Most influential Punk bands.
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Barbarossa
Quite simple.
What Punk Rock artists/groups would you say had the most influence on the Genre, and music as a whole?
For some examples, I'd have to go with-
Iggy Pop: Not only did he bring into existance, many common aspects of the genre. He was also one of THE pioneers.
The Ramones: Were they the first? Who cares. They brought a easier-to-listen style to the people, and gave their music a Bubblegum quality that set them apart. Their styles can still be found in many big Pop-Punk outfits today. (See "Screeching Weasle"

Glenn Danzig: One of the few examples of a real vocalist in a Punk Group. Helped spawn a new Sub-Genre, "Horror Punk". Went on to do great things with Heavy Metal.
Keep it going folks.
Alpha Centauri
Black Flag and Bad Brains more or less invented hardcore or hardcore punk, a genre that remains one of the most influential.
The Sex Pistols has a worldwide impact, a feat in itself back then when there wasn't all these avenues of exposure. Even more incredible when you consider or frowned upon they were.
Minor Threat would be there, although people argue they are the first emo (Emotive hardcore) band, which is also acceptable. They were just as much a punk band. Straight Edge created a movement that is still prominent in music and life in general.
-AC
Nellinator
I would say the Ramones, but I think that Cheap Trick was also pretty influential although some don't consider them Punk Rock.
Dusty
The Ramones, hands down.
Iggy Pop did well for the genre.
el_barto
The Ramones
Minor Threat
Fugazi
manorastroman
minor threat and fugazi on the same list? that's stupid. just say ian mckaye
the sonics (heavy garage-punk back in sixty three)
velvet underground (abrasive)
stooges (loud and angry)
new york dolls (outrageous)
the ramones (brought it to england)
the sex pistols (brought it widespread)
the clash (made it smart-ish)
radio birdman/the saints (brought it to australia)
ian mckaye (hardcore messiah)
rites of spring/husker du (invented, then perfected emotive hardcore)
that's not including the ridiculous number of power pop/proto punk/garage guys that heavily influenced.
Nellinator
Originally posted by manorastroman
minor threat and fugazi on the same list? that's stupid. just say ian mckaye
the sonics (heavy garage-punk back in sixty three)
velvet underground (abrasive)
stooges (loud and angry)
new york dolls (outrageous)
the ramones (brought it to england)
the sex pistols (brought it widespread)
the clash (made it smart-ish)
radio birdman/the saints (brought it to australia)
ian mckaye (hardcore messiah)
rites of spring/husker du (invented, then perfected emotive hardcore)
that's not including the ridiculous number of power pop/proto punk/garage guys that heavily influenced.
I forgot the Clash, the Sex Pistols and Velvet Underground.
el_barto
Originally posted by manorastroman
minor threat and fugazi on the same list? that's stupid. just say ian mckaye
the sonics (heavy garage-punk back in sixty three)
velvet underground (abrasive)
stooges (loud and angry)
new york dolls (outrageous)
the ramones (brought it to england)
the sex pistols (brought it widespread)
the clash (made it smart-ish)
radio birdman/the saints (brought it to australia)
ian mckaye (hardcore messiah)
rites of spring/husker du (invented, then perfected emotive hardcore)
that's not including the ridiculous number of power pop/proto punk/garage guys that heavily influenced.
Forgot Husker Du, damn!
The Core
The Ramones were an influence for all the wrong reasons, namely pop-punk, which isn't punk at all, and in retrospect, neither were the Ramones. Time signatures don't define genres.
I'll just say MC5 because they, like the Sex Pistols, had a song that got them big, then more or less fizzled out, but still made their mark.
Alpha Centauri
I love how everyone is saying The Ramones.
The Beatles of "punk".
-AC
Barbarossa
Without the Ramones, I doubt the American punk of past, present and future would be what it was, is and will be.
Light and Poppy they may have been, does not offset the influence they are.
Alpha Centauri
American punk of present and future? If that's what we have to thank The Ramones for...well.
Does not offset the fact that they're the band everybody namedrops.
There are more important bands.
Bad Brains, Black Flag and Minor Threat did more for music in general.
-AC
Impediment
Sex Pistols
Iggy and the Stooges
The Misfits
Black Flag
Dead Kennedys
Bad Religion
The Ramones
The Core
The Ramones were a pop band, "influences" aside. Any band can be an influence to another musician. There's hardly an instance that suggests that, at their roots, The Ramones were a punk band. They weren't political. They didn't dress the part. They weren't "rebelious". A clan of nice, albeit unkept, Jewish boys that played their music a little grungy and got caught up in a musical maelstrom.
...and American punk rock is dead. Has been for a long time. Those people grew up and now their kids listen to emo. Passive aggressives never get anywhere in music.
manorastroman
to deny the influence of the ramones in the shaping of punk is to be completely, inexcusably ignorant. or at least obsessively contrary to public opinion.
bad brains, black flag, and minor threat? first of all, those bands did nothing but shape the DC hardcore scene, which wouldn't exist in the first place without the ramones. second off, the vast majority of those influenced by bad brains are other hardcore bands. third off, what the hell did black flag do for music that others didn't do damn better? in your lingo, black flag is the "beatles" of pre hardcore. (ie, black flag mostly sucked). and as for minor threat, fugazi-rites of spring-husker du blows them out of the water. (ie, minor threat mostly sucks in comparison).
yeesh.
manorastroman
Originally posted by The Core
The Ramones were a pop band, "influences" aside. Any band can be an influence to another musician. There's hardly an instance that suggests that, at their roots, The Ramones were a punk band. They weren't political. They didn't dress the part. They weren't "rebelious". A clan of nice, albeit unkept, Jewish boys that played their music a little grungy and got caught up in a musical maelstrom.
...and American punk rock is dead. Has been for a long time. Those people grew up and now their kids listen to emo. Passive aggressives never get anywhere in music.
you don't know very much about punk history, do you? first of all, punk wasn't initially political at all. it was in fact anti-politics, and completely apathetic. and the ramones were a far cry from nice, excluding joey. they didn't dress the part? are you ****ing with me? they are the prototype punk aesthetic. tight jeans, old shirts, leather jackets, dirty, messy hair. think about it.
without the ramones, punk would have no speed. they were the band that decided to bash through thirty songs in fifty minutes. by extension, hardcore is very fundamentally indebted to the ramones.
the ramones were the original harbingers of punk. deal with it.
suggested reading: please kill me, by legs mcneil. in case you were unawares, legs was a founder of PUNK magazine. you know. the magazine that coined PUNK, and essentially documented the entire four-year punk run?
The Core
Originally posted by manorastroman
to deny the influence of the ramones in the shaping of punk is to be completely, inexcusably ignorant. or at least obsessively contrary to public opinion.
They played follow the leader, were radio friendly, and struck it rich.
Stroke of genius. And I loathe popular opinion.
manorastroman
do you loathe it unconditionally? because in some circumstances, it's a popular opinion because it's "true", insofar as opinions can be.
stop revealing your ignorance. they didn't play follow the leader in the least. they were the leaders. read up on the subject. and they barely got radio play during their career, and certainly never the first three years.
also i'm fairly sure they never struck it rich, by conventional standards. in fact...what the hell are you talking about?
The Core
Originally posted by manorastroman
you don't know very much about punk history, do you? first of all, punk wasn't initially political at all. it was in fact anti-politics, and completely apathetic. and the ramones were a far cry from nice, excluding joey. they didn't dress the part? are you ****ing with me? they are the prototype punk aesthetic. tight jeans, old shirts, leather jackets, dirty, messy hair. think about it.
without the ramones, punk would have no speed. they were the band that decided to bash through thirty songs in fifty minutes. by extension, hardcore is very fundamentally indebted to the ramones.
the ramones were the original harbingers of punk. deal with it.
suggested reading: please kill me, by legs mcneil. in case you were unawares, legs was a founder of PUNK magazine. you know. the magazine that coined PUNK, and essentially documented the entire four-year punk run?
Anti. Pro. Politics were at the root, I thought that was already implied. The Ramones "uniform" was more "slob" cum 50's greaser than anything. When you say punk. I think spiky, colored hair and trashy clothes. Not torn jeans, unkept locks, and leather jackets. I tend to think The Ramones songs were short because you can only write so much nonsense about being bored. Sorry if that sounds insensitive, but it's true. They made "punk" for people who didn't want to commit to the lifestyle. Punk, the term actually coined by Dave Marsh of Creem magazine in '70. You can Wiki that if you don't believe me.
The Ramones were a glorified, grungy version of The Beach Boys.
Originally posted by manorastroman
do you loathe it unconditionally? because in some circumstances, it's a popular opinion because it's "true", insofar as opinions can be.
stop revealing your ignorance. they didn't play follow the leader in the least. they were the leaders. read up on the subject. and they barely got radio play during their career, and certainly never the first three years.
also i'm fairly sure they never struck it rich, by conventional standards. in fact...what the hell are you talking about?
Popular opinion is still an opinion, and 1/2 of the people's input is baseless or uneducated. The Ramones being a "punk" band, a good example. They got lucky, sharing NONE of the characteristics of the true punk bands, other than fast guitars and drums.
Not much else I can say other than The Ramones, in theory, were not a punk band. Wether it defies popular opinion or not. It's educated opinion that prevails in the end, not predisposition by what you've been told all your life, or so convinced of.
They were influential. They were a band. Just one of the rock n' roll variety.
The Core
I forgot to add; I'm not really getting The Clash influence either. They drop a commercially successful album, a punk rock sin, 1/2 way through their careers, their biggest hit is a pop tune, and then the next year they fizzle.
Maybe they were bigger in the UK.
manorastroman
Originally posted by The Core
Anti. Pro. Politics were at the root, I thought that was already implied. The Ramones "uniform" was more "slob" cum 50's greaser than anything. When you say punk. I think spiky, colored hair and trashy clothes. Not torn jeans, unkept locks, and leather jackets. I tend to think The Ramones songs were short because you can only write so much nonsense about being bored. Sorry if that sounds insensitive, but it's true. They made "punk" for people who didn't want to commit to the lifestyle. Punk, the term actually coined by Dave Marsh of Creem magazine in '70. You can Wiki that if you don't believe me.
The Ramones were a glorified, grungy version of The Beach Boys.
i'm not sure you're understanding the chronology of this. singing songs about being bored is punk. it was the invention of punk, before the pistols made it a stage show and the clash made it political. whether or not you think of spiked hair and trashy clothes as punk, it's not. the reason english punks dressed so outrageously was the new york dolls. the dolls were managed by malcolm mcclaren. the same man who formed the sex pistols like a boy band, and also the owner of a shop called "sex". sex specialised in outrageous, dolls-style wear, influenced by drag and glam. certainly not punk.
and secondly, either you've never heard a beach boys song or you've never heard a ramones song. all they share is a vague, sunny aesthetic. the beach boys are infinitely more advanced.
Originally posted by The Core
Popular opinion is still an opinion, and 1/2 of the people's input is baseless or uneducated. The Ramones being a "punk" band, a good example. They got lucky, sharing NONE of the characteristics of the true punk bands, other than fast guitars and drums.
Not much else I can say other than The Ramones, in theory, were not a punk band. Wether it defies popular opinion or not. It's educated opinion that prevails in the end, not predisposition by what you've been told all your life, or so convinced of.
They were influential. They were a band. Just one of the rock n' roll variety.
i think your input might be on the bad side of that half.
read please kill me. i don't want to recite three hundred odd pages just so you can know how wrong you are.
i'm going to make a sandwich and come back to you, so you have time to go to wikipedia and then pretend like you have authority on the subject.
The Core
I know all I want to know about punk. You take popular opinion, and public perception, of punk into consideration, fact of the matter is The Ramones still don't fit it.
Songs about being lazy isn't "punk", because of it is, then Green Day are just as much punk as The Ramones, all because of "Longview". Bands aren't immune to"de-volving" once their predecessors redefine the genre. Especially in a matter of a year or two after Their influence can still be there, loud and clear, but that doesn't mean that in retrospect, when people see what ultimately defines the genre, that they can re-evaluate it.
It's not some music taboo, people do it all the time. Punk is rebellion, not boredom.
manorastroman
all you want to know is clearly not enough to make an informed opinion. i'm not taking popular consideration into my own view, i'm saying that popular opinion happens to be correct on this one.
just trust me. do you admit that i know far, far more about this particular movement than you? all you've said is that they didn't look punk and they sung about being bored.
jesus man, the ramones started the speed, the lo fidelity, AND the three chords three minutes foundation of punk.
Alpha Centauri
Originally posted by manorastroman
singing songs about being bored is punk. it was the invention of punk
"Punk wasn't about going out of your way to establish a dress code, it was the opposite. Dressing how you wanted to dress without a care of being accepted or rejected. Punk wasn't a fad, it was something we used to survive through an era we hated.".
-John Lydon. I think he knows a bit more about punk than you do.
Punk wasn't about being bored, it was about being fed up, there's a very big difference. Some reacted more vehemently than others.
The Sex Pistols reacted in a more comedic, snotty way. Black Flag and Minor Threat, Articles of Faith and D.O.A, these bands went off like a bomb.
The Ramones made lazy punk for people too lazy to get into what real punk was, and what real punk was; Energy and passion. They gave punk rock atrophy, and it took the hardcore and emotive hardcore punk movements to shake it out of sleep, which is why those bands were so violent.
Everyone that punk was meant to be against ended up liking The Ramones. Just like crowd surfing was a way of expression, but to quote Billy Corgan; "When you see crowd surfing in car commercials, you know its time has gone.".
-AC
manorastroman
oh...my...god. the willful ignorance. john lydon's version of punk was extremely image oriented, highlighted by the fact that he mentions dress style as the crux of his statement. john lydon is a f'ing hypocrite, considering he was chosen and dressed up (similar to the members of n sync) by a business oriented manager, one malcolm mcclaren. by his own admission, the sex pistols were manufactured. image, message, everything. how punk is that?
for the love of god, read some of the literature and interviews of the era. please kill me is your friend.
Alpha Centauri
"I know more about punk because I read a book." seems to be your rationale.
John Lydon's statement is still relevant to how things were THEN, not how he is NOW. It also doesn't alter the fact that he's had more to do with punk, and knows more ABOUT what punk was and is than you do. You sit in your chair and read books about it, he was there living it, he was there on an album that defined a genre, an era and subsequently influenced bands and artists across the board. Regardless of how they came to be, their music was great and their one and only album has had more influence than most punk albums of any era. It's held up as a standard, a classic. Over here it shook the establishment as it was meant to do.
"Punk was about being bored.". I say STOP reading books and listen to some damn music, it was nothing to do with being bored, it was about rebellion, not apathy. The Ramones made punk lazy and that's why hardcore happened.
Do some research, don't sit there saying "I know about punk, read the books.". Why are you arguing literature in a debate about such an incendiary MUSIC genre?
-AC
The Core
Originally posted by manorastroman
just trust me. do you admit that i know far, far more about this particular movement than you? all you've said is that they didn't look punk and they sung about being bored.
jesus man, the ramones started the speed, the lo fidelity, AND the three chords three minutes foundation of punk.
I admit it, not that it means anything to me, because you keep insinuating you're "more punk" than I am because you read a book. I said before, time signatures don't define a genre or a movement. The Who had more attitude than The Ramones ever could. "My Generation", anyone? "Teenage Wasteland" ring a bell? They created the power chord. They were loud. They were fast. They were violent on stage. They, infact, were punk personified.
I have yet to see one instance where The Ramones, while influential, pioneered anything new for punk rock in general. They popularized the best parts of their favorite bands and made "punk" for, like I said, people that liked the music, but were afraid of what their parents would think, considering true punk kids would tell their parents to **** off.
The Ramones influenced pop-punk, which is truly a worthless genre in my eyes. Pick one or the other. You can't willingly sell a sound thats rooted in anti-establishment, yet make it for the masses and use it to sustain yourself monitarily.
manorastroman
?????
i'm not punk in the least. i despise punk. i think it's bad music for sad people. that doesn't mean i don't know nearly everything about it.
everytime you make a post, you say something truly proving your opinion is groundless. in no way did the ramones make music for kids who were afraid to piss their parents off. that's wrong on so many levels i hardly know how to begin. aside from the fact that the ramones didn't make music for kids, the ramones DID piss parents off. they were boycotted.
as for john lydon, i never said that his statement ought to be relevant now. but it stands that if you knew the first thing about the sex pistols formation or lydon's personal life at the time, you would realize that his statements on punk aren't exactly authoritative. though i'm sure he knows more about punk than me, he certainly doesn't know more about punk than any of the hundreds of others who were "there".
back to the chronology aspect, the ramones didn't make punk lazy. how could they? they predated the sex pistols, and just about every other "punk" band as well. they didn't "make" punk anything, except perhaps exist. and i'm not sure why the core keeps mentioning monitary value. the ramones were not a rich band. during their first three years, dee dee was hustling his cock because they had no money.
why is this the only topic on which ignorance is somehow a virtue? it's clear you two know very little about the era, and equally clear that it's somewhat important to each of you. so why not learn more about it? is reading not punk enough?
i didn't just read one book. i read many. as well as many interviews. and don't even start to pretend that i haven't listened to the music. i've forgotten more punk albums than you will ever own.
back to the main topic of the thread: the ramones are FACTUALLY one of the mosti influential punk bands. even if for no other reason than this: they are responsible for the beginning of english punk.
Alpha Centauri
Originally posted by manorastroman
i'm not punk in the least. i despise punk. i think it's bad music for sad people. that doesn't mean i don't know nearly everything about it.
Sad, funnily enough.
Originally posted by manorastroman
everytime you make a post, you say something truly proving your opinion is groundless. in no way did the ramones make music for kids who were afraid to piss their parents off. that's wrong on so many levels i hardly know how to begin. aside from the fact that the ramones didn't make music for kids, the ramones DID piss parents off. they were boycotted.
You're not exactly proving...well...anything. You don't appear to know anything more than anyone who has read a book about punk.
The fact that they pissed PARENTS off suggests they were making music that kids loved.
Originally posted by manorastroman
as for john lydon, i never said that his statement ought to be relevant now. but it stands that if you knew the first thing about the sex pistols formation or lydon's personal life at the time, you would realize that his statements on punk aren't exactly authoritative. though i'm sure he knows more about punk than me, he certainly doesn't know more about punk than any of the hundreds of others who were "there".
They were there because of him and the bands that made it happen.
The Sex Pistols formation and John's personal life don't change the fact that they pioneered what came to be known as punk rock. That's a fact.
Originally posted by manorastroman
back to the chronology aspect, the ramones didn't make punk lazy. how could they? they predated the sex pistols, and just about every other "punk" band as well. they didn't "make" punk anything, except perhaps exist. and i'm not sure why the core keeps mentioning monitary value. the ramones were not a rich band. during their first three years, dee dee was hustling his cock because they had no money.
Predated? Yes, by a year, BARELY. They formed in 74, The Sex Pistols in 75, their self-titled album came out in 76, Never Mind... came out in 77. It was barely enough to call it true "pre-dating".
They didn't make punk lazy by coming after someone, they made punk lazy in comparison to The Sex Pistols, who were making music that sounded more like what original punk is known for. Punk was about rebellion, not boredom.
Originally posted by manorastroman
why is this the only topic on which ignorance is somehow a virtue? it's clear you two know very little about the era, and equally clear that it's somewhat important to each of you. so why not learn more about it? is reading not punk enough?
I don't care about being, looking or acting punk, the fact that you don't know how to construct a valid point is what's bothering me.
All you can say is "You know little.", despite the fact that I've raised many points you haven't even touched, and so has Cine.
It's not "important" to me, but I know music history, and you're interpreting it in a biased way.
Originally posted by manorastroman
i didn't just read one book. i read many. as well as many interviews. and don't even start to pretend that i haven't listened to the music. i've forgotten more punk albums than you will ever own.
Again with the fact claiming. "I've forgotten more punk albums..." when did you look at my CD collection? Idiot. Stop trying to make it seem like you're so much more knowledgeable on punk rock by saying it, start proving it and maybe you'll be believed. I'm not out here saying I know more about punk specifically than anyone, nor is Cine, but we've proven we know enough to prove you wrong.
Originally posted by manorastroman
back to the main topic of the thread: the ramones are FACTUALLY one of the mosti influential punk bands. even if for no other reason than this: they are responsible for the beginning of english punk.
So...if The Sex Pistols are manufactured...and The Ramones are responsible for that...2+2.
They are not responsible for English punk. The English punk scene, specifically London, was already growing more than rapidly and The Ramones' most notable contribution as a gig they played at The Roundhouse. They didn't start it nor are they responsible for it.
-AC
manorastroman
do you want a comparison, then? let's each list the punk albums we own, and then the books, interviews, etc. of the era we've read. my statement was a reaction to yours, namely: "start listening to the music."
you've brought up points i haven't touched? like what?
boredom (more accurately, dissatisfaction) leads to rebellion.
side notes: i wasn't proving the core's groundless opinion, his own blaise firing of plainly inaccurate statements did that. also, punk as you define it was a distinctly teenaged movement, so if in fact the ramones made music for kids...
amity75
Without The Stooges we wouldn't have had The Sex Pistols. Simple as that.
manorastroman
now that i've had a bit to think about it, you're using popular opinion, AC. essentially, you're saying that more people looked up to the sex pistols as punkers, and more people associate them with punk. that's goofy. philosophically, musically, and stylistically they were nothing new. richard hell had the philosophy and the style YEARS before the pistols. so because a thousand snot nosed english kids didn't look up to richard hell, he can't be considered influential punk? hypocrite.
the only special knowledge you have displayed is referencing the roundhouse. the core has done nothing but spout utter nonsense and reference fashion sense. neither of you have proven you know ANYTHING but how to be untraditional.
taste_u
The Sex Pistols were ****ing shit. PiL is the nigga's choice Lydonband/
tabby999
Originally posted by manorastroman
now that i've had a bit to think about it, you're using popular opinion, AC. essentially, you're saying that more people looked up to the sex pistols as punkers, and more people associate them with punk. that's goofy. philosophically, musically, and stylistically they were nothing new. richard hell had the philosophy and the style YEARS before the pistols. so because a thousand snot nosed english kids didn't look up to richard hell, he can't be considered influential punk? hypocrite.
the only special knowledge you have displayed is referencing the roundhouse. the core has done nothing but spout utter nonsense and reference fashion sense. neither of you have proven you know ANYTHING but how to be untraditional.
oh come on, this isn't a "who came first" argument, its a dicussion of the most influential punk bands, and whether you like it or not and dispite how many albums you've heard, books you've read or interveiws you've seen, the Sex Pistols were one of the most influential punk bands ever. It dosn't matter who came first, the Sex Pistols or Ramones, after Never Mind The Bollocks exposed the youth of England we got some of the best and brightest bands that went on to influence another generation.
This isn't some knowledge pissing contest. And i'm curious, if you hate punk so much, why have you "forgotten more punk albums than i'll ever own" and read what sounds like a library of books about it?
taste_u
http://img238.imageshack.us/img238/9544/istabu4yk.jpg http://img157.imageshack.us/img157/4900/istabu8ew.jpg
Alpha Centauri
Originally posted by manorastroman
do you want a comparison, then? let's each list the punk albums we own, and then the books, interviews, etc. of the era we've read. my statement was a reaction to yours, namely: "start listening to the music."
Oh please, don't be so juvenile as to start a "I'm more punk than you!" debate. Ok, champ, you're a real punk! Go you! Happy? I never claimed to be anything like that. I know my shit, and that's all I need to know to debate with you.
You can reference all the books you like, but you still haven't proven me, or Cine, wrong. You've just proven that you love The Ramones.
Originally posted by manorastroman
now that i've had a bit to think about it, you're using popular opinion, AC. essentially, you're saying that more people looked up to the sex pistols as punkers, and more people associate them with punk. that's goofy. philosophically, musically, and stylistically they were nothing new. richard hell had the philosophy and the style YEARS before the pistols. so because a thousand snot nosed english kids didn't look up to richard hell, he can't be considered influential punk? hypocrite.
the only special knowledge you have displayed is referencing the roundhouse. the core has done nothing but spout utter nonsense and reference fashion sense. neither of you have proven you know ANYTHING but how to be untraditional.
Who said Richard Hell wasn't influencial? Not me.
I don't care about Cine, his debate with you is his own. I'm a music fan, I don't see the point in dedicating one's self to any one genre inherently. There are punk bands I love, but there are punk bands I can't stand, so it's pointless for me to say I'm an out and out punk fan.
The point, as Tabby said, isn't about who came first, it's about influence. Like it or not, The Sex Pistols changed music, they influenced many people and were viewed by many credible bands, artists and critics as pioneers of punk rock, their album became a standard.
Wait...I'M using popular opinion? Maybe when you're not tonguing The Ramones, we can discuss that.
-AC
manorastroman
you effectively dodged and misunderstood everything i said. first of all, i'm not punk at all, as stated above. it was a large part of my life years ago, but thats about it. this is in no way a punk pissing contest. second of all, i only brought up the "forgotten more punk bands" thing because you insinuated that i hadn't "listened to the music".
i will agree that the sex pistols are a very influential punk band. they made my list, if you recall. but i take issue with your dismissal of the ramones. i don't tongue them. i haven't even listened to them in years. but the fact remains that the ramones are easily as influential as the pistols, something you inexplicably deny.
Alpha Centauri
Originally posted by manorastroman
you effectively dodged and misunderstood everything i said. first of all, i'm not punk at all, as stated above. it was a large part of my life years ago, but thats about it. this is in no way a punk pissing contest. second of all, i only brought up the "forgotten more punk bands" thing because you insinuated that i hadn't "listened to the music".
I insinuated that because you miss the point. If you think punk was about boredom, all's for nought with regards to your research.
Originally posted by manorastroman
i will agree that the sex pistols are a very influential punk band. they made my list, if you recall. but i take issue with your dismissal of the ramones. i don't tongue them. i haven't even listened to them in years. but the fact remains that the ramones are easily as influential as the pistols, something you inexplicably deny.
I'm not denying that they're as influential. I'm against the continual overrating of them. For me, that's as far as it goes.
They were influential, but that doesn't necessarily mean in a good way.
-AC
vintageSW77
well i liked to chip in with THE FALL and ADAM AND THE ANTZ first lp DIRK WEARS WHITE SOX being very influential
i agree that PIL were the better band over the Pistols an all
what the **** is an Akon pic doing in a Punk thread
Rn B and Hip Hop is why we need something like 76 to come along and shake things up
im tired of seeing kids listening to the same old shit accepting it
Barbarossa
Originally posted by Alpha Centauri
The Sex Pistols reacted in a more comedic, snotty way. Black Flag and Minor Threat, Articles of Faith and D.O.A, these bands went off like a bomb.
-AC
I'm shocked you have even heard of AoF. They really were never well known outside of Chicago.
Kudos to you.
Alpha Centauri
Originally posted by Barbarossa
I'm shocked you have even heard of AoF. They really were never well known outside of Chicago.
Kudos to you.
The lesson learned is not to underestimate me.
But thanks.
-AC
Barbarossa
Originally posted by Alpha Centauri
The lesson learned is not to underestimate me.
But thanks.
-AC
I never did.
Know anything else of the early chicago punk bands or scene? It's a favorite subject of mine, so I rather enjoy talking about it.
Lighthammer
The Clash, Sex Pistols, and Dead Kennedys
luv*kiedis
Originally posted by Barbarossa
Without the Ramones, I doubt the American punk of past, present and future would be what it was, is and will be.
Light and Poppy they may have been, does not offset the influence they are.
agreed
The Core
Punk's dead, and what it is today isn't punk.
RedAlertv2
Although punk rock today is admittedly a shadow of what it once was, Im of the opinion that punk rock will never die.
Bardock42
Originally posted by Alpha Centauri
American punk of present and future? If that's what we have to thank The Ramones for...well.
Does not offset the fact that they're the band everybody namedrops.
There are more important bands.
Bad Brains, Black Flag and Minor Threat did more for music in general.
-AC
I namedrop The Clash usually.
Though I like the Ramones. Listened to them a lot lately.
knight
BuZZcocks, Sex Pistols & The Members
vintageSW77
been listening to a lot of CRASS recently and The DKs
im going to download some SLAUGHTER AND THE DOGS
been reading about them in a Manchester music scene book i bought the other day but ive yet to hear them
i think the stuff that came out after punk died is far more interesting though
THE FALL
MAGAZINE
JOY DIVISION
PIL for instance
knight
Didn't PunK start in Manchester? I think BuZZcocks were from there.
vintageSW77
i always saw Punk as starting in NY but the Buzzcocks did put on a gig for the Pistols to play in Manc
in the audience was Mark E Smith,Morrisey,Mick Hucknall(!!???)Joy Division and a few other minor manchester musicians who went on to form bands
punk was different in Manc to the London scene
diffrent sound and less emphasis on the look
Barbarossa
Originally posted by vintageSW77
been listening to a lot of CRASS recently and The DKs
Crass eh? Nice choice.
Check out Conflict. I personally like them much more than Crass.
Also, look for Amebix. Without them, there would be no Crass. Or most other "Crust Punk" for that matter.
Solo
Minor Threat, Black Flag, Joy Division
vintageSW77
Conflict have now been added to my punk faves
el_barto
The Clash
Minor Threat
Fugazi
The Ramones
Dead Kennedys
New York Dolls
Husker Du
NOFX
Green Day
vintageSW77
anyone unfamiliar with THE FALL - the greatest band ever to come from Manchester who are still coming up with the goods 30 years on
here you go
http://www.sendspace.com/file/1r8k7d
80 min mix of some of their best tracks compiled by myself
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