🎵 SIMPLE MINDS "Don't You (Forget About Me)" REACTION

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  • Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @alexdrummer2175
    @alexdrummer2175 3 года назад +494

    Every decade has a song or two that strongly identifies that decade. This is definitely the song of the '80s!

    • @hmpz36911
      @hmpz36911 3 года назад +5

      Yeah you might be right about that. Isn't this in like every other John Hughes film?

    • @oreally8605
      @oreally8605 3 года назад +11

      80's were the best time to grow 💕 up and be born in....

    • @mr_dill_pickle5242
      @mr_dill_pickle5242 3 года назад +8

      This one and "Your Love" by the Outfield.

    • @justpassingthrough3657
      @justpassingthrough3657 3 года назад +4

      I would say Thomas Dolby- She Blinded Me With Science was a bigger iconic 80s song, IMO

    • @ShaunHensley
      @ShaunHensley 3 года назад +6

      @@justpassingthrough3657 That was always considered more of a novelty song, it was popular for a brief time compared to this song

  • @Frostrazor
    @Frostrazor 3 года назад +386

    This song is an anthem to us 80s kids. Anyone who was someone back then, saw The Breakfast Club multiple times. One of THE most celebrated movies of the 80s by teens and young adults in the mid 80s. it's a triumphant feel good song that any of us can perfectly see to this day the "loser" of the club finally getting the girl and thrusting his fist in the air under the field goal post on the football field as the credits roll - and this song blaring away. So wonderfully done. Most of John Hughes (RIP) films back then gave us those moments, but is the among the most cherished moments of them all, and this song reminds us of that amazing feel good moment of the movie. This movie was not just something to watch - it was a right of passage for us. There are very few songs as or more captivating in nostalgia to us 80s peeps than this song.
    As for the movie - it's still relevant today - featuring an eclectic group of teens each with an archetypal trope of their role in the school (jock, rebel, prom queen, spaz-freak, nerd), and how they are forced to spend a day together on a weekend in detention. Heartfelt, funny, philosophical, and celebratory.

    • @seandobson6221
      @seandobson6221 2 года назад +10

      I still rock this one and all of the Brat Pack. Weird Science, St Elmo’s Fire, Pretty in Pink, Some Kind of Wonderful, 16 Candles. I grew up with the Brat Pack. I feel like I was learning life from these, people I thought were kids at the time, but they were in their 20s already. But it is still really nostalgic.

    • @sferrin2
      @sferrin2 2 года назад +4

      This and Head Over Heels and Everybody Wants to Rule the World by Tears for Fears.

    • @christopherharper9932
      @christopherharper9932 2 года назад +5

      yup! saw the Breakfast Club at the movies and made me a Simple Minds fan forever!

    • @aha3885
      @aha3885 2 года назад +3

      God bless John Hughes.

    • @kevinmitchell4018
      @kevinmitchell4018 2 года назад +6

      dude.u just nailed it!!! wow! I couldn't have said it better.i wz 16 wen ths movie came out & wz into hard-core punk.i hated everything mainstream, but this song still takes me right back to 1985 every time I hear it.a great time it wz too

  • @pietergreveling
    @pietergreveling 3 года назад +490

    It's the end credit song from the movie The Breakfast Club (1985), one of the best 80's classics and my favourite teenage movie ever and it's as relevant today, as it was back then! 👌🏼🥰
    Definitely check it out, if you haven't seen it yet! ✌🏼

    • @gideonborean6433
      @gideonborean6433 3 года назад +24

      If you haven't seen this movie yet.......... are you even from planet earth????

    • @Petestanton
      @Petestanton 3 года назад +24

      Love that movie, sums up High School perfectly

    • @rhoetusochten4211
      @rhoetusochten4211 3 года назад +15

      Lex was all, "this song is like high school."
      Lol

    • @mibesto8039
      @mibesto8039 3 года назад +11

      Not every song has a riff and not every riff is a guitar. 🤣🤣 But every song you review is a blast. Love you both!!! 😁✌🏼♥️♥️

    • @PHFJR62
      @PHFJR62 3 года назад +7

      The apartment complex in the background that you can see, I lived there at the time. The school that it was filmed in was not used as a school anymore at that time. The State Police owned the school and had training classes there. This school was located in Des Plaines, IL, about a 1/2 hour from downtown Chicago.

  • @jaknazryth2488
    @jaknazryth2488 3 года назад +201

    This song as much a part of "The Breakfast Club" as the Script itself. It is about kids who have almost nothing in common, who would normally not be friends, being forced into school detention with each other, where they all must learn from each other. By the end of detention they become "friends for a day", but at the end of the movie, the question remains.... once they are back among their friends and social cliques, will they still be friends the next day at school? "Will you walk on by, or will you call my name?" is literally the question the song asks... the next day they see each other in the hallways of their school. In a way, this movie was revisited in the from of "Jumanji, Welcome to the Jungle" a couple years ago. "Welcome to the Jungle" basically took everything from the breakfast club but placed it in a fantasy/magical video game setting. The wider question is this. Once you become friends with someone not in your peer group, will you acknowledge your new friends in the presence of your current/old friends. Or will you walk away and pretend not to know them? Peer pressure can force you to do some dumb things. "The Breakfast Club"... Great life lesson.

    • @shawnk7832
      @shawnk7832 3 года назад +4

      We didn't talk in detention, unless we wanted more detention... 🤣

    • @FastHatTrick
      @FastHatTrick 2 года назад +6

      Post Gen X sees this movie as a tired motif, what they failed to realize, is that this was the FIRST movie to truly speak truth to its audience. It said all the things we couldnt say. It was the first one. There have been dozens since its release, but this was the first.

    • @mattslupek7988
      @mattslupek7988 2 года назад +2

      Yep. That scene when Brian, the brain (Anthony Michael Hall) asked, “What’s gonna happen to us on Monday? I mean, I consider you guys my friends. I’m not wrong, am I?” I’ve said several times that every high school kid should HAVE to watch this movie, so they can learn how and how not to treat each other. I’d also suggest that every first-time parent-to-be watch it so they know what NOT to do when raising their kids.

  • @warragamba1977
    @warragamba1977 3 года назад +154

    Love watching Lex’s reactions to these songs, her unbridled joy jumps from the screen. My wife and I met at 15 and in those days neither family had a house phone, so wrote to each other.....51 years later we are approaching our 49th wedding anniversary. She still has all those letters and they will be handed down to our daughter. Stay safe guys and much love from Australia.

    • @bluebird3281
      @bluebird3281 3 года назад +5

      Congrats !

    • @nathansnider6525
      @nathansnider6525 3 года назад +2

      We are all safe in Idaho, no mandates, no lock downs, no masks, and life is normal. It sounds like you guys down under are becoming a communist country. Hope I am wrong. I have always loved the spirit of Australia...hope you can get it together down there. Dont give up!

    • @markvanderstelt8999
      @markvanderstelt8999 3 года назад +5

      @@nathansnider6525 what the hell about what he said has to do with the virus ? another nut job trumpet who makes like nothing is happening. haha 309,314 cases of covid in idaho but ya all is well there.

    • @Frank75288
      @Frank75288 3 года назад

      Are Brad and Lex a couple ? If they are I can't see it lasting , he is so dull

    • @nathansnider6525
      @nathansnider6525 3 года назад +2

      @@markvanderstelt8999 Let's go Brandon!

  • @rufioquin2406
    @rufioquin2406 3 года назад +73

    I think it was first In “The Breakfast Club” … the classic 80s coming of age film

    • @paulb4604
      @paulb4604 3 года назад +3

      Breakfast Club is a must watch classic. I saw it in the theather a few years ago and it was still awesome.

    • @frankiek2269
      @frankiek2269 2 года назад

      @the world has fallen Yes. Definitely not first. Hell, it was even a major point in the first Pitch Perfect movie (

    • @Flip4910
      @Flip4910 8 месяцев назад

      pretty sure they wrote this song for the movie yeah they did it really really quickly if i'm not mistaken

  • @clydeotoole7663
    @clydeotoole7663 3 года назад +188

    The song is about the movie, where very different students who have nothing in common spend a day together in detention and bond, becoming friends and realizing things about each other they never knew or considered. The lyrics are asking will we still be friends when the next school day begins or will we revert to our clicks and ignore each other as though we don't exist, despite the bond and friendship we've realized. It's a fantastic movie, funny and fun yet with a deep message that every generation experiences.

    • @nealm6764
      @nealm6764 3 года назад +8

      Also the song was shopped to Bryan Ferry, Billy Idol and the Fixx before finally landing with Simple minds, who thought it would be "a forgettable song from a forgettable movie". It ended up being their biggest hit.

    • @thomaswhite7783
      @thomaswhite7783 3 года назад +10

      The Breakfast Club.

    • @Kaddywompous
      @Kaddywompous 3 года назад +11

      Don’t mess with the bull, young man. You’ll get the horns.

    • @zoegartham312
      @zoegartham312 3 года назад +3

      @@Kaddywompous Do you want another? Do you?

    • @vegasviking86
      @vegasviking86 3 года назад +3

      @@thomaswhite7783 love how they put down alllll that and never mentioned the movie title 🤦‍♂️

  • @benshafer5198
    @benshafer5198 3 года назад +144

    This was the main theme song for The Breakfast Club (1985). An iconic, generational movie for Gen Xers. Simple Minds are an excellent 80's new wave band. You may want to try Alive and Kicking or Promised You a Miracle next. ✌

    • @freebirdtony
      @freebirdtony 3 года назад +5

      Nice suggestions. Btw, I'm a late Baby Boomer, and many of us were attracted to the movie. With 1982 being the last high school graduation year for Boomers and the movie was released in '85.

    • @Itelkner
      @Itelkner 3 года назад +8

      I graduated '85 - and this song was almost the whole soundtrack of that time by itself - if one song could sum up that time.

    • @benshafer5198
      @benshafer5198 3 года назад +3

      @@freebirdtony '82 graduate here, so I can relate lol

    • @freebirdtony
      @freebirdtony 3 года назад +1

      @@benshafer5198
      I'm '80

    • @freebirdtony
      @freebirdtony 3 года назад

      @@Itelkner
      That's pretty cool.

  • @leannmiller7153
    @leannmiller7153 3 года назад +68

    I’m 68 and still love this song and The Breakfast Club. We had several movie nights, over the years, with our kids and extended family. It really teaches about cliques, stereotyping, and the social hierarchy of society. The message is still relevant.

    • @Itelkner
      @Itelkner 3 года назад +4

      That movie is brilliant!

    • @wadeputerbaugh9633
      @wadeputerbaugh9633 6 месяцев назад

      We actually watched this movie in sociology! To learn about social hierarchy and cliques

  • @Cadinho93
    @Cadinho93 3 года назад +49

    🎶Don't you forget about me…🎶
    This song is iconic in "The Breakfast Club" (1985)
    🎥🤘

  • @johnmcdermid6896
    @johnmcdermid6896 3 года назад +7

    Now your talking, from my country Scotland what a fantastic band, waterfront, alive and kicking, Belfast child, up on the catwalk, sanctify yourself, just for starters...

  • @MRoyClark
    @MRoyClark 3 года назад +2

    Neither "riffs" - nor Rock music - are strictly built around guitars. In fact, the term comes from Jazz music, where guitars are often in the background. There are definitely brass riffs, synth riffs, fiddle riffs, piano riffs, flute riffs, organ riffs, banjo riffs, and vocal riffs. A riff can be whistled or played on harmonica. Almost anything can be a riff. A riff is basically just a repetitive, rhythmic musical part, and this song has a few. They just aren't played on guitar. The main riff this song is known for is the synth chords that play counterpoint against the vocals in the chorus (between "don't you" and "forget about me"). The "hey hey, hey hey! ooh oh!" vocal intro and bridge part counts as a riff but could also be called a hook. The terms are often used interchangeably, and their definitions overlap. But riffs tend to be more forceful and rhythmic while hooks are usually more melodic or playful. And the term "riff" is usually used more when discussing Jazz, Country, Bluegrass, Metal, Punk, Indie and other Rock genres, while "hook" is the term more often used in chart Pop, Disco, Electronic Music, and Hip-Hop.
    Genre-wise, "Don't You (Forget About Me)" (1985/US#1, UK#7) can be filed a few different ways. In the US, it would probably be called New Wave, Dance Rock, Alternative, or even Goth. Simple Minds were a Scottish Postpunk/New Pop band who were huge in the UK for years before this gave them their mainstream US breakthrough. Starting out in the late 70s, their earlier stuff was more Art Rock (David Bowie, Kate Bush, Roxy Music) oriented and synth-heavy, but "Don't You" paired them with Keith Forsey, the producer and arranger behind Billy Idol's US crossover successes. The resultant style used muscular Rock drumming and galloping Rock bass to anchor their more artsy, esoteric tendencies. Jim Kerr's vocal remains the most Art Rock element, but it somehow works. The band absolutely hated this song (lots of bands hate their biggest hit) and in the UK it's just one of a dozen or so major Simple Minds hits, but here in the US, it's their most memorable song, and one of just a handful of crossovers, chartwise. They followed this up with "Alive and Kicking" (1985/US#3, UK#7) and "Sanctify Yourself" (1986/US#14, UK#10). Both are worth checking out, but their earlier music is a lot cooler. Definitely check out the official video for "Promised You a Miracle" (1982/UK#13) and "Glittering Prize" (1982/UK#16).

  • @wesalker3479
    @wesalker3479 3 года назад +69

    Brad, I feel so bad for you. You try so hard to understand the songs and, Lex just gets it, right off the bat. Every time. It's a gift.

    • @davidcox30004
      @davidcox30004 3 года назад +13

      Lex has an uncanny ability to get what songs were about in the time they came out. Much love to you guys.

    • @johnharrid5729
      @johnharrid5729 2 года назад +7

      Some people feel the music others just hear it

    • @JD-eq4dp
      @JD-eq4dp 2 года назад +7

      I find this fellow hard work. An over thinker and looks for the 'deep meaning' in everything. He'll do better if he was to cheer up !

    • @kennyhuskisson2684
      @kennyhuskisson2684 2 года назад +3

      @@johnharrid5729 Exactly!, That's what I always say, I think it's a gift, something some people are born with👍✌️

    • @davidnardiello4103
      @davidnardiello4103 Год назад +2

      There's a reason why Brad & Lex are at the top for music reaction videos; you can't beat the "Feels vs reals" dynamic they got 🔥

  • @scatton61
    @scatton61 3 года назад +1

    Simple minds, Gary Numan, Ultravox, Visage, OMD, Duran Duran, Spandau Ballet, Depech Mode... thoes were the days

  • @MusicFan1977
    @MusicFan1977 3 года назад +66

    This is Simple Minds' most well known song in America (thanks in large part to The Breakfast Club), but they have a lot of other songs that were very good which were hits in the U.K. and here in Canada, particularly on the albums "New Gold Dream", "Sparkle In The Rain" and "Sons and Fascination". Definitely worth a deeper dive.

  • @keithshaw6018
    @keithshaw6018 2 года назад +1

    It's from the movie The Breakfast Club a mega huge 80's hit with Molly Ringwald Emilio Estevez, Paul Gleason, Anthony Michael Hall, John Kapelos.

  • @wheresatari668
    @wheresatari668 3 года назад +86

    Yeah, this is from the 80's classic film called The Breakfast Club. This is the third vid of yours I've watched recently that had songs from movies you all should definitely watch. The Breakfast Club, Young Guns 2 (start with Young Guns first, though), and The Lost Boys. Not a bad start if you all were to start a movie reaction channel. I would also recommend Heat and The Usual Suspects. Two amazing movies with great casts and one story that will make your head explodeXD Those are just some of my personal favorites, though. Harry Potter and The Lord of the Rings if you want fantasy. There are way too many great works of art out there to begin to put a big list together, so I'll let other commentors go from there if you all decide to do it.

    • @JM-fi6ce
      @JM-fi6ce 3 года назад +1

      I've suggested movie reactions, they replied it's a ton of time and work, they would know best, although I would enjoy it.

    • @jdl619
      @jdl619 3 года назад +1

      Both young guns soundtracks are legendary two of my all time favorite movies I never get tired of watching either I'm an 80's kid for sure.

    • @wheresatari668
      @wheresatari668 3 года назад +1

      @@jdl619 Yeah. Young Guns is one of my favorite as well. My Aunt used to let us skip school at Her house and She had all the best 80's stuff. Young Guns, Predator, Terminator and the list goes on and on. I saw it there first and it has been up high on my personal favorites list ever since. Emilio was just a perfect choice for Billy and he killed it.

    • @jdl619
      @jdl619 3 года назад

      @@wheresatari668 I would watch young guns with my mom every time it came on TV my friends would be like What you doing s I'm learning & having a good time.

  • @erlstone
    @erlstone 3 года назад +2

    this is a type of new wave (a mainstream version of new wave...with roots to Ultravox, Roxy Music, Human League) and IMO they influenced U2 and Depeche Mode

  • @GoWestYoungMan
    @GoWestYoungMan 3 года назад +15

    Probably one of the most nostalgic songs for me and those that grew up in the 80s. Fond memories, teen angst, high school, and The Breakfast Club.

  • @iamrgenius
    @iamrgenius 3 года назад +1

    Time for JOY DIVISION! “Interzone”, “shadow play”, “love will tear us apart”

  • @sandymiller3577
    @sandymiller3577 3 года назад +86

    The only movie I remember with this song is called The Breakfast Club. It played at the very end of the movie. If you haven't seen it, you should check it out 👍

    • @vorbis4860
      @vorbis4860 3 года назад +2

      I feel like Lex perfectly described both this song and that movie in a way. They're paired together so well.

    • @sandymiller3577
      @sandymiller3577 3 года назад +1

      @@vorbis4860 I agree!

    • @11johnjs
      @11johnjs 3 года назад +3

      Classic Movie!

    • @1992WLK
      @1992WLK 3 года назад +1

      Easy A made a very on the nose reference/use of the song.

    • @MrRezRising
      @MrRezRising 3 года назад +2

      After TBC, there was no way to top that. I've only seen it in Family Guy, when they did a TBC bit.

  • @lda1970
    @lda1970 3 года назад +1

    In 1985 I was, 15 and over at this girls house I liked watching her put her make up on. This song started playing on the radio and she looked up at me in the mirror and said, “every time you hear this song, you will think of me”. I most certainly do, 36 years later. Howdy Angie L, Workman Junior High.

  • @jeffreekoch9298
    @jeffreekoch9298 Год назад +3

    You got it! This was '80s, late '80s. I was a young child at the time. Generation X anthem. It was on a popular movie, Breakfast Club. Watch the musical video later! Simple Minds were good, reminded me of U2, Inxs, The Church, etc. Is this rock? Yes. It's New Wave, post-punk, alternative, dance rock. 🕺 Yall hear the synths, good drums, light guitars and bouncy bass guitars? It's there. Lol. "Alive and Kicking" is another good one from this band.

  • @pauligrossinoz
    @pauligrossinoz 2 года назад +1

    Yep ... we called the house phone of their parents ... who acted as the strict gatekeepers of their little girls! We had to be very, very polite and very, very nice on the phone to their mothers to even stand a chance ...
    The 80's were very different times for us teenagers!

  • @alexmarin4245
    @alexmarin4245 3 года назад +15

    One of the best 80's songs! GREAT DRUMS! I LOVE SIMPLE MINDS

  • @steverakes6182
    @steverakes6182 Год назад +2

    The original eighties rat pack, Molly Ringwald, Emilio Estevez, Ally Sheedy, Judd Nelson, and Anthony Michael Hall. The Breakfast Club.

  • @harveybojangle475
    @harveybojangle475 3 года назад +79

    The keyboards used in this song give it a very 80's sound. A "riff" is a short, repeated phrase and doesn't have to just be from a guitar. So, most every song has them in one form or another.

    • @FightingTorque411
      @FightingTorque411 3 года назад +3

      Yes, though one would assume it's a guitar unless you specify "keyboard riff" or the like. Could also be called a "hook", or in classical music (stretching my memories of high school here) a repeating phrase is an "ostinato".

    • @rhondamcbath6279
      @rhondamcbath6279 3 года назад

      Yeah, most definitely, and I do agree. Most people, even the ones who are closely involved with "you know, the dude that makes all the magic happen with every thing to do with a songs sound effects?" That guy on the mixing boards, his job is to place those little riffs throughout the entire song!! Yep, that's the ticket fo show!! LOL 😎

    • @rhondamcbath6279
      @rhondamcbath6279 3 года назад +1

      @@FightingTorque411 I love it!! You just hit it right on the nail, or note in this case... 🎶

    • @marctoad
      @marctoad 3 года назад

      @@FightingTorque411 riffs are really common in jazz, on any instrument, just to throw that in there too

    • @leftcoaster67
      @leftcoaster67 3 года назад

      Don't ask me why. I still think the singer has a very Morrison like voice.

  • @ejbanks2001
    @ejbanks2001 3 года назад +1

    FINALLY!!!!!!!! BEST 80's MOVIE EVER!!!!

  • @lumpyfishgravy
    @lumpyfishgravy 3 года назад +35

    What a song. What a movie!
    Simple Minds were one of Scotland's biggest bands, successfully rising from [what was to be known as] Indie to Stadium Rock status.

    • @paulsmith2516
      @paulsmith2516 3 года назад +3

      Simple Minds were NOTHING to do with Indie music, at all. Indie is a genre or term that refers to the fact that the band are signed to an independent record label like Rough Trade or Food or Creation with no affiliation to the major labels like EMI, Columbia and the like. Simple Minds were most definitely a major label middle of the road pop band.

    • @joemachine4714
      @joemachine4714 3 года назад

      @@paulsmith2516

    • @dcanmore
      @dcanmore 2 года назад +2

      @@paulsmith2516 you do know this song came after their seventh album, right? First three albums were released on Zoom Records from Edinburgh. Simple Minds were born from a punk band Johnny and the Self-Abusers and released a record on Chiswick Records in 1977. They split up and two members reformed as Simple Minds a year later, Bruce Findlay (owner of Zoom) became their manager and they signed a three album deal with his label. The Changeling (1980) ruclips.net/video/DIL60rCoO8Y/видео.html Food became part of EMI (1994) and Creation was sold to Sony (1992).

    • @ijcunningham7873
      @ijcunningham7873 2 года назад +2

      They where from the punk era, they was called Johnny and he self abusers, before Simple Minds ;)

  • @1thommyberlin
    @1thommyberlin 2 года назад +2

    Riffs exist in ALL music. The term came from Rock music. in 'classical' you call the 'riff' a 'theme'. Think about it. In soul music think of the Temptations - In 'Ball of Confusion' the 'riff' is played by the bass at the begining of the song. there are 'riffs' in Jazz, blues, rock and roll, punk, soul, funk - it is a common structural element of songs, Choral music, the riff in the 'Hallelujah Chorus' is the word 'hallelujah', lol. Get it?
    I really enjoy these Brad and Lex - keep up the good work.

  • @sambosr
    @sambosr 3 года назад +5

    For me this about my friend Ray. An older gay bartender at a punk club I worked at in the late 80's. He was a wonderful human being. The absolute nicest human. He died of AID'S in 89. He was loved by many. This was the first song played at the club after his funeral. Still makes me cry.

  • @hannahmaebeaver9521
    @hannahmaebeaver9521 Год назад +1

    I can relate to this awesome song😊 very much so.
    Graduated 87 and breakfast club is so realistic to me.

  • @_Shadoh_
    @_Shadoh_ 3 года назад +13

    Lol, this song basically IS the 80s and sounds like it. Love it forever!

  • @silentqueue2344
    @silentqueue2344 3 года назад +2

    Great song! Now for some A Flock of Seagulls: "Space Age Love Song"; "Wishing"; "I Ran (so far away)"

  • @e.l.norton
    @e.l.norton 2 года назад +3

    This song WAS high school. People of that generation can't hear this and not be taken right back to that time. It's one of the songs that makes you FEEL16 again every time you hear it. It's a time machine, man.

  • @mattaustin5788
    @mattaustin5788 2 года назад +1

    Interesting that you said you did not think this was the 'most 80's' of the 80's music, because I think most people that lived through that decade in their formative years would say it is absolutely the most 80's of the 80's music. As someone who grew up in the 80's, this is like the quintessential 80's anthem, and as mentioned in many other comments, in the soundtrack of one of the biggest teen movies of the 80's, The Breadkfast Club. As 80's as music like hair metal was, this kind of song is really what defines the 80's music scene. Yes, Def Leppard and Motley Crue, etc are 80's, but when I really think of 80's music, its stuff like this song, Thompson Twins, Tears for Fears, Culture Club, Pet Shop Boys, Howard Jones, and all the one-hit wonders like 'One Night in Bangkok' from Murray Head and 'Weird Science' by Oingo Boingo and that kind of stuff. Hair Metal is the 80's version of Rock, but Rock existed before and after the 80's. This funky weird pop music stuff was really JUST the 80's, which makes it the most iconic of the 80's music genres.

  • @terrys8690
    @terrys8690 2 года назад +13

    The drumming is masterful, one of my favorite 80s tunes.

  • @MrnicEsmurfsmurf
    @MrnicEsmurfsmurf 3 года назад +2

    another great Scottish band ,formed in Glasgow my home town , you need to listen to Alive and KICKING

  • @chasingbirds3073
    @chasingbirds3073 3 года назад +15

    I graduated high school the year this song and the movie The Breakfast Club came out in 1985. For me it is so nostalgic for my high school years. Takes me right back every time I hear it.
    And Lex, I kept in touch with high school friends for years after graduation by writing letters. At least until the late 90's when email became more popular.

  • @JMulvy
    @JMulvy 2 года назад +2

    Simple Minds was considered New Wave, which were mostly the late 70s - early 80s. Think Flock of Seagulls, Eurythmics, Soft Cell, Duran Duran, Depeche Mode, New Order, Tears for Fears, and Culture Club to some extent. Simple Minds is also from Glasgow (a lot of people do not realize that) and I chop up their unique sound to their ethnic background because you see it in a lot of international bands. A very unique and interesting sound that deviates from the accepted formula but becomes a hit and can still be classified in one genre or another, kinda like what Ghost did when they first came to the states. VEry different from all the hair metal and pop rock that is synonymous with the 80s decade. People forget the hey days of the drum machine, synthesizers and keyboards, or even key-tar.

  • @dextercarmichael2753
    @dextercarmichael2753 3 года назад +8

    More like this: Psychedelic Furs, Echo and the Bunnymen, even Roxy Music!

  • @mokospoko
    @mokospoko 3 года назад +2

    Riffs, when employed in funk, R&B, Pop & Hip Hop will mostly be found in the bass line. Riffs are defined as a 1to4 bar repetitive phrase that has the role of driving the song and instilling a catching affect. Can occur with any instrument. For example the bass line in Billy Jean is a riff in of itself

  • @OronOfMontreal
    @OronOfMontreal 3 года назад +6

    One of the great New Wave bands, definitely. My favourite Simple Minds song is "New Gold Dream '81, '82, '83, '84". It has a heavy, driving beat that makes you want to Move.

  • @wanghotangho5803
    @wanghotangho5803 3 года назад +1

    Listen... anytime you hear a great song it is either from the late 60’s, 70’s, 80’s, or early 99’s

  • @WolfFX13
    @WolfFX13 3 года назад +9

    80's pop music was very experimental, it strayed from the common musical structure and played around with new instruments such as Synthesizers. This was part of 'the second British wave' around '82 when we were flooded with obscure British bands, the genre was mostly called 'New Wave' almost a Punk/Pop. The term 'Rock' applies to so many forms and sub-genres... according to radio stations even Rap is considered 'Rock', so especially when dealing with 80's music, don't even bother with labels.
    80's music is an Iceberg and you guys have about enough ice to fill a glass so far. There is soooo much to see still. Makes me think of Pinhead from Hellraiser saying 'we have such wonders to show you'...

  • @SaturnusDK
    @SaturnusDK 3 года назад +1

    When I was a kid I knew at least 20 phone numbers by heart. Those of my friends parents, my own family, family of friends they'd visit often, nieghbours, and for the school, football club trainer, and such. Everyone I knew was the same. You had an internal phonebook in your head all the time. You'd also remember the birthdays and the full name and address of all your friends, those in your own class, yourr family etc. Nowadays, people hardly remember their own name without looking at their phone.

  • @GothicDude-mu5qf
    @GothicDude-mu5qf 2 года назад +4

    Most bands in the 80s had guitarists and bassists that plugged their instruments into synthesizers for reverb, frigger effects as well as experimenting with new electronic sounds especially in a lot of the New Wave hits on the radio that was popular at the time.

  • @stephenneal9218
    @stephenneal9218 3 года назад +2

    I think this could fit in the "New Wave" category.

  • @Itelkner
    @Itelkner 3 года назад +14

    Ahh...what a great song! This thing was everywhere around the time I graduated HS.

  • @coreecorbin1558
    @coreecorbin1558 3 года назад +1

    One of my Favorites

  • @shinerdrinker9249
    @shinerdrinker9249 3 года назад +8

    I laughed out loud right with you when Lex said "I guess I've like heard it in the movies." This song is TOTALLY about high school. We've been wired to feel that way about this song by John Hughes and his 80s movies.

  • @Marcus-Oh-really-yes
    @Marcus-Oh-really-yes 2 года назад +1

    Loved all the Second British Invasion synth-pop bands of the 1980s! Simple Minds also had a big hit in the U.S. with "Alive and Kicking."

  • @seandobson6221
    @seandobson6221 2 года назад +3

    This song is in literally one of my ALL TIME FAVORITE MOVIES! I grew up in the 80s so I grew up with the Brat Pack. I love the entire group and all of the movies they were in at the time.

  • @kcrich1310
    @kcrich1310 3 года назад +1

    That song was from the 80s movie The Breakfast Club. Cult classic. That song has a guitar riff it just blends in with the synthesizer and the single note palm muting blends in well with the bass and snare drum. Alive and Kicking is another good song of theirs.........

  • @Quadrant14
    @Quadrant14 2 года назад +3

    Been listening to Simple Minds since 1977 when they first started, a brilliant band, and LIVE they are increadible

  • @peterwalsh2470
    @peterwalsh2470 3 года назад +1

    Here is how we kept in touch. In the olden days, we had something called a "home phone", and you would leave a message with another person if the person you wanted to talk to wasn't home. If there was no-one home, you simply tried again later. then a new fangled thing came along called an "answering machine" which was an attachment to the home phone, that contained a cassette tape in it, that allowed people to leave recorded messages if someone wasn't home or able to get to the phone in time. This was the standard form of arranging social gatherings for the weekend, until the internet was born (yes! the internet hasn't always existed!), and the first "dumb" mobile phones arrived, and emailing and text messaging became the more popular methods for achieving this. social media and smart mobile phones arrived some years after.

  • @youravgjoe42
    @youravgjoe42 3 года назад +3

    This is my favorite of the 80s new wave pop songs. Iconic. Always makes me happy when I hear it. Brad, I saw your head bopping and your body swaying a bit to this, and Alex you were really getting your groove on! Thanks for the great content.

  • @Wuppie62
    @Wuppie62 2 года назад +1

    Rifs....in the 80's there was synth-pop (emerged from 70's - analog - synthesizers and electronic sounds, like Kraftwerk, Tangerine Dream, etc) and it was often all about the digital synths that became affordable and mainstream, not always about electric (rock)guitars.
    Human League, Depeche Mode, UltraVox, New Order, Propaganda, etc.

  • @mofosoto
    @mofosoto 3 года назад +12

    Lex rockin out.
    Brad: "I must stare at screen with confused face"

    • @ninawildr4207
      @ninawildr4207 3 года назад +2

      Yeah he looks like Worf

    • @slake9727
      @slake9727 3 года назад

      He looks constipated

    • @markharris1125
      @markharris1125 2 года назад +1

      @@ninawildr4207 Is there any Klingon opera on RUclips?

  • @adrianparry8018
    @adrianparry8018 3 года назад +1

    Gen X another defining 80s moment from my childhood

  • @terryvittitow6362
    @terryvittitow6362 3 года назад +3

    It's at the end of The Breakfast Club as the credits are rolling.

  • @RobinT-treehugger
    @RobinT-treehugger 3 года назад

    The Breakfast Club is one of the BEST movies about growing up, being a teen, becoming an adult, and learning to fit into our crazy society. It is a MUST watch.

  • @praapje
    @praapje 3 года назад +3

    Simple Minds started out as a punk band and this is noticeable on their first album (1979). Four albums after that they were pretty experimental and dabbled in all sorts of genres until their big breakthrough album New Gold Dream (1982). After that they went synth pop and peaked in the mid 80s with hits like Don´t You, Alive and Kicking and All the Things She Said. After that they remained pop, but got more experimetal again with more rock.

  • @shanehebert396
    @shanehebert396 3 года назад +1

    As others have said, this song is HUGE with GenXers because of the movie The Breakfast Club. If you haven't seen it, you need to.

  • @rychenrollinc.3846
    @rychenrollinc.3846 3 года назад +6

    I was in this movie. I played Claire's ear ring 💍 😩

  • @creativitycell
    @creativitycell 2 года назад +2

    Simple Minds & Depeche Mode were my two equal fave bands as a teen in the 1980s, rest of World caught up with how great Simple Minds were through this song! It became one of the monster 1980s tune through the iconic teen movie about teen outsiders "The Breakfst Club". Turned Simple Minds from an alternative synth band into a massive global band with countless great songs and albums, all if which I have on original vinyl. Check out the epic emotional masterpiece "Belfast Child". This band are just awesome live, legendary concerts all around the World. Their first two earlier largely unknown 70s industrial synth albums as they found and developed their sound are incredible. But for me their classic New Gold Dream album is a total masterpiece if listened to as a whole, every track is amazing. Unique band, Unique sounds through out 70/80/90s! And cracked America! Which is rare for British/Scottish bands. 🙏👏😎

  • @ryancassano7689
    @ryancassano7689 3 года назад +3

    Love it. I was in middle school when Breakfast Club came out and it shaped my youth forever. Alive and Kicking is also on my list, another Simple Minds gem.

  • @chrishildebrand1836
    @chrishildebrand1836 3 года назад +1

    This song takes me right back to college as I graduated in 1985. Song is so awesome and the singing is just fabulous! I want to go back to the music of the 80's.

  • @FUBAR1986
    @FUBAR1986 2 года назад +5

    The drumming is perfect in this song.. Once again Lex gets it right ... The Breakfast Club features this song at the end...
    Great movie about high school and life's trials.

    • @mattslupek7988
      @mattslupek7988 2 года назад +1

      “The Breakfast Club” features it in the beginning (along with the extended version) as well. They play the extended version in the intro, during Brian’s monologue/reading the letter to Vernon.

  • @richardfox1605
    @richardfox1605 2 года назад +1

    Theme from the greatest teen movie ever made. The Breakfast Club. All of knew kids like the ones represented in the film. John Hughes captured the heart of our generation as none had done before.

  • @JeromeDukes
    @JeromeDukes 3 года назад +7

    There were many "coming of age" movies during the 80's that used interchangeable actors. This song is from "The Breakfast Club". Other similar movies were "St Elmo's Fire, The Outsiders, Pretty in Pink, Sixteen Candles, Some Kind of Wonderful". St. Elmo's Fire is probably my favorite from those movies and the theme song by John Parr "Man in Motion" is probably my favorite song as well.

    • @escapingreality3306
      @escapingreality3306 3 года назад +1

      Yup, they called those actors the Brat Pack.

    • @JeromeDukes
      @JeromeDukes 3 года назад +1

      @@escapingreality3306 Facts, love it.

    • @epstiensbedsheetnecktie9212
      @epstiensbedsheetnecktie9212 3 года назад

      You forgot Ferris Buehlers day off

    • @JeromeDukes
      @JeromeDukes 3 года назад

      @@epstiensbedsheetnecktie9212 Actually, I was thinking of adding FB but he wasn't part of the Brat Pack.

    • @epstiensbedsheetnecktie9212
      @epstiensbedsheetnecktie9212 3 года назад

      @@JeromeDukes fair enough. It just was another generation defining masterpiece.

  • @AriNoelle1
    @AriNoelle1 3 года назад +1

    It is originally the ending song for The Breakfast Club. It was also at the end of Easy A(they paid homage to Breakfast Club)

  • @CygnusXII
    @CygnusXII 3 года назад +6

    I have the entire Breakfast Club Soundtrack burnt into my brain. It's a perfect collection of music .

  • @mikeaube8172
    @mikeaube8172 3 года назад +2

    From The Breakfast Club back in 1985, great film!

  • @woodch
    @woodch 2 года назад +15

    That pre-outtro drum fill... Damn, that's solid as hell every time I hear it. The drums overall are so killer on this track-- in an era when drum machines were all the rage, this performance really shows off what a great drummer and engineer can bring to a song. Haven't heard a computer that can play like that yet.

  • @wjlintz
    @wjlintz Год назад +2

    6:01 Lex gets it. That is an all-time great drum fill. I remember hearing it when the song came out and thinking, "How?" Still in my head 35+ years later.

  • @Gzom1
    @Gzom1 Год назад +3

    Sincerely yours....The Breakfast Club

  • @bender21man
    @bender21man 2 года назад +1

    Great song...sums up the 80s totally! Movie was fantastic...so realistic...my last name is Bender so love that it was used in the movie. See the movie.

  • @preachervideo
    @preachervideo 3 года назад +19

    The riff is that three cord progression that you keep hearing over and over.

  • @mil2k11
    @mil2k11 2 года назад +1

    Breakfast Club is iconic to anybody who went to school from anywhere during the mid-70s to later 90s. This song is iconic to thousands of people who lived thru those times.

  • @jerilynbowler6321
    @jerilynbowler6321 3 года назад +25

    This was in The Breakfast Club. It’s a classic 80’s movie. You should check it out. I was bopping with you, Lexi!

  • @alanzimmerman1674
    @alanzimmerman1674 2 года назад +1

    There's at least 100 posts here essentially telling you that you have to watch "Breakfast Club." Make that at least 101. It is a must see.

  • @markstromberg1148
    @markstromberg1148 3 года назад +3

    I did not go through ALL the comments, but the drum fills in this song, particularly those in the middle, are iconic, memorable and fun!

    • @andyscott5277
      @andyscott5277 3 года назад +1

      Love it when the ride kicks in at the end 👍🏼

  • @jimpalmieri1049
    @jimpalmieri1049 2 года назад +2

    This song is definitely the soundtrack to all of us in Generation X.

  • @stevemd6488
    @stevemd6488 3 года назад +8

    Great song, the drummer is the star, propels the song

  • @coreecorbin1558
    @coreecorbin1558 3 года назад +1

    It is from a 80's movie "THE BREAKFAST CLUB" It is about your 12th grade

  • @NeonNights80
    @NeonNights80 3 года назад +15

    A RIFF is often a short melody or tune, often played by the rhythm section or solo instruments and RIFFS often form the basis or accompaniment of a musical composition, piece or song. As well as being a short series of notes (a melody or tune), a RIFF can also be a chord pattern, a bass line or musical phrase.

    • @joeypadgett7895
      @joeypadgett7895 2 года назад

      The RIFF is the drum beat in this song ( doon-katack-doon-doon, doon-doon-katack-doon-doon )

  • @neilsackman4723
    @neilsackman4723 2 года назад +1

    The Breakfast Club was a great movie. I was 16-17 or so when this came out and along with Fast Times those movies were great examples of early to mid 80s mid/late teen life.

  • @jaknazryth2488
    @jaknazryth2488 3 года назад +5

    Lex... you would have LOVED growing up in the 80's! I did! :) Long Live the Breakfast Club! This song kicks in during the final scene of the movie... where Judd Nelson walks towards the camera with a triumphant fist in the air! Great song, great vibes, great memories, great movie!!!

    • @mattslupek7988
      @mattslupek7988 2 года назад

      It’s in the beginning, too. They play the extended version during Brian’s (the brain’s) monologue/ reading the letter to Vernon in the intro.

  • @mrvwbob156
    @mrvwbob156 3 года назад +1

    A big hit on MTV, Around 84/85 I believe
    A big tune in the clubs
    Got my dance on to this often
    Nice choice you guys
    Do more 80’s modern rock stuff
    Peace out

  • @1TonyNash
    @1TonyNash 3 года назад +6

    My old favourite band. Their first ever song I heard was Love Song in 1981, I was 16 years old. My first album of theirs was New Gold Dream and I played the heck out of it, such a warm tonal balanced bass filled album. I saw them 4 times live, loved it each time. They were touted as being of the best live bands in their day. I've actually never watched The Breakfast Club but heard many times people mention the song was in the film. :-)

  • @lovedc4ever678
    @lovedc4ever678 2 года назад +2

    One of the greatest bands of all time ever! Everyone knows this song but I was listening to band for a years before this song came out and have listened to them for years and years after. Finally got blessed enough to see them live in 2018 after over 35 years of loving their music.

  • @PhilippoDan
    @PhilippoDan 3 года назад +5

    Simple Minds was such a great band back then. For me at least. Still get chills when Belfast Child comes on.
    On a lighter note, Alive and Kicking was a huge hit for them too. That song always takes me straight back to the 80's when I close my eyes.

  • @alexandrakincaid4653
    @alexandrakincaid4653 Год назад +1

    Man,the 80s were so SO awesome!

  • @tc71
    @tc71 3 года назад +4

    Drums are soooo on point in this song.

  • @alexisalejandro832
    @alexisalejandro832 3 года назад +2

    Pure GenX!!!

  • @roca7108
    @roca7108 3 года назад +5

    You should try another hit band from the 80's:
    O.M.D ( orchestral maneouvres in the dark) - Behind the wheel; - Electricity; - Joan of Arc ; - Enola Gay, etc.. really one of the pioneers in their genre.

  • @Strappa71
    @Strappa71 2 года назад +1

    Fun fact. They were asked to record this song for "The Breakfast Club" but turned it down at first. The director was adamant on getting them so they were shown a preview of the not yet finished movie. After they saw it they knew they had to do it. And the rest is 80s teenage history.

  • @boki1693
    @boki1693 3 года назад +13

    Main song from a coming of age 1980's movie about several young kids and future movie stars in real life, spending a saturday in detention together and discovering things about themselves. Also, the lead singer was married to the lead singer from the Pretenders, Chrissie Hines for some time. The Pretenders were a much much bigger female led group than Simple Minds. Simple Minds was a little bit more than a 1 hit wonder.

    • @Derry_Aire
      @Derry_Aire 3 года назад +4

      A one hit wonder in the USA but they had multiple hits in Europe and Asia. And it's Chrissie Hynde not Hines.

    • @PjRjHj
      @PjRjHj 2 года назад

      Simple minds were huge. Far from one hit wonders. I you think that, then you're missing out.

    • @James-hd6ez
      @James-hd6ez 2 года назад

      From 1979 to 1982 simple minds put out 6 albums all in 3 short years and apart from their first one which was a bit nieve and scatty the next five were truly amazing..then for some reason they went from music artistry to stadium rock around 1984 and lost that experimental magic and beauty.most uk fans of the band around that time were shocked at the huge change of direction in the band who went from a ground breaking group to a bombastic stadium band intent on breaking the American Market.
      And even though they made a lot of money and had big hits around the world a lot of the early fans believe that the original band members of simple minds which consisted
      Of five members now down to two were true pioneers of electronic ambient new wave music in the uk back in those early years.if I had to recommend one album to buy it would probably be empires and dance then get the others from that time period.

  • @pelqel9893
    @pelqel9893 2 года назад +1

    I'm 53 now... this song still gives me strong feelings of nostalgia, and is forever connected to The Breakfast Club. You have to watch this film in order to understand our generation's strong connection to this anthem! Love watching you two react to some of my most-favorite songs from my teens and 20s... wish sometimes that I could go back.