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Who Loves the RAMONES? I do. I do. Check out the new film End of the Century: The Story of the Ramones
What is your opinion of the band? For Against Indifferent | |
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I think a better question would be...
Who doesn't love the Ramones? I mean...c'mon now...it's the Ramones!!! What's not to love about them? | |
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heartbeatocean said: I do. I do. Check out the new film End of the Century: The Story of the Ramones
What is your opinion of the band? For Against Indifferent I DO I DO!!! dying ta see that film. I've been a huge Ramones fan since i was in the 6th grade! I live in NY and once i saw Dee Dee in the street and I had on a leather jacket with the road to ruin cover painted on the back and Dee Dee goes, "HEY MAN, nice JACKET." I said, "Thanks, Dee Dee!" and he proceeded to follow me around for three fucking hours, but like a block or two away!! At first i thought it was cool, but then i started to get scared, i thought he was gonna mug me and steal my jacket and sell it for drugs! DO YOUR PARENTS KNOW THAT YOU'RE RAMONES? fo' someone who can't stand dem tv dinnas, you sho' eat enough of them mutha#@$%!s | |
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these guys are the ones who got me into punk rock in the first place--i remember hearing "blitzkrieg bop" all the time on some college radio station and falling in love with it. that, and my graphic tech teacher in high school used to sometimes recite the lyrics to "beat on the brat". their first album is my fave...i remember back about a couple years ago when i was gettin my 2nd tattoo done, and i was in a conversation with the tattoo artist. i think i had my cd player with me and i was listenin to the ramones that day and the guy goes, "i could never get into the ramones, their songs are too short." i'm like, "that's the beauty of it!"
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800oldfunk said: and he proceeded to follow me around for three fucking hours, but like a block or two away!! At first i thought it was cool, but then i started to get scared, i thought he was gonna mug me and steal my jacket and sell it for drugs!
That's hilarious. Maybe he wanted you for a trick. I love the part in End of the Century when he's receiving induction at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and he says, "I want to thank myself. I want to thank Dee Dee Ramone. I want to pat myself on the back. I love you Dee Dee." | |
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Handclapsfingasnapz said: the guy goes, "i could never get into the ramones, their songs are too short."
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I do. Great band. Legendary. SynthiaRose said "I'm in love with blackguitaristz. Especially when he talks about Hendrix."
nammie "What BGZ says I believe. I have the biggest crush on him." http://ccoshea19.googlepa...ssanctuary http://ccoshea19.googlepages.com | |
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heartbeatocean said: 800oldfunk said: and he proceeded to follow me around for three fucking hours, but like a block or two away!! At first i thought it was cool, but then i started to get scared, i thought he was gonna mug me and steal my jacket and sell it for drugs!
That's hilarious. Maybe he wanted you for a trick. I love the part in End of the Century when he's receiving induction at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and he says, "I want to thank myself. I want to thank Dee Dee Ramone. I want to pat myself on the back. I love you Dee Dee." yeah me too! he was so funny at the R&RHOF. and the 'trick' issue crossed my mind as well! 53rd and 3rd! standin on the street... fo' someone who can't stand dem tv dinnas, you sho' eat enough of them mutha#@$%!s | |
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Anybody remotely interested in punk rock needs to listen to the Ramones. They stripped rock down to its 3 chord, 3 minutes (many times shorter), bass/drums/guitar essence. Plus, they were just damn FUN.
If the Ramones ever wrote a song about incest and Joey Ramone sounded like an imp with a falsetto it would sound like the 1 1/2 minute "Sister." This post not for the wimp contingent. All whiny wusses avert your eyes. | |
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Supernova said: [color=darkblue]Anybody remotely interested in punk rock needs to listen to the Ramones. They stripped rock down to its 3 chord, 3 minutes (many times shorter), bass/drums/guitar essence.
You'll probably shoot me for this ,but I dont understand why this is a good thing.But Ive also never been remotely interested in punk rock. I dont understand it's appeal.It seems to me like a fad that caught on very suddenly and died just as quickly due to an obvious lack of talent by (mostly) all involved( not necessarily the Ramones ) who were angry at how bloated the "Rock" industry had become.Despite what critics said at the time, it didn't really change anything for the better, did it? If anything ,such a reactionary movement would be more appropriate today, than in the late 70s. "...all you need ...is justa touch...of mojo hand....." | |
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MrTation said: Supernova said: [color=darkblue]Anybody remotely interested in punk rock needs to listen to the Ramones. They stripped rock down to its 3 chord, 3 minutes (many times shorter), bass/drums/guitar essence.
You'll probably shoot me for this ,but I dont understand why this is a good thing.But Ive also never been remotely interested in punk rock. I dont understand it's appeal.It seems to me like a fad that caught on very suddenly and died just as quickly due to an obvious lack of talent by (mostly) all involved( not necessarily the Ramones ) who were angry at how bloated the "Rock" industry had become.Despite what critics said at the time, it didn't really change anything for the better, did it? If anything ,such a reactionary movement would be more appropriate today, than in the late 70s. I'm sitting here in my Sex Pistols T-shirt. I'll pretend I did not just read that. | |
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By the way, The Ramones | |
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are the ramones a band? I thought they made T-SHIRTS? | |
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"Now I wanna sniff some glue, now I wanna have something to do!!!!!....." [Edited 9/3/04 20:24pm] NEW WAVE FOREVER: SLAVE TO THE WAVE FROM THE CRADLE TO THE GRAVE. | |
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MrTation said: Supernova said: Anybody remotely interested in punk rock needs to listen to the Ramones. They stripped rock down to its 3 chord, 3 minutes (many times shorter), bass/drums/guitar essence.
You'll probably shoot me for this ,but I dont understand why this is a good thing.But Ive also never been remotely interested in punk rock. I dont understand it's appeal.It seems to me like a fad that caught on very suddenly and died just as quickly due to an obvious lack of talent by (mostly) all involved( not necessarily the Ramones ) who were angry at how bloated the "Rock" industry had become.Despite what critics said at the time, it didn't really change anything for the better, did it? If anything ,such a reactionary movement would be more appropriate today, than in the late 70s. No shooting. I don't listen to tons of punk myself, but there is that percentage of it that to me has the appeal of running around naked in the house and screaming the lyrics. To me stripping it down to its bare essentials of bass guitar and drums isn't the appeal in and of itself. If you remember, in rock music's early history it was a pretty much basic style of music, and a 3 minute single dominated business, until the more artistic album free of (as much) filler became the standard in the late '60s. Rock isn't a genre that started out as being guitar based, but once it became guitar based 3 chords for a 3 minute song was the common calling card. To make rock music like this at that time was the norm, but by it becoming the standard it eventually fell out of favor. Any rock musicians can make short rock songs, but to make it short, and make it compelling is something else altogether. And granted, whether it's compelling or not is in the ear of the behearer. When the Beatles, Dylan, the Stones, et. al. started creating their "statement" work, rock music started to become more elaborate, the arrangements more complex, the production became more glossy, it was shedding its garage band appeal, and that's eventually what dominated FM radio. Concept albums became the norm, groups like Pink Floyd, Rush, Led Zeppelin, the Stones, Boston, the Disco genre, progressive rock in general - these things were in part what Punk was rebelling against. The punks called any groups who (they deemed) were complacent and had a history of selling out arenas and stadiums "Dinosaurs." In short, any established group who was extremely successful. They were the corporate fat cats. It was as much a backlash against the state of the music industry and its values as it was against any recording artists. I think that breeds a much needed shot in the arm at times. I don't think it's a bad thing to light a fire under some asses when the zeitgeist loses sight of what Rock music is about: not your parents' music, it was geared toward the common geek, outcasts who discovered music that spoke for them. If rock's early days were about throwing a brick thru the window of Ozzie and Harriet Nelson's house, then punk rock was about aiming a wrecking ball at the house of corporate rock, at The Man, at stagnation. When you say it caught on suddenly and died quickly, you're right. Punk is a limited genre to begin with. You don't need to be proficient on your instrument (but that's really not the point of it) and a lot of punk groups can't play worth crap. If you try to expand you'll be acccused of selling out and becoming what you once rebelled against. Which is what happened when The Clash released London Calling, which is also probably why they're my favorite, they were talented enough and smart enough not to let the limits of punk become self-defeating. As far as it changing anything, not if you're talking about the movement becoming the norm, no. Tho, the work is there for eternity, and its influence is still heard in many subsequent artists. But as I said, to me when it became a movement in the late '70s it shook people up, while at the same time giving voice to anger and social alienation. Ps, ironically (and at least in the States), it was "corporate rock" fans and dj's who were burning Disco records. I don't remember Punks taking it that far. This post not for the wimp contingent. All whiny wusses avert your eyes. | |
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Also, as I understand it, one might want to make a distinction between Ramones punk rock and Sex Pistols punk rock. The advent of the Sex Pistols and their American tour were devastation for the Ramones because punk rock got stereotyped as vomiting and spitting and the Ramones lost their chance at the mainstream audience. The Ramones actually did want to break through and sell more records, so I'm not sure they were worried about selling out.
In fact, I don't know if they even fit what people usually think of as 'punk'. But the point is they had a highly original aesthetic -- superfast songs, no guitar solos, dopey lyrics, no pauses between songs in their sets, etc which could only reveal a certain pretentiousness in the music of the day. A lot of what they were reacting to was elaborate psychadelic rock from the 60's and early '70 as well. So the stripped down thing was something new and original. They're stage act was extremely tight, lyrics compelling, and the music is melodic and influenced by the Beach Boys. It's an exciting combination of disparate elements. I actually find it a mystery as to why I like them so much since they do sound kind of bad. I guess that's what they call art... | |
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For
Talking about great movies and the Ramones, every music fan on the planet should see "Rock and Roll High School" at least once It's a bit silly but very entertaining. | |
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heartbeatocean said: Also, as I understand it, one might want to make a distinction between Ramones punk rock and Sex Pistols punk rock.
Sure, just like Springsteen rock and Led Zeppelin rock is different. This post not for the wimp contingent. All whiny wusses avert your eyes. | |
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Supernova said: MrTation said: You'll probably shoot me for this ,but I dont understand why this is a good thing.But Ive also never been remotely interested in punk rock. I dont understand it's appeal.It seems to me like a fad that caught on very suddenly and died just as quickly due to an obvious lack of talent by (mostly) all involved( not necessarily the Ramones ) who were angry at how bloated the "Rock" industry had become.Despite what critics said at the time, it didn't really change anything for the better, did it? If anything ,such a reactionary movement would be more appropriate today, than in the late 70s. No shooting. I don't listen to tons of punk myself, but there is that percentage of it that to me has the appeal of running around naked in the house and screaming the lyrics. To me stripping it down to its bare essentials of bass guitar and drums isn't the appeal in and of itself. If you remember, in rock music's early history it was a pretty much basic style of music, and a 3 minute single dominated business, until the more artistic album free of (as much) filler became the standard in the late '60s. Rock isn't a genre that started out as being guitar based, but once it became guitar based 3 chords for a 3 minute song was the common calling card. To make rock music like this at that time was the norm, but by it becoming the standard it eventually fell out of favor. Any rock musicians can make short rock songs, but to make it short, and make it compelling is something else altogether. And granted, whether it's compelling or not is in the ear of the behearer. When the Beatles, Dylan, the Stones, et. al. started creating their "statement" work, rock music started to become more elaborate, the arrangements more complex, the production became more glossy, it was shedding its garage band appeal, and that's eventually what dominated FM radio. Concept albums became the norm, groups like Pink Floyd, Rush, Led Zeppelin, the Stones, Boston, the Disco genre, progressive rock in general - these things were in part what Punk was rebelling against. The punks called any groups who (they deemed) were complacent and had a history of selling out arenas and stadiums "Dinosaurs." In short, any established group who was extremely successful. They were the corporate fat cats. It was as much a backlash against the state of the music industry and its values as it was against any recording artists. I think that breeds a much needed shot in the arm at times. I don't think it's a bad thing to light a fire under some asses when the zeitgeist loses sight of what Rock music is about: not your parents' music, it was geared toward the common geek, outcasts who discovered music that spoke for them. If rock's early days were about throwing a brick thru the window of Ozzie and Harriet Nelson's house, then punk rock was about aiming a wrecking ball at the house of corporate rock, at The Man, at stagnation. When you say it caught on suddenly and died quickly, you're right. Punk is a limited genre to begin with. You don't need to be proficient on your instrument (but that's really not the point of it) and a lot of punk groups can't play worth crap. If you try to expand you'll be acccused of selling out and becoming what you once rebelled against. Which is what happened when The Clash released London Calling, which is also probably why they're my favorite, they were talented enough and smart enough not to let the limits of punk become self-defeating. As far as it changing anything, not if you're talking about the movement becoming the norm, no. Tho, the work is there for eternity, and its influence is still heard in many subsequent artists. But as I said, to me when it became a movement in the late '70s it shook people up, while at the same time giving voice to anger and social alienation. Ps, ironically (and at least in the States), it was "corporate rock" fans and dj's who were burning Disco records. I don't remember Punks taking it that far. [/color] Great explanation Supernova. Like MrTation, I didn't get it either. My problem was/is, the folks I knew/know always wanted to play their instruments well and were taken aback by the success (albeit shortlived) of those that didn't care if they could play or not. This ire continues today with certain rap acts. Although not a big Ramones fan, I did occasionally catch myself singing... I just wanna have some kicks. I just wanna get some chicks. ...and Twenty-twenty-twenty four hours to go I wanna be sedated Nothin' to do and no where to go-o-oh I wanna be sedated Personal sidebar: Marky Ramone (aka Mark Bell) has a brother (Fred) who played guitar in a NYC band called Dust many years ago. When I was just starting to play drums, I got to jam with Fred who, to me, was not only a good player but also bore a striking resemblance to Jeff Beck. "...there is that percentage of it that to me has the appeal of running around naked..." Is that available for purchase anywhere? tA Tribal Disorder http://www.soundclick.com...rmusic.htm [Edited 9/4/04 0:34am] "Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all." | |
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TheJourney4all7 said: MrTation said: You'll probably shoot me for this ,but I dont understand why this is a good thing.But Ive also never been remotely interested in punk rock. I dont understand it's appeal.It seems to me like a fad that caught on very suddenly and died just as quickly due to an obvious lack of talent by (mostly) all involved( not necessarily the Ramones ) who were angry at how bloated the "Rock" industry had become.Despite what critics said at the time, it didn't really change anything for the better, did it? If anything ,such a reactionary movement would be more appropriate today, than in the late 70s. I'm sitting here in my Sex Pistols T-shirt. I'll pretend I did not just read that. I'm not sitting here in my Sex Pistols T-shirt, but ditto on the rest of that anyway. "I saw a woman with major Hammer pants on the subway a few weeks ago and totally thought of you." - sextonseven | |
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Supernova said: MrTation said: You'll probably shoot me for this ,but I dont understand why this is a good thing.But Ive also never been remotely interested in punk rock. I dont understand it's appeal.It seems to me like a fad that caught on very suddenly and died just as quickly due to an obvious lack of talent by (mostly) all involved( not necessarily the Ramones ) who were angry at how bloated the "Rock" industry had become.Despite what critics said at the time, it didn't really change anything for the better, did it? If anything ,such a reactionary movement would be more appropriate today, than in the late 70s. No shooting. I don't listen to tons of punk myself, but there is that percentage of it that to me has the appeal of running around naked in the house and screaming the lyrics. To me stripping it down to its bare essentials of bass guitar and drums isn't the appeal in and of itself. If you remember, in rock music's early history it was a pretty much basic style of music, and a 3 minute single dominated business, until the more artistic album free of (as much) filler became the standard in the late '60s. Rock isn't a genre that started out as being guitar based, but once it became guitar based 3 chords for a 3 minute song was the common calling card. To make rock music like this at that time was the norm, but by it becoming the standard it eventually fell out of favor. Any rock musicians can make short rock songs, but to make it short, and make it compelling is something else altogether. And granted, whether it's compelling or not is in the ear of the behearer. When the Beatles, Dylan, the Stones, et. al. started creating their "statement" work, rock music started to become more elaborate, the arrangements more complex, the production became more glossy, it was shedding its garage band appeal, and that's eventually what dominated FM radio. Concept albums became the norm, groups like Pink Floyd, Rush, Led Zeppelin, the Stones, Boston, the Disco genre, progressive rock in general - these things were in part what Punk was rebelling against. The punks called any groups who (they deemed) were complacent and had a history of selling out arenas and stadiums "Dinosaurs." In short, any established group who was extremely successful. They were the corporate fat cats. It was as much a backlash against the state of the music industry and its values as it was against any recording artists. I think that breeds a much needed shot in the arm at times. I don't think it's a bad thing to light a fire under some asses when the zeitgeist loses sight of what Rock music is about: not your parents' music, it was geared toward the common geek, outcasts who discovered music that spoke for them. If rock's early days were about throwing a brick thru the window of Ozzie and Harriet Nelson's house, then punk rock was about aiming a wrecking ball at the house of corporate rock, at The Man, at stagnation. When you say it caught on suddenly and died quickly, you're right. Punk is a limited genre to begin with. You don't need to be proficient on your instrument (but that's really not the point of it) and a lot of punk groups can't play worth crap. If you try to expand you'll be acccused of selling out and becoming what you once rebelled against. Which is what happened when The Clash released London Calling, which is also probably why they're my favorite, they were talented enough and smart enough not to let the limits of punk become self-defeating. As far as it changing anything, not if you're talking about the movement becoming the norm, no. Tho, the work is there for eternity, and its influence is still heard in many subsequent artists. But as I said, to me when it became a movement in the late '70s it shook people up, while at the same time giving voice to anger and social alienation. Ps, ironically (and at least in the States), it was "corporate rock" fans and dj's who were burning Disco records. I don't remember Punks taking it that far. [/color] Well, for me in a nutshell, (God I can't believe I even just used that term. I hate it) Anyway, I am a huge old school punk music fan and I'm also a huge fan of classic (arena rock) as well. I got into both at the same time in my life, (all the while being ridiculed by fans from both camps ) yet somehow I've been able to embrace both genres, even to this day. They can both move me, yet in completely different ways of course. "I saw a woman with major Hammer pants on the subway a few weeks ago and totally thought of you." - sextonseven | |
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Cool. I was a Ramoni .. Cool. | |
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mmm! i just read supernova's big ol' response above (niiiiice ) and it was right on. people have totally just passed off punk as just the whole safety pins n'gobbing-type thing, but it ain't so. this summer i've been reading a couple books about the entire punk rock movement here in the u.s., and if you don't know a whole lot about how it all was then you may wanna run to the nearest library or bookstore and have a peep at these:
we got the neutron bomb: the untold story of l.a. punk by marc spitz & brendan mullen (i just finished this one a couple days ago and i learned a lot from it) please kill me: the uncensored oral history of punk by legs mcneil & gillian mccain (just started readin this one...so far, so good) ...both of these books have tons of testimonials from people who were there when the whole shebang started and how it all used to be before the mainstream caught on to it and watered it down. get a hold of these two books if you haven't already, ya'll. btw, i just came across a copy of rock n'roll high school on dvd today...just started watchin a bit of it a few minutes ago and i think it's fuckin awesome. that, and i found out the other day that the ramones documentary is gonna be showin here in mpls on the 17th, so i'll definitely be headin over to see it. can't wait! | |
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Handclapsfingasnapz said: mmm! i just read supernova's big ol' response above (niiiiice ) and it was right on. people have totally just passed off punk as just the whole safety pins n'gobbing-type thing, but it ain't so. this summer i've been reading a couple books about the entire punk rock movement here in the u.s., and if you don't know a whole lot about how it all was then you may wanna run to the nearest library or bookstore and have a peep at these:
we got the neutron bomb: the untold story of l.a. punk by marc spitz & brendan mullen (i just finished this one a couple days ago and i learned a lot from it) please kill me: the uncensored oral history of punk by legs mcneil & gillian mccain (just started readin this one...so far, so good) ...both of these books have tons of testimonials from people who were there when the whole shebang started and how it all used to be before the mainstream caught on to it and watered it down. get a hold of these two books if you haven't already, ya'll. btw, i just came across a copy of rock n'roll high school on dvd today...just started watchin a bit of it a few minutes ago and i think it's fuckin awesome. that, and i found out the other day that the ramones documentary is gonna be showin here in mpls on the 17th, so i'll definitely be headin over to see it. can't wait! Yeah, I wanna see that new movie myself. NEW WAVE FOREVER: SLAVE TO THE WAVE FROM THE CRADLE TO THE GRAVE. | |
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theAudience said: Great explanation Supernova. Like MrTation, I didn't get it either. You're yankin my chain. "...there is that percentage of it that to me has the appeal of running around naked..." Is that available for purchase anywhere? Nahh. I keep my exhibitionism confined under my own roof. This post not for the wimp contingent. All whiny wusses avert your eyes. | |
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minneapolisgenius said: Supernova said: No shooting. I don't listen to tons of punk myself, but there is that percentage of it that to me has the appeal of running around naked in the house and screaming the lyrics. To me stripping it down to its bare essentials of bass guitar and drums isn't the appeal in and of itself. If you remember, in rock music's early history it was a pretty much basic style of music, and a 3 minute single dominated business, until the more artistic album free of (as much) filler became the standard in the late '60s. Rock isn't a genre that started out as being guitar based, but once it became guitar based 3 chords for a 3 minute song was the common calling card. To make rock music like this at that time was the norm, but by it becoming the standard it eventually fell out of favor. Any rock musicians can make short rock songs, but to make it short, and make it compelling is something else altogether. And granted, whether it's compelling or not is in the ear of the behearer. When the Beatles, Dylan, the Stones, et. al. started creating their "statement" work, rock music started to become more elaborate, the arrangements more complex, the production became more glossy, it was shedding its garage band appeal, and that's eventually what dominated FM radio. Concept albums became the norm, groups like Pink Floyd, Rush, Led Zeppelin, the Stones, Boston, the Disco genre, progressive rock in general - these things were in part what Punk was rebelling against. The punks called any groups who (they deemed) were complacent and had a history of selling out arenas and stadiums "Dinosaurs." In short, any established group who was extremely successful. They were the corporate fat cats. It was as much a backlash against the state of the music industry and its values as it was against any recording artists. I think that breeds a much needed shot in the arm at times. I don't think it's a bad thing to light a fire under some asses when the zeitgeist loses sight of what Rock music is about: not your parents' music, it was geared toward the common geek, outcasts who discovered music that spoke for them. If rock's early days were about throwing a brick thru the window of Ozzie and Harriet Nelson's house, then punk rock was about aiming a wrecking ball at the house of corporate rock, at The Man, at stagnation. When you say it caught on suddenly and died quickly, you're right. Punk is a limited genre to begin with. You don't need to be proficient on your instrument (but that's really not the point of it) and a lot of punk groups can't play worth crap. If you try to expand you'll be acccused of selling out and becoming what you once rebelled against. Which is what happened when The Clash released London Calling, which is also probably why they're my favorite, they were talented enough and smart enough not to let the limits of punk become self-defeating. As far as it changing anything, not if you're talking about the movement becoming the norm, no. Tho, the work is there for eternity, and its influence is still heard in many subsequent artists. But as I said, to me when it became a movement in the late '70s it shook people up, while at the same time giving voice to anger and social alienation. Ps, ironically (and at least in the States), it was "corporate rock" fans and dj's who were burning Disco records. I don't remember Punks taking it that far. [/color] Well, for me in a nutshell, (God I can't believe I even just used that term. I hate it) Anyway, I am a huge old school punk music fan and I'm also a huge fan of classic (arena rock) as well. I got into both at the same time in my life, (all the while being ridiculed by fans from both camps ) yet somehow I've been able to embrace both genres, even to this day. They can both move me, yet in completely different ways of course. No doubt. There are many fans who like both, no shortage of them, or us, in this case. This post not for the wimp contingent. All whiny wusses avert your eyes. | |
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Supernova said: You're yankin my chain.
No, seriously. I understood the political end of it. Raging against the machine and all. For a long time I just couldn't get behind the lack of musicianship in a great deal of it. "...there is that percentage of it that to me has the appeal of running around naked..." Is that available for purchase anywhere? Nahh. I keep my exhibitionism confined under my own roof. Aah well, if you ever change your mind, i'm good for a copy...or 2 (for historical purposes of course) tA Tribal Disorder http://www.soundclick.com...rmusic.htm "Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all." | |
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Thanx for the well-written essay, Supernova.I also have dug the Clash form time to time and dont hate the Ramones at all.
As this site has proven time & again, one man's noize is another's symphony.My remarks were not intended as a diss to the genre, just an admission that it has never meant anything to me.I could say the same thing about Country Music also,even tho Ive enjoyed some of it from time to time.(very occasionally,tho ) I still think that such a "movement" is even more appropriate in today's scene. "...all you need ...is justa touch...of mojo hand....." | |
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theAudience said: No, seriously.
I understood the political end of it. Raging against the machine and all. For a long time I just couldn't get behind the lack of musicianship in a great deal of it. tA Tribal Disorder http://www.soundclick.com...rmusic.htm There ya go.That's how I felt at the time too. "...all you need ...is justa touch...of mojo hand....." | |
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