PUNK
ROCK
In 1977, merely suggesting that the Queen was a moron (or a
potential H Bomb) would get you banned from the charts. These days
The Sex Pistols could duet with
Eminem, three strippers and a donkey, and roll Her Majesty around
Trafalgar Square in a barrel and nobody would give a damn. Times
have changed.
Punk took Great Britain (the entertainment industry and the
general public) completely by surprise. In the mid 1970s, the
massive tornado of the British
Invasion of the 1960s was a fading memory whose survivors sat
atop the charts with pale echoes of their best work.
Disco and soft rock/pop were the trends
of the day - as they were also in the USA. Britain's economy was
flailing and more and more teenagers left school to go straight on
the dole with little hope of financial success or social
stimulation. At the start of 1976 there was little warning
that the world of popular music would be turned upside down before
the end of the year.

Malcolm McLaren, who
ran a boutique in London that catered to an ever-changing
clientele seeking alternative fashion, was on the look-out for a
band of loutish adolescents to use as a platform for his loosely
held anarchist ideas. He had aspirations to manage The
New York Dolls, but when that band disintegrated he looked to
even scruffier, younger musicians that frequented his store. In
late 1975 The Sex Pistols began to perform with McLaren as
their manager and mentor.
Throughout 1976, The Sex Pistols built up a fierce
underground following with incendiary live shows which were often
violence-ridden chaotic affairs. Late in 76, their debut single Anarchy
In The UK established punk's modus operandi - ear-splitting
guitars, hyperactive tempo and inflammatory and venomous lyrics .
. . with raw energy carrying the lot.
Johnny Rotten was goaded into swearing on national television
and Fleet Street descended on punk with horror headlines and
outrage. Other groups were already following the Pistols'
blueprint and quickly stepped into the breach. The most famous
members of what came to be called the 'Class of '77' were The
Damned, The Clash (who mixed punk and
politics), The Jam (Mods who modelled
themselves after the early Who) and The
Buzzcocks (whose punk sensibilities did not hide their keen
grasp of pop hooks).
These bands were just the tip of an explosion that saw many
minor but important groups adding their voices to the fray. Generation
X, The Adverts, The
Vibrators, The Saints (from
Australia), X-Ray Spex, Slaughter
& The Dogs and Chelsea are all
esteemed by collectors for the one or two memorable songs they had
in them.
Overnight, hordes of angry kids from huge, decaying council
estates and soulless high-rise blocks, who were able to relate to
the punk movement, chipped in to buy mini sound-systems and bashed
away at cheap guitars.
London venues such as the Vortex, Nashville
Room, 100 Club, The Roxy and The
Marquee threw open their doors to thousands of safety-pinned,
cropped top, pogoing punks. At the same time, most council-owned
halls barred any form of punk performance.
The punk fanzine Sniffin' Glue (pictured at right) once included three
drawings of guitar chord shapes captioned; "Here's a chord.
Here's another one. Here's another one. Now form a band".
Punk was a DIY business, a reaction against the establishment,
pompous prog rockers, public opinion, the futility of many young
urban lives, and anything else that got in punk's way . . .
Today, early British punk records still sound exciting. At the
time however, they were also the epitome of nihilistic shock. They
could not have caused more of a sensation. The tempo was FAST
(although hardcore eventually made it even faster), the guitars
and vocals were LOUD and the lyrics addressed politics, sex,
depression and society with a frank realism that had rarely been
heard in popular music.
The performers were not seasoned virtuoso's and they valued
inspiration and attitude above professionalism. Some listeners
viewed the end-result as unbearably crude. Others welcomed them as
a necessary shot of air to blast rock & roll out of its
complacency.
Punk never really took hold in the USA as it did in Britain,
although those who were converted took up the music with a passion
that equalled their British counterparts. The Sex Pistols found
this out the hard way, with Johnny Rotten leaving the group in
1978 after the last show of a brief but legendarily chaotic
American tour, where their album Never Mind The Bollocks
stopped just short of the Top 100.
Perhaps punk failed to take hold in the US because it was
diametrically opposed to the American Dream. US rock audiences
liked a working class hero - as long as he behaved like a star. So
in the US in the mid-Seventies there weren't many takers for the
notion of well brought-up, middle class kids ripping perfectly
good clothes and pretending to have been born in the gutter.
Another reason Punk never took off in America - aside from the
fact that the conventional music business chose to ignore it - was
the sheer size of the country. Unlike in Britain, independent
record labels could not reasonably expect to have anything more
than a local hit.
In the end, punk did not so much die out as mutate and
diversify. As liberating as the first wave of punk was, it was
impossible to perform an endless loop of hyper-fast, bile-filled
anthems, as the musician's ambitions broadened and their musical
skills improved. Ultimately, many of the brash young bands of
the punk movement became the new establishment bands, with the
likes of The Police and U2
moving up into the stadiums.
The Jam remained huge stars in the UK through the early 80s,
like The Clash who became stars in the USA at long last after
1979s London Calling LP, they refined their sound and
incorporated reggae, R&B, soul and pop into their compositions
without ever compromising their integrity.
Original British punksters like Generation X and Sham
69 played themselves out almost immediately and others went
into arty minimalism (eg: Wire and The
Fall), psychedelia (The Soft Boys),
pop (The Undertones) or New
Wave (Siouxsie & The Banshees).
By 1980, 'New Wave' had become the new label for a modified,
tamed but no less innovative offspring of the original punk
explosion.
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