Rate Your Music score: 3.29 out of 5!
This now-lost hit was actually first released in 1982 and barely scraped onto Billboard's Bubbling Under the Hot 100 chart. But in 1989 - several years after it bubbled - it was rereleased, and only then did it reach the Hot 100. I only started hearing it then. I can't remember what station I kept hearing it on though.
And the video is a sight to behold.
I never saw the video until YouTube came along. Remember, it only made the main chart in 1989, and MTV was past its prime then. Kids at school still watched MTV, and they said some of the stupidest stuff imaginable about things they saw, but I didn't think MTV was nearly as exciting as it once was. Also, MTV kept going out on our local cable system. It went out just before something we actually wanted to watch, which caused a family member to accuse Storer Cable of "assholism." According to Wiktionary, assholism actually is a real word, and has appeared in print at least since 1970.
At the time, MTV actually had an afternoon program hosted by Martha Quinn that was full of "classic" music videos shown in the channel's early years. But those videos were only a few years old then. The equivalent today would be chronologically only about as far back as the U.S. Capitol riot or even Elon Musk's Twitter purchase.
Now, back to Q-Feel's video. The band's lead singer looks like "Weird Al" Yankovic wearing red pants, a ball cap, and a bunch of equipment strapped to his body. The other men look like they're wearing some sort of military pilot uniform. The women look like they're wearing something out of Star Trek. The participants all dance around, smiling their asses off.
I guess I missed all of this in the '80s, because the heyday of music videos was right between releases of this single. The rest of the '80s was driven by radio. These days, radio has little influence, and MTV has none at all, but our museum of lost hits is rooted in the days of these older media.
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