1985 (song)

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This article is about the song later rendered by Bowling for Soup. For the song by Paul McCartney and Wings, see Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five. For other songs, see 1985 (disambiguation).
"1985"
Single by Bowling for Soup
from the album A Hangover You Don't Deserve
Released July 27, 2004
Format Digital download, CD single, Airplay
Recorded Red Ruby Productions
Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.
Genre Pop punk, power pop
Length 3:13
Label FFROE/Jive/Zomba
Writer(s) Jaret Reddick, Mitch Allan, John Allen
Producer(s) Butch Walker
Certification Platinum (RIAA)
Bowling for Soup singles chronology
"Punk Rock 101"
(2003)
"1985"
(2004)
"Almost"
(2005)

"1985" is a 2004 song by the American pop punk band Bowling for Soup which reached #23 on the Billboard Hot 100, and was featured on their album A Hangover You Don't Deserve.[1] "1985" was originally written and recorded by the band SR-71, led by Mitch Allan.

Origins[edit]

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.[2] However, according to Bowling for Soup's website, it was Allan that called Reddick to suggest the possible cover.[3] 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 appeared on the charts.

Content[edit]

The song is about a middle-aged woman who dislikes modern pop culture, believing that mid-1980s pop culture was better.

The line "Bruce Springsteen, Madonna, Way before Nirvana" was changed by the band to "Stacy, Madonna, Melting in the lava" after a tour in 2008 at the Shreikenpeep festival in Berlin, Germany after the fans chanted it before the set. Not all editions have been updated.[citation needed]

References to the culture of the 1980s[edit]

Because the Bowling for Soup version of the song differs in lyrics from the SR-71 original, the two versions also differ with respect to some of their references to the 1980s. Certain references were removed from the original and replaced with new ones, while some were added in places where the original song repeated lines.

Detailed references:

Radio Disney edit[edit]

A separate edit of the song was recorded for Radio Disney. The lyric changes are as follows:

  • "One Prozac a day" is changed to "One workout a day".
  • "Only been with one man" is changed to "Only loved just one man".
  • "She was gonna shake her ass" is changed to "She was gonna shake it right."

Charts[edit]

Chart (2004) Peak
position
Australian Singles Chart[5] 22
Irish Singles Chart[5] 36
UK Singles Chart[5] 35
U.S. Billboard Hot 100[5] 23
US Billboard Top 40 Mainstream 10
US Billboard Hot Adult Top 40 Tracks 5
US Billboard Top 40 Tracks 13

Parodies[edit]

  • Matt "That One Guy" Hodgson has released a parody, "1955," based on Back to the Future. The song became a hit on the Dr. Demento Radio Show.
  • Psycho Pat Schaefer (also on Dr. Demento) has released a parody, "1955", which focuses on a grandma and her delusions about actually living in the year 1955.
  • 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.
  • The Bob Ricci band parodied the song as "Beach Boy Soup", using the lyrics of the Beach Boys song, "Kokomo".
  • Christian parody band ApologetiX released a parody titled "None Too Ladylike" on their Wordplay album, about Jezebel from the Bible.
  • Dino-Mike wrote a song to this called "Another '1985' Parody" making light of the fact that so many had parodied the original song.
  • Musical comedian Odd Austin recorded a parody called "That '70s Song" about the Fox sitcom That '70s Show.
  • April 30, 2010, gamer-geek parody band Palette-Swap Ninja released "Arcade Gaming Shrine" for free on their website.

Cover versions[edit]

The Bowling For Soup version has been covered by Richard Thompson on the live album 1000 Years of Popular Music.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 18 September 2004. p. 72. ISSN 0006-2510. 
  2. ^ [1][dead link]
  3. ^ "JARED NEWSFLASH! 1985 IS HERE!". bowlingforsoup.com. Archived from the original on August 20, 2008. Retrieved January 11, 2014. 
  4. ^ Joey House
  5. ^ a b c d "Bowling for Soup - 1985 - Music Charts". (acharts.us). Retrieved 2010-02-16. 

External links[edit]