1982: Triumphs and Tragedy
You may remember that when I first entered 1982, I spent eight of the twelve months of that year deployed with the marines. The first six months were especially difficult because I was floating about the Mediterranean Sea and Indian Ocean on a ship. So I didn’t get that much news especially news pertaining to music. However, one piece of tragic news that did reach my ears whilst on the ship was the death of comic actor and Blues Brothers singer John Belushi.
Unlike the assassination of JFK, Belushi’s death may not have been a where were you moment when you first learned about it to most people. While I can say for sure that I was on board the ship when I learned about his tragic passing, I can’t say where exactly the ship was at the time. I do know that it was somewhere in the Indian Ocean.
His career may have been short but John Belushi packed a load of things to remember him by during those few years. For us music fans, the biggest contribution to music was most certainly The Blues Brothers. His collaboration with Dan Ackroyd gave us a brilliant album and in 1980, a hilarious movie with one hell of a great soundtrack. For those new to 80smetalman, I have visited both on here if you want to take a look. Older statesmen like me, however, will always love Belushi for his antics on the old Saturday Night Live show. I will always love his Samurai character. In 1982, a true musical and comical genius was tragically taken from us. R.I.P. John Belushi.
Now on to the triumph. This year saw the third Monsters of Rock Festival at Donnington Park. Attendance was up from the previous two years and evidence that slowly but surely, heavy metal was taking over the UK. A small piece of festival history was made that year when Saxon became the first band to play at there for the second time. Headlining was another British band who failed to make it very far in the US, Status Quo. I have to admit, that I haven’t listened to them much over the years over the years. Guess I should rectify that. Other players that year included Gillan, Uriah Heep, space rockers Hawkwind and Canadian metal band Anvil. While it would be another year before I would hear about this great festival, I believe that this varied line up would have been a great thing to see and hear.
Like I said at the beginning, my knowledge of musical events is limited due to the circumstances. So if there is some other event from 1982, triumph or tragedy, let me know and I will post about it because it is part of our history. Call this an urgent appeal.
Next post: Status Quo- 1+9+8+2
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This entry was posted on April 12, 2015 at 9:21 am and is filed under 1980s, Concerts, Death, Heavy Metal, Heavy Metal and the 1980s, Humour, Music, Rock, Uncategorized with tags Anvil, Blues Brothers, British, Classic Rock, Dan Ackroyd, Deep Purple, Donington Festival, Gillan, hard rock, Hawkwind, Heavy Metal, Heavy Rock, History, John Belushi, Monsters of Rock, Saturday Night Live, Saxon, Status Quo, The 1980s, Uriah Heep. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
2 Responses to “1982: Triumphs and Tragedy”
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April 12, 2015 at 4:27 pm
I was lucky to catch him and the blues brothers on tour around that time – I was “dragged’ there by a friend of mine who had “no musical taste” — at least that is what my “punk” mentality thought back then. Now I know – good music is good music – simple as that.
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April 13, 2015 at 5:32 pm
I agree with that. The whole Saturday Night Live thing had me listening to him without further thought but I realised then as I do now how good The Blues Brothers were.
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