t want an old horse shoe, /Want your kiss ’cause I just can’t miss with a good luck charm like you, I want a good luck charm a-hanging on my arm to have, to hold tonight…”

“Lady Luck,” Kenny Loggins, 1977

For the leadoff track to Loggins’s solo debut LP, “Celebrate Me Home,” Loggins teamed up with songwriter Johnny Townsend to write “Lady Luck,” an effervescent tune that equates casino games of chance with gambling on a romantic relationship. Townsend (who teamed with Ed Sanford on the hit single “Smoke From a Distant Fire” the same year) wrote the lyrics as a cautionary tale in which the character whose life was “a golden gamble” was in danger of throwing it all away on a long shot: “Oh, what the devil, it’s fun, his lady luck was his one companion, /And by the silver and gold, his heart had been bought and bound, /But he chanced to fall in new love, he kissed her and he cut the tie, /And kissed his lucky lady goodbye…”

“You Got Lucky,” Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers, 1982

“Long After Dark,” the fifth LP by Petty and The Heartbreakers, was the first since the debut of MTV the previous year, and the music video they made for the single “You Got Lucky” was shown in heavy rotation. Petty collaborated with guitarist Mike Campbell to write the track, using a “surf guitar” sound and synthesizers for the first time, and adding new bassist/vocalist Howie Epstein to the group lineup. The lyrics take a somewhat boastful view of romantic luck, with the guy claiming it was the girl who got lucky when he found her: “You better watch what you say, you better watch what you do to me, /Don’t get carried away, girl, /If you can do better than me, go, but remember, /Good love is hard to find, you got lucky, babe, when I found you…”

“Luck Be a Lady,” Frank Sinatra, 1962

An accomplished lyricist from the 1940s named Frank Loesser took a stab at writing both music and lyrics for a featured moment in the 1950 Broadway musical “Guys and Dolls” when gambler Sky Masterson is desperate to win a big bet and needs luck to come through. Actor Robert Alda, who won a Tony award for playing Masterson, was the first to record the classic swing tune “Luck Be a Lady,” later covered by Marlon Brando in the film version, and then it became one of Sinatra’s signature songs in the 1960s, issued on the compilation LP “Sinatra ’65.” He re-recorded it with rocker Chrissie Hyde for his “Duets” album just before his death in the mid-1990s. “Let’s keep this party polite, never get out of my sight, /Stick me with me baby, I’m the fella you came in with, /Luck, be a lady tonight…”

“Lucky Man,” The Verve, 1997

Singer-songwriter Richard Ashcroft was the main guy behind England’s popular 1990s group The Verve, who had three successful LPs, most notably the 1997 #1 album “Urban Hymns” with three Top Ten singles in the UK. One of them, the majestic “Bitter Sweet Symphony,” was their only chart appearance in the US, reaching #12, but outselling it in their home country was the #1 hit “Lucky Man” (no relation to ELP’s song). Ashcroft said the song was “inspired by my relationship with my wife, and that sense of when you’re beyond the sort of peacock dance that you have early on in a relationship, and you’re getting down to the raw nature of yourselves.” “Happiness coming and going, I watch you look at me, /Watch my fever growing, I know just where I am, /Got a love that’ll never die, I’m a lucky man…”

“Good Luck Bad Luck,” Lynyrd Skynyrd, 1994

Following the 1977 plane crash that killed three band members and injured several others, the band dissolved, but a decade later, the survivors regrouped with new musicians to tour and eventually record new albums. “Endangered Species,” released in 1994, featured the late Ronnie Van Zant’s brother Johnny on lead vocals, and original member Ed King returned on guitar. It was King who wrote “Good Luck, Bad Luck” and performed the acoustic arrangement, which was something different for Lynyrd Skynyrd, a band that had more than its share of bad luck but also some good fortune as well: “It’s either good luck (I’m the last to get it) or bad luck (I’m the first), /When it’s good, ain’t nothin’ better, /When it’s bad, ain’t nothin’ worse…”

“Lucky Lucky Me,” Marvin Gaye, 1964

Motown Records was indeed a “hit factory,” where songwriters, producers and backing musicians teamed up with featured artists to record dozens of tracks, which were then reviewed by a “quality control” group and either released or shelved. They made some fine choices that topped the charts, but they also rejected some strong records that never saw the light of day until decades later. One of those was “Lucky Lucky Me,” an infectious Marvin Gaye track from 1964 that inexplicably wasn’t released until a “Best Of” package came out in England in 1994, and has still never been released in the US: “Lady Luck sure smiled on me when she blessed me with your loving charms, /I found my place in the sun, sweet heaven in your lovin’ arms, /I want to stand right up and shout it, /Lucky me, lucky lucky me…”

“Lucky Town,” Bruce Springsteen, 1992

Springsteen took a chance in 1988 when he dissolved The E Street Band and used different backing musicians when he finally released new music four years later when he released not one but two albums simultaneously. The “Human Touch” LP was something of a letdown, but “Lucky Town” was a more vibrant, honest collection of songs that reflected Springsteen’s reality of divorce, new love and fatherhood during that time frame. The title track does a nice job of reflecting the ups and downs of his career and personal life in 1992: “When it comes to luck, you make your own, tonight I got dirt on my hands, but I’m building me a new home, /Baby, down in Lucky Town, /I’m gonna lose these blues I’ve found, down in Lucky Town…”

“Some Guys Have All the Luck,” The Persuaders, 1973

A guy named Jeff Fortgang wrote this tune back in 1972 when it was first recorded by The Persuaders, the New York vocal group that had the big 1970 hit “Thin Line Between Love and Hate.” Their soul version of “Some Guys Have All the Luck” stalled at #39 in 1973, but it’s better than the cover versions that followed. Robert Palmer recorded a very different arrangement of the song in 1982, which reached #16 in the UK but petered out at #59 here. Then in 1984, Rod Stewart recorded a pop version of The Persuaders’ original, and it reached #10 on US charts. In the lyrics, the narrator bemoans how other men seem to have better luck than he does: “How does it feel when the girl next to you says she loves you? It seems so unfair when there’s love everywhere, but there’s none for me, /Some guys have all the luck, some guys have all the pain, /Some guys get all the breaks, some guys do nothing but complain…”

“Waiting For My Lucky Day,” Chris Isaak, 1996

Hailing from the San Joaquin Valley of California, Isaak crafted a pleasing blend of country blues, folk ballads and rockabilly music that won him success on the US pop charts in the late 1980s and 1990s. His sultry single “Wicked Game” reached #6 in 1989, and attracted the attention of filmmakers who not only used his music but cast him in small roles as well. His sixth LP, “The Baja Sessions,” included the tropical-sounding “Waiting For My Lucky Day,” a melancholy tune that nevertheless retained a ray of hope: “Lost everything I had in Texas, a millon dreams went by in Texas, /Sometimes the same life turns against us, but I’m waiting for my lucky day, /I watch the sun go down, I keep hanging on waiting for the wind to change, /I watch the sun go down, And I keep hanging on, waiting for my lucky day…” 

“Lucky Guy,” Todd Rundgren, 1978

The multi-talented Rundgren developed a reputation for being something of a one-man show, writing all his songs, playing all the the instruments and producing every track. By the late ’70s, despite touring regularly, he became known as a studio recluse, which inspired the 1978 album title “Hermit of Mink Hollow” (the street where he lived in upstate New York). “Can We Still Be Friends?” was the hit single from the LP, but there’s a also a nice little deep track called “Lucky Guy” that poignantly captures the self-pity of a man who wishes he had better luck in life: “And when there’s pain, he never minds it, /When it’s lost, he always finds it, /Nobody really knows just why, he just must be a lucky guy, I wish I was that lucky guy…”

“Running Out of Luck,” Mick Jagger, 1985

Jagger’s decision to head off on a solo career in the mid-’80s didn’t sit well with his colleagues in The Rolling Stones, especially Keith Richards, who felt some of the songs Jagger recorded would’ve been better on a Stones album, and he might be right. The first LP he attempted, 1985’s “She’s the Boss,” reached #13 in the US, thanks to the single “Just Another Night,” but follow-up singles fared poorly. Jagger wrote most of the tunes himself, including “Running Out of Luck,” one of the deeper album tracks, which features the great Jeff Beck on lead guitar and jazz fusion star Herbie Hancock on keyboards: “Running out of heat, running out of gas, running out of money way too fast, /Running out of liquor, there’s nothing left to eat, running out of luck, hungry for the meat…”

“Luck of the Draw,” Bonnie Raitt, 1991

Raitt had just won multiple Grammy awards for her 1989 LP “Nick of Time,” including Album of the Year, and she was eager to build on that momentum, writing several new songs and collaborating with other songwriters for her next LP, 1991’s “Luck of the Draw,” which actually outperformed “Nick of Time,” peaking at #2 on US album charts, thanks to its Top Five single “Something to Talk About.” The title song was one of two written by Northern Ireland musician Paul Brady, who claimed to be a big believer in the role that luck and coincidence can play in a person’s life: “These things we do to keep the flame burning and write our fire in the sky, /Another day to see the wheel turning, another avenue to try, /It’s in the luck of the draw, baby, the natural law, /Forget those movies you saw, it’s in the luck of the draw…”

“Lucky Man,” Emerson, Lake & Palmer, 1970

Incredibly, singer/bassist Greg Lake was only 12 when he came up with this song, inspired by the books he read about medieval times. Ten years later, after a brief stint with King Crimson, Lake teamed up with Keith Emerson and Carl Palmer to form one of the more commercially successful progressive rock groups of that era. They resurrected Lake’s early tune and turned it into their first single, augmented by Emerson’s early noodlings on the synthesizer. As the lyrics reveal, the “lucky man” in question wasn’t so lucky after all, as he was shot and killed in battle in the final stanza, but he sure appeared fortunate at first: “He had white horses, and ladies by the score, /All dressed in satin and waiting by the door, /Ooooh, what a lucky man he was…”

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Honorable mentions:

Lucky One,” Michael Penn, 2000; “Lucky,” Donna Summer, 1979; “Hard Luck Woman,” Kiss, 1976; “One of the Lucky Ones,” John Batdorf and Michael McLean, 2014; “Lucky Lips,” Ruth Brown, 1957; “Bad Luck,” Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes, 1974; “Lucky Star,” Madonna, 1983; “Lucky Day,” Thompson Twins, 1983; “If I Ever Get Lucky,” Merle Haggard, 2007; “Lucky in Love,” Mick Jagger, 1985; “Third Time Lucky,” Foghat, 1979; “Lucky Man,” Ronnie Wood, 2010; “I Feel Lucky,” Mary Chapin-Carpenter, 1992; “Lucky Kid,” Sheryl Crow, 2002; “Twice If You’re Lucky,” Crowded House, 2010; “Lucky Day,” Tom Waits, 1993.

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Your words sound so familiar

Regular readers know that although this blog covers classic rock music of the ’50s, ’60s, ’70s and ’80s, I don’t spend that much time exploring the Eighties. So when I’ve assembled lyrics quizzes, I don’t usually include songs from that decade. That changes today.

Below you will find 20 lines of lyrics from classic rock songs that came out between 1980 and 1989. I challenge you to look them over and see how many you can identify. Then you can scroll down and see how well you did while you read about the artists and their songs. As always, there’s a Spotify playlist at the end to enjoy afterwards.

Lyrics fans, sharpen your pencils, put on your parachute pants, and groove to ’80s music!

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1 “I found a picture of you, oh oh oh, what hijacked my world that night to a place in the past we’ve been cast out of?…”

2 “I see you, you see me, watch you blowin’ the lines when you’re making a scene…”

3 “I see you’ve got your fist out, say your piece and get out, yes, I get the gist of it, but it’s all right…”

4 “Well, they passed a law in ’64 to give those who ain’t got a little more, but it only goes so far…”

5 “A look from you and I would fall from grace, and that would wipe the smile right from my face…”

6 “And she said, ‘Honey, take me dancing,’ but they ended up by sleeping in a doorway by the bodegas and the lights on Upper Broadway…”

7 “I have stood here before inside the pouring rain with the world turning circles running ’round my brain, I guess I’m always hoping that you’ll end this reign…”

8 “You’ve taken lots of chances before, but I ain’t gonna give anymore, don’t ask me, that’s how it goes, ’cause part of me knows what you’re thinking…”

9 “We are young but getting old before our time, we’ll leave the T.V. and the radio behind, don’t you wonder what we’ll find…”

10 “People always told me, ‘Be careful of what you do, and don’t go around breaking young girls’ hearts…'”

11 “That’s when a sport was a sport, and groovin’ was groovin’, and dancin’ meant everything, we were young and we were improvin’…”

12 “Inside, we both know what’s been going on, we know the game and we’re gonna play it, and if you ask me how I’m feeling, don’t tell me you’re too blind to see…”

13 “Now over at the temple, oh they really pack ’em in, the in crowd say it’s cool to dig this chanting thing, but as the wind changed direction, and the temple band took five…”

14 “Spare a little candle, save some light for me, figures up ahead moving in the trees, white skin in linen, perfume on my wrist…”

15 “There’s a loving in your eyes all the way, I listened to your lies, would you say I’m a man without conviction, I’m a man who doesn’t know, how to sell a contradiction, you come and go…”

16 “Will you recognize me? Call my name or walk on by, rain keeps falling, rain keeps falling down, down, down, down…”

17 “A few stolen moments is all that we shared, you’ve got your family, and they need you there, though I try to resist being last on your list, but no other man’s gonna do…”

18 “Here come the man with the look in his eye, fed on nothing but full of pride, look at them go, look at them kick, makes you wonder how the other half live…”

19 “All the eyes that watched us once will smile and take us in, and we’ll drink and dance with one hand free, and have the world so easily, and oh, we’ll be a sight to see…”

20 “Well, I was there and I saw what you did, I saw it with my own two eyes, so you can wipe off that grin, I know where you’ve been, it’s all been a pack of lies…”

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ANSWERS:

1 “Back on the Chain Gang,” The Pretenders, 1982

The Pretenders were three years into their promising career arc in the summer of 1982 when things went south quickly.  They fired their bass player and then lost guitarist James Honeyman-Scott to a drug overdose the same week.  “I was traumatized by the loss of my two best friends,” said singer/songwriter Chrissie Hynde, ”but I had to get on with replacing them if we were going to survive as a band.”  They selected Billy Bremner and Robbie McIntosh to fill the void, and Hynde wrote “Back on the Chain Gang” about the pressure to complete their next album.  It was released as a single that fall, reaching #5 on US pop charts, and was an important track on their popular “Learning to Crawl” LP, finally released in 1984.

2 “Private Eyes,” Hall and Oates, 1981

Daryl Hall’s paramour Sara Allen had been the subject of their early hit “Sara Smile,” and she and her sister Janna were songwriters as well.  “‘Private Eyes’ is a real Janna Allen song, which she co-wrote with Warren Pash,” said Hall.  “Then I changed it a little bit and wrote the lyrics with Sara.  Some say it resembles ‘Kiss On My List” somewhat, and I guess it does.”  It became the duo’s third of six #1 songs in their career, holding the top spot for two weeks in November 1981.

3 “Touch of Grey,” Grateful Dead, 1987

For 20 years, The Dead had been first and foremost a live band, then an album band, but never much of a singles band.  “Truckin’” had been their highest chart appearance at #64 in 1970.  By the mid-‘80s, Jerry Garcia and Robert Hunter had come up with “Touch of Grey,” a grim look at life’s shortcomings that nevertheless maintains the resolve, “We will get by, we will survive.” They made it the centerpiece of their 1987 LP “In the Dark,” and lo and behold, it peaked at #9 on the charts. Its inventive music video, in heavy rotation on MTV, featured a live performance of the band, first shown to be life-size skeleton marionettes dressed as the band, and then as themselves. The song and its video helped introduce the Grateful Dead to a new generation of fans.

4 “The Way It Is,” Bruce Hornsby and The Range, 1986

The civil rights movement of the ‘60s had had a big impact on Hornsby when he was young, and by the time he formed a band and won a record contract in the mid-‘80s, he had written about it for what turned out to be a stunning debut album.  Said Hornsby’s brother John, “‘The Way It Is’ is mainly about compassion, about understanding racial and social types, and beliefs and practices that are different from your own.  It’s about a status quo that’s so complacent in its narrow-mindedness and bigotry that it seems it’ll never change. That’s why the line ‘Ah, but don’t you believe them’ is so important.”  The album’s title track reached #1 in the fall of 1986.

5 “Heat of the Moment,” Asia, 1982

In late 1981, three members of major prog-rock groups that had disbanded — guitarist Steve Howe of Yes, drummer Carl Palmer of ELP and bassist/vocalist John Wetton of King Crimson and U.K. — joined forces to become the supergroup Asia, bringing in Geoff Downes to round out the foursome.  Critics didn’t care for the group’s debut LP, but the public ate it up, sending it to #1 on the strength of the single “Heat of the Moment,” which peaked at #4 in the summer of ’82.  Said Wetton, “The lyrics are an abject apology for my dreadful behavior towards a particular woman, the woman I would eventually marry but divorce 10 years later.”

6 “Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes,” Paul Simon, 1986

This compelling tune about the unlikely pairing of a rich girl and a poor boy concludes “Graceland,” Simon’s 1986 masterpiece of African rhythms that won the Album of the Year Grammy. The lyrics have been interpreted in different ways; some say the woman is unlikable because she uses precious gems so cavalierly, but others say she is downplaying her wealth by hiding her diamonds while they secretly bring her happiness and “a pep in her step.” Simon doesn’t say definitively. He recorded the song with South African vocal group Ladysmith Black Mambazo and performed it with them in November 1986 in one of the most amazing musical moments in “Saturday Night Live”‘s history.

7 “King of Pain,” The Police, 1983

Sting was in the midst of a separation and divorce from his first wife when The Police were working on their fifth LP, “Synchronicity.,” and a few of the songs were inspired by that painful period for him.  While the #1 smash “Every Breath You Take” focused on obsession, it was the follow-up single, “King of Pain,” that captured Sting’s angst best.  “I conjured up symbols of pain and related them to my soul.  A black spot on the sun struck me as being a very painful image, and I felt that that was my soul up there on the sun.  It’s about projecting your emotional state into the world of symbolism, which is what poetry’s all about, really.” The song, described by one critic as “a devilishly infectious new wave single,” peaked at #3 in August 1983.

8 “Eye in the Sky,” Alan Parsons Project, 1982

Parsons was an accomplished producer and engineer, having been involved in The Beatles’ “Abbey Road” and Pink Floyd’s sonic masterpiece, “Dark Side of the Moon.”  In 1976, he teamed up with singer-songwriter Eric Woolfson to create a smooth brand of progressive rock as The Alan Parsons Project.  Utilizing a broad range of studio musicians and more than a half-dozen different lead singers, APP turned a lot of heads with their captivating music on songs like “I Wouldn’t Want to Be Like You,” “Damned If I Do” and “Games People Play.”  By 1982, the ensemble went for a mellower approach and grabbed a #3 spot on US pop charts with “Eye in the Sky,” interpreted by many as a condemnation of government surveillance.

9 “Steppin’ Out,” Joe Jackson, 1982

In early 1982, Jackson spent several months in New York City and was inspired to write an entire song cycle about it for the LP “Night and Day.”  Most notable was the single “Steppin’ Out,” about the anticipation and excitement of a drive out around the town at night.  One critic wrote, “It’s a mélange of simple piano hooks, rudimentary electronic treatment and classic vocal pop, with a rhythm track that’s quaint in its simplicity and driving enough to invoke images of the big city at night.”  It became Jackson’s biggest hit in the United States, peaking at #6 in December 1982.

10 “Billie Jean,” Michael Jackson, 1982

This was the track that took Jackson from a big star to the biggest star on the planet.  Released in 1982 on the 40-million-selling “Thriller” LP, “Billie Jean” owned the top spot on the singles chart for seven weeks in 1983.  Telling the tale of a celebrity falsely accused of fathering a child, the track (and its performance on the “Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever” TV special that year) introduced a number of Jackson’s signatures, including the moonwalk, black sequined jacket and high-water pants.  Said one review, “It’s frighteningly stark, with a pulsing, cat-on-the-prowl bass figure, whip-crack downbeat and eerie multi-tracked vocals.”

11 “Cherry Bomb,” John Mellencamp, 1987

When Mellencamp was in junior high school, he spent time hanging out at a place in Indiana called the Last Exit Teen Club, and by the time he had become an established star in 1987, he chose to write about that experience.  “Cherry Bomb” is the fictional name he gave to the hangout, and to the song, which appeared on “The Lonesome Jubilee” and reached #8 on the charts that year.  The music video for the song features a couple dancing intimately with one another near a jukebox while Mellencamp dances by himself, interspersed with vintage video clips. He used accordion to create a warm atmosphere appropriate for his nostalgic look back on a more innocent time when he was “laughing, laughing with my friends.”

12 “Never Gonna Give You Up,” Rick Astley, 1987

Astley’s quirky, robust croon and his nerdy romantic pitch made for one of the most irresistible four minutes in ‘80s pop rock.  The British songwriting/producing team of Mike Stock, Matt Aitken, and Pete Waterman wrote more than six dozen top hits for various acts in England, and “Never Gonna Give You Up”” is one of their biggest.  It topped the charts in 25 countries in 1987, including the US and the UK.  Years later, it curiously became the subject of an internet meme known as “Rickrolling,” involving harmless, misleading links that redirected users to the song’s music video.

13 “Rock the Casbah,” The Clash, 1982

The music for this catchy stomper was written by the band’s drummer, Topper Headon. Finding himself in the studio without his three bandmates, Headon progressively taped the drum, piano and bass parts, recording the bulk of the song’s musical instrumentation himself. When Joe Strummer heard the song, he loved it, but he recoiled at the “soppy lyrics about missing his girlfriend.” Instead, Strummer came up with a bold scenario of a Middle East king who bans Western music, but the populace rebels by holding concerts in the temples and squares. Released in 1982 as the second single from The Clash’s fifth album, “Combat Rock,” it reached #8 on US pop charts.

14 “These Dreams,” Heart, 1985

The lyrics of this beautiful tune, co-written by Martin Page and Elton John’s lyricist Bernie Taupin, describe the fantasy world a woman enters every time she sleeps when faced with a difficult situation in life.  Page and Taupin wrote it in 1985 and offered it to Steve Nicks, but she rejected it, saying, “I sing only my own songs.”  Undiscouraged, they approached Heart, led by the Wilson sisters, Ann and Nancy, who loved it and agreed to record it, with Nancy handling lead vocals for a change.  The power ballad reached #1 as the third single from their victorious comeback LP, “Heart.”

15 “Karma Chameleon,” Culture Club, 1983

The inspiration for this popular track is pretty straight-forward, according to Culture Club frontman Boy George:  “The song is about the terrible fear of alienation that people have, the fear of standing up for one thing.  It’s about trying to suck up to everybody.  Basically, if you aren’t true, if you don’t act like you feel, then you get Karma-justice, which is nature’s way of paying you back.” The record stayed at number one for six weeks and became the UK’s biggest-selling single of 1983.  It also spent three weeks at number one in the US in early 1984, becoming the group’s biggest hit and only US number-one single among their nine top-20 hits.

16 Don’t You (Forget About Me),” Simple Minds, 1985

Guitarist Steve Schiff and drummer Keith Forsey were scoring the 1985 film “The Breakfast Club” when they wrote “Don’t You (Forget About Me)” as its theme song.  They were inspired by a scene in which an introvert and a school bully bond while no one else is watching. Forsey said, “It was like, ‘hey man, don’t forget, when we’re back in the classroom, you’re not just a bad guy and we’ve got other things in common now.”  They wanted Simple Minds to perform it, but they declined, as did Bryan Ferry, Billy Idol, Corey Hart and Cy Curnin of The Fixx.  When they tried Simple Minds again, the band agreed after lead singer Jim Kerr’s wife Chrissie Hynde encouraged them to do it.  It became a #1 hit that grew Simple Minds’ fan base in the US for years to come.

17 “Saving All My Love for You,” Whitney Houston, 1984

In the mid-‘70s, lyricist Gerry Goffin (Carole King’s ex-husband and songwriting partner) teamed up with Michael Masser to write this formidable love song for Marilyn McCoo and Billy Davis Jr., formerly of The 5th Dimension.  In 1983, Masser first heard Houston singing another of his songs, “Greatest Love of All,” in New York’s Sweetwater Club, and was invited to produce a few tracks on her debut LP in 1984.  He suggested “Saving All My Love For You” would be perfect for her, turning it into “a woman’s song.”  She brought the house down at a performance at the Roxy in LA a few weeks later, persuading the record label to make it her next single, and it went to #1.

18 “Devil Inside,” INXS, 1987

From 1980 to 1985, Australia’s INXS built a strong following in their native country as each of their first five albums became increasingly successful on the charts there. Their 1985 LP “Listen Like Thieves” reached #11 in the US, setting the stage for the jackpot they hit in 1987 with their sixth, “Kick,” which spawned four Top Ten singles in the US.  “Devil Inside,” written by guitarist Andrew Farriss and singer Michael Hutchence, was perhaps their biggest rocker, reached #2 in early 1988. Said Hutchence, “The song examines the fight between good and evil that’s inside everyone.  It’s about the chaos of the devil, and how every time you think something’s going right, he comes in and changes everything.”

19 “Back in the High Life Again,” Steve Winwood, 1986

Will Jennings, Winwood’s writing partner, had carried around the phrase “back in the high life” as a song title idea written down in a notebook, and when he was at Winwood’s house in late 1984, he wrote the rest of the lyric in a half hour, without any music. More than a year afterward, Winwood finally wrote the music for it, and it became the title track to his hugely successful LP in 1986. “We’ve got absolutely no rules when we work together,” said Winwood about their approach. “There are no formulas; things just happen naturally.” While “Higher Love” was the energetic #1 single, “Back in the High Life Again” was a respectable #13 as a follow-up in early 1987, with James Taylor on vocal harmonies and Winwood contributing mandolin to the arrangement.

20 “In the Air Tonight,” Phil Collins, 1981

A spooky two-minute introduction lulls the listener into complacency until the point where the most dramatic, revolutionary drum sound comes crashing in to change “In the Air Tonight” into something else entirely.  As the first single on Collins’s solo debut, 1981’s “Face Value,” this track firmly established the drummer/singer as a commercial juggernaut outside his role in Genesis.  Once again, the heartbreak of a failed marriage proved to be grist for the songwriting mill, as Collins explained:  “What is it that I can feel coming in the air tonight?  Not sure, but it’s not good.  I was going through a divorce, and the only thing I can say about it is that it’s obviously in anger.  It’s the bitter taste left by cheating and lying.” It went Top Five in a dozen countries but strangely stalled at #19 in the US.

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