🎵 Sex Pistols "Anarchy in the UK" REACTION
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- Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024
- Thanks for checking out our Sex Pistols reaction. Anarchy In The UK was a poll winner on our Punk Rock live stream.
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The absolute beauty of TOTAL RAGE!!! They're not "having fun" or recovering from the night before. This is a political statement. All Sex Pistols songs are fantastic.
Well said!
right on, Frank....this ain't no fronting.
Absolutely! This was REAL and meant. From the heart and head. Yes, Malcolm McLaren’s paws are all over it, but I still play my EMI single regularly. And it keeps my head balanced.
Not really. Malcolm McLaren set them ticking and never expeted that they'd take off the way that they did. John Lydon got the joke but many others didn't. There was a serious core and punk stripped things back and made music accessible again after years of prog rock and the like but the Sex Pistols spent most of their time taking the piss. Lydon himself confirmed this in interviews years later, laughing at lyrics like making anarchist rhyme with antichrist
@@michaelkelly339 was the first manufactured boy band...
What is entirely lost in this analysis is the context of inner-city malaise in mid/late-70's Britain. Lydon's voice oozed real anger and frustration, that cut through the self-indulgent inanity of glam-rock, prog-rock and disco of the time.
yep, hes saying its just a welfare state and a police state, burn it all down
While that's true, give these 2 credit for even listening to it.
As rotten said ‘Yanks don’t understand rock’ About the only thing the man ever said that’s true
@@bessallin459 I would argue that Rage against the Machine or Dead Kennedy’s invalidates that statement.
@@bessallin459 There are a multitude of great American punks that invalidate this.
The Sex Pistols by definition is as punk as it gets.
ruclips.net/video/ZJLOsPT6NbY/видео.html
Nah they were posers
@@RealCanadianGaming Matlock, Jones and Cook. Johnny and Sid were the real ones
It's funny because they only made one album
@@jonathanshaw7355 the real deal didn’t make any albums 🤫
A friend of mine once described Johnny Rotten's voice as one of those few voices in music that makes you want to pick up a brick and start a riot.
I always feel that too...
he really sounds right fucking pissed off he does. if you've got that pissed off inside you and someone can vocalize it, well you get right fucking pissed off withem and want to burn the entire motherfucker down.
best description ever!
YES! I completely agree!
Note that in England, "I get pissed" means I get drunk.
oddly, Rottens diction and pronunciation is brilliant and part of his singing style... how he rolls words into halves is unique.
Gotta check out X-Ray Specs. Lead singer is teenager Poly Styrene and she is dynamite and sings with a thick Cockney accent. Her rebel anthem is "Oh Bondage, Up Yours!" She begins the song with the declaration: "Some people think girls should be seen and not heard. But I say, Oh Bondage Up Yours!"
The greatest punk album ever made. Every track on Never Mind the Bollocks brought the sneer and buzzsaw guitar. It was a punch to the face, and The Sex Pistols only needed one punch to snap rock n roll out of its own over produced self indulgent bombast. The only true punk rock masterpiece to this day.
Exactly!
crass is better
It’s not in the same league as The Stooges debut, great though Bollocks is.
Most true to themselves band ever
Great summary
I'm telling you she is a punk rocker at heart
To hear this without seeing John Lydon is missing a lot. His great book about his childhood is called "No dogs or Irish allowed"
Yes he was angry. Sex Pistols were banned from BBC TV and Radio. It wasn't fun at the time. It was scary to the government.
Excellent book
Johnny Rotten rightly outed pedophilia within the BBC and thus was a true enemy of the state. After the Sex Pistols l saw him front a band called PIL public image ltd.
The song ......Rise is definitely worth a listen......
@@andrewmccabe414 awesome band ....great person...
That sign 'No dogs etc' never existed. An image of the sign was pinched from an Art Exhibition in 1965 & a TV documentary imposed it rather poorly onto a house window - for effect. Everyone remembers it seeing it (on TV) & heard about it. No one can say where it was because it never happened.. Sadly many people today believe it existed.. If it had it would've not have been tolerated ... The Guardian looked into it over a decade ago
@@Mute040404 thx 4 the 411..
As i said b4...
Anger is an energy and the 1st book "no nuthin" are excellent reads.
Anarchy is as unacceptable to some people as communism. To be doing music like this now wouldn't raise any eyebrows, but to be doing music like this in 1976 is a different story. Also I know the '70s were a rough time for a lot of people in the UK so this song sounds like an expression of that rage and frustration. Inciting a riot is what it sounds like to me and I think that's why it still resonates today. It's not just some guy saying he hates everything. There's a point it.
Communism should be unacceptable. It is slavery.
Comprehend much? Re read
That is one of the issues with doing a reaction to a song like this. Unless you are going to do a miniature history lesson and then imagine yourself in the headspace of the time you cannot really appreciate it properly. This song was banned from tv when it came out. These days they would have it in a commercial, if they haven't already.
Most Americans don't even know what Anarchism or Communism mean. Many have been brainwashed to believe that fascist state Capitalism is communism, despite being literally an extreme opposite. As for Johnny Rotten, he never really knew what anarchy or anarchism means either. Hence the lack of surprise at him becoming a brainwashed Trump-supporter fooled into believing he's some kind of anti-establishment underdog.
@@TheKitchenerLeslie While you still have forced labour of prisoners (predominantly black) in the US, you're in absolutely no position to preach which political system has slavery.
Lex bounces around feeling every beat with pure enjoyment.
Brad always looks like me trying understand algebra.
Johnny Rotten is for sure a character. He's an old man now, but still that guy.
He was, is and always will be a massive c*** !! 🤣🤘
he was fun on the Masked Singer this season.. as the Jester
He is a knob end.
Yes , and he has a SOLID backbone, he warned the public about jimmy savile but nobody wanted to listen.
People call him a twat and that because he sticks by everything he says and does things purposefully to piss people off, which is the true punk way. He might be a bit of a narcissist but everyone has their issues
Johnny had been through a lot. He'd got meningitis around age 9 I think. Was very ill, was in a coma for a couple weeks and when he woke he had no memory of his life, didn't even know his parents or siblings. Had to start all over. Brought up in a very poor part of England and that alone is reason for angst.
The concourse area outside Arsenal's stadium, where the anti-ESL protests took place, is where his house used to be.
I guess he had another bout of not remembering his life when he shilled for Virgin Credit Cards in 2015 with " It's time to put a little rebellion in your pockets" (Sorry, couldn't resist.)
@@willieluncheonette5843 yeah, but those adverts fund PIL on the road and recording. You do what you must to realize the dream.
@@rickdaniels1789 Someone once told me maybe he needs the money. so yes, thank you for your comment.
Not to mention the strong anti-irish sentiment that was prevalent at the time. Lydon was of an Irish background.
I love it that Lex is more into the instrumental side of rock/metal whereas Brad analyzes the lyrics.
It’s a perfect balance of being authentic music critics.
I agree!
Aww they have no clue, it's very sweet
"He just sounds like he's going through some things."
No, it was the UK that was going through things. This is a bomb lobbed at Maggie Thatcher, the Tories and the Royal Family during some of the darkest days the British working class has endured.
Isn't it a bit early for being aimed at Thatcher?
When there was a Labour government in power.
@@Vectrex-xd6qi she was leader of the conservative party starting in 1975, but Prime Minister starting in 1979. The song came out in 1977
1976: James Callaghan and Labour. He was to stay PM until the Winter of Discontent triggered a vote of No Confidence in his government. The election that followed brought Margaret Thatcher to power with a majority of 44. She stayed in office for almost 12 years - a record for the 20th century and not beaten since.
UK was going through shitty economic times during the 70s but it was all under Labour. It was grim and dark, strikes, power cuts, inflation. You left school at 16 to nothing, no job, no university, no opportunity and no hope. We were young, were were full of anger and rebellion and it was expressed like this.
This album is the beginning, the very beginning of fast, loud, violent, profane rage. And it scared the living shit out of everybody back then!
The Saints released "Im Stranded" in Sept 1976, prior to the release of Anarchy in the UK.
Bob Geldof of The Boomtown Rats later said, "Rock music in the Seventies was changed by three bands-the Sex Pistols, the Ramones and The Saints"
If you haven't heard it, have a listen?
ruclips.net/video/OWeX65b5dOk/видео.html
The Pistols were great , stirred up the system. Try "New Rose" - the Damned and "teenage Kicks " - The Undertones . Both great UK punk bands from the 70's
New Rose yeah, love old Damned.
I'd add to that Nasty Nasty by 999, a much overlooked true punk number imo. Oh, and Alternative Ulster by Stiff little Fingers!
Hell yeah Teenage Kicks! I'd throw "Wasted Life" by Stiff Little Fingers in there as well.
Damned New Rose definitely, mebbe Identity by X-Ray Spex too.
@@Grymm23 I prefer Oh Bondage, Up Yours. I played it for an ex girlfriend of mine years ago and she said it was the most offensive thing she ever heard hahaha
I named my daughter, Sydney, after Sid Vicious because I was obsessed with him as a teenager and knew if I had a daughter, she would carry his name! RIP Sid 🖤
The pistols are a legend. There was no one like them, until later. They molded it into punk. John was almost put to sleep, they let him live. God save the queen.
this was a HUGE thing in the UK in 1977 or so. The establishment were terrified cos an awful lot of young people (including myself) loved this. They thought their whole world was under attack. Looking back it's just basically rock n roll with a simple nihilistic lyric but the powers that be were really threatened.
Megadeth did a cover of this song. It is faster but worth listening to.
Yes and better cover then Motley Crue
Megadeth version of this song is fire.
Iconic song. Love the Megadeth cover.
I'm not a big fan of punk rock, but I am a huge fan of The Sex Pistols, X, and The Clash. They each have their own sound and style that stand out against the rest of the punk bands of the 70's and 80's.
Johnny Rotten is such an icon. His attitude, voice and lyrics kickstarted the english punk movement.
Check out The Clash early stuff. Not just London Calling and later. Great stuff too but the early songs were just more energetic. Try I'm so bored with the USA, London's Burning, English Civil War, Tommy Gun, White man in Hammersmith Palais.
JR is really smart and well spoken. I was shocked when I found that out.
He played his part as the Jester on the TV series "Masked Singer" so well.. was great hearing him again, is Great that he and his wife have been married for 45 year
The Ramones touring England is what kickstarted all those bands like the Sex Pistols and Clash forming.
@Christopher Meisner He said a lot of things to provoke. In the end he was an icon no matter what!
@@faustusgood8194 In a musical way, yes. But the Ramones cartoonish lyrics had nothing to do with british punk. The Clash, Sex Pistols, The Damned, Stranglers etc all took lyric writing to another level.
Old school punk! Brad is right. Thats what punk is all about. Theme and musical style.
Many feel that this band initiated the genre, or at least were the first to bring it in the mainstream consciousness. This is the one and only studio album that they ever put out, but it's truly classic and historic for it's influence, in that inspired hundreds of bands for decades after. I wrote a paper on it in high school lol
How could they invent punk if there were so many punk bands before them...
@@manofconstantsorrow don't know; didn't say they did...I said many people feel that way...or that they brought it to the forefront The album debuted at #1 on the UK charts
@@benshafer5198 Well, that's the difference. They might be the greatest punk band, but definitely not the first one. And "mainstream" is a term kinda opposing everything that punk stands for.
@@manofconstantsorrow lol. If you're saying they're not a real punk band because they gained notoriety, I highly disagree. It's OK to disagree though. Good day
@@benshafer5198 I never said they're not punk. They're the quintessence of punk. Learn reading with understanding.
I am an old punk rocker. I love Brad & Lex’s fresh perspective of music I grew up with. They are responding how the music feels and what it brings up in their minds. This is what good music does. Hey Brad & Lex! Keep doing what your doing and ignore the na sayers and punksplaining from the critics. Trust yourself!
By allowing poverty, Govts seed the rebellion that will bring them down.
Punk Rock is surely missed within current society. Just having a blast and raging against perceived societal flaws. Rock on!
We are here
Great outlook guys that’s why punk music is about
Got to see Johnny Lydon (aka Johnny Rotten) when he was fronting Public Image Limited (PiL), and he came up with a great quote while mocking a sedate section of the crowd, "Rock and Roll is to be danced to, not looked at." Now that's punk!
Johnny Rotten is a legend! He hasn't changed a bit. May the road rise with you!
You need to listen to more British & Irish punk Lex. It's obvious that you're into it. Go with it mate.
I had such a cracking time growing up in the 70’s, didn’t realise just how good it was until you compare it with now.
"I think he's just having fun". Spot on description, Brad. Johnny Rotten/Lydon was a great wind-up merchant, as we say in Blighty. He loved being mischievous (unfortunately, he's also a tedious, self-important bore a lot of the time - particularly in later years, trying to stay the brash and edgy young punk). The Sex Pistols certainly wound-up the establishment in 1976 and 1977. The media became hysterical, thinking that the deranged youth were really trying to bring society crashing down.
True, a lot of it was to shock the old fuddy duddys but the lyrics to their 3 political singles were spot on IMO. And sometimes the shocking gave a shock to the shockee. I''ve read the Siouxsie Sioux wore a swastika armband or some such thing and one day she had the crap beaten out of her on the street. After that she learned her lesson and never did that again.
THIS BAND STARTED PUNK ROCK !!!!!
They need notes for this one....like 'N.M.E.' means New Musical Express, current 'establishment' music paper. This song definitely inspired a million punks
Yeah, the lyrics are very Brit-centric and that's ok cuz he was singing about his country. I almost need a glossary but learning that stuff is something I enjoy so thanks for the explanation. I don't really think of Punk as a time-fixed genre. Punk to me is more songs about attitude and opinion and protest, with certain musical characteristics, like the raw vocals and loud guitars.
"I don't believe in anarchy, because it will ultimately amount to the power of the bully, with weapons. Gandhi is my life's inspiration: passive resistance. I don't want to live in the Thunderdome with Mad Max." John Lydon 2012.
punk is supposed to be political and extremely offensive
and funny
Thats why it could only started in the uk like it did
"punk lost its innocence when it became political" - Duran Duran
His voice is "the fringes of dehydration"...lol
I'm sure in an interview John Lyndon said when they first got together they were still learning to play their instruments which is what gave them such a raw sound
Later on Sid Vicious asked Lemmy of Motorhead to teach him how to play bass - "I don't know how to play bass guitar Lemmy!"
"I already know that son!" 😂
Ok, acronyms explained:
N.M.E = New Musical Express, a british magazine dedicated to music (and other stuff) which started as a newspaper in 1952.
M.P.L.A = Movimento Popular de Libertação de Angola (Angolan People's Liberation Movement), an armed group who fought for Angola's independence and later became a political party, which is in office since the independence in 1975.
U.D.A = Ulster Defence Association, the pro-UK North Ireland's protestant terrorist group.
I.R.A = Irish Republican Army, the anti-UK North Ireland's catholic terrorist group.
thanks for this.
At the time some people were outraged by this. Now the lyrics sound hilarious. Petulant teenager lyrics 🤣
"That guy is a character"... so true.
"I WILL NOT DRINK WATER‼️"
~ Lex
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
A lot of good stuff came out of punk; and not just the music and fashion. Quite rightly they had contempt for our corrupt and hypocritical system (big business, politicians, policing)!
I just remembered that Johnny Lydon was on Judge Judy :-)
Problem is there's no votes in The Yoof so politicians don't really give a monkey's. More interested in appealing to old farts (like me).
The Sex Pistols created the British punk movement of the late 1970s.
"I guess this is real Punk." Yes indeed! A great song from a great group in a great genre.
Real punk is the Ramones 😂
This is first wave Punk Rock from England 1977.
Fun fact, Johnny rotten once came out on judge Judy and won his case.
He’s no idiot, right?! I love listening to him, actually. That episode was great! Cheers!
No he was telling us to fight the system, that only looks out for the 1%. And we should have done it ! He gave us hope ! ✌️🏴
My favorite punk bands from a 49 year old fan of punk from East Coast s. N.C.
CircleJerks
Black Flag
Dead Kennedys
Bad Brains 🧠
Fear
GERMS
Corrosion of Conformity
Can’t forget agent orange!
@@beetlejuice3925 also good
This is British punk,total anti establishment, this isn`t the ramones.it wasn`t just music it was a movement.
These guys were anti-establishment kind of band. This one rustle the feathers of many in the UK...
They were just a mouthpiece for Malcolm McClaren!
Johnny Rotten in the days of the Pistols and even through to today had a constant look of anger on his face for a reason. He came from poverty like a lot of people in the economically depressed UK at the time and felt disenfranchised by the government and at the same time, by pop culture with its cocaine and limousine rock image and stadium concert dynamic…and punk rock was a direct answer to that image. It was people like Lydon (Rotten) drawing a line in the sand and saying “no.” Saying “I’m not rich…I’m not good looking…I may not be super talented so I can’t achieve the poster boy dream life being shoved down my throat…but I still have value. I matter. And I can make music too that actually means something.” The Pistols were not about “just having fun” and doing a light hearted jam about liking anarchy. They were making a strong..and at the time shocking…statement against the status quo.
Rap and Punk are SO compatible
This is punk rock and also old skaters music I used to listen to this along long long time ago
I feel like an entire generation found punk through the Tony Hawk Pro Skater games tbh. I know I learned about so much music playing those games.
Pissed in British English means drunk and not angry (pissed off).
Please do Holidays in the Sun….glad that Brad is getting the punk vibe.
"That guy is a character." I'm guessing that I'm not the only one who immediately thought "You have NO idea..." right after Brad said that.
johns a character alright lol
The "Another Council Tenancy" is a reference to the working class (ironically unemployed) people who are given a home to live in by the local council. These areas are called Council Estates and depressing to exist in.
I wasn't sure if you knew so thought I would explain just in case. Love your content!
Exactly. What we call The Projects in the USA
There's a lot of inside UK sociopolitical stuff in this song. To this day I'm not sure what all those acronyms are, aside from the IRA.
@@mistabook UDA stands for Ulster Defence Association, they are opposing side to the IRA. Ulster being a town in Northern Ireland.
They are known as Royalists and want Ireland to stay in the UK.
@@spurtikus1 Thanks! I feel like this is something I should know abput
@@mistabook - NME - New Musical Express (the music paper) or "enemy". Debateable which is meant there.
MPLA - Peoples Movement for the Liberation of Angola! A left wing armed force who fought for liberation from the Portugese (and won).
You know the other two, now you know all of them, lol 👍
I love the fact you youngsters are find all this great music
NME (New Musical Express) was a music paper but also a great use of the word for John Lydon in this song (enemy).
You have to remember this is 1976/77 - these guys were the forerunners (after The Ramones!)
The Ramones set the table, Sex Pistols kicked the door in, and The Clash, turned out to be the only band that mattered. They influenced so many, including most of the skate pop you mention.
The Stooges and New York Dolls started punk long before The Ramones.
@@manofconstantsorrow I don't disagree with you, but you can make yourself crazy (and get into a lot of arguments) deciding who was the 1st. Some would say without the garage bands of the early 60's that punk never happens. Were the Velvet Underground punk? Their songwriting and attitude certainly was. There is a Peruvian band called Los Saicos who were recording in 1964 and some people feel they predated everyone.
@@clash5j You're confusing inspirations with actually starting particular style.
@@manofconstantsorrow Pink Fairies, Hollywood Brats, Ducks Deluxe, Hawkwind, Hammersmith Gorillas. Slade, Sweet, Edgar Broughton Band, Mott the Hoople, David Bowie!
@@quarkwrok ???
Greatest Punk band ever.
Both Megadeth and Motley Crue recorded covers of this song by the Sex Pistols.
The Sex Pistols only lasted that 1 album "Never mind the bollocks"... they imploded in 1978 after their bassist Sid Vicious was arrested for allegedly murdering his gf in a drug haze... Vicious died from an OD awaiting trial.
This is the quintessence of 70's punk rock!
My first records i ever owned was Sesame Street does disco and Never mind the Bollocks as a kid and it helped me grow my anarchist ways. I will always have a soft spot for this album
All we had for yearsin the UK were art school boys and university types, like Genesis , Yes, even the floyd and zeppelin. it was all middle class and prog rock, Ther Pistols gave every working class boy who could play 3 chords a shot.. This song matched the mood of working class people at the time... Please listen to Leftfield/ Lydon.."Open Up" see the progression.thanks guys.
Yep Tinsel Town as I incorrectly called the song for ages. I love Leftfield but don't think it would be good as reaction material. With the exception of Open Up.
I love love love love love the Sex Pistols. I'm also an accomplished musician that loves them. I'm also someone that would punk Brad with a song that doesn't have lyrics and tries to feel what the music says.
Brad is so right. no corporate rock. it was all about rebellion.
He’s not having fun. He’s pissed off at the ruling class and asking pissed off questions. The music and lyrics are both catchy and some
of the most anthemic around aside from the Misfits. But the Misfits rarely made statements in their music.
Punk was formed in the Bowery in NY around ‘76, ‘77.
Patti Smith, Iggy, NY Dolls.
The Ramones popularized it (to a degree).
Pistols had 1 record and made it international.
Proper old-school Punk!
To be honest Brit’s can’t explain this to Americans. It’s too hard to 😂
That song is from the 1970s. Its an Anthem here in the UK. They were effectively the first REAL punk band. I do this song in Karaoke all the time. Ive watched a lot of Americans react to this song and also GOD SAVE THE QUEEN, also by the pistols and generally they are shocked as if its blasphemous in some way. But to us Brits its just a classic anthem!!
Nah. I’m American and we loved this song (as teens). I’m sure older people would have hated it.
The Ramones came first.
@@neillenet291 Ramones weren't punk. they came off the back of 60s rock n roll.
@@neillenet291 also, the pistols formed in 72, and the ramones formed in 74.
@@COMICCOVERSTV and the Ramones first album came out in 76 and the sex pistols first album came out in 77
Legendary
The Sex Pistols were all about the VISUALS so you can see,feel and experience Punk Rock Guys..
I remember buying this as it got to number 1 in the UK despite no radio station touching it with a bargepole !!
MPLA=Angolan Peoples Liberation Army, UDA=Ulster Defense Assoc....IRA-Irish Republican Army
Thanks man. Always wondered about MPLA and UDA.
Not having fun, just the first modern generation of resistance to monarchy!
Sex Pistols rule!!!
The HYMN of a whole Generation!...watch the official Video.....even MOTÖRHEAD made a Cover of it !!!
Nice! Check out "God Save the Queen" and "Seattle" by P.I.L. which is another band the singer (John Lydon aka Johnny Rotten) played in.
ruclips.net/video/X2CUgzm7hxg/видео.html
One of the greatest punk rock albums of all time!!
the pistols were also really savvy as well.. they were far from just stupid anarchists. they understood that by being banned by radio and TV in the UK for the content of their songs [as they were] people wanted to hear their music more and the only way to access it was to buy it. they would get invited on to talk shows for the host to admonish them and they would just play up to it even more. they were indeed characters
Not a Sex Pistols fan, and not much of a punk fan at that, but since I first heard this song I've always loved it. Perfect early punk song.
"Nevermind the Bullocks, here are the Sex Pistols". Great album.
Never mind the bollocks you mean
@Tough Talk with Mac with John McCarthy
Close but no cigar, that's not the correct name of the album.
@@CrazyRamUK wow, you going to troll me for a spelling mistake?
Not just a spelling mistake. Go look it up.
Gotta watch the video!!
Personally my favorite punk group is Bad Religion- American Jesus and/or I Want to Conquer the World two great songs, out of many.
Never heard of them in England son
This came in the mid 70s when you had all these self-important rock bands who played for themselves not their audience. Then The Sex Pistols came along and blew them all away. They were joined by other good punk bands.
You could also try "World Destruction" a song Johnny Rotten did with Afrika Bambataa, a sort of punky/electro mix.
One of my faves.
This was THE MOST you two have ever connected on a SONG!!!
Important to rememeber, Lydon asserts the repetition of "no future" indicated the need to change the class system of England to allow mobility to the lower classes, lest they face "no future". It was not a call to nihilism and junkiedom as some made it out to be
Johnny Rotten's collaboration with Afrika Bambaataa called world destruction is a masterpiece pre hip hop Hip Hop
That live stream was a trip.... I think y'all should do separate old school and new school punk streams. There's so much to absorb in both catagories. I feel like y'all are being bombarded with extraneous shit that really isnt punk. I'm 52. Raised in Los Angeles and have been into punk music since 1979.... My big sister turned me onto the stooges and the pistols at 10.
Nice. I was born in 1979 and introduced to punk (and rock, hip-hop, metal, electronic forms of music, etc.) in 1991. I grew up in Reading, PA. We had quite the hardcore/punk scene back in the 90`s that has long since disappeared. It must have been interesting to have grown up at the time and place you did. Cheers, man.
And that was punk ...
I still think "New Rose" by The Damned is the most punk-sounding song there is (and also the first ever punk song to chart, just beating this one by a few weeks) but this is iconic.
Many iconic and good ones. Buzzcocks "Boredom" too...
@@jonstern7511 Hell yeah, Boredom is to me the most punk sounding punk song. New Rose still got an old style rock and roll feel to it, but Boredom doesn't at all. I think people will recognize Boredom as specifically Punk, it cannot be anything else, while New Rose is just fast rock n roll (but with a load of energy and surprisingly raw sound). One thing I'll give credit to Damned for is they achieved to capture the live sound, unlike the Sex pistols who were quite heavily produced with loads of overdubs.
Nevertheless, Damned never wrote such songs as the Pistols did, like Anarchy and Good Save the Queen. Sex Pistols were the real punks, the whole package, the other bands started usually because they saw the Pistols so the Pistols were essential for the whole British Punk scene, in fact there would have been no British punk whatsoever without the Sex Pistols and punk would not have been a counter culture movement as it was. Sex Pistols created British punk. In fact, they created punk as it was understood in the seventies. The American punk was not known by the mainstream as a movement, musically it was something but as a movement it was noting.
@@kurtwaldheim4048 agree with all of that great analysis (except placing UK punk above US in importance) and all those bands were great bands. Pistols must though have pride of place in importance, for the UK at least 👍👍
@@jonstern7511 I don't place them above US punk, I just think they are different things, because the UK version was much more than just music. It was daily headline stuff at one point, while the US punk was obscure. It only became well known when Blondie made a disco tune.
@@kurtwaldheim4048 👍👍
Fringes of dehydration is the PERFECT way to describe Johnny Rotten’s singing. Perfect.
You really have to understand British politics to understand what the song is about 👍🇬🇧