Explores the raw energy, rebellion, and liberating impact of
Britain’s 1976–77 punk explosion. Punk: the filth and the fury.
But it was so much more than that. In The History of Punk Music,
author Stephen Palmer depicts the punk rock explosion of 1976-77 in
tired, bored, and socially stratified Britain. Emerging from the
litter-strewn streets of London, punk’s music expressed the
suppressed anger of young working-class people with nowhere to go and
nothing meaningful to do. Its music was raw and shocking. Its fashion
mocked staid middle-class values. Its art was expressed in cut-outs
and by sprayed graffiti. Yet beneath this sudden explosion,
frightening to those of the establishment who witnessed it,
incomprehensible to white-collar workers commuting to and from work,
lay a philosophy of individual creative expression and an ethic of
anti-racism and liberation for women. Punk in its original form was a
movement of human liberation, a Year Zero moment in the history of a
nation more used to colonial exploits and a vast empire. It spoke of
fury, of hopelessness, of cathartic anger expressed through visceral,
exciting, revolutionary music. Its visual images captured the gaze of
the nation, and soon the world. And all of its central figures yelled,
hammered and smashed the doors of the Establishment. This book charts
the origins, appearance, development and ending of punk. It is a book
of passion and vivid description, befitting the individual visions of
the original punk musicians. Punk was filthy and furious, yet it was
also a new dawn for the British music scene.
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Punk & Pistolry
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781036120320
Publisert
2025
Utgiver
Casemate Publishers and Book Distributors, LLC
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter