This is a test
- 568 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Book details
Book preview
Table of contents
Citations
About This Book
With its own fashion, culture and chaotic energy, punk rock boasted a do-it-yourself ethos that allowed anyone and everyone to take part. Vibrant and volatile, the punk scene left an extraordinary legacy of music and cultural change. In Punk Rock: An Oral History, John Robb talks to many of those who cultivated the movement, such as John Lydon, Lemmy, Siouxsie Sioux, Mick Jones, Chrissie Hynde, Malcolm McLaren, Henry Rollins and Glen Matlock, weaving together their accounts to create a raw and unprecedented oral history of UK punk.
Frequently asked questions
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Both plans give you full access to the library and all of Perlegoās features. The only differences are the price and subscription period: With the annual plan youāll save around 30% compared to 12 months on the monthly plan.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, weāve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes, you can access Punk Rock by in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Media & Performing Arts & Punk Music. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Subtopic
Punk MusicCHAPTER 1
1950/60: THE ROOTS OF PUNK
Where does punk rock start? 1976? 1975? Does it start with the Stooges, or can we go back to the Stones, to Elvis or further back to medieval times and beyond? There is no doubt that rebel songs have always been with us, from crazed loons singing anti-imperial songs in Roman times to wild-eyed medieval minstrels enlightening the market place with their toothless anti-authoritarian rants. Itās always been with us, that wild spirit, that outsider cry. Itās only recently itās been with electricity - and louder and wilder.
Punk rock as we know it was a culmination of everything that had gone on in pop before, from the electric filth of hard rock, the wild abandon of the Stooges, the mass media fuck of Elvis, the pure revolution promised by the hippies, the sharp lines of the mods and the sneering rebel shapes of the rockers, to the stomping pop blitzkrieg of glam rock - even the experimentation of prog rock and Seventies underground art rock. Punk didnāt just come from the love of Ziggy Stardust. It came from everywhere: from the Beatles to glam, from Iggy to the Sweet, from pub rock to Captain Beefheart. Punk pulled these strands together and when it all finally coalesced in the UK in 1977 it went straight to the heart of the establishment. The interviews in this book show just how diverse the backgrounds of the key players were. Everything wild and colourful has been referenced.
For the fashionistas it only lasted a few months, but whilst they were squeezing their lardy hipster arses into the trite (and frankly quite rubbish) New Romantic outfits, punk went underground and re-emerged as the second wave, and a plethora of other punk-influenced scenes from goth to psychobilly to anarcho-punk to 2 Tone, and more besides - a whole bunch of vital music scenes that along with punk rock have become the key influence on all the best modern music and the yardstick by which it is measured.
THE MASS MEDIA F.U.C.K. OF ELVIS
Early RockānāRoll and the Birth of the Modern Rebel Song
Penny Rimbaud (Crass: drums and ideology)
I listened to Bill Haley before Elvis, but it didnāt hit me in the way that rockānāroll hit me later. āRock Around The Clockā and āSee You Later Alligatorā seemed like music hall. It didnāt knock me in a physical way, it was much more cerebral - if a kid of twelve or thirteen could be cerebral! I remember pedalling home on my bike with a copy of Bill Haleyās āOh When The Saintsā. My brother stopped me by the village pond and he got really cross. He was into jazz. We had a huge row about the fact I was polluting good music.
I went out and bought Elvis the moment it came out. Oddly, all the Teds were really into Bill Haley more than Elvis. Elvis made rockānāroll sexy and sexual, and it was the first time I realised I was a sexual person.
I was also listening to English jazz, and some American stuff like Gerry Mulligan which was groovy cool stuff. The English stuff like Humphrey Lyttelton was great. Humphrey got a sax and that was considered really wicked and all the trad jazz people ruled him out.
Hugh Cornwell (The Strangiers: lead vocals and guitar)
The first music I liked? I suppose it would have been Cliff Richard.1 It was a period of discovery and these artists were appearing out of nowhere. The English ones were there, but they werenāt affecting me as much as the Everly Brothers or Buddy Holly around at the same time. So until Cliff came along and had those early hits I donāt think anything touched the American stuff.
Iād already discovered Chuck Berry. I was playing along to his songs. I discovered Chuck Berry through my other brother who had a big record collection of jazz stuff as well. He was into jazz and when he would go out he would tell me not to touch his records, but I would go through them anyway! I discovered Art Blakey, Mose Allison - I was very lucky I had these other siblings who liked these kinds of music I was into at a really early age.
Lemmy (Motorhead: bass and lead vocals)
I saw Little Richard at the Cavern in Liverpool in the Fifties. That was incredible. I was living on Anglesey at the time, so you can imagine how mind blowing that was. Pretty soon I was a bit of a Ted.
Penny Rimbaud
I hung out with some kids at public school. We were the naughty boys that hung out with the bad boys above Burtonās, where the pool table was in Brentwood. There was a terrific tension there with the squaddies and the Teds, and we were the poncey public schoolboys trying to get a bit of action between everyone. It all felt so dangerous and exciting. There was something about the Teds that was really thrilling. They taught me that the world of my father wasnāt the only world.
Charlie Harper (UK Subs: vocals)
As a kid my first kind of passion was early rockānāroll. All the greats: Elvis, Jerry Lee, Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley. In the Fifties there was the Notting Hill riots going on, and some kids at our school became racists and decided to get rid of their black records, and because I loved Chuck Berry I got a lot of their record collections off them for pennies. I got into people like Larry Williams, things I would never have heard of otherwise - Big Bopper, Jerry Lee Lewis - things like that.
One of the earliest things I bought was an album by Cliff Richard and the Drifters, as the Shadows were called then. When I was fifteen I left school. I was still very interested in music. I decided I wanted to be an artist and go to Paris. I went to Montmartre, where all the artists hang out, to find out that everyone painted with paper knives not a brush. I was completely overwhelmed; I had no skill at all. I loafed around Paris and went to this cafe which had rockānāroll records. Rockānāroll was big in France.
Knox (The Vibrators: guitar and vocals)
I saw people like Gene Vincent in Watford - I saw him twice in one of those package shows that go round. I saw Eddie Cochrane when I was about thirteen; that was good. Johnny Kidd and the Pirates were very good.2 Also Cliff Richard and the Shadows - some of the early stuff was really good. āMove Itā was great. Itās a pity they didnāt carry on their direction, the Shadows. āApacheā, thatās a great song too.
Glen Matlock (The Sex Pistols: bass. Rich Kids: bass and vocals)
The first music I was into when I was a kid was a pile of old rockānāroll 78s from my uncle - like Little Richard, Jerry Lee Lewis, some raunchy stuff that sunk in at an early age, and then a couple of years later it was the beat boom, the Kinks, Small Faces and Yardbirds, and that was what really sunk in, that mad over-the-top guitar sound thundering out of the radio really got me.
Everything seemed to revolve round the Small Faces, the moddish kind of thing. I had my moments but I was too young to be a mod - I dabbled with that kind of look, I suppose. To me, the mods were very much a Sixties thing. They were the real thing. When I met Steve and Paul they seemed to be from a very similar kind of background. They were into bands like the Faces and the Who. This was 1973 when I met Steve, Paul and Wally.3
Growing up in the Sixties, everything was looking to the future. Iām still waiting for my jet pack and flying cars! It was all Tomorrowās World back then. There was always that element of modernism. So the songs donāt sound 25 or 30 years old now.
WHEN WE WAS FAB
Beatles, Stones, Mods and More
Kevin Hunter (Epileptics, Flux of Pink Indians: guitar)
At school I was always into pop stuff. My parents took me to see the Beatles but I donāt remember much about it. I was knee high. It was at Margate Winter Gardens early in ā63 - the gig was arranged before they made it big. I remember two shows, including one in the early evening for parents and kids, when the hall wasnāt very full.
I always liked chart singles. The first one I bought was a Hollies single, but I was always getting into stuff with a harsher edge, and I remember getting into Kinks stuff then. I couldnāt tell you what I liked about it.
Lemmv
In 1964 I was in Manchester, dossing around in Stockport and Cheetham Hill. I joined this band called the Rockinā Vicars.4 We played all over town - Oldham, Ashton. We used to go to the Twisted Wheel but never played there. We played the Cavern as well, the Manchester one thatās now buried underneath that fucking horrible shopping centre they put there. Manchester was great. It was like Liverpool: there were lots of bands. We knew the Hollies and Hermanās Hermits. We all used to hang around in that guitar shop on Oxford Street, Barretts. We played with Manfred Mann. The Rockinā Vicars always topped the bill, except once when we played the Free Trade Hall with the Hollies - itās a long story but our drummer succeeded in being a complete cunt and destroyed the stage under himself and fell into a hole! [laughs] It was a lesson you would have thought he would have profited from but Iām afraid not!
AI Hillier (Punk fan. Member of the āFinchley Boysā)
The Beatles had an enormous effect on most people in the mid-Sixties, and they certainly did on me. My mum would religiously drag me down to Jones Bros on the Holloway Road, and after a quick listen on the headphones or snuggle together in a sound booth she would rush to the counter and buy it.
When the Beatles films were released, and in particular Help!, the Beatles suddenly seemed magical to me. Their antics opened up a whole new world for madcap pop performers and without doubt made it possible for zany bands like the Monkees to exist. At primary school I invented a ābandā of my own called the Tigers. The thrill of running about the playground being chased by all the girls because I was a āpop starā lives with me to this day.
The Rolling Stones were the accepted antidote to the Beatles and I also really liked them. Even as a youngster I liked the more aggressive risk-taking, law-breaking, drug-using image that surrounded the Stones. Images of Hellās Angels at Altamont cemented this and placed them in my young mind alongside the likes of Jimi Hendrix, who always looked so totally different and cool. When he appeared on TV he never looked like he could give a fuck about anything, an aura that J. J. Burnel was to try and recreate to some degree a few years later.
My interest in the Doors came later, even though I was in Paris on a school trip not more than a few hundred yards from the building in the rue Beautreillis where Jim Morrison died on 3 July 1971 - literally a stoneās throw from our Parisian hotel.
Penny Rimbaud
What the Beatles did was to confirm the political element. John Lennon made me realise you could be a voice in your own right. Up till then you had to have a university degree or have studied philosophy to have an opinion, and I always had opinions and had been shouted down. What Lennon helped me to do was to realise that my own opinions were as valid as anyone elseās.
Steve Diggle (Buzzcocks: guitar)
We had loads of records: Elvisā āWooden Heartā, all that Charlie Drake stuff, and Bernard Cribbins!5 I grew up with the Beatles, Stones, early Who and Bob Dylan. There was a girl across the road who had the first Dylan album, a friend of mine had the first Beatles album, and those was the first real things I heard. A couple of doors down my cousin was a Teddy boy and he was playing Little Richard and Elvis, really good rockānāroll. I got into the Velvet Underground when I was fourteen, the psychedelic thing.
I was a bit of a mod. I remember going to Belle Vue in Manchester and seeing people with āThe Whoā on their parkas in 1965. That seemed amazing, and I always wanted a scooter. Townshend was smashing the guitars, and the Stones and the Beatles were telling you things that your mum and dad couldnāt tell you - that subculture was there.
I thought it was too complicated being in a band. I was enjoying being in street gangs and getting into trouble round Rusholme and Bradford in Manchester, and then Ardwick, and that was the real thing for me. I remember walking down the street in a suede jacket and people shouting stuff. If you dressed weirdly in those terraced streets in those days you would get a lot of hassle. That kind of thing toughens you up. It was like Coronation Street: proper northern, where you knew all the neighbours and you got into trouble breaking windows - and that all made me politically aware of things, the environment and your frustrations.
Charlie Harper
When I went back home to London, after living in Paris, t...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- The Contributors
- Foreword by Michael Bracewell
- Foreword by Henry Rollins
- Intro
- 1 1950-69: The Roots of Punk
- 2 1970-74: Glam Rock and Other Early Seventies Revolutions
- 3 1975: Iām Not an Abortion: The Birth of Punk
- 4 1976 Part I: Into Chaos
- 5 1976 Part II: Year Xerox
- 6 1976 Part III: Punk Becomes a Dirty Word
- 7 1977 Part I: The Explosion
- 8 1977 Part II: In 1977, I Hope I Go to Heaven
- 9 1977 Part III: Generation Why
- 10 1978: No Map or Address
- 11 1979: The Second Wave Peaks
- 12 1980-84: Protest and Survive
- Outro
- Acknowledgements
- Picture Credits
- Lyric Credits
- Index