1983 in music
See also:
1982 in music,
other events of 1983,
1984 in music, 1980s in music and the list of 'years in music'
Events
Some releases from 1983 deserve special mention:
- The Police's Synchronicity was their final release together before breaking up, and was enormously popular, including one of their more popular songs, "Every Breath You Take"
- Culture Club's Kissing to Be Clever was their popular breakthrough, and included one of their most well-known songs, the hit single "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me"
- Eurythmics' Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This) was also their breakthrough success, and included their signature tune, the title track
- Mötley Crüe's Shout at the Devil was their breakthrough, and included "Looks That Kill", though they would go on to greater popular and critical success in the later part of the decade after recovering from the shock of member Vince Neil's near-fatal car accident
- Tom Waits' Swordfishtrombones was his first album for Island Records, and the first in a series of three thematically and stylistically linked albums that established him as a critical darling and cult favorite
- New Order's Power, Corruption & Lies included the best-selling 12" record of all time, "Blue Monday"; the album was the second since forming from the ashes of Joy Division (after the suicide of Ian Curtis) and the first to achieve critical or popular success, as it was a stylistically innovative mix of synth vocals and dance-heavy beats
- Duran Duran scored hits from three separate albums in this year (Rio, the reissue of Duran Duran, and Seven and the Ragged Tiger)
- Merle Haggard began a run of chart success in this year, which continued for about two years. His duet album with Willie Nelson, Pancho & Lefty, was an enormous critical and popular success and did much to revitalize the careers of both entertainers, especially the hit title track
- Stevie Ray Vaughan's Texas Flood was more popular than any blues album since the late 1960s, and did much to establish country-blues as a commercially viable genre
- George Strait's Right or Wrong sold extremely well, and is a pivotal album in the development of the honky tonk revival during the rest of the decade.
The most long-term influential release of 1983 is probably Head over Heels by the Cocteau Twins, which sold poorly upon its initial release. In the ensuing years, the album's eclectic assortment of alternative rock, New Wave and synth pop influences became a cornerstone of later alternative rock groups, most especially in the United Kingdom, where the Cocteau Twins' mix of airy textures and breathless vocals (dream pop) mutated into genres like twee pop, space rock and shoegazing, and eventually hit mainstream success with a psychedelic-influenced form, Britpop.
Another album that eventually became enormously influential is Kill 'Em All by Metallica. This, their debut, is often considered the first purely thrash metal album, and helped lead the way for the diversification of heavy metal genres in the later part of the decade. Kill 'Em All 's popular success was quite limited, though it received rave reviews from metal critics and fans for its then-unique blend of earlier heavy metal pioneers, especially the New Wave of British heavy metal like Judas Priest, and hardcore punk, such as The Ramones.
Quiet Riot's Metal Health was enormously popular in 1983, and was the first heavy metal album to go to #1 on the pop charts. The lead single, "Cum on Feel the Noize" (cover of Slade) was also a huge hit, and set the stage for the mainstream crossover of later hair metal bands like Guns 'n Roses and Def Leppard. Metal Health is also the only album in Quiet Riot's catalogue to achieve much success critically or popularly.
Albums released
Top hits on record
Published popular music
- "Karma Chameleon" w.m. George O'Dowd, John Moss, Roy Hay, Mickey Craig & Phil Rickett
Musical television
Births
Deaths
- February 4 - Karen Carpenter, singer, dies of anorexia nervosa
- February 12 - Eubie Blake (100), pianist
- April 4 - Danny Rapp, Danny and the Juniors, gunshot wound
- April 14 - Pete Farndon, the Pretenders, drug overdose
- April 30 - Muddy Waters (68), heart attack
- April 30 - George Balanchine, choreographer
- May 5 - Clarence Quick (46), the Del Vikings, heart attack
- June 2 - Stan Rogers, musician
- July 5 - Harry James, bandleader
- November 7 - Germaine Tailleferre
- December 28 - Dennis Wilson, member of the Beach Boys
Awards
Referenced By
1980s in music | 1982 in music | 1983 | 1984 in music | A Flock Of Seagulls | A Momentary Lapse of Reason | Alan Parsons Project | B-52's | Bad Religion | Beat Happening | Cabaret Voltaire (band) | Cocteau Twins | Cover record | Cover version | David Bowie discography | Dead Milkmen | Deep Sea Skiving | Egyptian Lover | Eurithmics | Eurythmics | Eurythmics (band) | Every Breath You Take | Flock of Seagulls | Gary Numan | General Public | Genesis (band) | Head Over Heels | Herbie Hancock | Hip Hop music | Ian Anderson | Iron Maiden | Iron Maiden (band) | Jimmy Cliff | John Cougar | John Cougar Mellencamp | John Mellencamp | List of best grunge music albums | List of birthdays of rappers | List of definitive grunge albums | List of grunge albums | List of grunge music albums | List of hip hop albums, inclusive 1979-1989 | List of most influential grunge albums | List of most notable grunge albums | List of music events by year | List of musical events | List of rock and roll albums in the 1980s | Marcus Miller | Marillion | Metal Health | Michael Stipe | Ministry (band) | Misfits | Mötley Crüe/Shout at the Devil | Neruda (album) | Pancho & Lefty | Pat Benatar | Phish | Power, Corruption & Lies | Rebel Yell | Renaissance (band) | Renaissance (group) | Right or Wrong | Roberta Flack | Rock musical | Rock opera | Shout at the Devil | Spandau Ballet | Swans | Sweet Dreams | Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This) | Swordfishtrombones | Synchronicity (album) | Tears For Fears | Texas Flood | The B-52's | The B-52s | The B52's | The Cocteau Twins | The Eurythmics | The Misfits | The Misfits (band) | The Swans | Thomas Mapfumo | Timeline of trends in music (1980-1989) | Timeline of trends in music (1980-present) | Tony Banks (musician) | Triumph (band) | Vince Neil | Yes (band) | Yes Sir, I Will | Yes Sir I Will
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