Music Review: Scandal - We Are the '80s

Like faded pictures in a scrapbook — or from your high school yearbook — the '80s have become not only a slice of the past, but totally cool and awesome again. In honor of the decade that saw leg warmers, parachute pants, big hair, and MTV, Sony BMG and VH1 have released a series of CDs aptly titled We Are the '80s.

Featuring music from the two albums Scandal released — Scandal (1982) and Warrior(1984) — this version of We Are the '80s has eleven songs from the past and three previously unreleased songs of the same style. The synth pop band, led by Patty Smyth, enjoyed a short lived ride at the top of the charts in the early '80s, mostly due to the success of a budding MTV and the popularity of the innovative video cable station.

The album kicks off with what is probably the most recognizable song in the Scandal's catalog, the top single from their self-titled album, "Goodbye to You." The song has a poppy backbeat, synthesized instrumentation, and Smyth's voice delivering the lyrics of heartbreak and breaking free of a bad relationship. The video (shown below) is a testament to the early days of MTV with computer generated cheesy effects and swirls of psychedelic and pastel colors. Aside from watching it on MTV, my fondest memories of the song include dances in the school gym after a football game.

Because that was the common link in all of Scandal's music, they were songs with a message and rhythm that forced you to dance. No exception to the rule was "The Warrior." The top single from the album of the same name is a mainstay on most '80s compilation discs. Similar to "Goodbye to You," it was a bubble-gum version of a female empowerment song. Full of hunting and dancing metaphors, it sang to young woman who aspired to have a handle on their lives and hearts – or at least to this one.

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Article Author: Connie Phillips

Wife, mother, aspiring novelist, and music editor at BC Magazine, Connie Phillips spends most of her time in a fantasy land of her own creating. In reality, she writes about music, television, and the process of writing, when she's not cheering on her kids at equestrian events. …

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