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Dean
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Posted: December 04 2019 at 09:52 |
SteveG wrote:
rogerthat wrote:
SteveG wrote:
Dean wrote:
The sheer fact that Iain can reel off those 6 names from memory and I can instantly recognise every one of them (and add a few more) indicates to me that as, using the modern vernacular, influencers the power they wielded cannot be over stated. We are talking about a pre-internet era where a very small number of music newspapers and magazines were the only way that any music fan could get any information on their favourite bands and artists. Take for example Caroline Coon - one-time reviewer for the Melody Maker who was initially the inspiration for Matching Moles O Caroline and then later for The Stranglers' London Lady. Prog Rock artists avoided the press (possibly through social awkwardness) while Punks musicians (using that term loosely) openly courted publicity. Punk was a muso-journalists wet dream come true. | I'm not denying the voracity of your (and Iain's) argument. But wasn't the punk movement (using the term loosely) partially the result of socio-political and economic factors that negatively affected young people, particularly in the UK? Surely the music press did not dictate that criteria for helping along the punk movement. |
Maybe but would it have exploded in the UK without Malcolm McLaren promoting it for ideological reasons, reasons that the press was sympathetic to? It is interesting that within a few years, punk went back to being underground albeit thriving in the mainstream through its many offshoots. | Yes, it exploded with McLaren, but let's not forget that these types of music publications were geared to telling the public what they wanted to hear, not what they needed to hear. So, they had listen to their readership. Not the other way around. |
I disagree. Back then the Melody Maker and New Musical Express (and later Sounds) would deem to lead not follow. If they decided that someone or something was no longer de rigueur then out it went. Having ousted the rock dinosaurs (a journalists turn of phrase, not some smart-mouthed punk poseur as that would be an oxymoron) they actually managed to turn on themselves and the hand that fed them in the post-punk era.
Edited by Dean - December 04 2019 at 09:58
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Dean
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Posted: December 04 2019 at 09:57 |
SteveG wrote:
^ I agree 100% about real punk vs. post faux punk, and the resulting trendy punk/new wave boom that followed. That was certainly perpetuated by the press. But the "real punk movement" was still an organic entity that I believe was created mostly on it's own before the music press ran with it. There is still a semblance of a give and take between the punk movement and the press. The bottom line is that the press did not create the punk movement. But they certainly did shape the punk rock that followed. |
In the UK hardcore Punk was kept at arms' length by the press simply because there was no money in it. Plastic Punk was far more saleable.
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Dean
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Posted: December 04 2019 at 10:02 |
Anyway... found this on one of my searches, I remember this Ad from 1975 appearing in the NME:  Can't say that's particularly snooty 
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Lewian
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Posted: December 04 2019 at 10:43 |
Still this doesn't explain that outside the UK similar things happened. Also there was TV, radio, club and dance hall culture, gigs, people listening to stuff they didn't know in record shops, lots of things going on apart from music writing.
I remember (having come to the party somewhat late in 1979/80) that punk was seen as refreshing and liberating and people actually played a lot of punk which you couldn't do so easy with prog. I started making music myself at that time and it surely helped me and others that dilettantes were tolerated and even welcomed on stage. It was fun (and the product of my own proggish taste maybe sounded more punk than prog in the beginning  ). We didn't feel strongly influenced by journalists but rather by bands that achieved something listenable with simple means. And it was indeed somewhat "snooty" to tell us and others (including some really good folks) that in order to make music and go on stage you need to be able to play lake Wakeman or Emerson. So the musical appeal of punk/new wave is very obvious to me, if more on the active side than just for listening, as is the observation that some proggers were/are elitist, and would praise their favourite music based on the musicians' ability on display, which to me is rather circus than essential musical quality. Obviously it's very useful to play good music as well, I'm not denying that (although I was keen to ignore it at the time). You get my point; I had already started to become a prog listener but I was in a certain sense part of the revolution against it as well. Which had nothing to do with what journalists wrote.
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SteveG
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Posted: December 04 2019 at 10:44 |
Dean wrote:
I disagree. Back then the Melody Maker and New Musical Express (and later Sounds) would deem to lead not follow. If they decided that someone or something was no longer de rigueur then out it went.
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Yes, once again we agree nearly 100%. I agree that these publications ousted those that were no longer de rigueur. My only point of contention is who said that they were no longer de rigueur? Did the musical press take this upon themselves or were they focused on the new musical trends and reporting on the outcasts? As this seems to be your area of expertise, I have to yield to views. And no self respecting punk would have ever said rock dinosaur . At least not the fake ones I've met.
Edited by SteveG - December 04 2019 at 10:44
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Posted: December 04 2019 at 10:46 |
Dean wrote:
SteveG wrote:
^ I agree 100% about real punk vs. post faux punk, and the resulting trendy punk/new wave boom that followed. That was certainly perpetuated by the press. But the "real punk movement" was still an organic entity that I believe was created mostly on it's own before the music press ran with it. There is still a semblance of a give and take between the punk movement and the press. The bottom line is that the press did not create the punk movement. But they certainly did shape the punk rock that followed. |
In the UK hardcore Punk was kept at arms' length by the press simply because there was no money in it. Plastic Punk was far more saleable. |
Tell that to Malcolm McLaren.
Edited by SteveG - December 04 2019 at 10:46
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Dean
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Posted: December 04 2019 at 11:42 |
ker-ching!
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SteveG
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Posted: December 04 2019 at 11:47 |
^  Ok, message received!
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rogerthat
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Posted: December 04 2019 at 17:26 |
SteveG wrote:
^ I agree 100% about real punk vs. post faux punk, and the resulting trendy punk/new wave boom that followed. That was certainly perpetuated by the press. But the "real punk movement" was still an organic entity that I believe was created mostly on it's own before the music press ran with it. There is still a semblance of a give and take between the punk movement and the press. The bottom line is that the press did not create the punk movement. But they certainly did shape the punk rock that followed. | There was a real punk movement,yes, but it went underground again pretty soon. That is, it is very difficult to keep up a mainstream presence for very raw and simple music and it only happened with the active support of the music press. In fact, with the exception of punk, the music press, including the rock journos, have usually been conservative and loudly decried new trends only to jump onto the bandwagon when it breaks through at a mainstream level. Back to punk, what survived after the breaking apart of Sex Pistols was mostly post punk or new wave. Which is fine. I think Juju is a great album, for instance. But there's nothing DIY about it anymore, you don't get that sound without a decent budget and competent professionals. As Dean said, what really happened in the wake of the decline of prog was a slick commercialisation of rock on the one hand via New Wave. This ended with the soft side of rock getting subsumed into pop as it lost all bite. On the other side, the heaviness imperative. Pink Floyd weathered the punk attack better because they embraced big faux metal riffs in Animals and Wall. The period of prog's decline coincides with Rush's meteoric rise and they were as excessive as any prog rock band in the past. But they were heavy and in a tight Maiden/Priest like way, not a lumbering Ozzy Sabbath way. What 1976-77 really signalled then may have been the end of the hippie aesthetic, of rock as a dreamy kind of music. From hereon, rock necessarily had to be violent. If not violent, then at least whiny but that wouldn't come about until grunge and Radiohead.
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Posted: December 04 2019 at 20:50 |
Lewian wrote:
Still this doesn't explain that outside the UK similar things happened. Also there was TV, radio, club and dance hall culture, gigs, people listening to stuff they didn't know in record shops, lots of things going on apart from music writing.
I remember (having come to the party somewhat late in 1979/80) that punk was seen as refreshing and liberating and people actually played a lot of punk which you couldn't do so easy with prog. I started making music myself at that time and it surely helped me and others that dilettantes were tolerated and even welcomed on stage. It was fun (and the product of my own proggish taste maybe sounded more punk than prog in the beginning  ). We didn't feel strongly influenced by journalists but rather by bands that achieved something listenable with simple means. And it was indeed somewhat "snooty" to tell us and others (including some really good folks) that in order to make music and go on stage you need to be able to play lake Wakeman or Emerson. So the musical appeal of punk/new wave is very obvious to me, if more on the active side than just for listening, as is the observation that some proggers were/are elitist, and would praise their favourite music based on the musicians' ability on display, which to me is rather circus than essential musical quality. Obviously it's very useful to play good music as well, I'm not denying that (although I was keen to ignore it at the time). You get my point; I had already started to become a prog listener but I was in a certain sense part of the revolution against it as well. Which had nothing to do with what journalists wrote. |
The boldface is mine. I don't really condone the view expressed, but I'm intrigued, because it speaks to something I've always suspected. It took awhile for Prog musicians to get to the level they were eventually. I suppose it may have been hard for even talented up and coming musicians to keep up with some of the Prog legends simply because they had a few years head start learning to be musicians.
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Dean
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Posted: December 04 2019 at 22:28 |
HackettFan wrote:
Lewian wrote:
Still this doesn't explain that outside the UK similar things happened. Also there was TV, radio, club and dance hall culture, gigs, people listening to stuff they didn't know in record shops, lots of things going on apart from music writing.
I remember (having come to the party somewhat late in 1979/80) that punk was seen as refreshing and liberating and people actually played a lot of punk which you couldn't do so easy with prog. I started making music myself at that time and it surely helped me and others that dilettantes were tolerated and even welcomed on stage. It was fun (and the product of my own proggish taste maybe sounded more punk than prog in the beginning  ). We didn't feel strongly influenced by journalists but rather by bands that achieved something listenable with simple means. And it was indeed somewhat "snooty" to tell us and others (including some really good folks) that in order to make music and go on stage you need to be able to play lake Wakeman or Emerson. So the musical appeal of punk/new wave is very obvious to me, if more on the active side than just for listening, as is the observation that some proggers were/are elitist, and would praise their favourite music based on the musicians' ability on display, which to me is rather circus than essential musical quality. Obviously it's very useful to play good music as well, I'm not denying that (although I was keen to ignore it at the time). You get my point; I had already started to become a prog listener but I was in a certain sense part of the revolution against it as well. Which had nothing to do with what journalists wrote. | The boldface is mine. I don't really condone the view expressed, but I'm intrigued, because it speaks to something I've always suspected. It took awhile for Prog musicians to get to the level they were eventually. I suppose it may have been hard for even talented up and coming musicians to keep up with some of the Prog legends simply because they had a few years head start learning to be musicians.
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I would have thought that most musicians joined bands when they are in their mid-teens whether they are Punk or Prog. Manzarek had as much of a head start over Emerson as Emerson had over Wakeman and Wakeman did over Sensible and Sensible almost did over Nieve. [Yeah, I cherry picked because Wakeman was a young puppy compared to most 70s prog musicians and there is a paucity of Punk keyboardists to chose from, however I was stunned to see how old Dave Forumla is].
Ray Manzarek 1939 Keith Emerson 1944 Dave Formula 1946 Rick Wakeman 1949 Dave Greeenfield 1949 Captain Sensible 1954 Steve Nieve 1958
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Posted: December 04 2019 at 22:39 |
^ Which probably explains the recent surge of faded prog rock bands playing on cruise ships for retirees. Prog, this era's polka.
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Posted: December 04 2019 at 22:52 |
^ while OAP punk bands play seaside holiday camps
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Posted: December 04 2019 at 23:53 |
The Dark Elf wrote:
^ Which probably explains the recent surge of faded prog rock bands playing on cruise ships for retirees. Prog, this era's polka. | Painfully true, though perhaps not as bad as those "Psychedelic 60s" cruises (?)
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Posted: December 05 2019 at 00:19 |
I've always believed that the seventies journos didn't understand prog and I'm sure Emerson voiced this opinion in several interviews. They could however understand punk. It was simple enough for them. Journos were not music scholars so it's no surprise that they got behind it. That said prog was fading and had it's glory days and what was trying to replace was more technical jazz rock style music that was never going to achieve a wider audience that the likes of ELP, Yes, Floyd and Tull did.
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Posted: December 05 2019 at 01:45 |
Atavachron wrote:
The Dark Elf wrote:
^ Which probably explains the recent surge of faded prog rock bands playing on cruise ships for retirees. Prog, this era's polka. | Painfully true, though perhaps not as bad as those "Psychedelic 60s" cruises (?)
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I love the sound of a Psychedelic 60's cruise for the over 60's. 
Edited by Psychedelic Paul - December 05 2019 at 01:45
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Dean
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Posted: December 05 2019 at 01:54 |
If you cannot remember the 60s, that's Alzheimer's. If you cannot remember the psychedelic 60s, that's also Alzheimer's. If you cannot remember the psychedelic 60s cruise, that's still Alzheimer's.
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Posted: December 05 2019 at 02:18 |
rogerthat wrote:
SteveG wrote:
^ I agree 100% about real punk vs. post faux punk, and the resulting trendy punk/new wave boom that followed. That was certainly perpetuated by the press. But the "real punk movement" was still an organic entity that I believe was created mostly on it's own before the music press ran with it. There is still a semblance of a give and take between the punk movement and the press. The bottom line is that the press did not create the punk movement. But they certainly did shape the punk rock that followed. |
There was a real punk movement,yes, but it went underground again pretty soon. That is, it is very difficult to keep up a mainstream presence for very raw and simple music and it only happened with the active support of the music press. In fact, with the exception of punk, the music press, including the rock journos, have usually been conservative and loudly decried new trends only to jump onto the bandwagon when it breaks through at a mainstream level. Back to punk, what survived after the breaking apart of Sex Pistols was mostly post punk or new wave. Which is fine. I think Juju is a great album, for instance. But there's nothing DIY about it anymore, you don't get that sound without a decent budget and competent professionals. As Dean said, what really happened in the wake of the decline of prog was a slick commercialisation of rock on the one hand via New Wave. This ended with the soft side of rock getting subsumed into pop as it lost all bite. On the other side, the heaviness imperative. Pink Floyd weathered the punk attack better because they embraced big faux metal riffs in Animals and Wall. The period of prog's decline coincides with Rush's meteoric rise and they were as excessive as any prog rock band in the past. But they were heavy and in a tight Maiden/Priest like way, not a lumbering Ozzy Sabbath way. What 1976-77 really signalled then may have been the end of the hippie aesthetic, of rock as a dreamy kind of music. From hereon, rock necessarily had to be violent. If not violent, then at least whiny but that wouldn't come about until grunge and Radiohead. |
Valid points in both posts certainly.  The Punk that made it onto the front pages of national newspapers or mainstream news TV in the late 70's was the succes de scandale Situationst International type peddled by Malcolm McLaren. It's always salutary to remember that McLaren got most of his inspiration from US Punk when he was in America promoting and managing the New York Dolls in the mid 70's (He also asked to be Television's manager but was turned down flat by Tom Verlaine and Richard Lloyd) The ripped clothes, safety pins and spiked hair he reportedly 'borrowed' from Richard Hell. Punk on opposite sides of the Atlantic were completely different animals. In the US it strikes me as a bohemian, hedonistic, apolitical, lo-fi artistic 'loft' movement that drew inspiration from European literary sources like Rimbaud, Baudelaire, Genet, and Artaud etc. In the UK the focus was a much more overtly political (left leaning) agenda, a DIY ethos, anti-consumerism, the collective as a catalyst for consensual change and a cautious distrust of the written word. SteveG and rogerthat are both correct that if it was considered authentic at all, it could never be aspirational in a music career sense but just represented a way of life founded upon a particular set of values. Just to clear something up that persists to this day is the charge that Punk was nihilistic. I've never believed this for a second and yes, it was designed to shock, unnerve and unsettle but only so far as to encourage everyone to challenge the unthinking wisdom foisted upon us by those whose prosperity rests entirely on maintaining our apathy and docility.
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Posted: December 05 2019 at 02:19 |
Dean wrote:
If you cannot remember the 60s, that's Alzheimer's.If you cannot remember the psychedelic 60s, that's also Alzheimer's. If you cannot remember the psychedelic 60s cruise, that's still Alzheimer's. |
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Posted: December 05 2019 at 02:46 |
Dean wrote:
The sheer fact that Iain can reel off those 6 names from memory and I can instantly recognise every one of them (and add a few more) indicates to me that as, using the modern vernacular, influencers the power they wielded cannot be over stated. We are talking about a pre-internet era where a very small number of music newspapers and magazines were the only way that any music fan could get any information on their favourite bands and artists. Take for example Caroline Coon - one-time reviewer for the Melody Maker who was initially the inspiration for Matching Moles O Caroline and then later for The Stranglers' London Lady. Prog Rock artists avoided the press (possibly through social awkwardness) while Punks musicians (using that term loosely) openly courted publicity. Punk was a muso-journalists wet dream come true. |
Yes, I'd completely forgotten just how significant this was back in the pre-internet 70s. If Sounds, NME or Melody Maker (which sucked frankly) interviewed ELP or reviewed their new album it was a really really big deal for us fans. I mean, you kept that edition forever and told yer Mum not to throw it out if she was tidying up your room on pain of death. Even more gob-smacking was if our heroes appeared for just 5 fleeting flickering moments on the Grundig 'glass teat' in the corner of the living room. I mean, we all taped that on VHS and still have it somewhere at the bottom of a box in the attic. Yet this was one of the biggest selling bands on the planet at the time...  It just makes the comforting idea that scarcity confers the value on all things slip gradually out of my feeble grasp with every passing year 
Edited by ExittheLemming - December 05 2019 at 02:53
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