I realised today that I don'treally like punk music

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
So sure there are a couple of things I like but really, what's so special about punk music these days? So what you can play three chords and sing dumb lyrics about the government? This has been going on far too long. Why is punk considered so special whilst more interesting genres like metal are considered silly?

I'm serious here (albeit a bit drunk).

dog latin (dog latin), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:05 (eighteen years ago) link

There's just as much silly metal as there is silly punk.

Johnny Fever (johnny fever), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:08 (eighteen years ago) link

i've never liked punk. fuck those clowns

Mad SETI (jaxon), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:12 (eighteen years ago) link

okay, sorry - i'm really not trying to turn this into a metal vs punk discussion. more a reappraisal of punk as a genre. It gets wheeled out as this undeniably amazing movement which revolutionised music. Sure, it did influence a few things in a few places but it also suffocated music in other places. Flourishing genres like Metal, Prog, Psych, IDM etc will forever be maligned because they are so "anti-punk" ethos (ie they are technical/conceptual). Yet we are expected to worship this (in it's purest form) basic, and often boring style of hard rock music. I'm not talking about post-punk or new wave and things like that, because they are very very different to punk despite being related.

dog latin (dog latin), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:13 (eighteen years ago) link

punk is rubbish, thats why. the only defence anyone is ever able to come up with is the fall and the ramones (both great obv), but, punks no hapa haole is it!?

terry lennox. (gareth), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:18 (eighteen years ago) link

Punk is great. The Stones were punks. The Velvet Underground were punks. There were a million fucking great punk bands.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:19 (eighteen years ago) link

dog latin so OTM in ways I don't really have time to go over. I saw Jello Biafra on that PBS special on "protest music" and he said "punk was so great because it came around when we needed it 'cause the '70s sucked what with everyone saying the future of music was [rolls eyes] ELO." I wanted to burn my Dead Kennedys albums until I realized I'd already sold them all.

C/D: "[band that existed when Joey Ramone was 10 and predated the term 'punk' by a good 15 years] were punk!"

disco violence (disco violence), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:20 (eighteen years ago) link

The Who Sings My Generation was punk - I HAVEN'T GOT ELEVEN KIDS AND I WUN'T BORN IN BAGHDAD. I'M NOT HALF CHINESE EITHER AND I DIDN'T KILL MY DAD

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:21 (eighteen years ago) link

"predated the term 'punk' by a good 15 years"

You know the chronology of it well? People weren't calling Iggy Stooge a punk?

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:23 (eighteen years ago) link

Sure Punk has served it's purpose, and much as I love ELO, I agree things had to happen circa 1977. I was really (and still am) expecting to receive a grilling on this thread but I feel punk has been canonised so highly (particularly in the last couple of years) that it's almost illegal to diss punk music in music circles. So many bands come out with exactly the same sound as in the 70s it's untrue. Surely the novelty of not being able to play your instruments would have worn off after 25 years?

dog latin (dog latin), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:28 (eighteen years ago) link

Stop worrying about labels.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:34 (eighteen years ago) link

My Generation, Velvet Underground blahblah - it's old news. Besides, the appeal behind those bands (the Velvets especially) were that they were actually a bit shit, and that appealed to people because it was raw and rough and ready and before that time people hadn't really heard stuff like it and the idea that anyone could form a band in their garage was very appealing. The idea that in 2005 it is implicit that I ought to appreciate this kind of thing as anything other than the outcome of a curious sociopolitical youth movement that happened before I was born is absurd.

dog latin (dog latin), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:35 (eighteen years ago) link

I'm curious how it is that you feel the Who were "a bit shit." Or the VU for that matter.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:40 (eighteen years ago) link

because Daltrey wasn't a very good singer (and got worse when he learned to "sing")?

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:42 (eighteen years ago) link

Rhetorical questions: Are Muddy Waters' Chess records "a bit shit" because they're raw? What about Sun Records stuff (Elvis, Jerry Lee, Carl Perkins, etc.)?

x-post: Matos, to me that's like someone saying Dylan wasn't a good singer

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:43 (eighteen years ago) link

Or Joey Ramone or whoever

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:44 (eighteen years ago) link

hey, you asked. I can be rhetorical if I want. anyway, I've never been all that huge a Who fan, though I like them fine.

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:45 (eighteen years ago) link

and frankly I think that's exactly the point dog latin is trying to make--that "they're not technically good, big deal" is as legitimate a way of assessing them as any. I agree w/that generally even though I don't agree with it specifically

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:46 (eighteen years ago) link

I agree. I've been thinking this for a while now, despite the fact I have a special place in my heart (and too much on my shelves) for punk. I pulled out a few Lookout Records discs the other day and at first it seemed so great that I wondered why I had ignored it for so long. Before too long, however, I started noticing that I didn't actually feel it anymore. Some guy singing "I need therapy" isn't that hilarious, especially after you realize that it was more or less a self-fulfilling prophecy for most of these losers. A bunch of real screwed up people, really.

I got this vague memory of my first impressions of the Ramones. I remembered how different it seemed from all the metal bands back then. These punks weren't singing about how awesome they were and how they were going to kick ass, but mostly about how much they themselves sucked and what misfit, lazy idiots they were, how much they needed meds and lobotomies and how all their girlfriends were these suicidal psycho chicks and how much drugs they're going to do. I guess in it's own weird way it's more realistic than a lot of heavy metal, but I didn't exactly listen to metal for reality, anyway. My interest in punk started out as a laugh, but eventually I guess the cynical "laugh as your world falls apart" attitude rubbed off on me, as it seems to have on those old punks themselves. If they just started out to mock society and piss people off for a laugh, then why did they end up so serious and troubled?

Guitarzan, Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:47 (eighteen years ago) link

Guitarzan, I see what you're saying, but you're painting with an awfully broad brush. "They" all didn't end up any way. A handful of the more famous ones did, a pretty big distinction.

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:49 (eighteen years ago) link

But I'm not clear as to how they're not technically good. Listen to "The Good's Gone" or something. Daltrey was better than Keith Relf, as good as the guy from the Pretty Things, probably not quite as good as Jagger (not many were).

x-posts to Matos

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:50 (eighteen years ago) link

Well, y'know I have asked about the VU on other threads and even their protractors say that half the reason they like them is because they were a bit rubbish at what they did. I totally get this - I mean, it's the reason I like bands like Pavement after all. The looseness, the rough around the edgediness-ness. And sure, without punk we wouldn't have a lot of other things. I'm just saying that I find punk music, in it's purest form absolutely free from any artistic irredeemability (sp? gr?) other than it's gall. The fact that after punk came barreling along in the mid 70s making it suddenly increbly unfashionable to go for a musically interesting slant rather than an aesthetic or social standing - and the fact that this seems to have stayed with us since really bugs me. It feels like all the good work put in place by the Beatles, the Beach Boys, King Crimson and Led Zeppelin to make pop and rock into a sonically interesting artform was forever ruined by a bunch of guys who wouldn't have known what a minor seventh chord or an oboe was if it slapped them in the face.
Sure there will always be a place in my hard for the rough and ready. It's not so much the 70s punks and their precursors who are up against the wall here, more the prevailence of the false ethic that punk is right and if you don't like it or if you want to use fancy song structures/chords/instruments in your music then you're a wimp and a pussy and a druggy and a hippie who doesn't know how to rock.

dog latin (dog latin), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:53 (eighteen years ago) link

Maybe in the sense that incorporating feedback or whatever was considered bad form at the time. I don't think the Who were a technically bad band, but Daltrey hardly had what we think of as great pipes at first. And as indicated, I think his singing suffered when he developed them. (xpost to Tim)

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:54 (eighteen years ago) link

xpost to Matos: Yeah, you're right. That is a broad brush, I guess. Trouble is, whenever I think of a punk, I can only remember the more famous ones. And some of those I guess I just assume turned out pathetic. Like the singer of the Circle Jerks. I have no idea how he's doing, but I remember him with long dreads singing with Debbie Gibson and I always think he must be a sad sack. I do know the Descendents all went on to get real adult jobs or something.

Guitarzan, Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:55 (eighteen years ago) link

OH NOES I DON'T LIKE SHITTEY MUSIC ANYMORE AND I MADE A WHITE WEE WEE IN TEH BED LAST NITE IM SCARED GUYS WHATS HAPPENING

It's Called Maturity, Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:56 (eighteen years ago) link

dog latin, I have to say it's interesting that you mention that punk made it "suddenly increbly unfashionable to go for a musically interesting slant rather than an aesthetic or social standing - and the fact that this seems to have stayed with us since really bugs me" right after saying you like Pavement! To my ear, Slanted has always suffered from this very thing--they got way better when they finally just said yes, we're going to play and sound as good as we can.

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:56 (eighteen years ago) link

there will always be a place in my hard for the rough and ready

wow, i'm pissed up and it's 4am so maybe i oughtn't be typing.

dog latin (dog latin), Saturday, 15 October 2005 01:57 (eighteen years ago) link

To my ear, Slanted has always suffered from this very thing--they got way better when they finally just said yes, we're going to play and sound as good as we can.

I think I may be the only hardcore Pavement fan who reckons Slanted is on the whole a load of rub other than maybe Trigger Cut and Here (arguably the least punk tracks on the album).

dog latin (dog latin), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:00 (eighteen years ago) link

so yeh i agree with you there - I'd rather listen to anything off of Terror Twilight (itself a prog album, weirdly) than slanted.

dog latin (dog latin), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:02 (eighteen years ago) link

everyone in vu could play. you are all mad.

scott seward (scott seward), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:04 (eighteen years ago) link

terror twilight is not a prog record. it's a rock record.and not a prog rock record. just a normal rock record. and not even that weird. but great!

scott seward (scott seward), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:05 (eighteen years ago) link

On a related note, Grunge (the new punk) was the response after technical guitar prowess finally hit a wall. Although Dream Theater would come out later on, proving the ultimate wank wasn't forever gone, once people were seemingly doing the impossible already, a bunch of kids threw up their hands and said, "Fuck it. I can play Sex Pistols and I can play Black Sabbath. Let's concentrate on that."

Grunge wasn't a bad thing in most people's eyes in the 80's, so maybe it was kind of like that in the 70's, too. I know sometimes when I buy an album from the 70s or earlier, I sometimes find myself wondering if it was really a wise purchase. I tend to feel that I've heard it before and I didn't really need any more of it.

Guitarzan, Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:06 (eighteen years ago) link

you are all drunq.

scott seward (scott seward), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:07 (eighteen years ago) link

yes, but tracks like "the hexx" wants to be a prog track when it grows up. there is nothing in the least bit punk about terror twilight and yet it is a great pop rock album. people just diss it because they feel as if they've been conned by pavement. Why? because Pavement used to record songs with one guitar string being played onto a broken tape recorder and their drummer was on drugs but then they learned how to write and play songs and got nigel godrich in and oh my god they started playing listenable music how could they? etc. etc.

dog latin (dog latin), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:08 (eighteen years ago) link

xxpost

dog latin (dog latin), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:09 (eighteen years ago) link

"once people were seemingly doing the impossible already, a bunch of kids threw up their hands and said, "Fuck it."

More likely that they never listened to the stuff to begin with. Come on.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:09 (eighteen years ago) link

On a related note, Grunge (the new punk) was the response after technical guitar prowess finally hit a wall. Although Dream Theater would come out later on, proving the ultimate wank wasn't forever gone, once people were seemingly doing the impossible already, a bunch of kids threw up their hands and said, "Fuck it. I can play Sex Pistols and I can play Black Sabbath. Let's concentrate on that."

It's not as if technical or conceptual music died completely after 1977, it's just it became really uncool and so acts like Dream Theater could never have become as big as Nirvana. It's also the reason Oasis won the battle over Blur - they were more punk, so they won.

dog latin (dog latin), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:11 (eighteen years ago) link

... despite the fact Blur were by and large better songwriters and musicians and far more talented than Oasis. Oasis won out through being rebels and saying ridiculous things in the press and putting Blur down and saying they were wimpy.

It's like that joke in Family Guy

A: "I don't see any reason why we should go to war"
B: "Ah, but you are forgetting that anyone who doesn't want to go to war is gay."
C: "I wanna go to war"
A: "Hey, I never said I didn't want to go to war!"
D: "I said I wanted to go to war first!"

It's such an automatic excuse: Oh, so unless you respect these mohawk dudes then it means your into triple albums about trolls that eat maggot sandwiches and the inner meaning of ptolemiology.

dog latin (dog latin), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:16 (eighteen years ago) link

right, i'm going off on one - i'm going to bet. night.

dog latin (dog latin), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:17 (eighteen years ago) link

bed, that is.

dog latin (dog latin), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:17 (eighteen years ago) link

hee hee! nighty night.

scott seward (scott seward), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:18 (eighteen years ago) link

More likely that they never listened to the stuff to begin with. Come on.

Sure they did. And they got tired of it just like everyone else when they saw how pointless it was to try and stick a blazing fast solo in a song for no reason. Kurt Cobain and the dudes from Soundgarden had heard all the same shit I listened to growing up. They were all young boys once, too, glued to MTV just like every other kid. They watched Headbanger's Ball and 120 Minutes just like everyone else and every day after school they got to see Steve Vai doing "Yankee Rose," back-to-back with Megadeth's "Peace Sells" and Poison's "Every Rose," etc.

On the topic of Steve Vai, it's kind of funny that he offered to do some movie soundtrack with Perry Farrell. Perry Farrell's only response was "Wasn't he in White Snake?!" This proves (to me, at least) that Perry follows metal enough to know that shit. I didn't know about it until last week! And what is so different about Jane's Addiction, anyway? That shit is basically metal.

Guitarzan, Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:21 (eighteen years ago) link

I didn't say that they weren't aware of it, but you act like they were all Yngwie fans, but decided that they didn't want to commit themselves to the discipline and so went for the stupid punk music instead.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:25 (eighteen years ago) link

Those grungies must've been listening to some metal, because they sure liked to cover KISS.

Guitarzan, Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:26 (eighteen years ago) link

And, no, I didn't "act" like they were all Yngwie fans. You read into the sentence a bit much there. I'm sure they all wanted to be the best musicians they possibly could, but, like punk, it was a response to the technical, passionless master musicianship of the time.

Guitarzan, Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:28 (eighteen years ago) link

they were just too lazy to take guitar lessons.

scott seward (scott seward), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:29 (eighteen years ago) link

"these days"

I was CRYING when Huell Howser's head exploded in a local feed store (dr g), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:30 (eighteen years ago) link

I was engaging in a little hyperbole for levity's sake. The basic premise of my point is that you claim that grunge or whatever was (in your exact words) a "response" to metal prowess. The kids "threw up their hands" at the metal prowess and made the grunge instead.

Maybe some grunge people were big metal heads previously - I dunno. I think it was just more punk w/ a bit of a retro Stooges/Blue Cheer/Sabbath or whatever thing.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:34 (eighteen years ago) link

they were just too lazy to take guitar lessons.

Or broke...

well, then so was I... but, I not really. I practiced all the time. I just realized that I didn't need to be Yngwie fucking Malmsteen to make good music. (I never liked him, anyway.) I just wanted to make my own music ASAP, not waste time learning other people's music and, while I still respected Metallica and Megadeth, I knew my fingers wouldn't be able to do any of that shit for a long time, so I just kept plugging away at my own "style," which I thought was really important at the time. Besides, I knew what I thought were the only two scales, so I didn't think there was anything more to learn! Just practice, I figured. One day, it would all click. Haha.

Guitarzan, Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:37 (eighteen years ago) link

And I'm killing this thread. I'll bow out now. ;-)

Guitarzan, Saturday, 15 October 2005 02:40 (eighteen years ago) link

but then you remembered that you weren't 13?

scott seward (scott seward), Saturday, 15 October 2005 15:44 (eighteen years ago) link

She woulda said "Pretty Vacant, duh."

I still see local punk bands grinding it out and coming up with great songs. I like punk when it gets down to the stripped rock feeling, which is what I like in the Sex Pistols or in The Clash. It's fun to listen to, y'know? Stimulates the lizard brain. I'm not wild that the term gets applied to any pop rock with distortion, but it's not like I'm the fuckin' genre police. And besides, if people like Avril Lavigne didn't care so much about calling themselves punk, it wouldn't be as much fun to see their fans freak out when you call 'em "emo."

js (honestengine), Saturday, 15 October 2005 15:55 (eighteen years ago) link

I watched Shirley Braha's "New York Noise" on Channel 25 the other day and it is funny that they played Ramones "Rock N' Roll Radio" in the midst of all this other pretentious (but fun) pop, twee and retro-disco indie shit, as if it fit. That's a great show, by the way. I love it. The only problem is none of the bands seem like they'd be listenable for a full album, but it's entertaining to watch one video of a bunch of bands trying very hard to be different, while not really being very different at all, actually!

Point of this being, of course, that all these 30 or 40 something Brooklyn indie twee pop stars associate their girly sensitive music more with punk than, say, hippies, despite the fact their music is closer to hippy or krautrock than punk. And kraut's always seemed more hippy or prog than punk to me.

Guitarzan, Saturday, 15 October 2005 16:08 (eighteen years ago) link

Alternative TV toured w/ Gong. Lydon was a Hawkwind fan.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Saturday, 15 October 2005 16:10 (eighteen years ago) link

The Damned got Nick Mason to produce their album cause they couldn't get Syd.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Saturday, 15 October 2005 16:11 (eighteen years ago) link

Especially since the guest cohost was a one-man folkster like Bob Dylan, whom punk-leaners probably consider stripped-down indie post-punk rather than folk hippy shit.

Guitarzan, Saturday, 15 October 2005 16:11 (eighteen years ago) link

(that was an xpost to myself)

Guitarzan, Saturday, 15 October 2005 16:11 (eighteen years ago) link

But guys, if there are no guitar solos then thelack of solos dates the record to like now.

walter kranz (walterkranz), Saturday, 15 October 2005 16:12 (eighteen years ago) link

Kirk Hammett, right?

Guitarzan, Saturday, 15 October 2005 16:13 (eighteen years ago) link

J.D. -- did larkin really say that? from the one collection of his jazz writings that I've read he doesn't attribute the decline of jazz to anyone person in particular.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Saturday, 15 October 2005 17:58 (eighteen years ago) link

I feel punk has been canonised so highly (particularly in the last couple of years) that it's almost illegal to diss punk music in music circles

You're under arrest!

Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Saturday, 15 October 2005 22:17 (eighteen years ago) link

dissing punk is kinda punk so you are sorta doomed no matter what you say. the kids in the sexpistols t-shirts who have never heard the sexpistols may be the punkest of all cuz they don't give a fuck who the sexpistols were. they are waaaaaay punk.

scott seward (scott seward), Saturday, 15 October 2005 22:45 (eighteen years ago) link

everybodys punk.... sometimes.... but hold on... hold on...

howell huser (chaki), Saturday, 15 October 2005 22:56 (eighteen years ago) link

Led Zeppelin invented punk.

Robert Plant says on disc two of "the Drum N' Bass Show" 5-21-77 just before The Battle of Evermore:

"This was the plan. You see, When we were teenagers in about 1971, just before we started punk rock, we used to do an acoustic set and if you've followed some of the rubbish in the papers... not the papers in Houston, of course, you'll find out that we're just about to start doing an acoustic set for you right now, so I hope you like it."

The man makes no sense. There is a bonus interview at the end of disc three where they're talking about the black object on the cover of Presence and who knows what the fuck that is all about.

Guitarzan, Saturday, 15 October 2005 23:08 (eighteen years ago) link

I've seen *two* babies in Pike place market wearing Sex Pistols onesies. Or maybe it was the same baby, and the parents live nearby & I saw them twice this summer. Anyway, it was cute. When I saw it, I actually wondered if Alex in NYC had any Killing Joke onesies for his little girl.

The only punk songs that I really like are all hardcore. (probably this is mostly to do with the fact that I listened to too much grunge in high school) So I think I have a self limiting thing going on, I know the punk songs I like are very few & far between, so I tend to avoid it- as opposed to other genres like shoegazing or something, where I'm way more likely to give new stuff a few listens.

lyra (lyra), Sunday, 16 October 2005 01:02 (eighteen years ago) link

>...asked about the VU on other threads and even their protractors say

http://www.highhopes.com/28B.JPG

The secret to the early Velvets' sound was John Cale's deep understanding of trigonometry.

Wub-Fur Internet Radio, Sunday, 16 October 2005 17:04 (eighteen years ago) link

(I am in total agreeance with dog latin's original post only I realized this back in 1987.)

The Ghost of Black Elegance (Dan Perry), Sunday, 16 October 2005 17:21 (eighteen years ago) link

Wow. You're old

;-) (jks)

dog latin (dog latin), Sunday, 16 October 2005 18:52 (eighteen years ago) link

Some people have a pretty narrow definition of punk. For me it's attitude as much as stylistic, but when the following bands can all be considered "punk" you're talking about a pretty wide variety of music:

Television
Black Flag
Wire
Ramones
Minutemen
Misfits
Fugazi
Stooges
Buzzcocks
Undertones
The Fall

If you think all punk is poorly played, hyperfast three-chord anti-government screeds, you're listening to somebody's bad stereotype of punk. Or you're thinking of hardcore, which was punk's stylistic blind alley anyway.

If you pop on "Orgasm Addict" or "Holidays In The Sun" and you don't get an instant rush of timeless rock pleasure, you may be dead.

Edward III (edward iii), Sunday, 16 October 2005 23:36 (eighteen years ago) link

ZOMBIE DISCO VIOLENCE CRAVES MORE MOOGS

disco violence (disco violence), Monday, 17 October 2005 00:46 (eighteen years ago) link

Television
Black Flag
Wire
Ramones
Minutemen
Misfits
Fugazi
Stooges
Buzzcocks
Undertones
The Fall

Of this list, the only bands I have any passing desire to ever listen to are Wire, the Minutemen and The Ramones, and they aren't high on my playlist.

The Ghost of Black Elegance (Dan Perry), Monday, 17 October 2005 14:04 (eighteen years ago) link

You don't like the Undertones? Julie Ocean? Wednesday Week? My Perfect Cousin? It's Going to Happen? These are perfect songs!

Dan Selzer (Dan Selzer), Monday, 17 October 2005 14:45 (eighteen years ago) link

Television
Wire
Ramones
Stooges
Buzzcocks
Undertones
The Fall
------------
Black Flag
Minutemen
Misfits
Fugazi

mark grout (mark grout), Monday, 17 October 2005 14:46 (eighteen years ago) link

My point really wasn't "These punk bands are great" or "How often do you listen to these punk bands?" - more like these bands all have very distinctive sounds and point out the weakness of a "punk bands all sound the same" attitude.

Any argument that starts out "Why should I respect a music genre that is a bunch of undifferentiated crap" is immediately suspect if said genre is full of differentiation. Although I suspect the basis of this argument is "Somebody turned up their nose at my beloved ELO CDs - I'll attack back!" Okay, life sucks. Buy a helmet.

Edward III (edward iii), Monday, 17 October 2005 15:51 (eighteen years ago) link

one month passes...
Y'know , after watching a ramones documentary, and starting a silly rock band with some mates i'm starting to come back round to punk. i still don't like it, but i appreciate it more.

dog latin (dog latin), Sunday, 20 November 2005 03:12 (eighteen years ago) link

:(

Yawn (Wintermute), Sunday, 20 November 2005 03:15 (eighteen years ago) link

With the exception of a handful of classic bands, most mentioned upthread, the thing that's always drawn me to punk is the DIY/fuck-the-record-industry mentality. Genres of music that I have followed in the last decade or so have mostly adhered to this. IDM/laptop stuff, DJ /Rupture/Jason Forrest style cut'n'paste, illegal remix/mash-up stuff, various types of extreme metal like doom and U.S. black metal (especially guys like Leviathan who are basically making this shit by themselves on their computers) are all very "punk" to me.

It's uncompromising, DIY stuff done for the love of doing it, not because these guys think they have a chance in hell of making any money doing it. I am drawn to it because it's pure music driven by nothing more than love.

recovering optimist (Royal Bed Bouncer), Sunday, 20 November 2005 10:21 (eighteen years ago) link

love of seeing snot-nosed wannabe-rebels pin a piece of cloth with your band's name on it onto every article of clothing they own.

oops (Oops), Sunday, 20 November 2005 20:01 (eighteen years ago) link

you know, i understand the asthetic, the hwole DIY approach, everything about it, and i even agree with a lot of it, but man, i just can't listen to it.

AaronK (AaronK), Monday, 21 November 2005 04:20 (eighteen years ago) link

I guess I don't understand what you mean by not liking it. It's so diverse, I dont get which parts you don't like. Do you like Richard Hell? Television? Stooges? Mc5? Minor Threat? Theoritical Girls? The Contortions? New York Dolls? The Dead Boys? Generation X? DEVO? Pere Ubu? Clash? Green Day? The minutemen?

Anything that has ever been considered punk by anybody? Bands that sound like the Ramones? The New York 1970s scene? Detroit in the 60s, England in the 70s, LA in the 80s? Bands that are snotty? What do you mean by punk?

2 and 3 and 2 and 5, Monday, 21 November 2005 10:19 (eighteen years ago) link

I guess I don't understand what you mean by not liking it. It's so diverse, I dont get which parts you don't like. Do you like Richard Hell? Television? Stooges? Mc5? Minor Threat? Theoritical Girls? The Contortions? New York Dolls? The Dead Boys? Generation X? DEVO? Pere Ubu? Clash? Green Day? The minutemen?

OH THE DIVERSITY

Theorry Henry (Enrique), Monday, 21 November 2005 10:24 (eighteen years ago) link

http://www.probertencyclopaedia.com/j/Angela%20Lansbury.jpg
"He's at the aggge of notttt belieeevinggggg"

mark grout (mark grout), Monday, 21 November 2005 10:48 (eighteen years ago) link

I guess I don't understand what you mean by not liking it. It's so diverse, I dont get which parts you don't like. Do you like Richard Hell? Television? Stooges? Mc5? Minor Threat? Theoritical Girls? The Contortions? New York Dolls? The Dead Boys? Generation X? DEVO? Pere Ubu? Clash? Green Day? The minutemen?

OH THE DIVERSITY

Have you ever listened to these bands, Theorry? There's an awful lot of stylistic real estate between Minor Threat and Pere Ubu and the Theoretical Girls, yet all fall under the umbrella of Punk. It is the quintessence of diversity.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Monday, 21 November 2005 14:23 (eighteen years ago) link

...y'know, unlike, say, Hip Hop.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Monday, 21 November 2005 14:25 (eighteen years ago) link

mind you i'd say minor threat = hardcore.

but if punk is as diverse as you say, then why not ashlee simpson?

Theorry Henry (Enrique), Monday, 21 November 2005 14:34 (eighteen years ago) link

mind you i'd say minor threat = hardcore.

hardcore is to punk what acorns are to oak trees, silly person.

but if punk is as diverse as you say, then why not ashlee simpson?

Just because a genre is diverse, that doesn't necessarily make it all-encompasing.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Monday, 21 November 2005 14:48 (eighteen years ago) link

ok, why is ashlee less punk than the authors of 'when september ends'?

Theorry Henry (Enrique), Monday, 21 November 2005 14:56 (eighteen years ago) link

hardcore is to punk what acorns are to oak trees, silly person.

when is punk's cut-off point then? anyone who is inspired by punk, and anyone who inspired punk, is a punk?

Theorry Henry (Enrique), Monday, 21 November 2005 14:57 (eighteen years ago) link

hardcore is a direct descendent of punk. A stream-lined, arguably "purist" form to some.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Monday, 21 November 2005 15:35 (eighteen years ago) link

If they say they were inspired by punk, then they were.

Unless they are lying.

mark grout (mark grout), Monday, 21 November 2005 15:40 (eighteen years ago) link

given scritti politi's trajectory, is nu-pop punk in the same way, alex?

Theorry Henry (Enrique), Monday, 21 November 2005 15:44 (eighteen years ago) link

You can say you were inspired by Thomas Jefferson. But having read only his name in a 6th grade history book does not mean you have any idea what you're talking about.

D.I.Y. U.N.K.L.E. (dave225.3), Monday, 21 November 2005 16:02 (eighteen years ago) link

so hardcore acts are certified by... you, i take it, as knowing their onions? and who might you be?

Theorry Henry (Enrique), Monday, 21 November 2005 16:34 (eighteen years ago) link

I just present arguments - I don't solve them!

D.I.Y. U.N.K.L.E. (dave225.3), Monday, 21 November 2005 16:44 (eighteen years ago) link

Regarding Scritti Politti, might I recommend Simon Reynolds' exhaustive tome, Rip It Up & Start Again to examine the connections between New Pop and Punk, but yes, I'd say they're connected. I don't claim to be an authority however. That said, I know enough to be able to assert that Ashlee Simpson simply doesn't qualify as Punk.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Monday, 21 November 2005 16:47 (eighteen years ago) link

Are we supposed to quote David Berman now, or do I wait for someone to post a jpeg of Avril?

A|ex P@reene (Pareene), Monday, 21 November 2005 17:45 (eighteen years ago) link

This was my problem from the first post-- what bands exactly does he not like? I'm still interested in knowing.

And yeah, if you think DEVO and the New York Dolls sound the same you're a fucking moron.

ps... always thought hardcore was short for... hardcore punk... but maybe Im just crazy

2 and 3 and 2 and 5, Monday, 21 November 2005 18:46 (eighteen years ago) link

...y'know, unlike, say, Hip Hop.

Are you being "controversial" here?

Dan (Get A New Hobby Horse Already) Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 21 November 2005 19:01 (eighteen years ago) link

ps... always thought hardcore was short for... hardcore punk... but maybe Im just crazy

I was going to cite that too, but I've seen arguments to the contrary.

...y'know, unlike, say, Hip Hop.

Are you being "controversial" here?

No, here I believe I was "being a dick," but by the same token, I'd assert with a straight-face that there's more diversity under the banner of Punk than there is under the banner of Hip Hop.


Alex in NYC (vassifer), Monday, 21 November 2005 19:13 (eighteen years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.