1985 (song)

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"1985"
No cover available
Single by Bowling For Soup
from the album A Hangover You Don't Deserve
Released 2004 (Worldwide)
Format Digital download, CD single
Recorded 2004
Genre Punk Rock, Punk pop
Length 3.13
Label Jive Records
Writer(s) Bowling For Soup
Producer(s) Unknown
Chart positions
Bowling For Soup singles chronology
"Punk Rock 101"
(2003)
"1985"
(2004)
"Almost"
(2005)

"1985" is a song best known for its performance in 2004 by the pop punk band Bowling for Soup. Featured in their album A Hangover You Don't Deserve, as well as the American popular music compilation Now That's What I Call Music! Vol. 17, and Barbie Hit Mix, Vol. 2. "1985" was originally written and recorded by the band SR-71, led by Mitch Allan.

According to SR-71's website, Bowling for Soup's Jaret Reddick (a friend of SR-71) heard the song (from their album Here We Go Again) and asked for and received permission to record a cover version. However, according to Bowling for Soup's website, it was Allan that called Reddick to suggest the possible cover. Either way, it was Bowling for Soup's version, with slightly reworked lyrics from the original, that has become familiar to most United States radio listeners and topped the charts.

The song describes a woman, Debbie, who is obsessed with the pop culture of 1985 after her dreams of becoming an actress and celebrity as a twenty-something in the 1980s failed to materialize. (In the SR-71 version, the reason given is "the rubber broke", implying an unplanned pregnancy.) The song deals with themes like growth and maturity, lost dreams and changing pop culture via the passage of time. She has trouble dealing with her life and her teenage children due to her preoccupation with the past. (According to Reddick, the song was originally about 1984, but "1985 rhymes better with "preoccupied". [1])

The Bowling for Soup music video parodies famous videos from early MTV era, including Robert Palmer's "Addicted to Love" video, George Michael's "Faith" video, Whitesnake's "Here I Go Again" video (with "Debbie" rolling on a car a la Tawny Kitaen), and parodies Mötley Crüe, and Poison. In the music video, Mitch Allan appears walking past the house; he turns and shakes his head at the band's antics.

The song has attracted a significant pre-teen audience, even though no one in that group remembers the year 1985. A version with "children-rated" lyrics is played on Radio Disney, where, for example, the line "one Prozac a day" is replaced with "one workout a day." The edited version is produced by Kidz Bop; however, it initially retained the line "Only been with one man; what happened to her plan?" (this has since been changed; now it says "Only loved just one man".) Also, "she was gonna shake her ass..." was replaced by "she was gonna shake it right..."

The song and video are also popular with the generation of people currently in their 30s or early 40s as nostalgia for the pop culture of their youth, although the song makes no effort to imitate the style of the 1980s, with the exception of the line "on the radio", which resembles the timbre of the voice singing the verses in the Buggles' "Video Killed the Radio Star", known for being the first video ever played on MTV in 1981; this may or may not be intentional.

According to Bowling's Reddick, part of the song's cross-generational appeal comes from the fact that many of his band's fans are children and pre-teens, and their parents shared many of the experiences "Debbie" has fixated on.

[edit] Parodies

  • Johnny Crass has released another parody, "Being a Jedi," based on Star Wars. This version relates the plot of Revenge of the Sith, and compares the prequel trilogy unfavorably to the classic trilogy.

[edit] Other Songs

[edit] External links


Bowling for Soup
Jaret Reddick | Chris Burney | Erik Chandler | Gary Wiseman
Discography
Bowling for Soup | Cell Mates | Rock On Honorable Ones!!! | Let's Do It for Johnny! | Drunk Enough to Dance | A Hangover You Don't Deserve | Bowling for Soup Goes to the Movies | The Great Burrito Extortion Case
Singles
"The Bitch Song" | "Suckerpunch" | "Girl All the Bad Guys Want" | "Emily" | "Punk Rock 101" | "1985" | "Almost" | "Ohio (Come Back to Texas)" | "I Melt With You" | "High School Never Ends"
Labels
Sony BMG Music Entertainment | Jive Records | FFROE | Queso Records
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