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Length: 3:51
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If you survive, don't do as we did
A son exclaims there'll be nothing to do to
Her daughter says she'll be dead with you
While foreign affairs are screwing us rotten
Line morale has hit rock bottom
Dying embers stand forgotten
Talks of peace were being trodden
Stand or fall
State your peace tonight
Stand or fall
State your peace tonight
Is this the value of our existence
Should we proclaim with such persistence
Our destiny relies on conscience
Red or blue, what's the difference
Stand or fall
State your peace tonight
Stand or fall
State your peace tonight
It's the euro theatre
It's the euro theatre
It's the euro theatre
An empty face reflects extinction
Ugly scars divide the nation
Desecrate the population
There will be no exaltation
Stand or fall
State your peace tonight
Stand or fall
State your peace tonight
It's the euro theatre
It's the euro theatre
It's the euro theatre
Stand or fall
Stand or fall
Stand or fall
Stand or fall
Stand or fall
Stand or fall
And the whole world waits in trepidation to see if Americans are now prepared to heed this call. In Canada ,we have already made that decision as a nation of people who actually consider how our actions might affect our neighbors and friends / allies.
You guys rock. Stay strong and stand firm.
back in the day......what an awesome day that was!!!
The sad thing is that these songs are relevant again much like Sting performing "I Hope the Russians Love Their Children Too".
It is sad but gives me hope for the future. We seem to be able to move past the dark days every decade.
I don't care what anybody says, 24 yrs, and this tune still kicks ass! And, I'm 62!
I Agree, and I'm 68! Thanx RP!



I've got to agree with this. There was quite a bit of good music that occurred during the '80s. As with any period though it seems that you had to look a bit further or dig a bit deeper than what was being spoon-fed to the general public via most radio stations. However, there were some great radio stations that started changing what the public was hearing and played some really great music during that period.
This nails the 80's music issue. FM radio started to play what the public didn't know was available, sorta like a the host of this station...
The sad thing is that these songs are relevant again much like Sting performing "I Hope the Russians Love Their Children Too".
Yes , Bill is on a roll these days, So many songs that spoke of warnings, that no-one listened to........
Please also include Beastie Boys, Cyndi Lauper, Adam Ant, Whitney Houston, Neneh Cherry, De La Soul, Madonna, SADE, and The Stone Roses who also debuted in the 80s Not all hair bands and synth pop, but icons who changed the soundscapes and contributed to the diversity of music today.
Like Proclivities, I tend towards music from the 70s and typically disparage music of the 80 , with a sense that rock in the early 90s "saved" rock n roll. I especially agree that Dire Straits and only a few other bands were really worth a damn in the 80s.
HOWEVER, compare the top 100 songs in 1973 to those in 1983. It's easy to see that there was a lot of crap in the 70s that we've all forgotten about because it hasn't been played to death on "classic rock" radio for the past 50 years.
1973
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
1983
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
On the subject of the 80s: I was in my thirties right through that decade. I'd had the luck to be in London and a teenager in the late 60s, so believe I saw and heard the best of it . But the 80s were a groove: the materialistic antidote to a bit too much spaced-out sprituality in the 60s (let's jump Punk that was more a statement than music). Lloyd Cole, Simply Red, Pretenders, Madonna and Costello in their pomp etc. What's not to like?
Overlooked ,and underrated musical genius.
With Out a doubt
in the age of Miami Vice, big shoulder pads and this girl cut quite a figure in her high heels and sweetheart socks. She had legs...

A different era, sometimes greatly missed...
For years and years this was the only song by The Fixx that I liked. Then something clicked (largely due to BillG) and I came to like a lot more of their music.
Standard Faaaaaaall, rake your leaves tonight!
Fell.

I read that as "this is what I thought I was hearing" ... which seems supported by "(looks up actual lyrics)".
Ah! Silly me.
14 years old. Good times, man.
Might have been my wild sister PJ that threw that shoe. Me my gf Maty went to see the Kinks at the Greek Theater early 80s and witnessed a shoe bouncing of Ray Davies knee from several rows back! No effect on Ray forever the showman.Well turns out we split up sometime during the show as it were she made her way up front stage. When the show was over i says to PJ " DID YOU SEE SOME ASSHOLE THREW A SHOE AT RAY! In which she replied to me with her beautiful grin..yeah bro your big sis is a Crazy bitch..no disputing that!
Bowie's '5 Years' since sometime around xmess.
Soundtrack of our pandemic lives.
Yep. I was 15 in 1980 in London. The eighties for me: I loved The Police, The Damned, Siouxsie and the Banshees, Bauhaus, Bob Marley, UB40 even Frankie Goes to Hollywood! U2 was a bit mainstream for us alternative/dropout types (but I secretly liked them). Not cool were Duran Duran and many others, but the eighties was fantastic, especially as many gigs took place in London. I could go on...
in the age of Miami Vice, big shoulder pads and this girl cut quite a figure in her high heels and sweetheart socks. She had legs...
Not "Euro theatre" and "state your peace tonight" like so many lyrics sites post? Where did you find those lyrics?
I read that as "this is what I thought I was hearing" ... which seems supported by "(looks up actual lyrics)".
14 years old. Good times, man.
I was there too! Just a 24 yo sailor among friends - excellent concert!
If you think the '80s was just "hair metal and...synth stuff" you may not have been listening in the right places. Aside from U2, there were Talking Heads, The Clash, REM, The Psychedelic Furs, XTC, The Smiths, Squeeze, Split Enz, INXS, The Cure, The Replacements, The Pixies, and others making great music in the 1980s. To people running in the "Classic Rock" hamster wheel (not you), those bands may not seem so great, but none of them were "hair metal" or "synth" bands. Some of the electronic bands were quite good as well (more the ones who emulated Kraftwerk), but there certainly some bad ones.
I've got to agree with this. There was quite a bit of good music that occurred during the '80s. As with any period though it seems that you had to look a bit further or dig a bit deeper than what was being spoon-fed to the general public via most radio stations. However, there were some great radio stations that started changing what the public was hearing and played some really great music during that period.
State your biz tonight
It's the yuro filla
(looks up actual lyrics)... well damn, finally after 35 years I've figured out the real lyrics.. can't believe it took that long. On another note it's nice having the studio version. The live version just sounds like typical 80s arena rock, while the studio version has that massive mystical, world-moving baroque ambience that typified early 1980s new wave.
14 years old. Good times, man.
One of my favorite albums from that period, the other being Marshall Crenshaw's "Field Day."
It's all too common and easy for people to pontificate how much "'80s music sucked", especially for your garden variety, dyed-in-the-wool, classic rock disciples. It's also easy for many people to forget how much lousy music there was in the 1960s and '70s - largely because we weren't as bombarded with it, via MTV, as we were with music in the '80s. I'm not sure if it was "uniformly excellent" though, there was a lot of Phil Collins back then.
Sure there was lots of lousy music in the 1960s and 70s. But also a lot of great music. There just was hardly any good music coming out of the 80s. It was hair metal and this type of synth stuff.
All generalities are false, though, as the joke goes. I think Dire Straits and 80s U2 stuff (not as much of a fan of their stuff after Achtung Baby) were pretty good. But stuff like that was the exception that proved the rule.
I'm not saying this as someone looking back. I am saying this as someone who has always been very into music since the early 70s and who was constantly evaluating what was available. The 80s were a drought that were rescued by the music of the 90s.
And no, I wasn't watching MTV during the 80s.
If you think the '80s was just "hair metal and...synth stuff" you may not have been listening in the right places. Aside from U2, there were Talking Heads, The Clash, REM, The Psychedelic Furs, XTC, The Smiths, Squeeze, Split Enz, INXS, The Cure, The Replacements, Talk Talk, The Pixies, and others making great music in the 1980s. To people running in the "Classic Rock" hamster wheel (not you), those bands may not seem so great, but none of them were "hair metal" or "synth" bands. Some of the electronic bands were quite good as well (more the ones who emulated Kraftwerk), but there certainly were some bad ones.

The autumn of my sophomore year in high school just came flooding back to me in these last two minutes....
It's all too common and easy for people to pontificate how much "'80s music sucked", especially for your garden variety, dyed-in-the-wool, classic rock disciples. It's also easy for many people to forget how much lousy music there was in the 1960s and '70s - largely because we weren't as bombarded with it, via MTV, as we were with music in the '80s. I'm not sure if it was "uniformly excellent" though, there was a lot of Phil Collins back then.
Sure there was lots of lousy music in the 1960s and 70s. But also a lot of great music. There just was hardly any good music coming out of the 80s. It was hair metal and this type of synth stuff.
All generalities are false, though, as the joke goes. I think Dire Straits and 80s U2 stuff (not as much of a fan of their stuff after Achtung Baby) were pretty good. But stuff like that was the exception that proved the rule.
I'm not saying this as someone looking back. I am saying this as someone who has always been very into music since the early 70s and who was constantly evaluating what was available. The 80s were a drought that were rescued by the music of the 90s.
And no, I wasn't watching MTV during the 80s.
Um, no, 80s were not uniformly excellent. Not even close. I lived every minute of it. Two words: drum machines.
the 80's were about big hair, heavy metal and Rush for me, no drum machines allowed..

It's all too common and easy for people to pontificate how much "'80s music sucked", especially for your garden variety, dyed-in-the-wool, classic rock disciples. It's also easy for many people to forget how much lousy music there was in the 1960s and '70s - largely because we weren't as bombarded with it, via MTV, as we were with music in the '80s. I'm not sure if it was "uniformly excellent" though, there was a lot of Phil Collins back then.
Um, no, 80s were not uniformly excellent. Not even close. I lived every minute of it. Two words: drum machines.
Agreed. After more than 30 years, I just looked up the lyrics to this song. Quite a good lyricist on this tune. I'll have to look up the others.
Uniformly excellent and upbeat? I'll have to disagree with that. As with any time period there was a lot of awful music put out. Most of the good stuff flew under the radar for most people. Furthermore, there was lot of excellent music that wasn't "upbeat". I find it strange how many people think of the 80s as some great decade. A decade where nuclear war was being threatened all the time. A decade where the phrase "greed is good" became a mantra for Wall Street and big company mergers that put a lot of people out of work. A decade where Reagan raised taxes four times, and when Bush Sr. promised "No New Taxes" then proceed to raise taxes. A decade that ended in a recession. The good music in the 80s reflected this and wasn't necessarily upbeat.
Don't forget the Savings & Loan Crisis (followed by a Stock Market crash) which was part of the recession.
Wow!
I agree...a very good, under-rated, band...last time I looked they were still playing and enjoying success, with their original line-up...
That is where I have to disagree - the 80s sound was uniformly EXCELLENT and UPBEAT. Those were great days and it is reflected in the music of the era. And the FIXX - one of the best of the best

Uniformly excellent and upbeat? I'll have to disagree with that. As with any time period there was a lot of awful music put out. Most of the good stuff flew under the radar for most people. Furthermore, there was lot of excellent music that wasn't "upbeat". I find it strange how many people think of the 80s as some great decade. A decade where nuclear war was being threatened all the time. A decade where the phrase "greed is good" became a mantra for Wall Street and big company mergers that put a lot of people out of work. A decade where Reagan raised taxes four times, and when Bush Sr. promised "No New Taxes" then proceed to raise taxes. A decade that ended in a recession. The good music in the 80s reflected this and wasn't necessarily upbeat.
Or put them on auto-pay, like many of us have. Money well spent.

It's all too common and easy for people to pontificate how much "'80s music sucked", especially for your garden variety, dyed-in-the-wool, classic rock disciples. It's also easy for many people to forget how much lousy music there was in the 1960s and '70s - largely because we weren't as bombarded with it, via MTV, as we were with music in the '80s. I'm not sure if it was "uniformly excellent" though, there was a lot of Phil Collins back then.
Seconded.

I remember seeing that same tour. That was a great triple bill at the time.
This sound is so firmly rooted in that period, but it's still pretty dang good.
Agreed
Yah, and not really all that guilty.
If it was Wham! or the Thompson Twins you could feel a little guilty. ; )
Great memories...
This sound is so firmly rooted in that period, but it's still pretty dang good.
That is where I have to disagree - the 80s sound was uniformly EXCELLENT and UPBEAT. Those were great days and it is reflected in the music of the era. And the FIXX - one of the best of the best

HAHA, so right!
This sound is so firmly rooted in that period, but it's still pretty dang good.

First concert ever, The Fixx, Flock of Seagulls and the Police on the Synchronicity tour. Summer of 83?
I remember seeing that same tour. That was a great triple bill at the time.

An excellent choice, Bill. Thank you so much for being brilliant.
Is this the value of our existence
Should we proclaim with such persistence
Our destiny relies on conscience
Red or blue what's the difference
Yes, sadly...
Actually there were a lot of bands in the 80's whose music was quite topical: U2, Tears for Fears, Blue Peter, REM....
Yeah man, far out! I'll never forget trying to wash all that Peruvian flake out of my Izod shirt after the U.S.A. For Africa concert. It's like they say, "If you can remember suffering from 3rd degree burns caused by hairspray in the 80s, you weren't there!"
They didn't shake up their sound up enough. I think a lot of British synth-pop bands from the 80s got pigeonholed in the US by one or two big hits. Pop music embedded them in amber and moved on. The biggest example that comes to mind was Simple Minds after "Don't You (Forget About Me)".
This is probably the only Fixx song that I liked then and like now. Just didn't cotton to their sound for some reason.
First concert ever, The Fixx, Flock of Seagulls and the Police on the Synchronicity tour. Summer of 83?
That's got to be the wrong year. Amazon has Ultimate Collection out in 1999.
Anyhoo, just in the early 80s they had three #1 hits, five hits made the Top Five, and a several more made the Top Ten.
The trifecta of Shuttered Room, Reach the Beach, and Phantoms had:
Stand or Fall
Red Skies
One Thing Leads to Another
The Sign of Fire
Saved By Zero
Are We Ourselves
Lose Face
Question
Thanks for the research—I feel vindicated. I actually saw the Fixx "Reach the Beach" tour at Six Flags (NJ) around '84, although I had no idea who they were and didn't really care for the music.
That's got to be the wrong year. Amazon has Ultimate Collection out in 1999.
Anyhoo, just in the early 80s they had three #1 hits, five hits made the Top Five, and a several more made the Top Ten.
The trifecta of Shuttered Room, Reach the Beach, and Phantoms had:
Stand or Fall
Red Skies
One Thing Leads to Another
The Sign of Fire
Saved By Zero
Are We Ourselves
Lose Face
Question
Ditto

Rockit wrote:

I think "Precious Stone", "Secret Separation" and "Don't Be Scared" would qualify also.
Of course, those three never get played anywhere anymore.
Thanks! Forgot just how much I LOVED the FIXX....what a great sound