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  2. Number ones. Michael Jackson had the highest number of top hits at the Billboard Hot 100 chart during the 1980s (9 songs). In addition, Jackson remained the longest at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 chart during the 1980s (27 weeks).

    • Tom Eames
    • UB40 - 'Red Red Wine' UB40 - Red Red Wine (Official Video) You might not have realised it, but Neil Diamond first recorded this song back in 1967. UB40 feud: Reggae band's complicated history and why the Campbell brothers fell out.
    • Phil Collins - 'Another Day in Paradise' Phil Collins - Another Day In Paradise (Official Music Video) This ballad saw Phil Collins sing the tune from a third-person perspective, looking at a man crossing the street to ignore a homeless woman, imploring listeners not to turn a blind eye to those in need.
    • Culture Club - 'Karma Chameleon' Culture Club - Karma Chameleon (Official Music Video) This was the song that made Boy George an even bigger star around the world.
    • Rick Astley - 'Never Gonna Give You Up' Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (Official Music Video) If there's one song from the Stock, Aitken and Waterman era that has stood the test of time, it's Rick Astley's international number one smash.
    • 5 min
    • Rob Sheffield
    • Biz Markie, ‘Just a Friend’ Lighters up for the late, great Biz Markie, one of the most beloved music heroes of the Eighties or any other decade. The Diabolical One.
    • Nena, ’99 Luftballons’ A German girl sings about nuclear apocalypse in a perky New Wave bop about the end of the world. Yet it’s also a doomy teen romance, at a time when half the hits on the radio were about the end of the world.
    • My Bloody Valentine, ‘Feed Me With Your Kiss’ The dawn of the shoegaze era. My Bloody Valentine give an early taste of their power on their debut album, Isn’t Anything: Irish guitar madman Kevin Shields’ tremolo overdrive and feedback-loop noise, Belinda Butcher’s breathy vocals, awesome power-klutz drumming.
    • Bobby Brown, ‘My Prerogative’ The sound of New Jack Swing. Bobby Brown dishes the dirt on celebrity gossip, as the young Harlem prodigy Teddy Riley soups up a beat that would rule the radio for the next few years.
    • Don’t You Want Me – The Human League. This Human League hit was released as the fourth single from their album, Dare. Its lyrics describe a disagreement between two individuals, in which one of them is bitter about helping the other gain popularity.
    • Smalltown Boy – Bronski Beat. “Small Town Boy” is the debut single from British synth-pop group Bronski Beat, released in 1984. The song is based on a young man’s naivety about the world due to his sheltered life.
    • Relax – Frankie Goes To Hollywood. As you can see, the 80s were filled with synth-pop hits, and this one also proved successful! “Relax” is believed to be an overtly sexual song, describing the frustrations of delayed pleasure in the bedroom.
    • Beat It – Michael Jackson. This MJ hit talks about a man who avoids violence by walking away from a fight. “Beat It” is also featured on our best songs to wake up to playlist.
  3. 1. Physical. Olivia Newton-John. 2. Bette Davis Eyes. Kim Carnes. 3. Endless Love. Diana Ross & Lionel Richie. 4. Eye Of The Tiger. Survivor. 5. Every Breath You Take. The Police. 6....

  4. Number ones. Michael Jackson had the highest number of top hits at the Billboard Hot 100 chart during the 1980s (9 songs) in addition, Jackson remained the longest at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 chart during the 1980s (27 weeks).

  5. Here, we’re celebrating the 200 hits from the 1980s that we’re still listening to most—and “Africa” comes out on top, a song as beloved by those who made it a worldwide smash back then as by the younger generations discovering it for the first time now.

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