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Today I will mostly be listening to ....
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Phil Spector - a Christmas Gift For You. Timeless classic1
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1StevieG said:
Just in case you didn't know, FFS was the cleverly titled supergroup created when Franz Ferdinand and Sparks did a collaboration.,1 -
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stonemuse said:Blackbird, The Beatles Album - Milos1
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TR/ST - Destroyer 10
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1977 The Year Punk Broke - 3 discs of great memories, so many bands that I saw in bars, pubs, clubs and venues in and around London - Buzzcocks, Stranglers, Damned, Vibrators, Boys, Jam, Heartbreakers, Eater, Only Ones, Models, Motörhead, Cock Sparrer, Blitzkrieg Bop, Killjoys, Johnny Moped, Rezillos, Wreckless Eric, Slaughter and the Dogs, Gen X, Sham 69, Tom Robinson Band, 999, Lurkers, Menace, John Cooper Clarke, Wasps, ATV, Eddie and the Hot Rods, Chelsea, Cortinas ... and that’s just the ones from the album that I saw that year, so many other tracks as well, 87 in total.
Not every track is great, but that’s not the point. It was time of pivotal musical change and had an impact on me (and many others) that has lasted my entire life.3 -
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Wife bought the new WHO album, on the whole it's not to bad all things considered.0
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Conflict - This is the A.L.F.
A powerful message, with spirited delivery, from Eltham lad Colin Jerwood.
From the band's impressive 1986 LP The Ungovernable Force
RIP drummer Paco Carreno.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7NZpEm_M5E8
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Lincsaddick said:1
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Hold on. That screen grab for the video. Was it is hand pretending to be his right foot?1
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stonemuse said:1977 The Year Punk Broke - 3 discs of great memories, so many bands that I saw in bars, pubs, clubs and venues in and around London - Buzzcocks, Stranglers, Damned, Vibrators, Boys, Jam, Heartbreakers, Eater, Only Ones, Models, Motörhead, Cock Sparrer, Blitzkrieg Bop, Killjoys, Johnny Moped, Rezillos, Wreckless Eric, Slaughter and the Dogs, Gen X, Sham 69, Tom Robinson Band, 999, Lurkers, Menace, John Cooper Clarke, Wasps, ATV, Eddie and the Hot Rods, Chelsea, Cortinas ... and that’s just the ones from the album that I saw that year, so many other tracks as well, 87 in total.
Not every track is great, but that’s not the point. It was time of pivotal musical change and had an impact on me (and many others) that has lasted my entire life.
Have turned my daughter on to a lot of those bands and tried to educate her about the times and context.
The impact of punk was seismic, because as we know it was more than just music, it was political at a time of economic and social deprivation - before it all inevitably turned into another marketing commodity.
I always considered myself lucky to be of an age that was old enough to be part of the Beatles/Stones/Kinks era, but young enough to embrace the punk revolution.
Edit - Lucky you to have seen so many of those bands1 -
Six-a-bag-of-nuts said:stonemuse said:1977 The Year Punk Broke - 3 discs of great memories, so many bands that I saw in bars, pubs, clubs and venues in and around London - Buzzcocks, Stranglers, Damned, Vibrators, Boys, Jam, Heartbreakers, Eater, Only Ones, Models, Motörhead, Cock Sparrer, Blitzkrieg Bop, Killjoys, Johnny Moped, Rezillos, Wreckless Eric, Slaughter and the Dogs, Gen X, Sham 69, Tom Robinson Band, 999, Lurkers, Menace, John Cooper Clarke, Wasps, ATV, Eddie and the Hot Rods, Chelsea, Cortinas ... and that’s just the ones from the album that I saw that year, so many other tracks as well, 87 in total.
Not every track is great, but that’s not the point. It was time of pivotal musical change and had an impact on me (and many others) that has lasted my entire life.
Have turned my daughter on to a lot of those bands and tried to educate her about the times and context.
The impact of punk was seismic, because as we know it was more than just music, it was political at a time of economic and social deprivation - before it all inevitably turned into another marketing commodity.
I always considered myself lucky to be of an age that was old enough to be part of the Beatles/Stones/Kinks era, but young enough to embrace the punk revolution.
Edit - Lucky you to have seen so many of those bands3 - Sponsored links:
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Six-a-bag-of-nuts said:stonemuse said:1977 The Year Punk Broke - 3 discs of great memories, so many bands that I saw in bars, pubs, clubs and venues in and around London - Buzzcocks, Stranglers, Damned, Vibrators, Boys, Jam, Heartbreakers, Eater, Only Ones, Models, Motörhead, Cock Sparrer, Blitzkrieg Bop, Killjoys, Johnny Moped, Rezillos, Wreckless Eric, Slaughter and the Dogs, Gen X, Sham 69, Tom Robinson Band, 999, Lurkers, Menace, John Cooper Clarke, Wasps, ATV, Eddie and the Hot Rods, Chelsea, Cortinas ... and that’s just the ones from the album that I saw that year, so many other tracks as well, 87 in total.
Not every track is great, but that’s not the point. It was time of pivotal musical change and had an impact on me (and many others) that has lasted my entire life.
Have turned my daughter on to a lot of those bands and tried to educate her about the times and context.
The impact of punk was seismic, because as we know it was more than just music, it was political at a time of economic and social deprivation - before it all inevitably turned into another marketing commodity.
I always considered myself lucky to be of an age that was old enough to be part of the Beatles/Stones/Kinks era, but young enough to embrace the punk revolution.
Edit - Lucky you to have seen so many of those bands
The Roxy, in its limited lifespan, had 5 or 6 bands a night.
Only problem was the lack of venues in South East London. There were a few but most of my time was spent in Camden, Islington, and the West End. Although there were a few good places in East London.
You are right, punk was seismic ... it changed everything.1 -
The one on the left looks like he's terrified but the other finger snapping one is a real cool dude, not!
https://youtu.be/gQSncOYk-Cs
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sillav nitram said:The one on the left looks like he's terrified but the other finger snapping one is a real cool dude, not!
https://youtu.be/gQSncOYk-Cs
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Lincsaddick said:sillav nitram said:The one on the left looks like he's terrified but the other finger snapping one is a real cool dude, not!
https://youtu.be/gQSncOYk-Cs
It came out in ‘61, I only remember it because my older brother had it.
Didn't know it was our entry into the Eurovision Song Contest, came second. In the day when we used to do quite well.1 -
Taken from their self titled bloody brilliant debut album, Chicago Transit Authority, when they were a thoroughly decent band (drummer doing his Whiplash impersonation) and before they went all slushy and drippy!
https://youtu.be/DPZUgfOqAdg
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Bought this over the weekend goes from 1957-2017.
Typical bloke cover!
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Vulfpeck - Back Pocket, live at Madison Square Garden:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZPX9KQbwsg
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sillav nitram said:
Bought this over the weekend goes from 1957-2017.
Typical bloke cover!0 -
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