£5.99
Wired for Sound
Now That's What I Call An Eighties Music Childhood
The eighties was a golden era for British pop
Radio One served as the soundtrack of the nation; the chart run-down on Sunday evenings was compulsory listening - ditto watching Top of the Pops and reading Smash Hits. It also saw the launch of the Now That’s What I Call Music series. In the States, the arrival of MTV helped usher in what became known as the Second British Invasion, echoing the success of the Beatles twenty years earlier.
Wired For Sound
tells the remarkable story of the great eighties British bands (and Kajagoogoo) and how their music captured the nation’s imagination: the more radical beginnings in the early eighties (the new romanticisms of Duran and Spandau, the protest pop of early Wham!); the full pomp of their mid-eighties success (the worldwide tours, the glamorous video shoots, the ubiquitous “Choose Life” and “Relax” T-shirts); and their fall from the top of pop’s pedestal (the splitting up of Wham!, Boy George’s drug problems). Wired for Sound will describe the subsequent descent to Band Aid II (Bros, Wet Wet Wet, Stock, Aitken and Waterman), which bookended the low point of the pop music that followed.
Celebration of a Musical Era
Wired For Sound will be the affectionate celebration of both a musical youth and the era when young guns went for it. This is a book for anyone who grew up reading Smash Hits, soundtracked their teenage years on C90 cassettes and remembers a time when it really mattered who was number one.