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The Top 5 Songs Today Jan 29th In 1984

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On This Day January 29, 1984

Top 5 Songs This Week in 1984

On this day — January 29, 1984 — the charts were stacked. Radios, Walkmans, bedroom stereos, mall speakers, and car dashboards were all getting blasted with one of those early-80s lineups that feels almost unfair in hindsight.

This Gen X chart rewind counts down the week’s Top 5 songs from Matthew Wilder, Elton John, The Romantics, Culture Club, and Yes. How many of these 80s songs do you still remember without Googling?

This is peak early-1984 radio: new wave color, synth-rock punch, blue-eyed soul, British pop takeover energy, and the kind of hooks that made you keep a blank cassette ready just in case the DJ finally stopped talking.

#5
Matthew Wilder

“Break My Stride”

Bright, bouncy, and impossible to shake, “Break My Stride” brought pure early-80s optimism to the chart. It sounds like someone put resilience, a tropical shirt, and a Casio keyboard into a blender and somehow made it work.

#4
Elton John

“I Guess That’s Why They Call It the Blues”

Elton John gave 1984 one of those smooth, grown-up heartbreak songs that adults loved and Gen X kids quietly absorbed from the backseat. It is polished, emotional, and built like a late-night radio staple.

#3
The Romantics

“Talking in Your Sleep”

A sharp, catchy new wave rocker with just enough paranoia to make it fun, “Talking in Your Sleep” feels like neon lights, skinny ties, suspicious lyrics, and a band that knew exactly how to land a hook.

#2
Culture Club

“Karma Chameleon”

Colorful, catchy, and completely unavoidable, “Karma Chameleon” brought Culture Club’s pop personality to full blast. This is the kind of song that owned the radio, the video channels, and probably your aunt’s kitchen.

#1
Yes

“Owner of a Lonely Heart”

Yes crashed into 1984 with a massive synth-rock punch. “Owner of a Lonely Heart” was sharp, futuristic, weirdly cool, and absolutely built for a decade that wanted rock to sound like it had been rewired by a computer.

Why It Hits

Why this week feels so 1984

New wave had the keys Culture Club, The Romantics, Matthew Wilder, and the glossy pop-rock mood made the chart feel colorful, stylish, and very MTV-ready.
Rock was getting rewired Yes proved that legacy rock acts could survive the new decade by embracing sharper production, synth textures, and a more futuristic sound.
Radio was still massive Elton John, Culture Club, and Yes gave this week real chart weight — the kind of lineup that made 1984 feel huge before summer even arrived.

What was your #1 from this week?

Drop your favorite from this January 1984 Top 5 and tell us what you were doing in ’84. Like for more daily throwback hits, and follow Smells Like Gen X for weekly Gen X countdowns, shorts, 80s music flashbacks, and chart nostalgia.

Topics: January 29 1984 top songs, Top 5 songs this week in 1984, 1984 Billboard songs, Top 10 Songs of 1984, Every Number 1 Hit of 1984, Yes Owner of a Lonely Heart, Culture Club Karma Chameleon, The Romantics Talking in Your Sleep, Elton John I Guess That’s Why They Call It the Blues, Matthew Wilder Break My Stride, 80s music, Gen X nostalgia, Smells Like Gen X.