1982  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Revision as of 20:47, 19 May 2008
Jahsonic (Talk | contribs)

← Previous diff
Revision as of 19:44, 8 December 2023
Jahsonic (Talk | contribs)

Next diff →
Line 1: Line 1:
-{{Template}} +{| class="toccolours" style="float: left; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#c6dbf7; color:black; width:30em; max-width: 40%;" cellspacing="5"
-:[[1980]] - [[1981]] - [[1982]] - [[1983]] - [[1984]] - [[1985]] - [[1986]] - [[1987]] - [[1988]] - [[1989]] - [[1990]] +| style="text-align: left;" |
 +"I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of [[Orion (constellation)|Orion]]. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the [[Tannhäuser]] Gate. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die." --[[Tears in rain monologue]] delivered by [[Rutger Hauer]] as [[Roy Batty]] in ''[[Blade Runner]]''
 +<hr>
 +""[[Better Living Through Chemistry|Better things for better living … through chemistry]]" was a [[Dupont]] [[advertising slogan]] that ran from 1935 until 1982."--Sholem Stein
 +|}
 +{{Template}}
 +{|class="toc hlist" id="toc" summary="Contents" style="margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; text-align:center;"
 +|colspan="3" |
 +|-
 +! style="text-align:right; width:310px;"|<< [[1981]]
 +! style="width:125px;"|
 +! style="text-align:left; width:310px;"|[[1983]] >>
 +|}
 +'''1982''' is the 982nd year of the 2nd millennium, the 82nd year of the 20th century, and the 3rd year of the [[1980s]] decade.
== Art and culture == == Art and culture ==
 +===Art===
 +*[[Kerze (Candle)]], a painting by Gerhard Richter
 +*[[Protect Me From What I Want]], a work by Jenny Holzer
 +*[[Zeitgeist – Internationale Kunstausstellung Berlin ]]
 +*First issue of ''[[Les Cités obscures]]'' by François Schuiten and Benoît Peeters
 +
===Literature=== ===Literature===
-*''[[RanXerox in New York]]'' (1982) - [[Liberatore]] and Tamburini +====Fiction====
 +*''[[RanXerox in New York]]'' by Tanino Liberatore and Tamburini
 +*''[[Virginie, Her Two Lives]]'' by John Hawkes
 +*''[[Spanking the Maid]]'' by Robert Coover
 +*''[[Before She Met Me]]'' by Julian Barnes
 +*''[[Baltasar and Blimunda]]'' by Saramago
 +====Non-fiction====
 +*''[[Invention of Hysteria]]'' by Georges Didi-Huberman
 +*''[[Uncommon Places]]'' by Stephen Shore
 + 
===Film=== ===Film===
-*''[[Liquid Sky]]'' by Slava Tsukerman+====Feature films====
-*''[[Cafe Flesh]]'' by Stephen Sayadian+
*''[[Eating Raoul]]'' by Paul Bartel *''[[Eating Raoul]]'' by Paul Bartel
-*''[[The Thing]]'' by+*''[[The Thing (1982 film)|The Thing]]'' by John Carpenter
*''[[Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid]]'' by Carl Reiner *''[[Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid]]'' by Carl Reiner
*''[[The Draughtsman's Contract]]'' by Peter Greenaway *''[[The Draughtsman's Contract]]'' by Peter Greenaway
Line 14: Line 41:
*''[[Blade Runner]]'' by Ridley Scott *''[[Blade Runner]]'' by Ridley Scott
*''[[Tron]]'' by Steven Lisberger *''[[Tron]]'' by Steven Lisberger
-*''[[Fast Times at Ridgemont High]]'' by Amy Heckerling +*''[[Koyaanisqatsi]]'' by Godfrey Reggio
 +*''[[Forbidden Zone]]'' by Richard Elfman
 +*''[[The Atomic Cafe]]'' by Loader, Rafferty and Rafferty
 +*''[[Café Flesh]]'' by Stephen Sayadian
 +=====Guilty pleasures=====
 +*''[[Slapstick of Another Kind]]'' by Steven Paul
 +*''[[The Killing of America]]'' by Sheldon Renan
 +*''[[Liquid Sky]]'' by Slava Tsukerman
*''[[Evil Dead]]'' by Sam Raimi *''[[Evil Dead]]'' by Sam Raimi
-*''[[Q]]'' by Larry Cohen+*''[[Q (1982 film)|Q]]'' by Larry Cohen
 +*''[[Fast Times at Ridgemont High]]'' by Amy Heckerling
 + 
 +====Short films====
 + 
===Music=== ===Music===
-*The [[TB-303]] was a synthesizer/sequencer produced by the Roland corporation in 1982 and 1983 that had a crucial role in the development of contemporary electronic music, but most of all on the acid house that would follow a couple of years later. +*The [[Roland TB-303]] was a synthesizer/sequencer produced by the [[Roland Corporation]] in 1982 and 1983 that had a crucial role in the development of contemporary electronic music, but most of all on the acid house that would follow a couple of years later.
*Dub in disco *Dub in disco
-**"Thanks to You and "Don't Make Me Wait" came out and started the whole dub thing in disco." Steven Harvey in Collusion magazine #5, 1983 [...]+**"[[Thanks to You]]" and "[[Don't Make Me Wait (Peech Boys song)|Don't Make Me Wait]]" came out and started the whole [[dub music|dub]] thing in disco." [[Steven Harvey]] in Collusion magazine #5, 1983 [...]
- +
**Shep Pettibone: " [...] strangely enough, all these computer records started after "Thanks To You". It was kind of like that computer sound within a black vein. **Shep Pettibone: " [...] strangely enough, all these computer records started after "Thanks To You". It was kind of like that computer sound within a black vein.
*Disco and electro *Disco and electro
-**In 1982 NYC disco expanded its perimeters to include dub, electronics, jazz, Latin, afro, new wave - a cauldron capable of melting down any ingredient. Records by The Peech Boys, Sinnamon and D Train allied the Black R&B tradition with high-tech mix/electronics. The emergence of labels Tommy Boy and Streetwise under Arthur Baker and John Robie pushed the hard electronic/beat box edge to the fore. To turn on one of me city's three dance radio stations and hear a DJ mixing three records together at once seemed like an impossible dream of the avant garde infiltrating the market place. -- Steven Harvey [...]+**In 1982 NYC [[disco]] expanded its perimeters to include dub, electronics, jazz, Latin, afro, new wave - a [[cauldron]] capable of melting down any ingredient. Records by [[The Peech Boys]], [[Sinnamon]] and [[D Train]] allied the Black R&B tradition with high-tech mix/electronics. The emergence of labels Tommy Boy and Streetwise under Arthur Baker and John Robie pushed the hard electronic/beat box edge to the fore. To turn on one of me city's three dance radio stations and hear a DJ mixing three records together at once seemed like an impossible dream of the avant garde infiltrating the market place. -- [[Steven Harvey]]
-*Compact disco launched+*Compact disc launched
-**The compact disc was launched in 1982. The advantage of the CD is that it was digital, which helped prepare the MP3-P2P (Napster et all) revolution of the late nineties.+**The [[compact disc]] was launched in 1982. The advantage of the CD is that it was digital, which helped prepare the MP3-P2P (Napster et all) revolution of the late nineties.
====Singles==== ====Singles====
- +*[[Sexual Healing]] by Marvin Gaye
-*Planet Rock (1982) - Afrika Bambaataa and the Soul Sonic Force+*[[Planet Rock (song) |Planet Rock]] by Afrika Bambaataa and the Soul Sonic Force
-*Dirty Talk (1982) - Klein & MBO+*[[Dirty Talk (Klein + M.B.O. song) |Dirty Talk]] by Klein & MBO
-*Together Forever (1982) - Exodus+*[[Together Forever]] by Exodus
-*Don't Make Me Wait (1982) - Peech Boys+*[[Don't Make Me Wait (Peech Boys song)|Don't Make Me Wait]] by Peech Boys
-* Grace Jones - Feel Up (Levan mix)+*[[Atomic Dog]] by George Clinton
-*Dinosaur L - Go Bang [Arthur Russell]+*[[Over Like a Fat Rat ]] by Fonda Rae
-*Soul Sonic Force - Planet Rock [...]+*[[Feel Up]] by Grace Jones
-*Michelle Wallace 'Jazzy Rhythm' Tee Scott+*[[Go Bang!]] by Dinosaur L
-*Donna Summer - I Feel Love (Patrick Cowley's remix)+*[[She Can't Love You]] by Chemise
-*Debbie Trusty - Searchin' for Some Lovin' [Nick Martinelli]+*[[Last Night a D.J. Saved My Life]] by Indeep
-*Chemise - She Can't Love You+*[[Sex Without Stress]] by the Au Pairs
-*Raw Silk 'Do It To The Music' [Nick Martinelli]+*[[Bam Bam]] by Sister Nancy
-*Fonda Rae 'Over Like A Fat Rat' [Fonda Rae]+*[[The Message (Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five song)|The Message]] by Grandmaster Flash
-*Indeep - Last Night A DJ Saved My Life+*[[Work Song (Bill Laswell song) |Work Song]] by Bill Laswell
-* Bo Kool - Love Money [Jazz-Funk]+*[[Skindo Le Le]] by Alive!
-*Carly Simon - Why+*[[My Spine (Is The Bassline)]] by Shriekback
-*Denroy Morgan - Happy Feeling+*[[Why (Carly Simon song)|Why]] by Carly Simon
-*Funk Fusion Band - Can You Feel It [Nick Martinelli]+*[[Ja Funmi]] by King Sunny Ade
-*Rockers Revenge - Walking On Sunshine [Jamaica]+*[[What About My Love?]] by Johnnie Taylor
-*Fat Larry's Band - Act Like You Know + Whatnauts+*[[Barely Breaking Even (The Universal Robot Band) |Barely Breaking Even]] by Universal Robot Band
-*Leon Ware - Why I Came To California+*[[Act Like You Know]] by Fat Larry's Band
-* Sinnamon - Thanks To You [Shep Pettibone]+*[[I Feel Love]] by [[Donna Summer]]
-*Montana Sextet Heavy Vibes [Montana]+*[[Thanks to You]] by Sinnamon
-*Marvin Gaye - Sexual Healing (one of the very first 808s used for bass)+*[[Dog Police]] by Dog Police
-*Material - Let Me Have It All+*[[Do It to the Music]] by Raw Silk
-*Patrice Rushen - Number One+*[[Searchin' For Some Lovin']] by Debbie Trusty
-*Heaven And Earth - I Really Love You+*[[Estrelar]] by Marcos Valle
-*Inner Life - Moment Of My Life+*[[Camino Del Sol]] by Isabelle Antena
-*Man Parrish - Hip Hop, Be Bop (Don't Stop)+*Can You Feel It by [[Funk Fusion Band]]
-*Grace Jones - My Jamaican Guy+*[[Walking On Sunshine]] by Rockers Revenge
-*Extra - Haven´t Been Funked Enough+*[[Why I Came To California]] by [[Leon Ware]]
-*Willy Hutch - In and Out+*[[Heavy Vibes]] by the Montana Sextet
-*Touchdown - Ease Your Mind+*[[Let Me Have It All]] by Material
-*Plunky & the Oneness of Juju - Every Way But Loose+*[[Number One (Patrice Rushen song) |Number One]] by Patrice Rushen
-* Clark Sisters - You Brought the Sunshine+*[[Hip Hop, Be Bop (Don't Stop)]] Man Parrish
-*Kasso - Key West+*[[My Jamaican Guy]] by Grace Jones
-* New Order - Blue Monday+*[[Haven´t Been Funked Enough]] by Extra
-*Alicia Myers - I Want To Thank You+*[[In and Out (Willie Hutch song) |In and Out]] by Willy Hutch
-*Malcolm McLaren - Buffalo Gals+*[[Ease Your Mind]] by Touchdown
-* Cybotron - Cosmic Cars [Juan Atkins]+*[[Every Way But Loose]] by Plunky & the Oneness of Juju
-* Universal Robot Band - Barely Breaking Even+*You Brought the Sunshine by [[Clark Sisters]]
-*Valentine Brothers - Money's Too Tight (To Mention) +*[[Key West]] by [[Kasso]]
 +*[[Blue Monday]] by New Order
 +*[[I Want To Thank You]] by Alicia Myers
 +*[[Buffalo Gals]] by Malcolm McLaren
 +*[[Cosmic Cars]] by Cybotron
 +*[[Money's Too Tight (to Mention)]] by Valentine Brothers
 +*[[Keep the Fire Burning]] by Gwen McCrae
 +*[[Kick That Habit Man]] by Monte Cazazza
====Albums==== ====Albums====
-*[[Violent Femmes (album)|Violent Femmes]] by Violent Femmes+*[[Violent Femmes (album)|''Violent Femmes'']] by Violent Femmes
-*Thriller (1982) - Michael Jackson+*''[[Thriller (Michael Jackson album)|Thriller]]'' by Michael Jackson
-*Inner Life - Inner Life+*''[[Kakashi]]'' by Yasuaki Shimizu
-*One Down - Material+*''[[One Down]]'' by Material
-*Armagideon Time (1982) - Willie Williams+*''[[Juju Music]]'' by King Sunny Ade
-*King Sunny Ade - Juju+
- +
==Births== ==Births==
Line 88: Line 130:
==Deaths== ==Deaths==
 +* [[Patrick Dewaere]]
 +* [[Georges Perec]] (1936 - 1982)
* [[Patrick Cowley]] (1950 - 1982) * [[Patrick Cowley]] (1950 - 1982)
* [[Rainer Werner Fassbinder]] (1945 - 1982) * [[Rainer Werner Fassbinder]] (1945 - 1982)
Line 96: Line 140:
* [[May 10]] - [[Peter Weiss]], German writer and artist (b. [[1916]]) * [[May 10]] - [[Peter Weiss]], German writer and artist (b. [[1916]])
* [[May 29]] - [[Romy Schneider]], Austrian actress (cardiac arrest) (b. [[1938]]) * [[May 29]] - [[Romy Schneider]], Austrian actress (cardiac arrest) (b. [[1938]])
 +* [[December 19]] - [[Dwight Macdonald]], social critic, combative journalist and anarchist (b. [[1906]])
* [[December 24]] - [[Louis Aragon]], French writer (b. [[1897]]) * [[December 24]] - [[Louis Aragon]], French writer (b. [[1897]])
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

Revision as of 19:44, 8 December 2023

"I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die." --Tears in rain monologue delivered by Rutger Hauer as Roy Batty in Blade Runner


""Better things for better living … through chemistry" was a Dupont advertising slogan that ran from 1935 until 1982."--Sholem Stein

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

<< 1981 1983 >>

1982 is the 982nd year of the 2nd millennium, the 82nd year of the 20th century, and the 3rd year of the 1980s decade.

Contents

Art and culture

Art

Literature

Fiction

Non-fiction

Film

Feature films

Guilty pleasures

Short films

Music

  • The Roland TB-303 was a synthesizer/sequencer produced by the Roland Corporation in 1982 and 1983 that had a crucial role in the development of contemporary electronic music, but most of all on the acid house that would follow a couple of years later.
  • Dub in disco
    • "Thanks to You" and "Don't Make Me Wait" came out and started the whole dub thing in disco." Steven Harvey in Collusion magazine #5, 1983 [...]
    • Shep Pettibone: " [...] strangely enough, all these computer records started after "Thanks To You". It was kind of like that computer sound within a black vein.
  • Disco and electro
    • In 1982 NYC disco expanded its perimeters to include dub, electronics, jazz, Latin, afro, new wave - a cauldron capable of melting down any ingredient. Records by The Peech Boys, Sinnamon and D Train allied the Black R&B tradition with high-tech mix/electronics. The emergence of labels Tommy Boy and Streetwise under Arthur Baker and John Robie pushed the hard electronic/beat box edge to the fore. To turn on one of me city's three dance radio stations and hear a DJ mixing three records together at once seemed like an impossible dream of the avant garde infiltrating the market place. -- Steven Harvey
  • Compact disc launched
    • The compact disc was launched in 1982. The advantage of the CD is that it was digital, which helped prepare the MP3-P2P (Napster et all) revolution of the late nineties.

Singles

Albums

Births

Deaths




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "1982" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools