yes punk was a distinct movement but it did follow a line right out of the 60's. It's not like the bands that Punk got its influences from bands that were playing long jams, excess long winded songs. Also punk didn't just start on its own with no influence. Hence where did it come from? Most people say it followed the stooges, mc5, velvet underground to the NY Dolls, glam rock(full of prog roots by the way) all bands that didn't have any excess and never stopped having this fun idea(although I'll debate all rock bands had fun). Everyone likes to take the Ramones as the darlings of early punk but it is stated numerious times they were influenced by Iggy Pop Dictators and The NY Dolls.Aktivator:
Okay. So I guess the basic point in your post is that bands like the Electric Light Orchestra didn't take themselves that seriously either, at least they didn't in the seventies and eighties.
You've also frequently contested the point that punk bands were rebelling against the excesses that had crept into rock music.
Do you then disagree that the punk bands of the seventies were out to reembrace the short singles of the early to mid sixties? How would you characterize the punk movement if you don't see rebellion against introspection/excesses in rock as a key defining characteristic? If punk wasn't rebelling against relevance and reembracing mindless fun, what then was it all about?
You don't agree with me but you do admit that punk existed as a distinct movement. How then would you define/characterize punk?
![]()
Secondly, lets look at the early 70's. You talk about excess and arena rock like it was the only game in town. Mainstream early 70's music was all over the place. There was country Rock, Celtic revival ,soul,Roots-rock ,Progressive bluegrass , art rock/prog rock, Nostalgia,Power-pop ,reggae,dub,salsa,singer/songwriter,L.A. Renewal ,southern rock,glam, early stages of hearvy rock/heavy metal etc.. The masses were all over the place not just listening to arena and prog rock. So were was the need to rebel against only two genres? I think what gets lost in history is it wasn't the bands that rebeled against these genres but the masses left those genres to listen to punk rock and that happened after the birth of punk 74-76.
By 77 you also had disco so some went to disco and others to punk. However, arena rock was also still a big force-look at a guy like Groovy man he and his buddy's weren't going to fall into disco or punk. Don't also forget the hippie crowd was still following the jam band and southern rock(dead and allmans). So early Punk was just another genre and had nothing to do with excess. However, by 78 we are now talking about bands influenced by punk bands and this might be where the rebellion against all other forms really began. Funny thing is that Punk went back underground by 79 and the masses went to new wave which had influences from all corners.
By the way how do you explain a band like The Gang of Four? influences in punk but also jazz? Yeah we understand you went on to follow punk into the 80's which went hardcore but the masses were long gone from the genre by then.
Don't get me started on punk rock's that liked prog/art rock or a guy like Brian Eno who mixed with all of them.
here is agreat read on the history of rock
here is the portion on punk
http://www.scaruffi.com/history/cpt42.html
Last edited:





