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The Return of Bruno vs. Heartbeat:

An 80s Celebrity Music Showdown

August 14, 2025
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When two small-screen icons traded scripts for studio time, and the results were pure 80s excess.

The Ballad Of Bruce And Don:

The mid 80s. A time when two heroes will rise. Heroes who will conquer the small screen and quickly set their sights on conquering the charts. 

Bruce ‘Bruno’ Willis vs The Don Johnson.

Let’s take a look at their pedigree. 

Stylish man in sunglasses and light gray suit, posing confidently.
  • After over a decade as a jobbing actor, Don Johnson was in his mid 30s when he struck gold in 1984 as Sonny Crockett in Miami Vice.

Bruce Willis didn’t have to wait as long for his break. Moonlighting came along in 1985 when Bruce was 30. 

"Smiling man in a suit against a blue background."

One was an undercover detective with an image that was flash, brash and flaunted it all.

There’s also a question of just how a detective sergeant could afford all those designer clothes and a Ferrari Testarossa.

"Man exiting a white sports car near construction site with traffic barriers."

Crooked cop on the take? 

The other was a private detective with a wisecracking attitude:

"Man in a white shirt and black tie gesturing expressively in an office setting."

And an image built on character rather than clothes. 

Designer stubble was de rigueur, regardless. How any of that translates to pop prowess is debatable.

Will their vocals undo the allure of their handsome features? 

Enough of the preliminaries. The combatants are in their corners ready to face the music. 

Round 1

Both go with a tried and tested method of relying on a cover for their debut singles.

The source material offers very different approach though. 

  • Don goes with “Heartbeat:”
Alt text: "Helen Reddy 'Imagination' cassette tape featuring tracks like 'Yesterday Can't Hurt Me' and 'Heartbeat'."

Originally recorded by Wendy Waldman and already covered by Helen Reddy.

Neither of which made any dent on the charts, so Don has a free run at imprinting his own style on it.

  • Whereas Bruce:
"Bruce Willis album cover for 'Respect Yourself' from 'The Return of Bruno.'"

Goes for a classic: The Staples Singers’ “Respect Yourself.”

Both peak at #5. 

Round summary: Both fighters come out pumped up, giving it their best shots in the hope of scoring a quick knockout but find themselves evenly matched.


Round 2

Both of our fearless entertainers have formidable support in their corners. 

"Album cover featuring Don Johnson with song list from 'Let It Roll,' highlighting his music career."

Don has Harry Chapin, Willie Nelson, Bonnie Raitt, Ron Wood and Stevie Ray Vaughan appearing on the Heartbeat album.

  • Bruce has the myriad talents of The Temptations, The Pointer Sisters, Siedah Garrett and Booker T Jones on The Return Of Bruno. 
"Group photo of four friends smiling together, featuring vibrant 80s fashion styles."

Round Summary: Another even round. The reputation and talents of the hired hands cover the limitations of our protagonists.


Round 3

Both convert their star power into elongated HBO promos: 

The Don weaves the Heartbeat album into a narrative in which he’s a documentary film maker caught up in a bomb explosion.

This near death experience leading to a life flashing before him review of his existence. Shorn of this context, the video to Heartbeat is non more 80s.

Its incomprehensible. There’s explosions. There’s a beautiful woman.

"Two musicians performing on stage, one playing guitar and the other singing into a microphone."

There’s a guitarist (Dweezil Zappa!) shredding a squealing solo.

In amongst it all is Don, who you may think would be on safe ground with the acting part, but looks as out of his depth as the vocals. 

Bruce takes a different documentary themed approach.

A mock rockumentary in which he plays Bruno Radolini, a legendary Forrest Gump type character who was there at every major juncture in popular music. Not that you’d know it from the “Respect Yourself” video.

Bartender in a rustic bar with stacked glasses and colorful drink, expressing surprise.

He’s a bar tender daydreaming his nights away.

June Pointer shows up to take on the heavy lifting while the backing vocals also protect listeners from focusing on the limitations of his voice. 

Round Summary: A tough one to score as neither convinces. 80s excess vanity projects is the order of the day. Throw more money at it – style over substance.


Round 4

A lull in proceedings as Bruce and Don opt for cautious circling.

Subsequent singles miss the target until Don delivers a low blow:

"Barbra Streisand and Don Johnson's 'Till I Loved You' vinyl record cover and disc."

Using the star power of Babs to land one more Billboard top 40 hit. 

Round Summary: A points deduction sees Bruce take the round at a pinch.


Round 5

Looking for assurances from further afield, Bruce dominates early:

"Album cover of Bruce Willis's 'Under the Boardwalk' featuring him performing on stage."

Almost delivering a knockdown as “Under The Boardwalk” reaches #2 in the UK.

Don is shaken, but steadies himself and unleashes his own continental kapow. “Tell It Like It Is” takes him to #2 in Germany and top 10 in France and the Netherlands. 

Round Summary: Don comes through an early barrage to dominate the round.


Round 6

The boys keep swinging. Demonstrating their star power:

  • Don’s debut album Heartbeat peaks at #17 and is certified Gold.
Chart listing featuring Don Johnson's album "Heartbeat" at position 17.
  • Whereas The Return of Bruno peaks at #14 and is certified Gold.
"Chart listing featuring Bruce Willis at number 14 for 'The Return of Bruno' on Motown."

Round Summary: The margins are wafer thin, but Bruce sneaks this one.


Round 7

The boys keep swinging. But this time their unconvincing follow ups miss their mark. 

Both release their second albums in 1989.

"Album cover of Don Johnson featuring a monochrome portrait of the artist."

Don’s Let It Roll did not chart in the US. No. 2 in Germany though. Das ist gut, ja! 

Bruce’s If It Don’t Kill You, It Just Makes You Stronger did not chart in the US. #9 in Finland though. Oi jes, team Helsinki! 

"Bruce Willis album cover for 'If It Don't Kill You, It Just Makes You Stronger' featuring a vintage car."

Round Summary: A lot of weary circling but Don manages to unload an uppercut that has Bruce reeling.


Round 8

Both fighters taking punishment.

People Magazine said:

"People Weekly magazine cover featuring Bruce Willis, January 1987, celebrating New Year."

The Return Of Bruno shows us that he (Willis) can’t shout songs quite as well as Don Johnson.” 

A true backhanded compliment though. Who it’s actually favouring is debatable.

Allmusic:

  • “Willis may deeply believe he has vocal talent, but the album stands more as a testament to the excesses of Reagan-era celebrity and baby-boomer nostalgia than as a piece of music”
  • “Don Johnson is at best a competent singer.”

In a stunning development:

‘Bruno’ and ‘The Don’ simultaneously walk onto each other’s sucker punch and hit the canvas. Referee Casey Kasem counts them down and out. That’s it folks. Show’s over. 

Amid Bruce and Don’s punch drunk appeals for another shot, music is declared the real loser.


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JJ Live At Leeds

From across the ocean, a middle aged man, a man without a plan, a man full of memories, a man like JJ.

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