Was just listening to The Skids this morning. What a band! For those of you lucky to be alive when punk rock was in it's prime (sex pistols, the damned etc) I have a couple of questions. Did any of you have any experiences meeting any band members? My Dad had his pint nabbed by Joe Strummer!
Also, what other punk bands were good/big at the time?
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Thread: Punk Era
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17-06-2019 07:40 AM #1
Punk Era
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17-06-2019 09:00 AM #2This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
One band in particular I’d recommend is the Pete Perret band (ex The Only Ones). Saw them two weeks ago and they were superb. No idea how Pete Perret is still alive given his heavy addictions back in the day but he’s an amazing talent!
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17-06-2019 10:16 AM #3
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17-06-2019 10:35 AM #4
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The 'big three' back then were the Sex Pistols, the Clash and the Damned. The Pistols set things ablaze but burned out very quickly, although their classic singles are still as thrilling as the day they were first aired. The Damned were more cartoonish and lacked the depth of the Clash, but they're still going in some format to this day. The Clash had a terrific songwriting duo in Strummer and Mick Jones. When you consider their third album London Calling came out only a couple of years or so after their debut album their musical development as a band was remarkable. Strummer could speak as much nonsense as sense back in the day, but he was a magnetic and much-loved front man, while in bassist Paul Simonon they had a bass player whose good looks and sartorial style influences the wardrobe of a generation of men to this day! When Strummer and Jones buried the hatched a few years after the classic Clash line-up broke up, they collaborated on a few excellent songs for Jones' later band Big Audio Dynamite which hinted at what the Clash could have become had they been able to hold things together.
As good as any of those bands IMHO, though less commercially successful, were Stiff Little Fingers. In their original guise they were simply explosive. Also from Northern Ireland were the Undertones, another great band, who while less 'punk' or political than SLF turned out some terrific singles about everyday life.
Buzzcocks also released some brilliant stuff, while there were stacks of one-hit wonder bands around whose singles defined the era. Check out Sound of the Suburbs by the Members, Gary Gilmore's Eyes by the Adverts and Oh Bondage Up Yours by X-Ray Spex.
Outwith the UK, honourable mention should go to the Ramones, who came out of the same CBGB's stable as Blondie and Talking Heads and were hugely influential.
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17-06-2019 10:51 AM #5This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Its such a broad spectrum of music that has diversified and evolved over the years that there are so many bands that are worth listening to.
From the first wave of UK Bands i would suggest listening to:
- Slaughter and the Dogs - "Do it dog style"
- 999 - "999"
- X-Ray spex - "germ free adolescents"
- Vibrators - "pure mania"
- Stiff Little Fingers - "Inflammable Material"
- UK Subs - "another kind of blues"
- Chelsea - "Chelsea"
From American Early Stuff
- Ramones - "Ramones", "Leave Home" adn "Rocket to Russia" are my favourite ones
- Dictators - "Go Girl Crazy"
- Dead Boys - "Young Loud & Snotty"
- Johnny Thunders & The Heartbreakers - "L.A.M.F."
- Television - "Marquee Moon"
You could listen to some of the bans that were a pre-cursor to the punk scene that started in USA - MC5, The Stooges and The New York Dolls probably the best of those.
There are some good second wave uk bands that came out in the 80's including The Adicts, Angelic Upstarts, The Business, Cock Sparrer, Exploited, The Ejected, Abrasive Wheels, The Threats, Menace, GBH. There was also a lot of generic rubbish under the Oi banner being promoted by Garry Bushell at that time which is well worth avoiding and sometimes a bit right wing for my liking.
There were also some great Anarcho Punk bands around that time like:
- Conflict
- Discharge
- Varukers
- Sub-Humans
- Crass
- Oi Polloi
A lot of great stuff from the early 80's in theamerican hardcore scene with bands like:
- Bad Religion
- Regan Youth
- Adolescents
- Gang green
- Dead kennedys
- DOA
- Misfits
- Circle Jerks
- Black Flag
- Minor Threat
- Bad Brains
- Beastie Boys (from the early 80's)
- Germs
of the above Black Flag and the Dead Kennedy's are the stand outs.
i stopped collecting records as much towards 2000, so i caught a lot of the re-emergence of american punk in the early 90's onwards with bands like Rancid, NOFX, Face to Face, Swinging Utters, The Dwarves, Dropkick Murphys, Screeching Weasel, The Descendents..........
There's a very, very potted history but some stuff in there you might find you like, some you might hate too
If you want a whole live experience try The Rebellion Festival in Blackpool in August - it pretty much covers the whole spectrum of punk rock over 3 or 4 days. I've not been for a good few years but used to go religously until old age got the better of me
http://www.rebellionfestivals.com/
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17-06-2019 12:28 PM #7
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17-06-2019 01:32 PM #8
I think the ‘punk attitude ‘ changed a lot of musical snobbery for good. It blew a hole through the notion you needed to be well educated and a muso to form a band. It kind of reached back to the very formation of rock n’ roll and if you had a talent you could pick up an instrument and let rip. DIY clothing , anti-fashion lasted about two years then punk uniforms were sold to the masses who wanted to buy into the rebellion thing. Even now, hordes of ‘punks’ can be seen herding in the likes of Camden or at some gigs with the standard shop bought gear. It’s good to remember the lasting influence from that time can still be seen in groups today who openly pay homage to the bands from the 1976-1978 era. Some of it was corny, manufactured but the main wave of energy and attitude gave loads of us the confidence to do stuff we’d otherwise never have done!
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17-06-2019 01:45 PM #9This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I don't accept that at all
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17-06-2019 03:26 PM #10
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17-06-2019 04:15 PM #11This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Paul and John Mackie of the Scars were 2/3 years below me at school in Currie, great lads.
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17-06-2019 04:18 PM #12
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Knew the lead singer from Oi Polloi, he inspired us to put a punk band together but we were ****ter than **** !!
See and chat to Wattie Buchan from the Exploited now and then.
Knew Stuart Adamson post skids quite well before he tragically took his own life.
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17-06-2019 04:49 PM #13This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
He was an architect and turned up unannounced at our office in the mid-late 90s looking for a job, complete with his design for the Scottish Parliament building on a roll of crumpled tracing paper under his arm. The design was well thought out and very interesting but you could tell he had his demons at that time.
I spoke to him a few times later when he was playing in the Oak, Bells and the like and he seemed a lot more settled.
He was also an original member of Silly Wizard but, as he did with other groups, he left at exactly the wrong time.Last edited by Peevemor; 17-06-2019 at 04:54 PM.
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17-06-2019 05:45 PM #14
I don't know if this will mean anything to anyone (it certainly wouldn't have for me if I was still in Scotland), but I know Loran from French punk group Bérurier Noir pretty well.
https://fr.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loran_B%C3%A9ru
I could write screeds about him but suffice to say that he's a sponge for knowledge and is one of the brightest, genuine, selfless and most interesting people that I know. Not many, myself included, would get that impression that on first sight.
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17-06-2019 07:19 PM #15
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I was at a wedding a few years back and there was a covers band playing called the Honeymoons who were a cut above most such bands. Turned out the lead singer was Stuart's daughter Kirsten. Here she is with a former band the Gillyflowers:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T8ij_CqcRdE
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17-06-2019 07:41 PM #16
As someone who probably spends more time on music forums than football ones this is fascinating thread.
We can all agree on football. I thought I liked music from that era and without wishing to offend anyone (the ultimate musical fanboy opening line) loads of the stuff listed here is dire.
I know that won't be a popular opinion but sheesh I've just read it again
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17-06-2019 07:42 PM #17
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17-06-2019 07:43 PM #18This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Going back about 20 years there was a mental hardcore band called Brezhnev from Holland that crashed at my flat when they played Edinburgh.
I had visions of a trashed gaff but it was quite the opposite, a late night and a lot of drink admittedly. When I said there was only one spare bed they insisted their driver had it. One of them slept in the van to make sure no one nicked their gear and when he came up in the morning he said he'd been woken up by the old woman on the ground floor who took him out a cup of tea
They evem did the dishes and hoovered before they left.
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17-06-2019 07:54 PM #19This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I'll really put the cat amongst the pigeons and state that the clash only had one great album and London calling is no better than average
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17-06-2019 08:24 PM #20This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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17-06-2019 08:27 PM #21This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
You want the real cat amongst the pigeons, with the exception of X Ray Spex, Ramones and Television your first two lists are terrible
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17-06-2019 08:39 PM #22This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I would respectfully suggest that you're talking out your hat as SLF first album is a classic. And furthermore whilst the television album is well worth a listen it isn't a patch on the dead boys album, I'll assume you clearly just haven't listened to it
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17-06-2019 09:19 PM #23This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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17-06-2019 09:22 PM #24This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
So Death or Glory, Bankrobber, I fought the law, straight to hell, train in vain, Tommy Gun are all not really good compared to Protex Blue for example. SLF's lyrics were written by a Daily Express journalist and the music was third rate Clash rip offs.
Slaughter and the Dogs?? I genuinely audibly laughed at that.
You like Pere Ubu, Wire, Magazine, Patti Smith, Suicide, PIL, Richard Hell & the Voidoids or is that stuff too arty?
Good call on Black Flag and Circle Jerks but what about Husker Du, Mission of Burma, Meat Puppets, Minutemen, Fugazi, Replacements, etc?.
Some people believe punk/new wave was just three chord shouty dirges. It wasn't. Or it shouldn't be
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17-06-2019 09:24 PM #25This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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17-06-2019 09:26 PM #26This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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17-06-2019 09:34 PM #27This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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17-06-2019 09:47 PM #28
Punk isn’t my thing, and probably more post punk than what the opening post was looking for, but Magazine,The Buzzcocks & Joy Division are about as far as I go with “Punk”.
Edit, can add Patti Smith to my brief list as well after seeing someone else mention her.Last edited by The Modfather; 17-06-2019 at 10:02 PM.
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17-06-2019 09:54 PM #29This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Patti smith did some amazing stuff.
Most of the US bands you mention there were bands I would listen to. Fugazi are good but I do prefer minor threat, and to a lesser extent the teen idles sole EP.
I wouldn't agree on your view on slaughter and the dogs. I think that album is an excellent piece of work.
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17-06-2019 10:17 PM #30This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
We're not going to agree on it all but hey ho
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