My Top 50 Pop Singles of the 1980s

Tuesday, March 03, 2026

































The first thing I should say is that I've already done several other genre lists for 1980s singles, so a lot of things you might expect to see in an "'80s pop" list might not be here. Michael Jackson and Prince were in my R&B list, Bruce Springsteen and Phil Collins were in my 1980s mainstream rock list, Van Halen and Bon Jovi were in my hard rock/metal list, Tears For Fears and U2 were in my alternative list, and Dolly Parton and Kenny Rogers will no doubt be in the country list that I do next. And along the way here, I have a lot of thoughts about how "pop" really became a genre as we know it in the '80s, in that complicated and sometimes problematic process of rock becoming soft rock, and Black influences being minimized in music derived from R&B and disco, and so on. Here's the Spotify playlist

1. Cyndi Lauper - "Time After Time" (1984)
I got close to finalizing this list about 10 months ago, before I put it to the side for a bit while I focused on the release of my book. And at the time I think I had "Time After Time" as low as #3 on the list, but the emotion brought forth last fall by listening to Cyndi Lauper's whole catalog, watching her get inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and re-watching her documentary really made me decide it had to be #1. And I just always love the stories where the last song written for an album is an absolute classic that you can't imagine not being on the record. 

2. Katrina And The Waves - "Walking On Sunshine" (1985)
I'm posting this on a Monday morning, so I feel like Barry popping in his special Monday morning tape in High Fidelity. A whole lot of this list is white people doing Motown homages, and "Walking On Sunshine" is one of those songs I loved before I could even distinguish much about who made a song when or where just from the sound of it, and I was a little surprised when I realized it was written by British white people in the mid-'80s. It's a little funny to think that this song was the first hit Scott Litt worked on before he produced six platinum R.E.M. albums. 

3. Madonna - "Like A Prayer" (1989)
As I said, Michael and Prince and Whitney and Janet were on my R&B list, which leaves Madonna as by far the biggest pop star of the '80s who's actually on this list (and even she, believe it or not, was marketed as a racially ambiguous disco singer on her early 12"s, which had no photos on the sleeves). "Like A Prayer" still has the biggest streaming numbers of her imperial era hits (a recent, surprisingly decent Weeknd collaboration is her only song with a billion plays on Spotify). But "Material Girl" and, surprisingly, "La Isla Bonita," a song I seldom heard growing up and have never enjoyed, are nipping at its heels, and I'll be said if they ever catch up, because "Like A Prayer" is perfection. 

4. Wham! - "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go" (1984)
Another Motown homage by white people, although it's so charmingly synthetic and white that I would say it actually fits Bowie's 'plastic soul' concept better than what Bowie did. 

5. Michael McDonald - "I Keep Forgettin'" (1982)
Another guy who was so obsessed with Motown that he made Motown covers the focal point of his career in the 21st century. But on his albums fronting the Doobie Brothers and his early solo career, he really had one of the best and most distinctive voices in pop and crossed over to the R&B charts with "I Keep Forgettin'" (twice, if you count Warren G and Nate Dogg's "Regulate"). His brand of soulful soft rock is now retroactively tagged with the playful name "yacht rock," but I don't really care what you call it, I grew up on Michael McDonald's harmonies. 

6. Daryl Hall & John Oates - "You Make My Dreams" (1981)
Are we still saying "blue eyed soul"? I think that term's more frowned upon now. In any event, Hall and Oates became pop icons by staying pretty true to their Philly Soul roots. "You Make My Dreams" originally peaked at #5 in the middle of a golden run where it was preceded by a #1 and followed by two #1s, but at some point amidst the various film and TV syncs it became their defining song, and I got to interview Oates not long after it became their first track with a billion streams. I barely heard it growing up, and when I did I thought of it as the song that sounds like the "Ducktales" theme, but now I adore it. 

7. Debbie Gibson - "Only In My Dreams" (1987)
Today we live in a pop music ecosystem that's been significantly shaped by women who wrote or co-wrote hit songs as teenagers (Taylor Swift, Billie Eilish, Olivia Rodrigo, etc. -- although there's still always a vocal contingent of the public that's quick to assume a man really did all the work). Carole King wrote hits as a teenager, but she didn't become a successful artist until she was almost 30. So Debbie Gibson, who became the youngest person to write, produce and perform a #1 single with "Foolish Beat," is a more important figure in that history than I think she gets credit for. My favorite of hers, by far, though, is the debut single she wrote when she was 14 and recorded when she was 16. 

8. Tracy Chapman - "Fast Car" (1988)
A lot of the guitar-driven music on here is soft rock, but Tracy Chapman is an example of someone who came from the folk music tradition when she made a pop classic (that has since, via the Luke Combs, made her the first Black woman with a solo writing credit on a #1 country hit). 

9. Paul Simon - "You Can Call Me Al" (1986)
Paul Simon also came to pop stardom through folk music a couple decades before Chapman, but Graceland came out of him embracing a whole bunch of musical traditions from different countries and cultures, and inspires debate and adoration in equal measure 40 years later. A lot of people say that I must hate this song because my name is in it, but I've always loved it. My late aunt Linda would always sing "You Can Call Me Al" when I was little and going by Alex, so the song always reminds me of her, and maybe I wouldn't go by Al today if not for this song? I really don't know. 

10. Robbie Nevil - "C'est La Vie" (1986)  
I initially forgot all about this song when I did my list of 1986 singles and went back and added it. I think it's only a couple of songs I've done that with. What a banger, this really epitomizes how hard that really slick, antiseptic '80s pop sound can hit. 
































11. Billy Joel - "The Longest Time" (1984) 
Billy Joel is in some ways the typical rock musician whose career wound up defined by how much more people liked his ballads than his rockers. And even as someone who loves that Attila album and has no use for "Just The Way You Are," I have to admit that he really thrives as a pop songwriter. And he reached a new level of pop chart ubiquity, oddly, by making 1983's An Innocent Man, a nostalgic throwback full of pre-British Invasion styles, including the biggest doo wop song in the history of MTV. 

12. Elton John - "I Guess That's Why They Call It The Blues" (1983)
I grew up thinking of Elton John and Billy Joel as the being the concurrent piano man titans of pop music, but once I started to really look at their catalogs, I realized that Elton's imperial period ended around 1976's Blue Moves just as Billy's began around 1977's The Stranger. But Elton managed to bounce back pretty well in the '80s, and this one has always been my favorite, partly because of the really funny standup bit Tommy Davidson used to do about it. 

13. Madonna - "Borderline" (1984)
Kind of an outlier in Madonna's catalog, it's just sweet and earnest in a way she didn't allow herself to be very often ("Cherish" is another great one in that lane), and it has some of my favorite '80s synth sounds. 

14. Starship - "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" (1987)
Haight-Ashbury psych rock legends Jefferson Airplane's transformation into Jefferson Starship and then simply Starship is the purest distillation of that familiar narrative about idealistic '60s hippies growing up and becoming unabashedly commercial capitalists. There's some truth to that, but I also like Grace Slick's voice on "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" just as much as on "White Rabbit." This song was the first of nine Hot 100 #1s written by Diane Warren as well as the first of Warren's 17 songs nominated for the Oscar for Best Original Song, and in both cases it's my favorite. "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" is better in The Skeleton Twins than in Mannequin, though. 

15. George Michael - "Faith" (1987)
George Michael created a little 2-minute number with a Bo Diddley beat without intending it to be a single, and extended it with a guitar solo once people started to suggest it could be a single. And it seems strange to think this song was a happy accident, because now it's so central to his pop iconography. 

16. Christopher Cross - "Ride Like The Wind" (1980)
It's weird to think that Christopher Cross, then already doughy and pushing 30, and a teenage Billie Eilish are the two only artist in Grammy history to come out of the gate so strong with debut albums that they won all four general category awards (Best New Artist and Song, Record, and Album of the Year). "Ride Like The Wind" also provided one of Michael McDonald's finest moments as a backing vocalist and Rick Moranis's greatest SCTV sketch

17. The Pointer Sisters - "Neutron Dance" (1985) 
The Pointer Sisters really epitomize how talented singers can move between genres fluidly -- they learned to sing gospel as kids, won their first Grammy in a country category, had a long string of R&B hits, and crossed over with some big pop hits in the '80s. "Neutron Dance" came out when I was 3 years old, and I remember getting so hyped up to this song when I was little, I just thought it was the hardest thing I'd ever heard. I also loved their "Pinball Number Count" song on "Sesame Street," of course. 

18. Donna Summer - "She Works Hard For The Money" (1983)
I just made a Donna Summer deep album cuts playlist last week, and it sort of bookended her reign as the Queen of Disco with her early pop/rock material and her return to pop/rock with She Works Hard For the Money. 

19. Cyndi Lauper - "Girls Just Want To Have Fun" (1983)
You really have to hear Robert Hazard's original recording of "Girls Just Want To Have Fun" to appreciate how completely and brilliantly Cyndi Lauper overhauled the music and the lyrics to make it into the pop classic we know and love today. 

20. Rick Astley - "Never Gonna Give You Up" (1988)
Before the "rickroll" memes, well, I wouldn't say this song was respected, but it was just another '80s pop hit, not one so infamously bad that people used it to taunt each other. I've never minded the memes, though, because if someone surprises me with this song, I just listen to it because I enjoy it. His soundalike follow-up hit "Together Forever" is a jam too. 

































21. Daryl Hall & John Oates - "Private Eyes" (1981)
Now that's a really good, really fake-sounding electric piano sound, maybe the best. 

22. Bonnie Tyler - "Total Eclipse of the Heart" (1983)
Meat Loaf and Jim Steinman went their separate ways for a decade after the enormous success of Bat Out of Hell, and while Meat struggled, Steinman wrote a few smashes for other artists, most notably "Total Eclipse of the Heart," which I started to understand and like a lot more after I realized who wrote it and understood it as part of Steinman's maximalist oeuvre. 

23. Tina Turner - "The Best" (1989)   
Desmond Child produced the first recording of "The Best" by Bonnie Tyler, before Tina Turner recorded what became the biggest and...simply the best version of the song. Desmond Child also wrote "If You Were A Woman (And I Was A Man)" for Tyler, and it also got recycled when Child used its melody for Bon Jovi's "You Give Love A Bad Name." 

24. Madonna - "Express Yourself" (1989) 
Like A Prayer is my top Madonna album, but I can't tell you what a buzzkill it is to hear the album version of "Express Yourself," it's gotta be the video mix all the way. 

25. Buster Poindexter And His Banshees Of Blue - "Hot Hot Hot" (1987) 
I knew David Johansen for "Hot Hot Hot" and Scrooged for so many years before I heard a New York Dolls song or realized it was the same guy. What a wild life he had. 

26. Huey Lewis and the News - "If This Is It" (1984)  
It's not exactly a Buster Poindexter-level reinvention, but Huey Lewis was a pretty credible rocker before becoming a pop superstar. While his early band Clover spent some time across the Atlantic, Lewis played harmonica on a few Thin Lizzy and Phil Lynott tracks, while the other members of Clover were Elvis Costello's band on My Aim Is True. And even when Huey and the News became adult contemporary crossover stars, he still had that big, raspy, commanding voice that most rock frontmen would kill for. 

27. Kenny Loggins - "This Is It" (1980)
Another great Michael McDonald backing vocal, his second co-write with Kenny Loggins after their work on the Doobie Brothers' "What A Fool Believes" went supernova. I think this song is kind of underrated, I only really heard it more and a couple times and realized how much I liked it in the last decade. 

28. Wham! - "Last Christmas" (1984) 
In the streaming era, Christmas songs bum rush the Hot 100 every December, but so far "All I Want For Christmas Is You" and "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" have been the only ones to go all the way to #1. And if any other song ever gets there, I really hope it's "Last Christmas." Really I was pretty disappointed that it didn't get there after George Michael died on Christmas day in 2016. 

29. Gloria Estefan and Miami Sound Machine - "1-2-3" (1988)
Gloria Estefan had so many hits, she was really my introduction to Latin pop before I knew what it was, great voice, hooks for days. 

30. Murray Head - "One Night In Bangkok" (1985)
This song felt like one of those delightfully bizarre '80s chart oddities even before I realized it was from a musical about chess. Murray Head also kind of sounds like James Urbaniak to me now, so I picture Rusty Venture performing it. 
































31. Kim Carnes - "Bette Davis Eyes" (1981) 
My wife and I sang karaoke for the first time just a few weeks ago, at this little bar in Napa, California. It was fun, but after people sang their picks, the DJ would random put them back in the queue with his own song picks, and my wife and her brother's fiancee were very surprised when the DJ informed them it was time to go up and sing "Bette Davis Eyes." They muddled their way through it, neither feeling very confident about their feel for the song, but it was still kind of a fun moment. 

32. Indigo Girls - "Closer To Fine" (1989)
Another gorgeous, emotionally affecting folk pop crossover hit from that moment when Tracy Chapman and Suzanne Vega helped bring acoustic singer-songwriters back to the mainstream in the late '80s. The 2023 Indigo Girls documentary It's Only Life After All is highly recommended and gave me a greater appreciation for both this song and the rest of their catalog. 

33. Frida - "I Know There's Something Going On" (1983)
If a lot of what we think of as pop is just anglicized R&B, then it makes sense that ABBA's big hits are the pre-'80s example of pop-as-a-genre that everybody can agree on -- they were Swedes doing really really white disco. ABBA broke up in the early '80s, and their biggest U.S. hit of the decade, "The Winner Takes All," isn't anything special, but Anni-Frid Lyngstad had a pretty great single as a solo artist. 

34. Olivia Newton-John - "Physical" (1981)
Olivia Newton-John, the Australian pop country singer of the '70s who became a household name via Grease, kind of stumbled into becoming the template for the blonde pop superstar before Madonna's arrival. I was born during the 10 weeks that "Physical" was at #1 on the Hot 100, tied with the much less horny "You Light Up My Life" for the longest-running #1 at the time. 

35. Madonna - "Material Girl" (1985)
I think Madonna probably disliked being nicknamed 'the material girl' more than she dislikes the song itself. But hearing as a kid that she didn't like this song was an early lesson for me that you don't have to agree with an artist about their own music. 

36. Bananarama - "Cruel Summer" (1984)
I think another song with the same title, Taylor Swift's "Cruel Summer," become so ubiquitous in the last few years has really increased my affection for the clearly superior Bananarama song. 

37. Daryl Hall & John Oates - "Kiss On My List" (1981)
Three big Hall & Oates hits from 1981 are on this list, and it easily could've been four, they really hit an incredible hot streak that year. 

38. The Weather Girls - "It's Raining Men" (1982) 
I was very surprised to learn they were already releasing music as The Weather Girls before "It's Raining Men," it was actually on their third album, I'd always kind of assumed the group name was inspired by the song. Paul Shaffer co-wrote it, originally intending it for Donna Summer, and the Weather Girls made it a hit the same year that Shaffer began his run with "The Late Night with David Letterman." Hell of a year for ol' Paul. 

39. Neneh Cherry - "Buffalo Stance" (1989)
This song was kind of futuristic, in the sense that a club kid with two famous parents rapping over a dance pop track was really a vision of how the music industry works today. 

40. Karla Bonoff - "Personally" (1982)
Karla Bonoff wrote songs that were hits for Linda Ronstadt and Wynonna Judd, but she didn't write her only top 40 hit "Personally," which Glenn Frey suggested to her after it had been pitched to Bonnie Raitt. I never heard this song until a couple years ago, but it was just one of those tracks I found while looking at old Billboard charts that I ended up liking so much that I found room on it on this list alongside all this music I grew up on. 































41. George Michael - "Father Figure" (1988)
I'm not saying the Babygirl needledrop tipped the scales, but I went back and forth a bit about whether this song would make the cut. 

42. Dead Or Alive - "You Spin Me Round (Like A Record)" (1985) 
Stock Aitken Waterman sounds like a law firm, but it was a trio of British producers and songwriters that really helped turn pop towards the streamlined, professionalized assembly line system that it is today. "You Spin Me Round" was the first of 13 SAW productions to top the UK singles charts and was the first to reach as high in #11 as well (they also did the Rick Astley song I wrote about earlier). Pete Burns of Dead Or Alive was a much more unusual character and wilder vocalist than most of the people that fronted Stock Aitken Waterman productions, though. 

43. Jermaine Stewart - "We Don't Have To Take Our Clothes Off" (1986) 
I didn't mean to put three songs by queer artists in a row here, but it certainly warrants mentioning that pop music was extremely gay in the 1980s even while mainstream culture was extremely homophobic, most gay entertainers were in the closet, and AIDS was killing so many people. Jermaine Steward died of AIDS complications in 1997, and in that context, his charmingly chaste and massively catchy crossover hit is heartbreakingly poignant. 

44. Cyndi Lauper - "Money Changes Everything" (1985)
She's So Unusual is the only album with three singles on this list, which feels about right for me. The much bigger "She Bop" was going to be the third, but the way Lauper sings The Brains' "Money Changes Everything" just floors me every time I hear it, what a performance. 

45. Was (Not Was) - "Walk The Dinosaur" (1989)
I know lots of people were into dinosaurs when they were kids, but I was really into dinosaurs, like I was reading college-level paleontology textbooks before Jurassic Park was out, I was basically a dinosaur hipster. So obviously this was my favorite song when I was 7, and learned much later that Was (Not Was) started out in Detroit making weird avant funk and collaborating with Wayne Kramer of the MC5, before Don Was became a super producer who worked with the Stones and Dylan. 

46. Bobby McFerrin - "Don't Worry, Be Happy" (1988)  
Guys who could do weird stuff with their voices were very big in my world as an '80s kid. Michael Winslow (the sound effects guy from Police Academy and Spaceballs), John Moschitta (the fast talking guy from the Micro Machines commercials), and a cappella musician Bobby McFerrin were some of the world's greatest entertainers in my mind. I understand why people find this song irritating I guess, but as a 6-year-old kid, I just thought it was so cool that he made this entire song with his voice, and I still think the melody is really catchy. 

47. Madonna - "Open Your Heart" (1987) 
I didn't have MTV until the '90s, but my dad would tape NBC's "Friday Night Videos," so that was my earliest exposure to music videos, I have vivid memories of Tears For Fears and Peter Gabriel videos. I'm pretty sure "Open Your Heart" was the first Madonna video I saw, which is kind of appropriate given the video's weird-ass concept of a kid watching her in a peep show. I was surprised at how low this song's streaming numbers are, of her #1 hits, only "Justify My Love" and "Who's That Girl" have fewer plays (and who the hell is listening to "Crazy For You" in this day and age?). 

48. New Kids On The Block - "You Got It (The Right Stuff)" (1989) 
Two of my older cousins were teenage girls in the NKOTB era so I have that very classic boy experience of growing up sneering at boy bands and being baffled by their popularity. And even as an adult who loves a lot of pop music today, it feels uncontroversial to say that New Kids were probably, musically, the weakest of any hugely popular boy band, and they probably have a lot to answer for by becoming the first "white version of New Edition" success story. I think their is their best hook, though, and "Weird Al" Yankovic did a pretty good parody that was about the white stuff in Oreos. 

49. Harold Faltermeyer - "Axel F" (1985) 
As far as pop hits that were an incidental byproduct of how funny Eddie Murphy was in the '80s, the instrumental theme from Beverly Hills Cop is a much better song than "Party All the Time." And writing about the Crazy Frog phenomenon for Stereogum last year gave me a renewed appreciation for how good "Axel F" is when there's not an animated frog jabbering over it. 

50. Olivia Newton-John and Electric Light Orchestra - "Xanadu" (1980)
I'm not much of a musician, and contrary to popular belief, it takes more musicianship to cover a song than to write one. So I haven't recorded many covers, but "Xanadu" is one of the three songs I've covered with Western Blot, last year for a friend's film project. So I had to listen to this song so many times to figure out the melody and structure, and it's now tattooed on my brain in a way few songs are.

Friday, February 27, 2026

 






This week on Spin, I ranked Outkast's albums and wrote about Todd Snider's "Ballad of the Devil's Backbone Tavern" for the Deep Cut Friday column. 

TV Diary

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

 





a) "How To Get To Heaven From Belfast"
Maybe it's reductive to say one Irish show reminds me of another one, but "How To Get To Heaven From Belfast" is, like "Bad Sisters," about a group of Irish women who are harboring a secret about a man's death. Even the romantic subplot is kind of similar. But it's pretty good, from the same creator as "Derry Girls," a show I liked but never kept up with beyond the first few episodes, I should probably go back and finish that one. I was surprised at how dark the story got by the end, but it worked and set up a possible second season well.

b) "Can You Keep A Secret?"
Another dark comedy with a similar tone, this one British. It opens with a guy mourning his father who died 2 months earlier, and then his mother says "Can you keep a secret?" and his father walks in. And so the rest of the series is them collecting the insurance money from his death and trying to keep the secret that he's still alive, pretty entertaining stuff but that opening moment is just perfect, I love that they made it the title of the show. I wasn't familiar with Mandip Gill and she's absolutely gorgeous. 

c) "56 Days" 
"56 Days" on Amazon Prime is kind of an old-fashioned 'erotic thriller' with a very overused modern plot device -- the first episode shows two characters meet and hook up, and also shows you the discovery of an unidentified dead body in one of their homes 56 days later. So the couple episodes I've watched, and probably nearly all of the 8-episode season, are devoted to showing you various ways those characters are deceptive and untrustworthy and making you try to predict who's going to kill who. I'm not a big fan of that kind of storytelling, although I don't mind terribly that those characters are played by two very beautiful people, Avan Jogia and Dove Cameron (he's engaged to Halsey, she has a budding music career as a replacement-level Halsey). There are some cartoonish bits where Cameron will be acting friendly or flirtatious with somebody and then will turn away from them and immediately make an evil face so you know she's planning something devious and underhanded. 

The idea of doing a "Star Trek" show about the Starfleet Academy that we've always heard about is so good, and it's such a bummer that it's another mediocre Alex Kurtzman "Trek" show rolling off the assembly line. It's fun to see Holly Hunter as a Star Trek captain and even Paul Giamatti in a guest role as a Klingon, but I just hate the look of these shows and some of the dialogue is just so corny and not in an appropriately "Star Trek" way. 

On paper, "The Beauty" could have been the right show from the right person at the right time. Ryan Murphy's first hit "Nip/Tuck" was all about the dark side of vanity and insecurity, and revisiting that subject matter from a body horror angle in the 'looksmaxxing' era could've been a slam dunk on the zeitgeist. But it's genuinely one of the worst shows Murphy has ever made, and he's made a few duds. The first three episodes feature long, repetitive setpieces of three different people undergoing the same grotesque transformation, before introducing to a larger array of wacky characters like a one-eyed assassin who loves yacht rock. And there's just something about the slick Murphy house style that makes the gory special effects shots and the knowingly absurd moments all just not land as well as they should. Like if you had a David Fincher-type director with a real sense of style and atmosphere direct these actors with these scripts, it might not be great, but it would probably be good. 

I liked the first season of "School Spirits" a lot and got a bit bored of it in the second season. It feels like they sort of finished off their original idea for the show and are trying to revitalize it with a new storyline and some new cast members for season three, though, including Jennifer Tilly, so far I think it's working pretty well. 

g) "Hijack" 
The first season of "Hijack" was about Idris Elba as a corporate negotiator who has to negotiate with airline hijackers, and the second season is about a train hijacking. The spirit of Speed 2 is alive, I love it, I hope a boat gets hijacked in season 3. 

I miss some of the old supporting cast from the first three seasons of "Shoresy" -- at one point in season 5 they mention Sanguinet but he didn't actually appear on camera or anything, which was kind of disappointing. But it's still a pretty great show, I enjoy seeing Shoresy and Laurel finally become a couple, and just felt kinda proud of the show for actually getting a Wayne Gretzky cameo. 

Time flies, it feels bizarre that this show is already in its fourth season. Vella Lovell's character on "Crazy Ex-Girlfriend" was so hilarious that I'm sometimes annoyed that she's a bit more of a straight man character on "Animal Control," but she's still great, I think it's nice that they let her and Michael Rowland's characters finally get together. I've also enjoyed Ken Jeong being in the last few episodes and having a little "Community" semi-reunion with Joel McHale.  

The 'animated sitcom for adults' genre has been in pretty rough shape for a while now, so I was cautiously optimistic when I saw that voice cast for "Strip Law" includes Keith David, Stephen Root, Adam Scott, Janelle James, and Jim Rash. It's pretty good, though, some of the humor is a little predictable but it occasionally gets a belly laugh out of me. 

A French show on Netflix that takes place in the 16th century, one of those old-fashioned pulpy action shows, but with lots of nudity. 

m) "Dudes" 
A German sitcom about a group of guys who are all dealing with middle age in different ways, but with lots of nudity. A decently funny show, I could see an American adaptation being popular, without the nudity (or possibly with, idk). 

A fun Japanese show on Netflix about a young woman who wants to be a serious reporter but ends up getting transferred to a tabloid and has to cover sordid scandals and gets caught in that world, kinda reminds me of The Devil Wears Prada

It's funny to see a Korean show with the corniest premise about someone having wishes granted by a literal genie, like it makes me wonder if someone would ever try to reboot "I Dream of Genie" in America today. 

Sweden first allowed women to be police officers in 1958, and this Netflix period piece is about some of the first women on the job. Like a lot of period piece TV, the costuming and visual details are more impressive than the writing, which feels a little shallow and obvious. 

A truly weird Korean show where a modern day chef magically gets transported back to the 10th century and becomes the personal chef of a monarch of the Joseon dynasty and impresses everyone with her futuristic cooking techniques, like how do you even come up with a premise like this. 

This Indian show is about a game developer who's dealing with misogynistic online harassment, it's weird that the only TV show I've seen reckon with Gamergate at all was made on the other side of the world. 

Another pretty weird premise for this Taiwanese show, two women practice a resurrection ritual to bring the head of a scam center back to life to avenge their daughters who were kidnapped and forced to work there, one of whom died and one of whom is a coma. 

Maybe I heard something about the ABA at some point in the past but I don't think I had any idea that an NBA competitor existed for 9 years in the '60s and '70s and it's a pretty fascinating story, especially how they hired away some NBA players but also gave a bunch of unknown amateur players a chance to go professional. 

Most showbiz documentaries these days fall into two categories: docs where the celebrity subject has editorial control and makes sure they come out looking good, and docs where the celebrity subject doesn't participate at all. "Reality Check" is an increasingly rare and entertaining example of a third category: Tyra Banks sat for interviews about "ANTM" and tries to put a positive spin on every problematic story, but the whole thing is just so unflattering to her. It's interesting because the show was sort of ahead of the curve in trying to counteract some of the harmful standards perpetuated by the fashion industry but still managed to reinforce a lot of them, so it's like an autopsy of the pitfalls of the early woke era, and of trying to be politically correct in the messy sensationalistic reality TV system.  

Watching this Amazom Prime docuseries about female CEOs, including "ANTM" alum Winnie Harlow, right after finishing "Reality Check" kind of made impossible to watch this through anything other than the lens of the weaknesses of girlboss feminism. 

These true crime docs always make me aware of stories that probably made the national news that I have no memory of hearing about that the time. And "Girl On the Run" is about Sarah Pender, who was convicted of a double murder and described as a 'female Charles Manson,' and escaped from prison for several months in 2008. Pretty crazy stuff, and it's fascinating that Hull sat down for onscreen interviews to share all the details, and also maintain her innocence in the murder case.  

This PBS miniseries is pretty interesting, I feel like a lot of people would benefit from watching it right now, when it feels like there's more resentment festering between the Black community and the Jewish community than I've ever seen in my lifetime. 

The score in this is way too dramatic, it makes me feel like I'm watching a movie full of intense forboeding like Tár and not a Netflix docuseries about a famous TV chef. 

This A&E show, where each episode follows a police investigation beat by beat via body cam and dash cam and Ring camera footage, is kind of impressively put together, but I don't particularly like watching this kind of stuff and I really don't like the whole surveillance state we're living it that makes it possible.

My Top 50 Albums of 1968

Tuesday, February 24, 2026


























Here's the Spotify playlist with a track from each album:

1, The Jimi Hendrix Experience - Electric Ladyland
2. The Beatles - The Beatles (The White Album)
3. The Band – Music From Big Pink
4. The Rolling Stones - Beggars Banquet
5. The Kinks – The Kinks Are The Village Green Preservation Society
6. Aretha Franklin - Lady Soul
7. The United States of America – The United States of America
8. The Velvet Underground - White Light/White Heat
9. The Zombies – Odyssey and Oracle
10. Simon & Garfunkel – Bookends
11. Bobbie Gentry – The Delta Sweete
12. Van Morrison – Astral Weeks
13. Loretta Lynn – Fist City
14. Merle Haggard and the Strangers – Mama Tried
15. Johnny Cash – At Folsom Prison
16. Soft Machine – The Soft Machine
17. Cream - Wheels Of Fire
18. Grateful Dead – Anthem of the Sun
19. The Doors - Waiting For The Sun
20. Stevie Wonder - For Once In My Life
21. Harry Nilsson – Aerial Ballet
22. Deep Purple – Shades of Deep Purple
23. Thelonious Monk – Underground
24. Laura Nyro – Eli And The Thirteenth Confession
25. The Byrds – Sweetheart of the Rodeo
26. Fleetwood Mac - Fleetwood Mac
27. Neil Young - Neil Young
28. Creedence Clearwater Revival - Creedence Clearwater Revival
29. The Beach Boys – Friends
30. Miles Davis – Nefertiti
31. James Brown – I Got The Feelin’
32. Sun Ra and the Arkestra – Sound of Joy
33. Joni Mitchell – Song To A Seagull
34. Nico – The Marble Index
35. Cecil Taylor – Conquistador!
36. Pink Floyd – A Saucerful Of Secrets
37. Willie Nelson - Good Times
38. Aretha Franklin - Aretha Now
39. Tammy Wynette – D-I-V-O-R-C-E
40. George Jones – Sings The Songs Of Dallas Frazier
41. The Byrds – The Notorious Byrd Brothers
42. Sly & The Family Stone – Dance To The Music
43. Betty Wright - My First Time Around
44. The Mothers of Invention – We’re Only In It For The Money
45. Bobby Taylor & The Vancouvers – Bobby Taylor & The Vancouvers
46. Miles Davis – Miles In The Sky
47. Anthony Braxton – 3 Compositions of New Jazz
48. Nazz - Nazz
49. Al Kooper, Mike Bloomfield and Stephen Stills – Super Session
50. Randy Newman – Randy Newman

I don't like when people view rock before punk and metal through the lens of merely what was edgy and prescient enough to be protopunk or protometal. But part of what makes looking at this particular moment in time fascinating is seeing how much the psychedelic era opened up this whole market for 'progressive' or 'underground' bands that really blew things up in a lot of exciting directions. Even The Beatles were really incorporating some really avant and lo-fi things into their records, and that probably made room for everyone else to loosen up too. I'd already declared The White Album to be the best Beatles album, so doing a list like this requires some rock calculus like "is Electric Ladyland better than every Beatles album?" and I decided to go ahead and plant that flag, although I guess we'll see if I commit to it when I do an eventual big list for the entire decade. A whole lot of these artists released multiple albums in '68, but just Aretha Franklin, The Byrds, and Miles Davis had double representation on my list. 


Previously:
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1969
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1970
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1971
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1972
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1973
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1974
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1975
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1976
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1977
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1978
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1979
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1980
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1981
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1982
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1983
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1984
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1985
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1986
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1987
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1988
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1989
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1990
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1991
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1992
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1993
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1994
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1995
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1996
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1997
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1998
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 1999
My Top 25 Albums and Top 50 Singles of 2000
My Top 25 Albums and Top 50 Singles of 2001
My Top 25 Albums and Top 50 Singles of 2002
My Top 25 Albums and Top 50 Singles of 2003
My Top 25 Albums and Top 50 Singles of 2004
My Top 25 Albums and Top 50 Singles of 2005
My Top 25 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2006
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2007
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2008
My Top 50 Albums and Top 50 Singles of 2009
My Top 50 Albums and Top 50 Singles of 2010
My Top 50 Albums and Top 50 Singles of 2011
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2012
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2013
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2014
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2015
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2016
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2017
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2018
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2019
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2020
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2021
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2022
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2023 
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2024
My Top 50 Albums and Top 100 Singles of 2025

Deep Album Cuts Vol. 392: Donna Summer

Monday, February 23, 2026









I've been wanting to make this playlist for a long time, I started seriously putting it together in 2023 when the excellent HBO documentary Love To Love You, Donna Summer came out, and then I got close to finishing it last year. So when Alysa Liu did her amazing gold metal-winning figure skating routine to Summer's rendition of "MacArthur Park" at the Winter Olympics last week, and it rocketed up the iTunes charts, it reminded me that I really wanted to get my Donna Summer playlist up on here. 

Donna Summer deep album cuts (Spotify playlist):

1. Wounded
2. Need-A-Man Blues
3. Come With Me
4. Wasted
5. Summer Fever
6. Autumn Changes
7. Take Me
8. Sweet Romance
9. Say Something Nice
10. Mimi's Song (live)
11. My Baby Understands
12. Our Love
13. Lucky
14. Grand Illusion
15. (If It) Hurts Just A Little
16. (I Do Believe) I Fell In Love
17. People People

Track 1 from Lady of the Night (1974)
Track 2 from Love To Love You Baby (1975)
Tracks 3 and 4 from A Love Trilogy (1976)
Tracks 5 and 6 from Four Seasons Of Love (1976)
Track 7 from I Remember Yesterday (1977)
Tracks 8 and 9 from Once Upon A Time (1977)
Tracks 10 and 11 from Live And More (1978)
Tracks 12, 13, and 14 from Bad Girls (1979)
Track 15 from The Wanderer (1980)
Track 16 from Donna Summer (1982)
Tracks 17 and 18 from She Works Hard For The Money (1983)

Summer worked with Italian songwriter Giorgio Moroder from the very beginning, at first with British producer Pete Bellotte. But Summer and Moroder were both versatile talents and made music in many different styles, and her debut Lady of the Night had more of a pop/rock sound before they started to find a more danceable electronic sound that made her the Queen of Disco. 

Summer made some really great cohesive records, including the concept albums Four Seasons of Love and I Remember Yesterday and the double LPs Once Upon a Time and Bad Girls, and was right between Fleetwood Mac and ELO on my favorite album artists of the '70s list. A lot of these records run together with continuous transitions between tracks, so it was tough to pull out individual tracks without interrupting those grooves, I think there's only one or two abrupt cuts on here. In the '80s, Summer started to branch out with other producers including Quincy Jones, and I included a couple of those albums, but I decided to stick to just the first 10 years of Summer's career. I try to cover an artist's whole career when it makes sense to, but sometimes I really just want to focus on their prime years, especially for someone whose songs can be pretty long and make it harder to cram a lot of them into 80 minutes. 

Moroder's team of collaborators, the "Munich Machine," included lots of people who went on to do great things. German engineer Reinhold Mack produced huge records by Queen and Billy Squier, and English drummer Keith Forsey would make produce hits for Billy Idol and Simple Minds. And Icelandic keyboardist Thor Baldursson gets a mention in my book for his group Gaz, whose track "Sing Sing" features one of the most sampled breakbeats in Baltimore club music. 

The "MacArthur Park" suite that Alysa Liu skated to is from Live and More and I included a sweet song Summer wrote for her daughter that never appeared on a studio album, "Mimi's Song." "My Baby Understands," a great song, was sampled on Ne-Yo and Jamie Foxx's "She Got Her Own." "(If It) Hurts Just A Little" was sampled on a lot of dance tracks (Cassius, Deaf'N Dumb Crew, Love & Mind, etc.). "Sweet Romance" was sampled on a bunch of New York rap tracks (most prominently DJ Kay Slay and the Lox's "The Streetsweeper")

Previous playlists in the Deep Album Cuts series:
Vol. 1: Brandy
Vol. 2: Whitney Houston
Vol. 3: Madonna
Vol. 4: My Chemical Romance
Vol. 5: Brad Paisley
Vol. 6: George Jones
Vol. 7: The Doors
Vol. 8: Jay-Z
Vol. 9: Robin Thicke
Vol. 10: R. Kelly
Vol. 11: Fall Out Boy
Vol. 12: TLC
Vol. 13: Pink
Vol. 14: Queen
Vol. 15: Steely Dan
Vol. 16: Trick Daddy
Vol. 17: Paramore
Vol. 18: Elton John
Vol. 19: Missy Elliott
Vol. 20: Mariah Carey
Vol. 21: The Pretenders
Vol. 22: "Weird Al" Yankovic
Vol. 23: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
Vol. 24: Foo Fighters
Vol. 25: Counting Crows
Vol. 26: T.I.
Vol. 27: Jackson Browne
Vol. 28: Usher
Vol. 29: Mary J. Blige
Vol. 30: The Black Crowes
Vol. 31: Ne-Yo
Vol. 32: Blink-182
Vol. 33: One Direction
Vol. 34: Kelly Clarkson
Vol. 35: The B-52's
Vol. 36: Ludacris
Vol. 37: They Might Be Giants
Vol. 38: T-Pain
Vol. 39: Snoop Dogg
Vol. 40: Ciara
Vol. 41: Creedence Clearwater Revival
Vol. 42: Dwight Yoakam
Vol. 43: Demi Lovato
Vol. 44: Prince
Vol. 45: Duran Duran
Vol. 46: Rihanna
Vol. 47: Janet Jackson
Vol. 48: Sara Bareilles
Vol. 49: Motley Crue
Vol. 50: The Who
Vol. 51: Coldplay
Vol. 52: Alicia Keys
Vol. 53: Stone Temple Pilots
Vol. 54: David Bowie
Vol. 55: The Eagles
Vol. 56: The Beatles
Vol. 57: Beyonce
Vol. 58: Beanie Sigel
Vol. 59: A Tribe Called Quest
Vol. 60: Cheap Trick
Vol. 61: Guns N' Roses
Vol. 62: The Posies
Vol. 63: The Time
Vol. 64: Gucci Mane
Vol. 65: Violent Femmes
Vol. 66: Red Hot Chili Peppers
Vol. 67: Maxwell
Vol. 68: Parliament-Funkadelic
Vol. 69: Chevelle
Vol. 70: Ray Parker Jr. and Raydio
Vol. 71: Fantasia
Vol. 72: Heart
Vol. 73: Pitbull
Vol. 74: Nas
Vol. 75: Monica
Vol. 76: The Cars
Vol. 77: 112
Vol. 78: 2Pac
Vol. 79: Nelly
Vol. 80: Meat Loaf
Vol. 81: AC/DC
Vol. 82: Bruce Springsteen
Vol. 83: Pearl Jam
Vol. 84: Green Day
Vol. 85: George Michael and Wham!
Vol. 86: New Edition
Vol. 87: Chuck Berry
Vol. 88: Electric Light Orchestra
Vol. 89: Chic
Vol. 90: Journey
Vol. 91: Yes
Vol. 92: Soundgarden
Vol. 93: The Allman Brothers Band
Vol. 94: Mobb Deep
Vol. 95: Linkin Park
Vol. 96: Shania Twain
Vol. 97: Squeeze
Vol. 98: Taylor Swift
Vol. 99: INXS
Vol. 100: Stevie Wonder
Vol. 101: The Cranberries
Vol. 102: Def Leppard
Vol. 103: Bon Jovi
Vol. 104: Dire Straits
Vol. 105: The Police
Vol. 106: Sloan
Vol. 107: Peter Gabriel
Vol. 108: Led Zeppelin
Vol. 109: Dave Matthews Band
Vol. 110: Nine Inch Nails
Vol. 111: Talking Heads
Vol. 112: Smashing Pumpkins
Vol. 113: System Of A Down
Vol. 114: Aretha Franklin
Vol. 115: Michael Jackson
Vol. 116: Alice In Chains
Vol. 117: Paul Simon
Vol. 118: Lil Wayne
Vol. 119: Nirvana
Vol. 120: Kix
Vol. 121: Phil Collins
Vol. 122: Elvis Costello & The Attractions
Vol. 123: Sonic Youth
Vol. 124: Bob Seger
Vol. 125: Radiohead
Vol. 126: Eric Church
Vol. 127: Neil Young
Vol. 128: Future
Vol. 129: Say Anything
Vol. 130: Maroon 5
Vol. 131: Kiss
Vol. 132: Dinosaur Jr.
Vol. 133: Stevie Nicks
Vol. 134: Talk Talk
Vol. 135: Ariana Grande
Vol. 136: Roxy Music
Vol. 137: The Cure
Vol. 138: 2 Chainz
Vol. 139: Kelis
Vol. 140: Ben Folds Five
Vol. 141: DJ Khaled
Vol. 142: Little Feat
Vol. 143: Brendan Benson
Vol. 144: Chance The Rapper
Vol. 145: Miguel
Vol. 146: The Geto Boys
Vol. 147: Meek Mill
Vol. 148: Tool
Vol. 149: Jeezy
Vol. 150: Lady Gaga
Vol. 151: Eddie Money
Vol. 152: LL Cool J
Vol. 153: Cream
Vol. 154: Pavement
Vol. 155: Miranda Lambert
Vol. 156: Gang Starr
Vol. 157: Little Big Town
Vol. 158: Thin Lizzy
Vol. 159: Pat Benatar
Vol. 160: Depeche Mode
Vol. 161: Rush
Vol. 162: Three 6 Mafia
Vol. 163: Jennifer Lopez
Vol. 164: Rage Against The Machine
Vol. 165: Huey Lewis and the News
Vol. 166: Dru Hill
Vol. 167: The Strokes
Vol. 168: The Notorious B.I.G.
Vol. 169: Sparklehorse
Vol. 170: Kendrick Lamar
Vol. 171: Mazzy Star
Vol. 172: Erykah Badu
Vol. 173: The Smiths
Vol. 174: Kenny Rogers & The First Edition
Vol. 175: Fountains Of Wayne
Vol. 176: Joe Diffie
Vol. 177: Morphine
Vol. 178: Dr. Dre
Vol. 179: The Rolling Stones
Vol. 180: Superchunk
Vol. 181: The Replacements
Vol. 371: The Beastie Boys
Vol. 372: Marianne Faithfull
Vol. 373: Sly and the Family Stone
Vol. 374: Billy Idol
Vol. 375: The Jam
Vol. 376: Roberta Flack
Vol. 377: Chubby Checker
Vol. 378: Bad Company
Vol. 379: Mana
Vol. 380: Joe Cocker
Vol. 381: The Kinks
Vol. 382: Phish
Vol. 383: Faith No More
Vol. 384: The Alarm
Vol. 385: Jill Sobule
Vol. 386: Luther Vandross
Vol. 387: Angie Stone
Vol. 388: MC Lyte
Vol. 389: The Beach Boys
Vol. 390: The S.O.S. Band
Vol. 391: Bad Bunny