@Inglejuice - I may be wrong but I am guessing that you don't like her or her band...... ;-) Ha ha ha ha, always great to know! And it's always nice to allow others to enjoy what they wish to enjoy, isn't it? Isn't it?...........
Siouxsie and the Banshees were my first ever gig age 13 in 1978 before the Scream came out saw them lots after but tbh would hate to of seen them at a festival
I met Jools on a music course for The Prince's Trust when I was 18 (November '95). He was a lovely bloke. We had a nice little chat. I jammed with Ed Tudor Pole on the course as well. Nice memories.
MTV had a show in the mid 1990s called 12 Angry Jurors where regular viewers were brought into the studio to give their opinions on new music releases.
Siouxsie my IDOL looks so Beautiful! Wow the Brits think we Americans are cheesy as hell 😂. It wasn't a hit here either hahaha (talking about the Barbara Streisand song) I remember(Tony Hadley had a hit Here with TRUE by his band Spandau Ballet a big hit 🎯 in the US in the early 80s don't know what that says about that song if all we like here is crap! 💩 Idc I'll always love Music from the UK it is my very favorite type of music! My Parents raised me on it from their era the 60s & 70s (The Beatles). The 80s & 90s British music was the shiznit 💩 the bomb!💣
Of all the post war "moments" the very late 1980s is arguably one of the most charmless and resistant to revival. Hideous at the time, and unlike almost every other period, distance lends to it no greater enchantment. Jools Holland's "curtains" haircut pretty much says it all. It was a style disaster zone from which almost no one escaped unscathed.
Isn't it interesting that Siouxsie's musical outlook is no different in the 21st Century. Esp. that line about a lot of music being, "...a cocoon for a voice, rather than competing with it..." The minute I heard that, I thought of the song, "Candyman", one of MANY songs where Siouxsie "competes" w/ The Banshees inimitable power.
Why can't we hear all the songs? We can only hear the first two and then the rest are cut out. Pointless to hear their opinions if you don't know what they're talking about! I'd like to see an uncut version.
Well I'm currently listening to the 3rd song as I write this ( Status Que ) so I've no idea what you're talking about EDIT we're now on the fifth song and I know what you're saying, I'm guessing it's down to copyright
@@jimmytgoose476 That being the whole point of the comment. Many a rebuttal "There's great music still....you just have to dig for it!". Apart from the likes of the BBC stupidly banning the odd record here and there (which only made people go out and buy, so they could hear why it was banned), it's amazing what got aired in the 70s/80s, you didn't have to slavishly toe the line, so bands like The Smiths, The Undertones, The Police et al, could be vehemently opposed to government policy & the establishment as a whole, and chisel into granite, their legacies as bands who will forever have the respect deserved of their work.
He said every type.... which is patently not true . I agree , the broadcasting landscape has changed but the fact remains that there is still amazing new music out there .
I'd rather have listened to that Dee Lewis (I think was her name) track than the Stock, Aitken and Waterman crap that was every at this time. Other than that I agree with all the things Siouxsie said.
Of course Electribe 101's Tell Me When The Fever Ended is the only track that still sounds great today. The album Electribal Memories was one of the best albums of 1990 and along with the Cocteau Twins Heaven Or Las Vegas the only cds I have worn out through over playing. Siouxie, come on love, its been a while, where are you????
@@jimmytgoose476 I’ve often wondered about those bands. Are they taking the piss? Don’t get me wrong. I like heavy metal. I write for Rock Candy magazine and I’ve co-written two books on the subject.
In that case you should know they are serious . I was at school and college with one of Bolt Thrower and he took it very seriously . Search any of those bands on RUclips and flick through the comments ; all three still have large devoted fanbases , bordering on fanatical in the case of Napalm Death. I went to Bolt Thrower's 25th anniversary gig , sold out 8 months in advance, and met people who had flown from Poland , New York and Sydney . No one does that for a joke band . When they walked onto that stage they were greeted like a victorious army returning to Rome . And i felt more than a bit of Coventry home boy pride for Baz and Martin 🙂
If you mean the jury, you mean Helen Lederer, mostly known as a comedienne rather than a music expert. Like Pop Quiz, JBJ would've been better with an all musician panel, but knowing the BBC, it was probably cheaper for them to use people who were regulars on a BBC tv/radio show.
These songs suck now and they sucked then. The Clash were cool, but BAD was BAD... I was into The Sugarcubes, N.I.N, Depeche Mode, Cocteau Twins, Sonic Youth, The Smiths/Morrissey, Skinny Puppy... just to name a few in 1989. Siouxsie was an obsession with me along with Stevie Nicks, Debbie Harry, and Bjork... then came Sia (back when she showed her face), but I still dig her stuff on the radio.
Back in 1989, TV struggled with colour, so Siouxsie's face was a completely different colour from her neck, and Jools' hair was kinda black/pink/black/pink. Strange days. Frank Bruno was indistinguishable from his Spitting Image version. The overall impression I had was of claustrophobia, due to the stage set, and the limited selection of bland music. Mr Tony Bland himself said "I don't mind world music", which shows he is not a fascist moron.
There were worse crushes than Siouxsie a young teenage punk could of had but she couldn't cast a shadow on either one of the utterly gorgeous ladies Gaye Advert or, (obviously) Debbie Harry. Yes, Ive had a drink...
@@lewisner Yeah she was lovely looking, sure enough, but this show would've worked better if all four judges were from the music business, better still, contemporaries of the people they were judging, rather than wheeling on someone whose last hit was 20yrs ago.
Agreed Jeremy, mainly due to the effects of some great bands from earlier in the 80s/late 70s calling time. The record companies filled the gaps with....dross, and the record buyer in his/her mid 20s being outside of the major labels' buyer demographic for hit singles, whereas the 12yr old upwards was targetted with pop-tastic fluff. Made fortunes for the record companies, plus the mediocre acts being easier to control, why would the corporations controlling the business care that the music was SHIT, in the old sense of the word? Up to '86 it felt like a great era of music, but after that, even The Smiths had lost their magic. Another major snag in the UK, was the novelty record/one hit wonder rubbish that parents would buy, just never seemed to go away, and a bigger infestation that left a worse trail of destruction across the music scene: the actresses turned warbling wannabes eg Minogue. A screwdriver through the eardrums was very tempting, so I stopped watching the likes of TOTP.
Had to laugh at 18:36. Can you imagine the uproar there would be today. I wonder how many people picked up on it? not to mention the unabashed racism at 26:12.
@@cloverfield911 Of course it was not racist, I was being ironic, pointing the finger at today's triggered snowflake brigade who cry fowl at even the mention of the word 'black'. If you watch it back you'll see that Frank Bruno jokingly pointed the finger and made comment to Tony Hadley for saying such a thing.
@@michaelhanrahan5349 you're the one sounding triggered cause you felt the need to clear something up when nobody asked you 🤣 and wtf is a Snowflake? The frosting on the Christmas cookies I'm gonna eat this year😅
@@michaelhanrahan5349 so then which one is it ? Pick one. It's unabashed racism when he said White at the end but then its not really? and ppl are brigades and yadayada and.. weak nonsensical modern millennial sh*t " like what? 🥴😴
Sioux (looking right regal here)says some sensible things..plodding mediocre music is "dangerous" since it creates zombies........ *Bad* Mickey Jones, ...got himself an afro for the occasion ....twas no "hit" bytheway... his first two BAD singles were very good though....the unsubtle way he threw in that "I Can't Explain" sample in this ditty was downright amateurish....Bruno "You know"...... *what* does he "know"....? Dee Lewis.....Hey gurl... you look nifty ,but would you buy that mediocre sludge muzak yourself ? Although Juls "hopes" it would be a hit.....ain't that a right royal sycophant liar....no wonder he got himself a career for life at the bloddy bbc.....An applause for Michael 🐟....?.....something 🐠y going on there ?
Yet another boring song from Status Quo. I've heard them all my life, have most of their stuff, generally like this kind of thing. But blaahh! I'd rather eat glass.
@@ColumRogers They made some good psychedelic records in the 60s and some good rock records in the 70s but by the 80s they were middle aged and boring.
@@Philliben1991 Yes, if my old man was a big fan, aged in his 50s, it rather puts their music into perspective and just WHY they went from "heroes for Suzuki X7/Yamaha RD250 riders" on Radio 1 to "the venerable rockers" on Radio 2. It all starts to get "denim jeans worn with waistband just under the nipples" or "Status Quo...21 Golden Greats, out now, and a free incontinence pad with every copy."
Robin Ferris Maybe for pop. But underground music was powering full force ahead. It's kinda sad how a lot of people ignore great music in the late 80's as if there was nothing else happening.
I thought Frank Bruno was the best....as for the others! Helen, never thought she was ever funny, and Siouxse, how self important..Dee Lewis great little number. My opinion only.
Bloody hell! Does this look dated or what? Having said that, the 1980s were dated while they were happening. It was quoted on several occasions that the decade imitated the 1930s, which was a very accurate description.
You're talking out of your arse. 80s music was and still is more progressive than most of the shite we endure in the charts these days. And any decade is 'of it's time' - not a difficult concept really.
@@TheOptimod The start & middle of the decade were so much better than its end, and it's the groups like The Smiths/The Police/Echo & The Bunnymen/Simple Minds/Big Country and so on, who have the teens/twenties of the era wishing for a time machine, and the kids of today wishing they'd been around in the 80s.
So beautiful glamorous elegant and so smart I just love you Siouxsie
Siouxsie beautiful as ever. Oh dear god the music they are reviewing is utter pish lol
As most of commercial eighties music was.
Siouxsie is a very intelligent woman.
intellegent and beautiful
She'd be the best mom ever!
@Inglejuice Siouxsie and the Banshees one of the best bands ever.
@Inglejuice - I may be wrong but I am guessing that you don't like her or her band......
;-)
Ha ha ha ha, always great to know!
And it's always nice to allow others to enjoy what they wish to enjoy, isn't it?
Isn't it?...........
@Inglejuice Are you a Streisand fan perchance?
There's a kind of tingle of anticipation as they play awful songs, to hear what Siouxsie will say about them.
Didn't think I liked Tony Hadley but the whole panel came across as very nice people 👍And Siouxsie looked gorgeous
Was fourtunate to witness the wonder and beauty of Souixsie Souix live....1991 Lollapalooza Dallas Texas.( Souixsie and the Banshees)
Siouxsie and the Banshees were my first ever gig age 13 in 1978 before the Scream came out saw them lots after but tbh would hate to of seen them at a festival
Siouxsie had the best analysis of the songs. Always on the money!
Siouxsie Sioux.Intelligent,great analysis,and beautiful with it.Good panel👍
I met Jools on a music course for The Prince's Trust when I was 18 (November '95). He was a lovely bloke. We had a nice little chat. I jammed with Ed Tudor Pole on the course as well. Nice memories.
What a cool show. Wish they'd do one in the States. We need all the help over here with the garbage on tv these sad and depressing times
MTV had a show in the mid 1990s called 12 Angry Jurors where regular viewers were brought into the studio to give their opinions on new music releases.
Siouxsie my IDOL looks so Beautiful! Wow the Brits think we Americans are cheesy as hell 😂. It wasn't a hit here either hahaha (talking about the Barbara Streisand song) I remember(Tony Hadley had a hit Here with TRUE by his band Spandau Ballet a big hit 🎯 in the US in the early 80s don't know what that says about that song if all we like here is crap! 💩 Idc I'll always love Music from the UK it is my very favorite type of music! My Parents raised me on it from their era the 60s & 70s (The Beatles). The 80s & 90s British music was the shiznit 💩 the bomb!💣
I expected Siouxsie to be more critical - shit music but she is beautiful and a legend
"Dull and uninspiring" definitely sums up Michael Bolton.Smart lady.
Whatever happened to Michael Bolton? Actually, I don't really care what happened to him.
She's adorable.
Siouxsie is so beatiful!
i was in the audience , it was filmed in Newcastle. Met Frank afterwards and got his autograph
I didn't know Mick Jones/B.A.D made a Rave tune, hahaha, top hairstyle as well, his hair left him soon after in protest and never came back!
Weirdo ^
Big Audio Dynamite are rooted in Dance Music check out 'House Arrest' from the Album Megatop Phoenix
they should bring this show back
Good on Siouxsie for questioning the format
john lydon did the same
Isn't she adorable
SIOUXSIE - - RIGHT ON !!
Always liked Big Audio Dynamite and they were early users of sampling
Of all the post war "moments" the very late 1980s is arguably one of the most charmless and resistant to revival. Hideous at the time, and unlike almost every other period, distance lends to it no greater enchantment. Jools Holland's "curtains" haircut pretty much says it all. It was a style disaster zone from which almost no one escaped unscathed.
Late 80s yeah, once Thatcherism took hold. If you watch the story of TOTP you can see the switch over between 84 and 85.
It was great for thrash metal, hardcore and skateboarding. Every other thing was shit , especially Radio One before Peel's show .
I got out in '86. For ever.
A million drugged-up dickheads doing aerobics to car alarms ? Yeah....great ....🤮🤣🤣
@@monsieur-j-r-hartley Summers of AIDS, you mean!
Siouxsie looks beautiful, and I agree with her. She was being nice actually.
Spot on Siouxsie 👌👌👌👌
The show was made at the "Pink Palace" aka BBC Newcastle in Fenham
Siouxsie 🖤
Siouxie Sue great expert as her UK singles chart positions of 59,93 and 154 prove I don't think!
I had such a crush on Helen
Lovely wasn't she, and that's even with her hair looking like she'd been pulled through a hedgerow by her feet.
siouxsie is the only one who knows.
Isn't it interesting that Siouxsie's musical outlook is no different in the 21st Century. Esp. that line about a lot of music being, "...a cocoon for a voice, rather than competing with it..." The minute I heard that, I thought of the song, "Candyman", one of MANY songs where Siouxsie "competes" w/ The Banshees inimitable power.
2:30 Siouxsie Sioux post-punk gothic rock queen 80s, beautiful women
Came here to see Siouxie...
That's funny cos in that 3 second music blip, I thought it sounded like Donna Summer's "I Feel Love." Viva La Banshee!
The most exciting thing here is Tony's Pac-Man shirt.
Why can't we hear all the songs? We can only hear the first two and then the rest are cut out. Pointless to hear their opinions if you don't know what they're talking about! I'd like to see an uncut version.
Well I'm currently listening to the 3rd song as I write this ( Status Que ) so I've no idea what you're talking about
EDIT we're now on the fifth song and I know what you're saying, I'm guessing it's down to copyright
They were all shit anyway 🤣
5:40 was as banal as they come, I'm really surprised they all had such good opinions on it, especially Siouxsie.
Upside Down Probably though friendship with Mick Jones.
+Upside Down total bias.. terrible song terrible video
Well it was Mick Jones. BAD were great but it was all over by about 87/88
Siouxsie 👌 innocuous like every type of song lyric and genre today
There's loads of great music today, you just won't hear it on tv or daytime radio
@@jimmytgoose476 That being the whole point of the comment. Many a rebuttal "There's great music still....you just have to dig for it!". Apart from the likes of the BBC stupidly banning the odd record here and there (which only made people go out and buy, so they could hear why it was banned), it's amazing what got aired in the 70s/80s, you didn't have to slavishly toe the line, so bands like The Smiths, The Undertones, The Police et al, could be vehemently opposed to government policy & the establishment as a whole, and chisel into granite, their legacies as bands who will forever have the respect deserved of their work.
He said every type.... which is patently not true . I agree , the broadcasting landscape has changed but the fact remains that there is still amazing new music out there .
You're not edgy
Oh dear, haha, that Big Audio Dynamite track was utterly appalling.
Dreadful shite and what the fuck has Mick Jones done to his hair he looks like a circus clown
It was forgettable crap.
Yeah, seems to be reaching a bit too far on that one. Alot of there stuff is very cool though.
@@jaimeacosta233 I love their first album all the way through, but I've never heard anything else by them that I like at all.
@@Vargon7 Check out The Album ' Higher Power' by Big Audio ( they dropped The Dynamite part of the name)
Electribe 101 Brilliant track ,
Great panel!
Mick Jones looks like Tommy Trinder after a perm went wrong.
"You lucky people!"
And to think Trinder died the very year this programme aired.
Just looked Dee Lewis up, she never made another record after this show…
I don’t think Siouxsie would put up with sitting through this video.
Shame the songs were cut short.
Susan would have been an excellent Ursa in Superman II.
streisand's song wasnt a hit in thr US either
I didn't even know that JBJ was a thing in the 80s
I like Juke Box Jury (in deferemce to Billy Idol of Gen X) 'coz they made Contact (BAD) a perfect hit!
Love Frank!
I'd rather have listened to that Dee Lewis (I think was her name) track than the Stock, Aitken and Waterman crap that was every at this time. Other than that I agree with all the things Siouxsie said.
2:20 says it all lol
We'll have a drink afterwards, shall we? 😂😉
Can't believe she actually participated. How sad...
Of course Electribe 101's Tell Me When The Fever Ended is the only track that still sounds great today. The album Electribal Memories was one of the best albums of 1990 and along with the Cocteau Twins Heaven Or Las Vegas the only cds I have worn out through over playing.
Siouxie, come on love, its been a while, where are you????
She's drawing her pension and kicking back with her cats
Big audio dynamite sounds like a rick astley arrangement. yawn...
Tony's on good form
Did the host really introduce them with their zodiac signs? 😂
why was salif keta cut?
The energy in the studio is dead. Paint drying gives off better energy. Jules comes over like hes knackered out.
This is a fantastic reminder of how shit things used to be, back when shit was properly SHIT.
Meaning what?
Shittier than shit.
That pop music is mostly shit ....duh...😃
Good line up. Hideous songs. 89 was dire. Grunge and dance music couldn’t come quickly enough
Actually your wrong 1989 was a great year for music .
@@douglastaggart9360 name some good albums.
From Enslavement To Obliteration , Symphonies Of Sickness and In Battle There Is No Law come to mind ....
@@jimmytgoose476 I’ve often wondered about those bands. Are they taking the piss? Don’t get me wrong. I like heavy metal. I write for Rock Candy magazine and I’ve co-written two books on the subject.
In that case you should know they are serious . I was at school and college with one of Bolt Thrower and he took it very seriously . Search any of those bands on RUclips and flick through the comments ; all three still have large devoted fanbases , bordering on fanatical in the case of Napalm Death. I went to Bolt Thrower's 25th anniversary gig , sold out 8 months in advance, and met people who had flown from Poland , New York and Sydney . No one does that for a joke band . When they walked onto that stage they were greeted like a victorious army returning to Rome . And i felt more than a bit of Coventry home boy pride for Baz and Martin 🙂
why cutting the songs man why did you do that
That BAD track was BAD!!!
Sounded like a BAD 'B' side.
It was awful - and for a band that was great for a while, - e=mc2 , Cmon every Beatbox, Medicine Show to name but three.
I’d forgotten how cheap and nasty TV used to be. 😳
At least it was more engaging than the crap around now
Bruno 😁
Not that Siouxsie cares what I think, but I like her less extreme make-up. She is an attractive women, to be sure.
What was the track played at 19:51?? They completely skipped over it.
It was Salif Keita's "Nous pas bouger". It's funny because they say it's in French but only the chorus is. ruclips.net/video/8k1BbF6Q8Kk/видео.html
Who was the third one? The Bonnie Tyler lookalike?
If you mean the jury, you mean Helen Lederer, mostly known as a comedienne rather than a music expert. Like Pop Quiz, JBJ would've been better with an all musician panel, but knowing the BBC, it was probably cheaper for them to use people who were regulars on a BBC tv/radio show.
@@majorvonhapenallthetime8602 Thank you, although I've never heard of her. I had been "abroad" for three years, then. Never came/went back.
She was a lot lizard taking lunch at the moment
What on Earth happened to Noel? He looks a different man...
Jools Holland forever the pilllock !
These songs suck now and they sucked then. The Clash were cool, but BAD was BAD... I was into The Sugarcubes, N.I.N, Depeche Mode, Cocteau Twins, Sonic Youth, The Smiths/Morrissey, Skinny Puppy... just to name a few in 1989. Siouxsie was an obsession with me along with Stevie Nicks, Debbie Harry, and Bjork... then came Sia (back when she showed her face), but I still dig her stuff on the radio.
Haha love Mick Jones
Siouxsie should've fired her agent for booking her on this crap show. She maintains her dignity, but it's a challenge while caught in the middle.
Back in 1989, TV struggled with colour, so Siouxsie's face was a completely different colour from her neck, and Jools' hair was kinda black/pink/black/pink. Strange days. Frank Bruno was indistinguishable from his Spitting Image version. The overall impression I had was of claustrophobia, due to the stage set, and the limited selection of bland music. Mr Tony Bland himself said "I don't mind world music", which shows he is not a fascist moron.
There were worse crushes than Siouxsie a young teenage punk could of had but she couldn't cast a shadow on either one of the utterly gorgeous ladies Gaye Advert or, (obviously) Debbie Harry.
Yes, Ive had a drink...
I thought Helen Lederer was quite cute here.
Gaye Advert had a creepy face.
shut the fuck up and stop comparing woman that wouldnt even lay a hand on you.
Gaye Advert definitely, but you can keep Harry.
@@lewisner Yeah she was lovely looking, sure enough, but this show would've worked better if all four judges were from the music business, better still, contemporaries of the people they were judging, rather than wheeling on someone whose last hit was 20yrs ago.
BAD was GOOD. Crap joke, great song. 😄
A reminder that there was plenty of shit music around in our youths.
Agreed Jeremy, mainly due to the effects of some great bands from earlier in the 80s/late 70s calling time. The record companies filled the gaps with....dross, and the record buyer in his/her mid 20s being outside of the major labels' buyer demographic for hit singles, whereas the 12yr old upwards was targetted with pop-tastic fluff. Made fortunes for the record companies, plus the mediocre acts being easier to control, why would the corporations controlling the business care that the music was SHIT, in the old sense of the word? Up to '86 it felt like a great era of music, but after that, even The Smiths had lost their magic.
Another major snag in the UK, was the novelty record/one hit wonder rubbish that parents would buy, just never seemed to go away, and a bigger infestation that left a worse trail of destruction across the music scene: the actresses turned warbling wannabes eg Minogue. A screwdriver through the eardrums was very tempting, so I stopped watching the likes of TOTP.
You should have listened to Peel instead . Plenty of great music that decade but you would never hear it on day time radio or shows like this .
why did juke box jury always choose such shit music.? Thanks for the Whistle Test
Had to laugh at 18:36. Can you imagine the uproar there would be today. I wonder how many people picked up on it? not to mention the unabashed racism at 26:12.
26:12 I don't think that was a racist comment. If anything it's a complement to black vocalists who have incredible voices!!
@@cloverfield911 Of course it was not racist, I was being ironic, pointing the finger at today's triggered snowflake brigade who cry fowl at even the mention of the word 'black'. If you watch it back you'll see that Frank Bruno jokingly pointed the finger and made comment to Tony Hadley for saying such a thing.
@@michaelhanrahan5349 you're the one sounding triggered cause you felt the need to clear something up when nobody asked you 🤣 and wtf is a Snowflake? The frosting on the Christmas cookies I'm gonna eat this year😅
@@michaelhanrahan5349 so then which one is it ? Pick one. It's unabashed racism when he said White at the end but then its not really? and ppl are brigades and yadayada and.. weak nonsensical modern millennial sh*t " like what? 🥴😴
@@michaelhanrahan5349 and the ppl who liked your comment were triggered. Caught that real quick ;)
shit year for music
According to this edition of JBJ, it certainly was, but I stopped following in 1986/7.
Sioux (looking right regal here)says some sensible things..plodding mediocre music is "dangerous" since it creates zombies........
*Bad* Mickey Jones, ...got himself an afro for the occasion ....twas no "hit" bytheway... his first two BAD singles were very good though....the unsubtle way he threw in that "I Can't Explain" sample in this ditty was downright amateurish....Bruno "You know"...... *what* does he "know"....? Dee Lewis.....Hey gurl... you look nifty ,but would you buy that mediocre sludge muzak yourself ? Although Juls "hopes" it would be a hit.....ain't that a right royal sycophant liar....no wonder he got himself a career for life at the bloddy bbc.....An applause for Michael 🐟....?.....something 🐠y going on there ?
Puke inducing edition of the show.
Tony hadlee judging music...hahaahhah
Mr bland
Big Awful Dynamite .....🤮🤮
Do anything to give their agents money .Looked bored !
....how tacky....Siouxsie doesn't belong here...
Yet another boring song from Status Quo. I've heard them all my life, have most of their stuff, generally like this kind of thing. But blaahh! I'd rather eat glass.
Thought I was the only one who thinks they are boring... Hear one Quo song, pretty much heard them all!
The 70s stuff was good and then it all got rather predictible and safe
@@ColumRogers They made some good psychedelic records in the 60s and some good rock records in the 70s but by the 80s they were middle aged and boring.
@@Philliben1991 Yes, if my old man was a big fan, aged in his 50s, it rather puts their music into perspective and just WHY they went from "heroes for Suzuki X7/Yamaha RD250 riders" on Radio 1 to "the venerable rockers" on Radio 2. It all starts to get "denim jeans worn with waistband just under the nipples" or "Status Quo...21 Golden Greats, out now, and a free incontinence pad with every copy."
They should have wrapped it up in 1975 . Metallica are the Quo of the 21st century .
Pointless
Jools describes both Siouxsie and Tony Hadley as "agemanon" (soft G). WTF is "agemanon"?
A Gemini-an.
@@snowbelle74 Ah yes. If I had listened more carefully and heard that person 3 was a Libra and 4 a Scorpion, I would have figured that out. Thanks!
🤣🤣🤣
Helen's comments are comedy but the show is so bland no one appears to realise
Crap show
who cares what star sign they are, in this its meaningless, its nonsence
Despite trying desperately to be funny and/or relevant Helen Lederer was simply embarrassing
and look what happened to her career
I think the late 80s has to be the worst era of music ever.
Robin Ferris Maybe for pop. But underground music was powering full force ahead. It's kinda sad how a lot of people ignore great music in the late 80's as if there was nothing else happening.
Conner Reed That's true. Lots of good shoegaze and stuff
it did bring in the next generation of great indie bands like Stone Roses, Happy Mondays and the Manchester scene which was just around the corner.
Kylie and her ilk....yuch!!! Puke inducing & painful with it.
I thought Frank Bruno was the best....as for the others! Helen, never thought she was ever funny, and Siouxse, how self important..Dee Lewis great little number. My opinion only.
Bloody hell! Does this look dated or what? Having said that, the 1980s were dated while they were happening. It was quoted on several occasions that the decade imitated the 1930s, which was a very accurate description.
Funny that The Banshees music is timeless though.
You're talking out of your arse. 80s music was and still is more progressive than most of the shite we endure in the charts these days. And any decade is 'of it's time' - not a difficult concept really.
what culture did the 30s even have? extreme poverty and swing music?
@@TheOptimod The start & middle of the decade were so much better than its end, and it's the groups like The Smiths/The Police/Echo & The Bunnymen/Simple Minds/Big Country and so on, who have the teens/twenties of the era wishing for a time machine, and the kids of today wishing they'd been around in the 80s.
siouxsie was such a snob
Jools was an exponentially bigger one.
Who's D Lewis Never Heard Of Her Before
boring
totally pointless music show Wouldn't happen on TV today Like listening in on a private conversation
DAVID PYPER Hello David. Hows it going?
@@dee_seejay One fears that your sharp sarcasm may have gone right over his head.