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I borrowed an LP of The Crass out of curiosity and have never heard anything like it!
Every song sounded exactly the same as the previous one, the vocalist just seemed to be angrily shouting as opposed to singing, there were no tunes as such, nothing catchy that you could sing, whistle or hum before, during or after.
There seemed to be no quality control, no production values, no finesse, no overdubs, no tender loving care in a 24 track studio, one take on a 4 track portable in a garage more like..........Just noise!.....But I guess that is what is was all about, sending out some kind of message and that message being far more important than the music itself.
A Marmite group that did seem to be rather popular, cos the groups name was sprayed everywhere and seemed to be on every passing punks leather jacket in Swansea City centre.
Argus!
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One for the ageing Punks on here... on 13:51 - Jan 4 with 3664 views
One for the ageing Punks on here... on 13:40 - Jan 4 by Wingstandwood
I borrowed an LP of The Crass out of curiosity and have never heard anything like it!
Every song sounded exactly the same as the previous one, the vocalist just seemed to be angrily shouting as opposed to singing, there were no tunes as such, nothing catchy that you could sing, whistle or hum before, during or after.
There seemed to be no quality control, no production values, no finesse, no overdubs, no tender loving care in a 24 track studio, one take on a 4 track portable in a garage more like..........Just noise!.....But I guess that is what is was all about, sending out some kind of message and that message being far more important than the music itself.
A Marmite group that did seem to be rather popular, cos the groups name was sprayed everywhere and seemed to be on every passing punks leather jacket in Swansea City centre.
I wasn't paying attention then because I never noticed them. I used to like SLF though,
One for the ageing Punks on here... on 13:51 - Jan 4 by Catullus
I wasn't paying attention then because I never noticed them. I used to like SLF though,
Seems apt for on here....
Songs from SLF and others e.g. Alternative Ulster, Pretty Vacant, London Calling, Hong Kong Garden, Blitzkrieg Bop,etc did have a certain memorable quality. Sadly I cannot remember anything by The Crass.
There again attitude may be more important along with lesser artistry i.e. total opposite of choreographed disco dancing seen in Saturday Night Fever. The punk influence lives on i.e. the standard of music and dancing at 11:10s in the video sort of says that? Who needs fly spray?
Argus!
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One for the ageing Punks on here... on 16:33 - Jan 4 with 3600 views
I saw a punk band in St Phillips' around this time, but it wasn't Crass. Think it was local boys.
Loved the chaos.
The crunching chords and uncontrolled keening feedback used to give me goosebumps.
What I didn't like about the whole punk scene was the lie that it was somehow "democratic", working class, DIY, and inclusive.
Within a short time it became overrun with preening, middle class poseurs, full of exclusive cliques who'd frown disdainfully at you if you weren't wearing the right gear. The Cure and Siouxsie Souix spring to mind.
Hardly surprising when you consider people like Malcolm McClaren and Vivienne Westwood were 2 of the driving forces behind it.
Alternative TV and The Fall distanced themselves from that kind of degeneracy.
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One for the ageing Punks on here... on 16:34 - Jan 4 with 3595 views
One for the ageing Punks on here... on 16:33 - Jan 4 by FieryJack
I saw a punk band in St Phillips' around this time, but it wasn't Crass. Think it was local boys.
Loved the chaos.
The crunching chords and uncontrolled keening feedback used to give me goosebumps.
What I didn't like about the whole punk scene was the lie that it was somehow "democratic", working class, DIY, and inclusive.
Within a short time it became overrun with preening, middle class poseurs, full of exclusive cliques who'd frown disdainfully at you if you weren't wearing the right gear. The Cure and Siouxsie Souix spring to mind.
Hardly surprising when you consider people like Malcolm McClaren and Vivienne Westwood were 2 of the driving forces behind it.
Alternative TV and The Fall distanced themselves from that kind of degeneracy.
One for the ageing Punks on here... on 16:33 - Jan 4 by FieryJack
I saw a punk band in St Phillips' around this time, but it wasn't Crass. Think it was local boys.
Loved the chaos.
The crunching chords and uncontrolled keening feedback used to give me goosebumps.
What I didn't like about the whole punk scene was the lie that it was somehow "democratic", working class, DIY, and inclusive.
Within a short time it became overrun with preening, middle class poseurs, full of exclusive cliques who'd frown disdainfully at you if you weren't wearing the right gear. The Cure and Siouxsie Souix spring to mind.
Hardly surprising when you consider people like Malcolm McClaren and Vivienne Westwood were 2 of the driving forces behind it.
Alternative TV and The Fall distanced themselves from that kind of degeneracy.
Two very working class bands there fiery. I think you hit an interesting distinction which I always thought was clear between the middle-class The Cure and the more working class of Joy Division/New Order. Whilst I like the Cure, never felt as true or as visceral as JD/NO, The Fall or later on The Smiths, or even Matt Johnson/The The.
Some great podcasts/documentaries out there-Transmissions (JD/NO) and one on The Clash narrated by Chuck D. Would love a Fall one. Could interview the 100,000 ex-members.
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One for the ageing Punks on here... on 16:49 - Jan 4 with 3583 views
One for the ageing Punks on here... on 16:49 - Jan 4 by onehunglow
You been away Paul?
Busy Rich
Trying to write a record a new batch of teaching material in a rush as someone left recently. A few health and safety issues to deal with in relation to clinical teaching and Covid and a serious accident on one of the farms not helping my humour.
Hope all is well with you and yours.
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One for the ageing Punks on here... on 17:04 - Jan 4 with 3572 views
One for the ageing Punks on here... on 16:59 - Jan 4 by Professor
Busy Rich
Trying to write a record a new batch of teaching material in a rush as someone left recently. A few health and safety issues to deal with in relation to clinical teaching and Covid and a serious accident on one of the farms not helping my humour.
Hope all is well with you and yours.
Touch wood.Wish could say the same about being busy.
One for the ageing Punks on here... on 13:35 - Jan 4 by Highjack
I imagine all punks are ageing these days.
I hated crass, but looking back i see their value in the uk music scene. I love conflict. I was at this gig, it was mad. People do go on about three chords and punk rock, mostly untrue, the pistols as an example were heralded as cant play. Then in recent years the worlds top musicians have reviewed it and stated they were well beyond their time. I think that was on one of those famous albums breakdowns you can still find on certain channels. Steve Jones the guitarist is revered as one of the worlds best rock guitarists.
Dont forget these bands were kids moistly, DIY ethic, and the music scene was either petrified of them or just tried to ignore them. It didnt work. The stamp the music alone left on the world scene was massive.
HighJack, punks from all over the world converge on The Rebellion festival UK each year, aged 14 to 75, thousands of punters. Its a cracking four days.
A great believer in taking anything you like to wherever you want to.
One for the ageing Punks on here... on 16:33 - Jan 4 by FieryJack
I saw a punk band in St Phillips' around this time, but it wasn't Crass. Think it was local boys.
Loved the chaos.
The crunching chords and uncontrolled keening feedback used to give me goosebumps.
What I didn't like about the whole punk scene was the lie that it was somehow "democratic", working class, DIY, and inclusive.
Within a short time it became overrun with preening, middle class poseurs, full of exclusive cliques who'd frown disdainfully at you if you weren't wearing the right gear. The Cure and Siouxsie Souix spring to mind.
Hardly surprising when you consider people like Malcolm McClaren and Vivienne Westwood were 2 of the driving forces behind it.
Alternative TV and The Fall distanced themselves from that kind of degeneracy.
Tyrone Thomas the guitarist in ATV is from Crundale, Haverfordwest, my cousin. Swans fan. Was in the band for first three singles etc, now back with them.
I was at the Venom gig at st Philips way back, local punk oi band. That was mental too. Got some photos somewhere.
This post has been edited by an administrator
A great believer in taking anything you like to wherever you want to.
One for the ageing Punks on here... on 17:10 - Jan 4 by KeithHaynes
I hated crass, but looking back i see their value in the uk music scene. I love conflict. I was at this gig, it was mad. People do go on about three chords and punk rock, mostly untrue, the pistols as an example were heralded as cant play. Then in recent years the worlds top musicians have reviewed it and stated they were well beyond their time. I think that was on one of those famous albums breakdowns you can still find on certain channels. Steve Jones the guitarist is revered as one of the worlds best rock guitarists.
Dont forget these bands were kids moistly, DIY ethic, and the music scene was either petrified of them or just tried to ignore them. It didnt work. The stamp the music alone left on the world scene was massive.
HighJack, punks from all over the world converge on The Rebellion festival UK each year, aged 14 to 75, thousands of punters. Its a cracking four days.
I would love to take issue Keith as regards The Pistols and musicality but I dont want a ban as I would then be lonesome as Hank.
I did say,nothing the matter with 3 chords. Most classic rock /blues is ;it's about how an instrument is played. It' s why the likes of BB King and Chuck Berry are so revered for all time as they kept it simple but took the basics and wrapped them in their own style.
One for the ageing Punks on here... on 17:17 - Jan 4 by onehunglow
I would love to take issue Keith as regards The Pistols and musicality but I dont want a ban as I would then be lonesome as Hank.
I did say,nothing the matter with 3 chords. Most classic rock /blues is ;it's about how an instrument is played. It' s why the likes of BB King and Chuck Berry are so revered for all time as they kept it simple but took the basics and wrapped them in their own style.
Noise Annoys :-}
A great believer in taking anything you like to wherever you want to.
One for the ageing Punks on here... on 17:14 - Jan 4 by KeithHaynes
Tyrone Thomas the guitarist in ATV is from Crundale, Haverfordwest, my cousin. Swans fan. Was in the band for first three singles etc, now back with them.
I was at the Venom gig at st Philips way back, local punk oi band. That was mental too. Got some photos somewhere.
This post has been edited by an administrator
Think it was Venom I saw there. Name rings a bell.
Did they ever play downstairs in the Coach and Horses on Wind Street?
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One for the ageing Punks on here... on 17:38 - Jan 4 with 3526 views