"Don't You Want Me" by The Human League.

OK, boys and girls, more 80s one-hit wonders: Lead singer Philip Oakey penned this 1981 massive global hit after reading an article in a teen-girls' magazine about meeting a waitress at a cocktail bar. He calls it "a nasty song about power-politics between the opposite sexes". It was the only hit for his British new-wave band, defining the synth-pop genre. Originally intended for it to be a vocal solo, he switched it to a duet with one of the group's two teenage singers after watching "A Star is Born" ('76). Trademark heavy use of the now-legendary LM-1 drum machine. It received heavy play on the then-young MTV channel and has become a karaoke standard. The best-selling UK single of 1981, topped the Billboard Hot 100 for three weeks and was Certified Gold. Part of the "He's Just Not That Into You" movie soundtrack ('09). Song? Answer: "Don't You Want Me" by The Human League. One of the many great tunes we listened to in '81 on the ol' Mustang's radio during the long drive from Philly to Fort Dodge. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uPudE8nDog0&list=RDuPudE8nDog0&start_radio=1

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