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Simple Minds at Bell Centre: A simply amazing reminder of 1980s new wave power
Simple Minds at Bell Centre: A simply amazing reminder of 1980s new wave power

Ottawa Citizen

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Ottawa Citizen

Simple Minds at Bell Centre: A simply amazing reminder of 1980s new wave power

Montreal did not forget about Simple Minds. Article content Just under 9,000 fans made the trek to the Bell Centre on Tuesday to see the Scottish band, which was part of the slew of ultracool British new wave bands during the first half of the 1980s that revolutionized the music world, and it was very clear that a big chunk of the folks there had been following them from way back in the day. Article content Article content 'Montreal was one of the first cities to get behind Simple Minds and really encourage us,' said the band's charismatic and oh-so-down-to-Earth frontman Jim Kerr. Article content Article content There was a lot of grey hair in the crowd. Which was super cool to see. Pop music is a young person's game, but there are loads of people of a certain age who still love the music they listened to in high school and university during the '80s. Article content There are '80s DJ/dance nights happening all over the city. I even do one myself, called High Fidelity, and every time I hold one, people — inevitably 40 and older — tell me they love reliving the dancing fun they had all those years ago. There's also VV Taverna, a bar devoted to the same scene at the corner of St. Denis and Rachel Sts. Article content There are loads of folks who still dig listening to bands like The Smiths, Depeche Mode, The Cure, New Order, Echo and the Bunnymen, the Psychedelic Furs, to name a few. And it's not just nostalgia. It's because the music still sounds fab. Article content Article content 'It's still great music 40 years later,' said Jean Boudreau, who was at the Bell Centre Tuesday. 'Even young people today listen to music from the 1980s. It's aged better than the music of the '90s, like grunge. These songs have strong melodies. I remember hearing this music at the Limelight, at the Passeport on St. Denis St., at the Thunderdome.' Article content Nancy Faraj said it's only natural that you return to the music of your youth. Article content 'When you listen to music from the age of 16 to 25, it influences you for the rest of your life,' said Faraj. Article content Before the concert, I texted my old friend Ivan Doroschuk, lead singer of Men Without Hats, the Montreal band that produced one of the iconic anthems of the '80s new wave, Safety Dance, and I asked him why this music was still so popular. Article content Article content 'It's a decade that hearkens back to better times in a lot of people's minds (even though it was the Reagan/Thatcher era),' wrote Doroschuk. 'It's one of the last decades where there were real songs, real melodies, but also social/political commentary. A lot of singalongs, too. The music is dance-oriented as well, which gives it a cross-generational appeal and which explains why '80s nights are popping up all over the place, taking the place of disco in a lot of clubs. Contemporary pop music also borrows a lot from the '80s, with artists like The Weeknd.'

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