The worst thing about punks is that they worry too much about being punk
:lol: PDT_003
You can say that about many groups of people, though.
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I suppose, for me, one of the things that colours my perspective is that I regard music as entertainment and not much else. I think it's artistic as well, you're creating things, but basically it's all about entertainment for me. When ever musicians (or the engine selling it, or the media) start adding political or social baggage, or trying to make out it's a force for change (any more than other art forms are), then I get turned off big time.
I want entertainment and escapism from music, I'm happy if lyrics deal with interesting topics that make me think, but I don't want a load of other bollox crammed down my throat. When/if the message gets "preachy", I'm off..
I missed, at the time, a lot of very good music because it came out under the "punk/new wave" banner. Elvis Costello is a particularly good example - I was turned off what he was doing because of how he fitted into things at the time and how fans of his told me about him. I didn't realise it at the time, but I loved the tunes and inventiveness he was applying. But I couldn't get past the image and attitude stuff. It took meeting Rory Gallagher at a festival (during Elvis Costello's set), and hearing what he thought about them to open up my ears (he was there a day early, as a punter, to check him and Ian Dury out because he thought they were brilliant - and he was "anti" pop music and the apparatus around it). Admittedly Elvis C was trying to distance himself from the new wave thing at the time - it was his country music period - so I might have got into him after that anyway.
I suppose I didn't like the social message that went with punk. I am of the generation that punk was apparently about and for. I faced the same bullsh1t they had to put up with and were apparently trying to knock down. But I don't agree with the knock it down, destroy the past, approach. I do think we should be able to mock the past or the establishment, but I think we can do it more gently (with better results) and hang on to respect (both self-respect and respect for others).
Punk and other things that were going on (eg Not The Nine O'clock News - I
hated that) taught us that you don't have to respect anyone or anything. All of us now, if we don't like or understand a thing - whether it's right or wrong - instinctively feel that it doesn't deserve our respect.
So, yeah, from that perspective, punk is not dead - it's the cr@p that we don't like today, society apparently falling to bits, people with money just using it to make more for themselves and "screw you, by the way", and people without it taking it from people who ain't got much more and going "screw you, by the way". Long live punk... :lol:
The music itself, the good bits, were very good. The rest, as far as I can see, was a big mistake...
This is blaming a lot on "punk", I know :lol: - I do suspect that punk didn't actually cause it, though. I suspect that punk helped get it out in the open, but really it was just an expression of how uncaring and unsupportive of each other society was ready to be.