The List

4 Rock Songs Every 80s Kid Knew by Heart (But Somehow Forgot)

Were you an 80s kid? If so, I bet you jammed out to at least one or two of the following 80s rock songs. If you forgot them, I donโ€™t blame you. There was just too much good music during that decade to remember all of the best of the best. Letโ€™s revisit a few classics!

โ€œWhen Iโ€™m Goneโ€ by Albert Hammond (1981)

Albert Hammond was the kind of musician that not everyone in the 80s was tapped into, but if you did, you had good taste. โ€œWhen Iโ€™m Goneโ€ is one such song that proved how talented the soft rock artist was during the 1980s, and it was a pretty successful hit in Europe, particularly in South Africa. However, it wasnโ€™t until the freestyle singer Rockell covered the song in 1999 that it became popular in the US, peaking at No. 21 on the Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales chart.

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โ€œDead Manโ€™s Partyโ€ by Oingo Boingo (1986)

Would this be a list of excellent 80s songs without at least one Oingo Boingo track? โ€œDead Manโ€™s Partyโ€ is just one of many tracks from the American outfit that I find underrated. Released as a single from the album of the same name, โ€œDead Manโ€™s Partyโ€ also appeared in the 1986 Rodney Dangerfield comedy Back To School. 

โ€œOnly Lonelyโ€ by Bon Jovi (1985)

Bon Jovi really dominated 1980s hard rock, but โ€œOnly Lonelyโ€ is one song from the band that doesnโ€™t get as much love as it should. It didnโ€™t quite crack the Top 40 on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking instead at No. 54. I think it should have done better, because this glam rock tune is a standout from 7800ยฐ Fahrenheit. I love how melodic it is.

โ€œEightiesโ€ by Killing Joke (1984)

How about a classic post-punk tune that low-key encapsulated a lot of the average 80s kidsโ€™ experiences? If you were an 80s kid, you were likely exposed to the ultra-capitalist โ€œ80s bossโ€ stereotype and might have thought you were destined to โ€œpushโ€ and โ€œstruggleโ€ once you came of age. But if all you wanted to do was dance, you likely resonated with this particular song. Itโ€™s a sociopolitical gem and one of those rock songs from the 80s that really captures the unease of both the Cold War and culture as a whole.

Photo by Chris Walter/WireImage