I’ve been reading a lot of threads here about people’s recollections of the 1980’s: what clubs they went to, what cliques they hung out with, what clothes they wore, and what cars they drove. I’m getting a picture (accurate or not) of a lot of wealthy or upper middle class young people in these recollections, or at least kids who didn’t have to worry about how to finance their wardrobes, hairstyles, music collections, and clubbing. This definitely was NOT my experience in the 1980’s.
My experience was much less affluent. I grew up in a working class family, where from the age of twelve I paid for everything that I needed. And I’m talking EVERYTHING: haircuts, underwear, school lunch. I never got an allowance—I got a job (actually, I got several). I bought my first car (a hideously ugly 1969 Buick LeSabre with torn upholstery) for $75, because that was what I could afford.
I left home at age seventeen (1979) and worked to support myself at an assortment of low-paying jobs. Until I got married in 1987, I lived with assorted roommates in cheap apartments. After paying my bills there was never any money left to go to college. An injury at work, and the resulting month without a paycheck, forced me even to go a food pantry. I shopped at thrift stores because I HAD TO, not because it was trendy. If I wanted to buy a new record album or go to a club, I usually had to sacrifice something else in my budget. I ate macaroni and cheese and hotdogs for a week once in 1983 so I could go to an Elvis Costello concert. (Oh, by the way, I did eventually, many years later, attend and graduate from college.) But enough of my sob story.
I’m not trying to polarize people here into socio-economic groups. What I AM looking for is how you feel music of the late 1970’s-1980’s (new wave and punk, and all their offshoots; plus metal, pop, etc.) is related to distinctions in socio-economic classes, and how people of those different classes experienced the music and culture of the decade. The 1980’s is generally known as the “Me” decade, when people were more concerned with self-gratification than social or political causes. The 80’s also spawned the terms “yuppie” and “junk bonds”. And don’t forget our conservative, Republican, movie star president, and his trickle down economics. When I think of 80’s music and its social, economic, and political climate, I generally think of punk toward the left end of the spectrum and new wave toward the right. Of course this is a gross generalization.
What are your views? There is definitely a relationship between the conditions of an era and the music of an era. After all, musicians have been singing about political and social issues for centuries. How is this related to class distinctions of the young people of the 1980's?
How did your socio-economic status affect how you experienced the 1980’s?