The Year Of Punk Documentary London Weekend Television 01/01/78

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  • Опубликовано: 14 фев 2016
  • The Year Of Punk Janet Street Porter Reviews The Year Of Punk, A LWT Documentary Broadcast On 01/01/78 Featuring Early Classic Footage Of The Sex Pistols, The Clash, Siouxsie And Others

Комментарии • 405

  • @Sameoldfitup
    @Sameoldfitup 3 года назад +99

    “Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?”― Tennessee Williams

    • @lynnnleistinger8226
      @lynnnleistinger8226 2 года назад +1

      I do know what's you mean..things tend to look better in hind sight..when your going through it it hard to detach yourself. That's why you have friends

    • @jenny2tone242
      @jenny2tone242 Год назад +2

      Deep

    • @lucasroche8639
      @lucasroche8639 Год назад +2

      I'd never read any Tennessee Williams, thank you, it's always nice to find something new.

    • @cannotfindmyshoes3
      @cannotfindmyshoes3 Год назад +1

      Interesting !

    • @Inbaroush
      @Inbaroush Год назад +1

      Perfect.

  • @millionseller001
    @millionseller001 8 лет назад +122

    Good to see a Punk documentary that was actually made in the era instead of some silly presenter nowadays who wasnt even there telling us all how 'bad'it all was..tv and radio bypass punk as though it never happened.thanks for posting..happy days.

    • @thomasandersen6719
      @thomasandersen6719 3 года назад +3

      everything after 1976 is not punk (early pistols, clash and the Damned)....1977 was just a shit load of crap bands hanging on to a fashion....to me punk ended new years eve 1976...early Pistols, early Clash, the Damned, Kilburn and the high roads, Eddie and the Hot Rods and Dr. Feelgood....that's it.......do I have to name all those crappy hangers on in 1977?

    • @thomasandersen6719
      @thomasandersen6719 2 года назад

      @Bob Freak I have no idea what that even means

    • @almklit
      @almklit 2 года назад +2

      @@thomasandersen6719 ...and the Stranglers who were gigging throughout 1976 and were very much part of Punk to begin with.

    • @thomasandersen6719
      @thomasandersen6719 2 года назад +1

      @@almklit Stranglers were never embraced by the so called punk movement...they were just too old...their drummer was 40 when their first album was released in 1977. Hugh was in a band in the mid 60s with Richard Thompson from Fairport Convention....Stranglers were never ever part of punk to begin with and never embraced...as I said...their drummer was 40 in 1977....he was old enough to be the dad of some of the earliest punks in London in 1976

    • @almklit
      @almklit 2 года назад +2

      @@thomasandersen6719 That's not strictly true, it became the reason, but initially they were embraced, but infighting incidents like Dingwalls 1976 between the Clash and the Pistols at a Remones gig and the Stranglers stance very quickly ostracised them from there comtemporories. I am referring to the early beginninings late 1975 early 1976 before PUNK became mainsteam and the new orthodoxy and rules developed. I am talking when Strummer was in the 101,ers and The pistols were going to see the stranglers.

  • @adam4-dotz349
    @adam4-dotz349 2 года назад +36

    Remember watching this @ the start of 1978 and saw Siouxsie performing the Lord's Prayer over the closing credits.....I was hooked!! The Banshees have been my favourite band ever since....,Thanks for downloading....Respect due from an Old Goth....

    • @sophiew1967
      @sophiew1967 2 года назад +3

      I saw the Banshees a few times myself including that amazing 1985 Peepshow tour when Siouxie did the whole tour with her leg in paster to the hip..she still looked like a goddess! I occasionally talk to Steven Severin on his RUclips channel he's pretty up for talking to fans .

    • @jamesguy1030
      @jamesguy1030 Год назад +1

      Sophie W ~ Yeah,
      The Punk Rock Movement & The Hard Rock Scene have got a lot in common with their aggressive & violence style of music.
      Lemmy & Motörhead used to be covered in Nazi memorabilia, hats, iron crosses, patches, etc.
      Siouxsie & The Banshees is Pictured with the Luftwaffe Eagle & swastika patch on her black shirt.
      Like Lemmy Said =
      “The Bad Guys throughout history always had the best uniforms, when you think about it. . . . They were the Rock Stars of their day”
      This was to inspire a Generation of Young people to get off their arses & make something interesting happen.
      One of these young men featured in this classic documentary is a man called Ian Stuart.
      Ian Stuart, Like so many young men dreamed of a career in Rock ‘n’ Roll
      but when in 1977 he formed Skrewdriver,
      A Punk Group Based in North West England,
      No one could have predicted the rollercoaster ride that he was about to endure.
      So with two singles and an album recorded Skrewdriver were heading for the dizzy heights of rock stardom,
      But when their concerts became battlegrounds & gained the band a reputation that saw them Banned from London venues,
      Disowned by their record label and slaughtered in the mainstream music press most people would have put it down to experience & shuffled off into a Dystopian day Job.
      it is testament to the resilience of Ian Stuart that against all the staggering odds he refused to be defeated.
      This is well documented in the fascinating book called =
      “The Ian Stuart - Skrewdriver Biography”
      This Records the historical journey that started as a highly rated punk vocalist mixing with the Likes of ~
      The Sex Pistols,
      Bob Geldof,
      Siouxsie & The Banshees,
      Motörhead,
      Iggy Pop,
      Sham69,
      Sting from the police,
      & Suggs From Madness.
      Right the way thru to National Front Demonstrators,
      British Movement Marches,
      Ku Klux Klan Leaders in the US,
      & Top Skinhead Recruits for the Blood & Honour Organisation that he founded back in 1987.
      The Record Shops refused to sell his albums,
      Yet they sold thousands,
      His Concerts were starved of any publicity,
      Yet even his enemies would admit that he could easily fill venues as big as the Royal Albert Hall.
      This Remarkable in-depth story traces his early beginnings in Blackpool through to his Murder as a National Socialist & Skinhead Legend in 1993.
      Yeah, we’ve all heard stories about rebellious Punk Rock Stars,
      but this is a Truly unique account of a Rebel with a Cause.
      & one who lived through the Pain, Pressure & Patriotic Pride that was his Life.
      Even if you Revile this Rock Movement,
      it’s ideas,
      it’s Music,
      This is an interesting & important piece of Social & Youth Culture History.
      (it’s also available on video footage)

    • @saraenneking4652
      @saraenneking4652 Год назад

      They destroyed disco

    • @atis9061
      @atis9061 Год назад

      @@saraenneking4652 it deserved to die

    • @cannotfindmyshoes3
      @cannotfindmyshoes3 Год назад +1

      She STILL looks good too, all these years later. 🖤

  • @philipsymonds4016
    @philipsymonds4016 8 лет назад +32

    Best 5 years of my life punk!!77 to 82.loved it,miss it.

    • @sophiew1967
      @sophiew1967 2 года назад +2

      Well theres some amazing punk bands still out there..check out Viagra Boys & my own personal favourite from Australia ..Amyl & The Sniffers with the incredible Amy Taylor..theres some great music out there & a lot being made by older people like us too like Nottigham's Sleaford Mods...eve n Iggy Pop is covering a few of their tracks !

    • @seansands424
      @seansands424 2 года назад +4

      It was great, miss it

    • @jamesguy1030
      @jamesguy1030 Год назад +1

      sean sands ~ Yeah,
      if you Don’t already know,
      The Punk Lead Singer on the Stage slagging off the Teds after getting their gear smashed up,
      Was an amazing Punk by the name of Ian Stuart.
      & i must say, his story is a Truly unique account of a Rebel with a Cause.
      The first concept of Skrewdriver was way back in 1975, When Ian Stuart formed a band calling itself “TUMBLING DiCE”
      The band mainly played cover versions of songs by the Rolling Stones & The Who.
      But in May ‘77 the band changed their name to Skrewdriver & had started to write their own material.
      Soon afterwards the single “ANTISOCIAL”
      was released at the end of 1977 & featured live in this amazing documentary by LWT
      Now Skrewdriver Took a major image change dropping their Punk look & becoming a Skinhead Band.
      Their debut L.P “All Skrewed Up” was Soon to follow.
      Becoming Skinheads did nothing to improve their image with the music press,
      Who labelled Skrewdriver fans as Thugs & National Front Supporters.
      The mainstream media then called upon Skrewdriver & Sham69
      to Denounce their Patriotic followers,
      Jimmy Percy & Sham69 quickly agreed & then became really big.
      of course Skrewdriver declined & the press declared war against them.
      With a Complete ban on advertising & gigs becoming harder & harder to find the band called it a day in 1978.
      Skrewdriver reformed in 1979 with a new guitarist and a new drummer, they promptly released the “Built up knocked Down E.P”
      Once again the advertising ban & the constant attention from the mainstream media led to the band splitting again in 1980.
      This is where the in-depth story should end but at the end of 1981
      Ian Stuart moved to London & formed yet another Line up.
      This Time around the band members were a lot more clued up on what kind of reception to expect.
      & they set about building the Skrewdriver following with a-vengeance.
      in early 1982 they released the 12” Called
      “BACK WITH A BANG”
      & then two tracks for the United Skins Compilation namely
      “ANTISOCIAL” and
      “BOOTS & BRACES”
      So after years of backstabbing & name calling by the mainstream music press,
      SKREWDRIVER Now decided to get straight to the point & prove that all the Rumours were were actually true.
      SKREWDRIVER were Truly a Patriotic National Front Band & they were bloody proud of it.
      However, this Remarkable Story ended with the Murder of Ian Stuart as a National Socialist & Skinhead Legend in 1993.

    • @AndyFromEssexUk.
      @AndyFromEssexUk. Год назад

      @@jamesguy1030I consider myself extremely lucky to have seen Ian,Kev,Grinny and Phil at the Marquee in 1977.The band Chelsea were on too and were boring.The place was full of Scotland fans,I think they played England at Wembley that day.I was 14.

  • @edwardbliss8931
    @edwardbliss8931 8 лет назад +123

    We are in need of another music revolution like punk. Now. Anything with that same "fuck the mainstream, kill the music industry" spirit.

    • @TravisBickle1963
      @TravisBickle1963  8 лет назад +10

      +Edward Bliss
      Too Right Pop Stars dressed like country gents complete with flat caps and beards and playing folky/acoustic twaddle reminds me of the 70's country rock era exactly the reason punk happened

    • @jvnkhartskrewedgod4782
      @jvnkhartskrewedgod4782 8 лет назад +4

      FVCK YEAH WE DO!!!!!

    • @thebanbablues
      @thebanbablues 8 лет назад +2

      devolved*

    • @AlexanderLaurence
      @AlexanderLaurence 8 лет назад +4

      what industry? Punk wasn't so much anti mainstream, it was a counter culture movement.

    • @misternice4667
      @misternice4667 7 лет назад +1

      agreed

  • @TheHalloweenmasks
    @TheHalloweenmasks Год назад +14

    I have always liked punk, it has something that other music doesn't have.

  • @thetriumphofthethrill2457
    @thetriumphofthethrill2457 6 лет назад +19

    Good and important documentary from the time. It's nice to see all of those who are now legends during their early days.

  • @fabiopunk1661
    @fabiopunk1661 7 лет назад +39

    the value of this doc is that was actually shot at that time, and it still sounds so fresh

  • @Paulvon128
    @Paulvon128 7 лет назад +8

    I lived this era. It was crazy but fun

  • @andersonpessoa1671
    @andersonpessoa1671 7 лет назад +22

    39:57 First time I see Siouxsie Sioux smiling, how charming she is!

  • @jagmarc
    @jagmarc Год назад +7

    What you see and hear here is about as close as you'll ever get to a primary source of how London was 1976-77

  • @gustavnovak
    @gustavnovak 2 года назад +6

    Time may change me but I can't trace time...still a punkrocker ! 👍🖖🤙🏻📢🎼🎵🎶🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸

  • @lynnnleistinger8226
    @lynnnleistinger8226 2 года назад +6

    I'm 60 I fell for mainly British first wave I was 14 in 1977 prime Punk saved Britan .

  • @sophiew1967
    @sophiew1967 2 года назад +3

    Thanks for this Mr Taxi Driver 🚕 takes me back to being 12 yrs old in the late 70' s & throwing myself round in front of my mum's old black & white tv when the Old Grey Whistle Test or Tony Wilson was promoting punk & new wave bands on Granada Reports..what a great time in British mudic !👍

    • @cannotfindmyshoes3
      @cannotfindmyshoes3 Год назад

      Haha! Are you talking to ME?! 😅 I like how you noticed the name too.

  • @jonblazeinc
    @jonblazeinc 8 лет назад +30

    Good to see stranglers mentioned in this even back then. ....The media likes to discard them out the movement

    • @katieandrew2719
      @katieandrew2719 8 лет назад +2

      I agree!

    • @jonblazeinc
      @jonblazeinc 7 лет назад +3

      Thomas Andersen the rest of the band were in their late 20s back in 77 only jet was in his 30s then. but yes they were almost 10 years older than the other punk bands then

    • @Stranglerxx77
      @Stranglerxx77 7 лет назад +5

      The stranglers were amazing live ( I was 14 in 77 ) and saw em alot 78 _ 82 , Also the clash were as good live J J and Hugh were 25 in 77 .

    • @sfbunnyman
      @sfbunnyman 7 лет назад +1

      ZERO XX77. i saw Hugh Cornwell in San Francisco the last three times he toured. Interesting hearing Stranglers songs played by a three piece band. He was cool and took the time to chat with fans after the show.

    • @christo792
      @christo792 7 лет назад +5

      The Stranglers had an interesting history.
      They were formed in 1974 by Jet Black, the drummer, who was then in his mid-thirties. They were called The Guildford Stranglers.
      They were a pub rock band, playing music influenced by psychadelic rock bands such as The Doors and The Music Machine.
      They managed to get opening sets for The Ramones and Patti Smith, which brought them into Punk.
      Hugh Cornwell was a Blues musician, Burnell had been a classical guitarist and had performed with symphony orchestras. Jet Black had been a Jazz drummer and Dave greenfield had played at military bases in Germany.
      This explains why they had a totally different sound to the rest of the bands in the late 70s.

  • @deanpd3402
    @deanpd3402 4 месяца назад +1

    Punk is the same value system as that of Crowley. The spirit and world view that he embodied. That same value has echoed throughout the decades. Though changing its tones here and changing its wardrobe and tempo there. It has always remained, lingered, festered even. It has grown on the back of society like a wicked fungus, as we now find ourselves in the dead centre of a new age and aeon of Horus.

  • @prschuster
    @prschuster Год назад +3

    Some of the best years of my life

  • @garystones9446
    @garystones9446 6 лет назад +8

    I'm glad to say Westwood never made a penny out of me, made me own till the end.

  • @ernestomercedes5754
    @ernestomercedes5754 Год назад +4

    this documentary is really great

  • @emily.toombs
    @emily.toombs Месяц назад

    I saw Siouxsie live last May and let me tell you, she’s still just as beautiful and amazing 💜

  • @pigknickers
    @pigknickers 8 лет назад +9

    Overall you've just got to say, better days. The people were sweet even if we thought they were orrible at the time. And no it can't happen again we have to accept our fate.

  • @akatripclaymore.9679
    @akatripclaymore.9679 Год назад +1

    Thanx for the Vid, Travis B. I was born in "64"👍🤜🤛

  • @Kblog777
    @Kblog777 6 лет назад +4

    Wow this is very insightful and almost retrospective considering it was at its peak when this documentary was made.

  • @lucatricky1457
    @lucatricky1457 2 года назад +9

    R.i.P. Jordan queen of punk

    • @cannotfindmyshoes3
      @cannotfindmyshoes3 Год назад +2

      Yeah, she was SOMETHIN ELSE!!! Beautifull person she was too. An ICON. 🖤

    • @hgreen8666
      @hgreen8666 8 месяцев назад +1

      .. RIP Jordan, Debbie and Tracie. All gone and too young .

  • @lucasroche8639
    @lucasroche8639 Год назад +4

    We used to go to Sedetionaries to buy our ...badges. If one of us was lucky it was because of saving up for a bum-flap or an armband, if it was Christmas maybe a T-shirt, no one could afford Sedentariness back then.
    So whenever you hear the old "what did Malcolm do with all the money?" Know that the answer is "keeping that shop open". 😄
    Punx not dead.

  • @filipematias5127
    @filipematias5127 6 лет назад

    Great documentary though... Thanks for posting this video!

  • @MrUndersolo
    @MrUndersolo 8 лет назад +13

    Still makes me laugh when I think about how silly the British public responded to punk. "First they hate you, then they ignore you, then they win" - paraphrasing Gandhi there, but that is pretty much what happened.
    Man, we need this again...

  • @IssyHowlter
    @IssyHowlter 6 лет назад +3

    best punk documentary ive seen

  • @Kblog777
    @Kblog777 6 лет назад +6

    Sounds that Janet Street Porter doing the narration. The way she's speaking gives the impression that it's 2008 not 1978.

  • @sergeantcrow
    @sergeantcrow 7 лет назад

    Excellent.... Thanks !

  • @andysandel9325
    @andysandel9325 7 лет назад +2

    Fantastic Documentary So Great To Watch It Again, Thank You TravisBickle1 For Sharing With Us📎🔗🔒

  • @donnablackman3954
    @donnablackman3954 Год назад +4

    Hard era good music ❤

  • @dirtydave2691
    @dirtydave2691 6 лет назад +6

    Chaz Chandler put it best, "Its rock and roll its fun".

  • @jonnyzchivago7623
    @jonnyzchivago7623 7 лет назад +19

    Its hilarious how the posh kids involved tried to sound thick and talk with a street accent. Strummer,and Don Letts(the posh rasta)are the funniest. I noticed how Sid Vicious sounded like a well-spoken chap until he got the 'bass Player' slot in the pistols. Also funny was Simonen talking about his mates all working in the factory......was there an art school called the factory near where he lived?

    • @cpj93070
      @cpj93070 6 лет назад +6

      posh kids? Joe was 25 in 77 would have been called an old man in the punk days at that age.

    • @Kblog777
      @Kblog777 6 лет назад +2

      Jonny Zchivago Punk was fake tho. It was like grunge in the 90s, rich kids pretending to be poor and street.

    • @lemsip207
      @lemsip207 6 лет назад +4

      Back then even working class people sounded posh compared to now.

    • @Heatfarmer
      @Heatfarmer 6 лет назад +2

      Uhh, so only working class kids should be punks or whats the fucking point?

    • @gavinreid5387
      @gavinreid5387 3 года назад +6

      Strummer was from a rich family and went to a posh boarding school. Mockney accent.

  • @ruiraiox-pontoscardeais9917
    @ruiraiox-pontoscardeais9917 7 лет назад +3

    LOVE THIS--- EU VI OS THE CLASH AO VIVO EM CASCAIS, LISBOA 1984

  • @Sameoldfitup
    @Sameoldfitup 3 месяца назад

    Brings back memories, but I lived a sheltered youth in a children's home.

  • @daryuskobra669
    @daryuskobra669 8 лет назад +7

    siouxsie sioux looked pretty cool, even in her younger days

    • @hgreen8666
      @hgreen8666 8 месяцев назад +1

      She did she always has looked awesome but she looks great now, old, as she is.

  • @zellah
    @zellah 8 лет назад +52

    Where are The Damned? You know, the band who released the FIRST punk single out of the London scene. GRRRRR

    • @gcf7175
      @gcf7175 8 лет назад

      +Maureen Sullivan You're lookin for the bofa dees?

    • @zellah
      @zellah 8 лет назад

      +Genuine Chocolate Face Say what?

    • @gcf7175
      @gcf7175 8 лет назад +6

      +Maureen Sullivan THE BOFA DEEZ NUTS! Ha ! got em!

    • @spikesification
      @spikesification 8 лет назад +3

      Probably in the u.s again... First punk band to tour there as well....

    • @thedamnedrose6665
      @thedamnedrose6665 7 лет назад

      My thought exactly maureeeeeeen! 😘😘😘

  • @godstomper
    @godstomper 6 лет назад +5

    I remember when san Francisco and the bay area was a epicenter of the punk culture in the states back in the 80s. Remind you i was about 7 or 8 when it got huge. Then the thrash metal scene in the bay area got huge with death angel, exodus, heathen testament metallica . amazing times

  • @deceptivepanther
    @deceptivepanther 8 лет назад +2

    Brilliant.

    • @danielaschwarz1971
      @danielaschwarz1971 7 лет назад

      I must agree,I love Punks Documentary,The Sex Pistols,Joe Strummer,Siouxsie and much more...

  • @vv247
    @vv247 Год назад +2

    I didn't know Mensi passed ... fu ! thats a massive loss.

  • @TheSanchoPancha
    @TheSanchoPancha 7 лет назад +1

    that was a great time

  • @christinacolasanto530
    @christinacolasanto530 2 года назад +1

    Loved this very enjoyable.

  • @pena.3302
    @pena.3302 5 месяцев назад +1

    Wow Bowie made Station to Station.b4 all this released.76.Great lp.then off to berlin.w/-Ig..cool times.! "Im a Dog That never dies"..jim n osterberg.

  • @combatgirl38
    @combatgirl38 Год назад +1

    "Rules of punk" is the very definition of contradiction of terms.
    This is why not needing or giving a fuck about labels is the best way to live freely without inhibition.

  • @libertine40
    @libertine40 8 лет назад +28

    I was 15 when Punk hit NY hard in 1975 and I gravitated towards it because it was an inclusive bunch of folks. There was no such thing as a Afro Punk or Asian Punk - you were just a Punk. The music was of the hook too - nothing like it then or since. It had been percolating since 1971 and hit its apex around '77. Unfortunately, by the early 1980s, Punk was ruined by arrogant execs like that pr$k from CBS Records. That's why the Sex Pistols excited stage left. Next thing we knew bands like The Police were considered Punk. Heck, I looove them yet there are NOT Punk. It's the age old story: nobody can be bothered until the opportunity to make money arises.

    • @roadkilldemon1174
      @roadkilldemon1174 8 лет назад +3

      Ya whit? I hardly think that ace 80s punk bands like Discharge, The Exploited and Amebix could be lumped in with The Police. Punk never died- it just burrowed back into the underground and became an altogether meaner and nastier beastie! :) There were plenty superb American punk bands doing well in the 80s too- Dead Kennedys, Black Flag, to name just two of the bigger ones. There's definitely some crackin' punk to come out of the 80s, mate.

    • @libertine40
      @libertine40 8 лет назад

      +NightWolf Bingo!

    • @libertine40
      @libertine40 8 лет назад

      +Roadkill Demon I agree brother! It did go underground and I was glad when it did, lol. In the states we had MC5, Iggy and the Stooges, Kennedy's - as to said. Out of that backlash came Joan Jett, Twisted Sister and the like. It's still evolving to this day, like HipHop, which took a similar path as Punk with the record execs and got hijacked by Rap. These days the best music can be found by individuals producing their own stuff and distributing it online at these various music social networking sites...like UTube. LoL. The radio is whack and completely out of touch with American youth. How's radio where you're at?

    • @libertine40
      @libertine40 7 лет назад

      +James Morris I have NO problem with hardcore and didn't intend any thing malicious in not including it. I'm just a human being who makes mistakes, lol. Add on brother, by all means...

    • @libertine40
      @libertine40 7 лет назад

      +James Morris Too true...stereotyping is a total drag - besides being completely ignorant.

  • @JoshuaCraigStrain
    @JoshuaCraigStrain 7 лет назад +1

    Well orchestrated .

  • @jamesconnolly5969
    @jamesconnolly5969 8 лет назад +3

    This year is the 40th anniversary of punk and Vivien Westwood and Malcolm McLaren's son are Having a Huge Bonfire and burning everything Punk, because its not rebellious and doesn't stand for anything anymore and is excepted even by the queen

    • @jessmorey9719
      @jessmorey9719 6 лет назад +2

      That’s really sad I wish they could bring punk back because the 70s and 80s are my favourite era 🤘🏻

  • @thecitizenjoan
    @thecitizenjoan 9 месяцев назад +1

    Walking down to kings road I see so many faces

  • @akatripclaymore.9679
    @akatripclaymore.9679 Год назад +1

    The Ramones were a big part of the Punk Rebellion! Thank God for Punk Rocker's.. Anything but the Bee Gee's, KC & the Sunshine Band, The Carpenter's..OMFG🙄
    "DISCO SUCK'S " Perpetually! "Rat Scabies" Mum, how cool is that? Love (The Damned) & Skrewdriver, God Ian Stewart was so young!

  • @flux928
    @flux928 8 лет назад +5

    Siouxsie made good after all.

  • @SoulOfTheReaver
    @SoulOfTheReaver 7 лет назад +3

    Siouxsie turned out alright :P

  • @bonnieburton7484
    @bonnieburton7484 3 года назад +1

    Right on do what you want do you know punk rock is actually cool there’s a lot worse going on in this world love it theMusic

  • @bluesborn
    @bluesborn 7 лет назад +11

    1967:The Summer of Love
    1977:The Summer of Hate

    • @TravisBickle1963
      @TravisBickle1963  7 лет назад +9

      There was A lot of anger but... The only hate I remember was toward the punks not from... Summer of fun for me :)

    • @pinkfloyd870
      @pinkfloyd870 2 месяца назад

      @@TravisBickle1963 true... the hate was all from the mainstream.
      Cops were horrendous, but that just made it dangerous and exciting.

  • @habovay3
    @habovay3 8 лет назад +4

    If the original air date of this documentary was indeed 1/1/78, ironic that it was just days prior to the Pistols' ill-fated North American debut.

  • @oliviolanza1933
    @oliviolanza1933 Год назад +3

    Siouxsie is soooo cute🥰

  • @FiveLiver
    @FiveLiver Год назад +2

    26:36 Screwdriver

  • @TomTremayne
    @TomTremayne 7 месяцев назад

    Street Porter had noticed punk's contradictions early on & well done to her for doing so. For me an interesting character in this doco' is Helen Bullen. She appears in the first Wednesday night at the Roxy sequence at 15:57 & then again in the crowd at 22:30, shot by Don Letts when her son's playing in Eater. She's there again during the interview at 22:37 & each time is wearing different clothes so was clearly a regular, or semi-regular, at the club & whilst she appears not to be a punk herself, in her scrap book photo she's wearing a 'Max's Kansas City' t-shirt long before they were available in the UK!? Wonder what her story was.......is she still alive?

  • @garycollingwood4002
    @garycollingwood4002 Год назад +1

    💙 VIRGIN LISTENING AND WATCHING 💙

  • @w.g.hunter1300
    @w.g.hunter1300 7 лет назад +2

    Note the letter to Mark Perry from Cabaret Voltaire at 39:25, asking for the return of their demo!

    • @Cires789
      @Cires789 6 лет назад +1

      As a cabs fan, that tickled me too.

  • @hauntedtown
    @hauntedtown 5 дней назад

    Holy shit Ian Stuart at 2am nice 👍

  • @patrickspeer2990
    @patrickspeer2990 6 месяцев назад

    I was there, but only a wee little man, I was born 1969, first grade for me was the BiCentennial Year in the USA, 1976. I though Punk started in England, but some say the US. I always thought it wasnt music but social outcry and rebellion, against everything, rejection of everything, music was just the medium, similarly to early Rap. Rap wasnt music, it was rapping about society.

  • @MrSchmolko
    @MrSchmolko 6 лет назад +4

    sid vicious on drums...later he found that he was even better playing the bass :-)

  • @djinnmagik2003
    @djinnmagik2003 5 месяцев назад

    How've you been Travis? 😁 Are you still driving a taxi in NYC!? 😁 I enjoyed your punk rock video. I remember when you used to have that wicked mohawk back in the day 😁

  • @prizramirez2075
    @prizramirez2075 3 месяца назад

    Wow looking at the shop the woman from her shop , her shop really reminds me of a oldschool kind of" hot topic " or spensters 😅

    • @aotctd
      @aotctd Месяц назад

      lol The raiders

  • @gussyboy5167
    @gussyboy5167 6 лет назад +3

    And Danny Baker then went on too do the Daz doorstep challenge.

  • @LarsRyeJeppesen
    @LarsRyeJeppesen 7 лет назад

    "Sniffing Glue Magazine", lmao..

  • @CarlosMiguelDominguesros-mm8zy
    @CarlosMiguelDominguesros-mm8zy 2 месяца назад

    4 m ,was the best year

  • @FranciscoLopez-uk2hl
    @FranciscoLopez-uk2hl 7 лет назад

    does someone have the play list to all the songs ?

  • @JRStephens5005
    @JRStephens5005 7 лет назад +12

    Vivienne Westwood was right when she said that British craftsmen should be making the garments, instead of foreigners. Same as today in America. It's a shame that all of our clothes are made overseas instead of America.

    • @christo792
      @christo792 7 лет назад +3

      Cheaper labour.

    • @devadvogrba
      @devadvogrba 7 лет назад +3

      At first it seemed hard to figure out how your sub-intelligent insinuation failed to collect any response, but on second thought, the mindless are rearing their empty head again and are the thing of the future. Crying shame. There are documentaries here, however, about the neo-nazi tendencies back in the punk era and you should check them out if nothing else than to see whose brainchild your failed attempt at thinking is and how suchlike mindless craps got to be ridiculed by the civilized, and will be so again, to be sure.
      Just who do you think is to blame for the labour export? Who profits from it? And who suffers; is it just the Brits/Americans or the horribly exploited labourers in the overseas sweatshops? Do some reading prior to writing, you really have nothing to say.

    • @christo792
      @christo792 7 лет назад +5

      Deva Dvogrba
      Education is a wonderful thing.
      You should try it sometime.
      You know how to put words into a sentence, but seem to forget that that a sentence should make sense.
      Neo-nazi tendencies in the Punk era? 'Brainchild your failed attempt at thinking is...'!?!
      And other assorted gibberish, none of which has anything to do with the fact that the reason clothng and other goods are made abroad is that working conditions and wage rates which would be totally unacceptable in Britain or the US are acceptable in other countries.
      Which is nothing to do with neo-nazi tendencies, or, to quote you, 'suchlike mindless craps got to be ridiculed by the civilized, and will be so again, to be sure.'
      Whatever that means.

    • @jagmarc
      @jagmarc Год назад +1

      I so agree with you, but something my friend who owns a hat manufacture business told me, that in even where she is in Luton a hat-making centre of excellence, that she now gets them instead made in China and she says they are much better made there than they ever were in England. But Punk wouldn't happen in China

    • @hazelwray4184
      @hazelwray4184 7 месяцев назад

      Petit bourgeois pipe dream

  • @daithi1961
    @daithi1961 7 лет назад

    fab

  • @hansmoser989
    @hansmoser989 Год назад +1

    saw johnny moped two months ago, strange...
    h.m.

  • @hgreen8666
    @hgreen8666 8 месяцев назад

    Brilliant just bloody brilliant I hate authorities and their shit what we need today is more of this stuff and less of the trendy mainstream Kardashian’s shit.

  • @lesleycroney8918
    @lesleycroney8918 7 месяцев назад

    At about 1 minute in its meeee😊

  • @cristiandlf6704
    @cristiandlf6704 6 месяцев назад +1

    Was great to saw Skrewdriver in this documentary 👍🏻

  • @garycollingwood4002
    @garycollingwood4002 Год назад +2

    💙💙💙 VIRGIN 💙💙💙

  • @WOLFanddBEAR
    @WOLFanddBEAR 7 лет назад +4

    18 mins the who? From Watford, sounds awesome

  • @FranciscoLopez-uk2hl
    @FranciscoLopez-uk2hl 7 лет назад

    12:20 specifically

  • @sophierin4943
    @sophierin4943 3 года назад +4

    The damned are again not mentioned eventhough they brought out the first punk album in the UK.. very strange how they get ignored every time.

    • @roncopresents
      @roncopresents 3 года назад +5

      The Damned never allowed people to film them for free because of their manager Jake being a greedy sod. That's why there's so little footage of the damned from those days compared to other bands who had the foresight to let people film them or filmed themselves.

    • @sophierin4943
      @sophierin4943 3 года назад +1

      @@roncopresents Thank you for the information. That explains a lot. It's very unfortunate.

    • @Jambi2435
      @Jambi2435 3 года назад +3

      They were also bannned from TV appearances for the second half of 1977 by the technicians union after their appearance on Blast Off as Rat and Captain brought air rifles and were shooting the camermen on the bum with them, so I wonder if that is why they weren't featured here. A real shame.

    • @hgreen8666
      @hgreen8666 8 месяцев назад

      @@Jambi2435lol that sounds so funny 😂

  • @laneylazarus207
    @laneylazarus207 7 лет назад

    Guys this type of movement is going on right now though!! but with filmmakers, PUNK CINEMA check out Anarchy In The UK: The New Underground Cinema Movement

  • @comedyworldofficial
    @comedyworldofficial 2 года назад +1

    New Years Day 1978

  • @frozenice61
    @frozenice61 3 года назад +2

    danny baker editor of sniffing glue mag

  • @TERRANOVAofficial
    @TERRANOVAofficial 7 лет назад +3

    young don letts!

  • @HoundTO
    @HoundTO 7 лет назад +5

    I have nothing of value to add to this conversation

  • @billcaputo2005
    @billcaputo2005 4 месяца назад +1

    What Siouxie and The banshees song is she singing at the end credits????????

    • @TravisBickle1963
      @TravisBickle1963  4 месяца назад +2

      A Very early version of the 'Lords Prayer.

    • @billcaputo2005
      @billcaputo2005 4 месяца назад

      @@TravisBickle1963 thank you so much!

  • @eduardoteodorobracamonteal397
    @eduardoteodorobracamonteal397 3 года назад +1

    1977

  • @nmacog
    @nmacog 7 лет назад

    is that Joolz Denby at 11:13 ?

  • @rob16248
    @rob16248 7 лет назад +2

    30:00 - Danny Baker

  • @miggy999
    @miggy999 8 лет назад

    OMG .. its Danny Baker at 31 minutes !!

  • @philpatton5652
    @philpatton5652 4 года назад +1

    It was brilliant in the early 80d with bands like crassn conflict n discharge

  • @qw128386
    @qw128386 7 лет назад +1

    what band is playing at 18 minutes in??

    • @adrianclarke1339
      @adrianclarke1339 7 лет назад +6

      The Bears - playing Insane. The lead singer in the programme was Mick North, who died in a motorbike accident some 3 months before the programme was aired.

  • @stiiimes
    @stiiimes Год назад +1

    rock n roll is 2 or 3 catchy chords and a good beat. thats all punk was / is, just a return to good simple rock n roll music about topics relevant to the youth

  • @lindaymohegan3529
    @lindaymohegan3529 7 лет назад +11

    Who is the band at 20 minutes? She said The Burrs? The Birds? From Rockford? From Woford? I have no idea. They rule and I want to know who they are. Does anyone know at all? There's absolutely nothing in the credits about the bands. I cannot understand her accent either, if it's the burrs or the birds. ahhhhh. Let me know someone, please.

    • @lexusdav
      @lexusdav 7 лет назад

      try shazam the sound if possible ?

    • @TravisBickle1963
      @TravisBickle1963  7 лет назад +4

      The Bears

    • @gazriley624
      @gazriley624 7 лет назад +2

      Look up The Bears - on me 7" it's on youtube

    • @clumpft
      @clumpft 7 лет назад

      nah, melodic bass sounds shit in punk music.

    • @hubblebublumbubwub5215
      @hubblebublumbubwub5215 7 лет назад +2

      It sounds like a combination of Dead Boys and Flipper with screamo vocals

  • @sophiew1967
    @sophiew1967 2 года назад

    10.22.is that a very young Kathy Burke ??

  • @GaryDGuitar
    @GaryDGuitar 7 лет назад +7

    34:20, that lady is worth about $50,000,000 nowadays.

  • @FiveLiver
    @FiveLiver Год назад

    29:47 Danny Baker in the 'Sniffin' Glue' office.

    • @FiveLiver
      @FiveLiver Год назад

      34:04 Vivienne Westwood at Seditionaries.

  • @sketch591
    @sketch591 7 лет назад +3

    Sid Vicious on drums ......crazy days indeed.

    • @shannonmarie2417
      @shannonmarie2417 7 лет назад +2

      sketch591 kinda makes u wonder would things have turned out the same if he had remained with her and not joined the sex pistols..and met nancy

    • @hgreen8666
      @hgreen8666 8 месяцев назад

      @@shannonmarie2417might be alive today had he taken the different path.

  • @Sameoldfitup
    @Sameoldfitup 3 года назад +1

    It's youth culture that's all...........

  • @viktorkovalchuk
    @viktorkovalchuk Год назад +1

    That song by the bears is so so ahead of it’s time… proto grunge and emo

    • @viktorkovalchuk
      @viktorkovalchuk Год назад

      Grunge and emo have their roots in punk/hardcore, so….

    • @viktorkovalchuk
      @viktorkovalchuk Год назад

      @ciao214Z I should clarify, when I said grunge, I meant nirvana

  • @lauralewis673
    @lauralewis673 7 лет назад +2

    Again, where are The Damned? First punk band to put out a single - "New Rose"... Hello???

    • @julosx
      @julosx 7 лет назад +1

      Not to mention Wire…