Gen X-er living in a time machine, high on nostalgia. Flashbacks is the debut album by Peach on a beach, a tribute to growing up in Dartmouth, NS during the 80s. Available on streaming and CD. Check out YouTube videos for "Beeping and Bleeping", "Pizza Corner", "Before Call Display" and more. Releases in 2024 included the moody "Rabbit Hole", “Zooming In", a tribute to my lifelong passion for maps, and climate change anthem "Clock is Ticking". Official website: https://www.peachonabeach.ca/
Tightly surrounding vocalist Steve Perry in a display of unity, "Separate Ways" was one of the first videos to show the "air band" technique.
Journey also hated making videos, which may explain why this one feels it cost under $20 to shoot.
Shot on a wharf in New Orleans, the video features the band members in your face with awkwardly close close-up shots.
"Separate Ways" by Journey is one intense tune. It was written during a turbulent time for the band as two members were going through divorces during the middle of a tour.
A band known for its hooks and looks, "A View to a Kill" by Duran Duran was just another grand video to add to its growing repertoire
Recorded as the theme for the James Bond film of the same name, the clip is stylish and slick, featuring the boys playing roles as spies and assassins while lurking around the Eiffel Tour.
I love thelow budget 80's cheese of the clip, especially the "flying camera getting shot out of the sky" effect.
And at the end of the video, Le Bon does a parody of James Bond, smarmily introducing himself as "Bon. Simon Le Bon."
According to Wikipedia, Duran Duran was chosen to do the song after bassist John Taylor a lifelong Bond fan, approached producer Albert Broccoli at a party, and somewhat drunkenly asked "When are you going to get someone decent to do one of your theme songs?
"A View to a Kill" was the last song recorded by the original five-member lineup until the band reunited in 2001.
Few bands epitomize the mid-90s post-grunge sound more than the rock-tronica of Garbage, the brainchild of producer Butch Vig.
On most of the group's songs, the vocals of Scotland's Shirley Manson howl while the guitars growl.
And "Push It" is no exception.
The video is trippy, full of bizarre imagery, with a Matrix-y vibe.
The weirdness of the clip makes it feel like a distant cousin of 1981's "Whip It" by Devo. And the glowing jackets remind me of Nik Kershaw's "Wouldn't It be Good" video from 1984.
And if you were hoping to see the band, there's enough shots of Shirley Manson to keep our attention.