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Punk Rock: So What?

Punk Rock: So What?

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $24.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Uneven but interesting ideas
Review: A collection of essays, primarily about the British scene. The writing is very uneven, which gets in the way of some interesting ideas. In particular I appreciate the inclusion of essays on gender and race, as these issues are usually glossed over in books on punk. I also liked to essay on regional British punk in contrast to London, and the influences of surf & garage music and comix on American punk. These would be best as starting points for discussion, as each is fairly short, and has shortcomings.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A little too pedantic for punk.
Review: There is one fantastic essay in this collection, "'I won't let that dago by:' Rethinking punk and racism," by Roger Sabin. Its totally great, and I think its mandatory reading for anyone interested in punk. Other than that essay though....

Well, I picked this book up from the library hoping to get a little more context for the 1970s UK punk scene. Listening to Gang of Four, Sham 69, and Stiff Little Fingers day after day, I wanted some specifics. I wanted Margaret Thatcher horror stories and shocking welfare statistics. This book really doesn't do that. Furthermore, it kinda reads like a bunch of professors waxing nostalgiac about listening to the Rezillos and buying bondage pants. I'd have been better served re-reading the liner notes to Crass's "Best Before." This book might be a good resource if you're writing a paper on punk, but its not much use for someone with a general interest, and it doesn't touch much at all on social or political issues, which to me seem crucial to UK punk. But do check out that Sabin essay!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A little too pedantic for punk.
Review: There is one fantastic essay in this collection, "'I won't let that dago by:' Rethinking punk and racism," by Roger Sabin. Its totally great, and I think its mandatory reading for anyone interested in punk. Other than that essay though....

Well, I picked this book up from the library hoping to get a little more context for the 1970s UK punk scene. Listening to Gang of Four, Sham 69, and Stiff Little Fingers day after day, I wanted some specifics. I wanted Margaret Thatcher horror stories and shocking welfare statistics. This book really doesn't do that. Furthermore, it kinda reads like a bunch of professors waxing nostalgiac about listening to the Rezillos and buying bondage pants. I'd have been better served re-reading the liner notes to Crass's "Best Before." This book might be a good resource if you're writing a paper on punk, but its not much use for someone with a general interest, and it doesn't touch much at all on social or political issues, which to me seem crucial to UK punk. But do check out that Sabin essay!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Punk
Review: This book is a great punk book i recomend it to all.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Nick Knox was in the Cramps, not the Vibrators...
Review: When I first found this book I was indeed suspicious, expecting a disaster of misunderstanding and pedantic musings that miss the point (and soul) of the vital rock music that is associated with this era. I myself have problems with the label 'punk', which I am old enough to associate with (and remember as), a 60's rock phenomenon, a la the classic 1972 'Nuggets' compilation of garage and pop peculiarities, to which Lenny Kaye wrote the liner notes and in which he used the term 'punk' to describe the sounds of these 1960's gems. Academics and journalists engaging rock music always has its (great) risks (Greil Marcus' pretentious and phony 'Lipstick Traces: A Secret History of the Twentieth Century', for example, which gets some well-deserved criticism in the chapter I'm about to recommend), but one chapter in this book REALLY gets it right; 'Chewing out a rhthym on my bubble-gum: The teenage aesthetic and geneologies of American punk', by Bill Osgerby. He notes, among many things, the connection between bubble gum, the Monkees, and the Ramones, and sidesteps any pretentious musings in favor of excellent insights into the music. The book is worth it for the valuable insights he provides into some timeless and inspired music(s).
By the way, drummer Nick Knox was in the great band The Cramps, not The Vibrators, as mistakenly found on page 206, in a chapter by someone else. The name of the singer/guitarist in the Vibrators was simply 'Knox', one word only. I saw the Vibrators, the original Ramones, and others in that halcyon year of 1977, and the Cramps some years after that. Bless ya, Nick, wherever you are. Thanks for your contribution to some brilliant and timeless music.


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