New York's CBGB Birthed The Icons of Punk | History of Punk | Amplified

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  • Опубликовано: 3 окт 2022
  • Punk: Attitude is a documentary on the history of punk rock in the U.S.A. and U.K. The film traces the different styles of punk from their roots in '60s garage and psychedelic bands (Count Five, The Stooges) through glam-punk (New York Dolls) to the '70s New York.
    Watch the full documentary here: • History Of Punk: Sound...
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    #punk #cbgb #punkrock
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Комментарии • 465

  • @benksteele8127
    @benksteele8127 Год назад +44

    Saw the Ramones at cbgb's in 77 and they blew me away. Hard driving I couldn't resist and I was a jazz fan at the time. Interesting era for a college student. Punk sure beat disco for excitement.

  • @bostonfrank6739
    @bostonfrank6739 Год назад +15

    Good documentary.I saw live the Ramones twice, Black Flag twice , Plasmatics twice., Fear, & the Cramps.

    • @mournblade1066
      @mournblade1066 Год назад

      I saw The Cramps. Most disgraceful performance I have ever seen. It was absolutely fantastic!

  • @sukie584
    @sukie584 Год назад +103

    Max’s Kansas City was just as important to the birth of NYC music scene as CBGBs.

    • @duckbrew
      @duckbrew Год назад +6

      and the Mudd club. But yea Max's were there first

    • @O0othiago0o0o0o
      @O0othiago0o0o0o Год назад +8

      But CBGB's has a logo!😂

    • @takingcandyfromstrangers
      @takingcandyfromstrangers Год назад +7

      Also mother's, trash and vaudeville and countless others

    • @ikesweat8749
      @ikesweat8749 Год назад +1

      What's a mud club?

    • @ikesweat8749
      @ikesweat8749 Год назад +2

      @@O0othiago0o0o0o lol logo's are what sells haha

  • @RogerPeet
    @RogerPeet Год назад +16

    I had a subscription to Cream magazine and in this one issue Andy Warhol said, 'The best album I've heard this year is, Talking Heads 77'. That day, I bought it. I loved it. Andy was right.

    • @club_rock
      @club_rock Год назад +2

      IGGY AND THE STOOGES
      THE CRAMPS
      BAUHAUS
      JOY DIVISION
      and forget The talking heads ⚡️⚡️⚡️⚡️⚡️⚡️⚡️

    • @Suzismymom
      @Suzismymom Год назад +2

      Andy Warhol was sitting at the table next to mine one night at cbgbs, I believe it was a Steel Tips show. Steel Tips have a video on YT, Crazy Baby is the name of the song, anyway there were 2 artists in the band, Joe Coleman (check out his wiki page) and Patrick McDonald who went on to create the comic and books, Mutts.
      My friend was married to the bass player Stanley, the band was mostly from Edison NJ.

  • @dreammix9430
    @dreammix9430 Год назад +18

    I heard my first punk rock song on kxlu FM here in Los angeles. My mind was blown and it changed my entire life! I mean seriously changed my life!

  • @Suzismymom
    @Suzismymom Год назад +28

    Even though I was a tunnel kid I still managed to go to cbgbs and Max's Kansas City at least 3 times a week between 1977 and 1979. Saw the Dead Boys at least 40 times, Ramones maybe 20 times, nearly every band mentioned plus many not mentioned were on my radar.
    Not enough room here for even half my stories but I do have some proof since I can see myself in many photos and videos right at the front of the stage.
    I don't get the arguing going on in the comments, if you were lucky enough to be a certain age at a certain time it should be celebrated, shouldn't be trying to one-up each other. We all have our own stories if we were there, and they're all valid if true 😎

    • @bostonfrank6739
      @bostonfrank6739 Год назад

      I was at a punk rock party in Bpston & the 2 guitarists from the Plasmatics showed up and I got wasted with them until 7am.

    • @markwasthere
      @markwasthere 6 дней назад +1

      i saw the dead boys, thunders, plasmatics dozens of times each. did you see them at left bank in mt vernon?

    • @Suzismymom
      @Suzismymom 6 дней назад

      @markwasthere I love your name 😎 No, I never did manage to go there. I saw the Plasmatics only once, at cbgbs. It was easy for me to go to cbgbs and Max's, less than 30 minutes and the Holland Tunnel was only $1.50 back then.
      I saw Dead Boys, Ramones, Iggy, The Damned, Richard Hell and the Voidoids and a bunch of other bands at a club called The Showplace in Dover NJ. I had the same car Stiv had when he lived in Youngstown, a 1968 Chevelle SS, as I was driving home after a Dead Boys show they tried to race me in their tour band but I won lol
      I sure miss those days but I'm so happy to have the memories!

    • @markwasthere
      @markwasthere 6 дней назад

      @@Suzismymom i lived on 19th/2nd and 19th/3rd. I never went to NJ then much. Saw the same stuff, probably in the same place once or twice

  • @jtee4865
    @jtee4865 Год назад +11

    CBGB should have been given historic landmark status from NYC.

    • @stevenpivornik9982
      @stevenpivornik9982 8 месяцев назад +1

      I felt the same way about that. I went inside that place when it later became a high-end value clothing store that would sell ripped pants for $150, but call it the punk look still. I walked out with a tear in my eye thinking the same thing: If they only just turned it into a museum with wax figurines of the first bands that started and founded punk there. THAT, in my opinion, would have been the greatest tribute and memorial.

    • @joesphschramm3754
      @joesphschramm3754 7 месяцев назад

      I thought they did give it Landmark status.

  • @RasCuban33
    @RasCuban33 Год назад +4

    Very lucky to say I played there frequently in the 2000s right up to the close🥲. Remember watching the Toasters and looking over and who’s standing right next to me. Mr. Gotta Look Sharp himself, Joe Jackson! I just stayed shut and enjoyed the moment. So many wonder surprises at Cb’s……..especially that famous bathroom lol!

  • @iamthewalruscuckookachoo1372
    @iamthewalruscuckookachoo1372 Год назад +38

    Once I discovered Iggy and the Stooges as a teenager they opened me up to so many great bands that as a brittish kid I wasn't all to familiar with. I mean I was brought up on the Dammed, Sex pistols and The Buzzcocks but I never paid as much attention to where it all started. For me the LAMF album turned me into an obsessed Johnny thunders fan that wanted to know everything about him and the bands he played in. I never get bored of documentary films of how Punk Rock came to be.

    • @connystardust9957
      @connystardust9957 Год назад +5

      Hi, I made the same experience. I got the original Raw Power in 1973. Highly impressive and incredibly beautiful, still today. Unbeatable. My eternal number one, followed by the New York Dolls, Flamin' Groovies, The Frost. First Ramones-LP a real killer. Enjoy your life!

    • @iamthewalruscuckookachoo1372
      @iamthewalruscuckookachoo1372 Год назад +3

      @@connystardust9957 Thanks man. You have excellent taste in music. I love the flamin groovies myself and love anything to do with the Dolls. Take care bro.

    • @ejtattersall156
      @ejtattersall156 Год назад +1

      "Dammed, Sex pistols and The Buzzcocks but I never paid as much attention to where it all started." That's because those bands had nothing to do with New York. And Iggy, yes, he was big to the British scene, but he was from Michigan.

    • @iamthewalruscuckookachoo1372
      @iamthewalruscuckookachoo1372 Год назад +3

      @@ejtattersall156 He was big to every scene. The stinky toys from France The Saints from Australia. I love it all. Iggy and the stooges and the mc5 were idols to every punk band that started. Be that in the states or europe.

    • @ejtattersall156
      @ejtattersall156 Год назад

      @@iamthewalruscuckookachoo1372 Iggy, yes, MC5, no. Iggy was huge in Britain, that's for sure. So was the Velvet Underground. I never heard anyone in the Pistols Clash or Damned bring up MC5. Johnny did No Fun by Iggy and Roadrunner by Modern Lovers. Never a word about MC5. MC5 were really heavy hippie music, and was really not the sort of thing people listened to. I think later on their influence was exaggerated.

  • @aprilherrera3469
    @aprilherrera3469 Год назад +11

    I've always felt like the Detroit area started punk...The Stooges, MC5...Death....All influenced their predecessors...

    • @jonw.3886
      @jonw.3886 Год назад +2

      I think Detroit is very undervalued for all kinds of music. Sure there was Motown but many hard edged bands came from Detroit or became really popular playing in Detroit. MC5 in my opinion was way ahead of what became punk in New York. Detroit embraced a lot of bands from outside. Just think Kiss in the early days getting major play in Detroit and then writing Detroit Rock City as a tribute. The J. Geils Band said Detroit was like their second home because of the support they received playing there. I know I'm not talking about punk but Detroit was either a launching point for new bands or the straw that stirred the drink for up and coming bands and Detroit should be recognized for its place in rock history.

  • @dreammix9430
    @dreammix9430 Год назад +5

    I cannot believe this video just ended that way mid sentence

  • @PeterMayer
    @PeterMayer Год назад +11

    Even though it maybe wasn't in its prime, our band from Cincinnati , The Drumbones, played at CBGB's the week before Christmas, 1985.

  • @johnwatson3948
    @johnwatson3948 Год назад +5

    In 1979 I got up onstage at CBGB as an announcer for my NY friends awful band. Never saw any of the famous acts there as most had moved on, though backstage there were still stamps on the walls: “You’ve Been Arrested by the Police”. Two years later backstage at the Paladium got pictures of David Johansen with his friend Joe Perry.

  • @mr.onethirtyeight5088
    @mr.onethirtyeight5088 Год назад +26

    Man, Johnny Thunders was the coolest cat around there ever so briefly ...

    • @philipibaugh2925
      @philipibaugh2925 Год назад +4

      Yes he was he even had Steven Tylors girlfriend for awhile. I read it in the Please kill me book written by leggs McNeill. He was very talented it's a shame how he met his demise.

    • @leahflower9924
      @leahflower9924 Год назад

      Yeah I like heartbreakers the most then dolls and his solo stuff he was so cute in the dolls though 😍

  • @DukesMusic84
    @DukesMusic84 Год назад +13

    I went to a few CBGB shows in the mid 2000s. That's the last time New York punk really felt like a scene in my opinion. This is fantastic

  • @adiparker3555
    @adiparker3555 Год назад +5

    i love Punk Attitude the Don Letts documentary...they cud have included a few other scenes that happened in other countries...here in Melbourne, Australia we had a cool punk/post punk scene that gave Nick Cave and The Birthday Party onto the Bad Seeds, The Saints, Radio Birdman, Go Betweens, Triffids and on and on....

    • @club_rock
      @club_rock Год назад

      YOU ARE A CROCODILE DUNDEE ... you might listen to COSMIC PSYCHOS
      😀😀😀😀😀

  • @gaffathepunk
    @gaffathepunk Год назад +2

    This Clip is from the film Punk:Attitude .

  • @loriquintana4333
    @loriquintana4333 Месяц назад

    I was a punk in the 70s and 80s, and I wish with all my heart I had gone to NYC.

  • @ericwanderweg8525
    @ericwanderweg8525 Год назад +14

    Interesting. I was introduced to what I thought of as early punk (sex pistols, social distortion, black flag, the misfits etc) but didn’t realize it started out a lot earlier than all that.

    • @barrygreenstein8383
      @barrygreenstein8383 Год назад +3

      Check out the album "The Stooges" from 1968. Iggy Stooge as he was known then and The Ashton brothers released what is considered to be the first punk rock album. The term punk rock came from a bad review that the album got from a journalist from the psychedelic flower power 60's.

  • @stevenpivornik9982
    @stevenpivornik9982 8 месяцев назад +1

    So freakin' amazing where the influences later on for The Rolling Stones Mick Jagger and The Ramones both singing tones came from The New York Dolls. Creepy how it all sounds alike now, but it's awesome.

  • @spook5.56nato4
    @spook5.56nato4 Год назад +10

    This was a great video! Growing up in the late 70’s/early 80’s listening to Punk was not mainstream for sure. You almost had to listen it to it
    “underground”. Living in Canada we cut our teeth on bands like The Forgotten Rebels, The Diodes and DOA to name a few. I was fortunate to see a concert at CBGB’s before it closed down in the mid 80’s. I saw China Crisis there. I’m in my mid 50’s now and still wear my Doc’s. Oi Oi Oi.

  • @RosieYogi40
    @RosieYogi40 7 месяцев назад

    Went to CBGB’s in 2003 and have some AMAZING pictures of the inside… saw New York Dolls with Kiss and Motley Crue at Pine Knob in ‘12… love this… I should add I’m only 39

  • @TheChadTI
    @TheChadTI Год назад

    Awesome! Thank you!

  • @carstenkoloc5226
    @carstenkoloc5226 Год назад +5

    Bad Brains-Unforgettable !!!

  • @scubaguy007
    @scubaguy007 Год назад

    1980 in a small town south of Atlanta I met one of the coolest kids who had just moved there from California. God rest his sole he was not long to this world, but his punk rock and new wave influences totally shaped the soft young malleable minds of that town. Len Todd you were the GOAT and I truly miss your fun loving free spirit. 😮

  • @shack7631
    @shack7631 Год назад +2

    This video is just a section from Don Letts Punk Attitude documentary.

  • @AlmostReady504
    @AlmostReady504 Год назад

    This is really cool
    Many were alive and well still looking fabulous when this was put together.
    My God it hurts growing old
    Cannot believe David is the only Living Doll... stay with us David Jo

  • @kubok275
    @kubok275 Год назад +11

    would love to see a feature length doc about this scene

    • @mj.l
      @mj.l Год назад +4

      this is all from the feature length documentary 'punk: attitude'

    • @kubok275
      @kubok275 Год назад +1

      @@mj.l oh neat, thanks!

    • @M_C79
      @M_C79 Год назад

      There's an excellent film about CBGB's based on Hilly Krystal's memoir, I believe. Really great. Not a documentary, but feels close to the truth.

  • @marylivingstone9815
    @marylivingstone9815 Год назад +7

    Wow, quite a few ghosts in this documentary. RIP to all.

    • @artlover1477
      @artlover1477 Год назад

      Yeah, seeing Kane and Sylvain Sylvain interviewed together was great!

  • @gustavnovak
    @gustavnovak Год назад +1

    N.Y. Dolls at the whistle test is still very LETHAL...it's KILLER ! 📢🎼🎵🎶🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🖖👍🤙🏻

  • @honorladone8682
    @honorladone8682 Год назад +5

    I miss hanging out at CBGBS !!! Philadelphia USA

    • @tiki_trash
      @tiki_trash Год назад +2

      It must have been nice.

    • @tiki_trash
      @tiki_trash Год назад +2

      I need to look into the history of this bar. I thought it was out of business in the eighties. Here in Missoula, MT we had a "punk" bar called Jay's Upstairs. It was a tiny little room above Jay's Bar, and oh my god it was loud. It kind of started out as a practice space for rock cover bands that played at other venues. Robin Dent, the manager, decided she was only going to book bands that played original music. The scene just basically made itself.

  • @rickkubik6666
    @rickkubik6666 Год назад +3

    I was a raving fan of the Ramones, back in the 1970s- galvanizing music! That said, just read a biography on the Ramones, written by one of the Johnny Ramone. It had some sobering facts.
    1. Joey was a manic-depressive with a lot of clinically weird manias
    2. Dee Dee Ramone, who wrote most of the songs, was hooked on drugs and died young because of same
    3. Marky Ramone was deeply alcoholic and was fired because of it
    So, if the music was that good (and it is), did it require that the band members be that mentally disturbed? Makes a person think.

  • @elisecliftonklitz
    @elisecliftonklitz Год назад +1

    My band The Klitz played there in August 1979🎸 long live CBGB'S 🧷

  • @alanhansmannkurtcobain8811
    @alanhansmannkurtcobain8811 Год назад

    Awesomeness ❤️

  • @philipswain4122
    @philipswain4122 Год назад +2

    Oh how I loved Television

  • @rustyrobinson8027
    @rustyrobinson8027 Год назад

    Thanks

  • @Riskmangler
    @Riskmangler Год назад +2

    RIP Arthur

  • @Junkiescum
    @Junkiescum Год назад +8

    Man 73-78 might be the absolute peak of rock. Some of the most influential music came out in those 5 years, from glam to punk I think overall New York was the most important scene and that 5 year run is the most important 5 years in rock history.

  • @marianopujadas7762
    @marianopujadas7762 Год назад

    MUY BUENO!!!

  • @themountaingoat21
    @themountaingoat21 Год назад

    Remember going to New York 96, the only place I wanted to go was CGgb's..got there was stoked.saw band, no idea who..was not the point..it was a real s hole..you could feel the history ,smell it..brilliant

  • @Jamestele1
    @Jamestele1 Год назад +1

    The band that made arena rock look damn silly. Sad that they didn't all realize that they were the kings of early proto-Punk. You had the Velvet Underground, Iggy & the Stooges, and the NY Dolls. Even early Alice Cooper were related. It was a small scene that never thrived at the time, but left an awesome scar!

  • @markwilliams5606
    @markwilliams5606 Год назад +16

    Until you discover the Stoogies. Your not looking for the First so called punk music. Try 1969 By the Stoogies. Ann Arbor based band. Detroit Grit 🇺🇸

    • @cliftongaither6642
      @cliftongaither6642 Год назад +1

      the Stoogies?

    • @carsonrunyon6099
      @carsonrunyon6099 Год назад +2

      You mean the stooges right?

    • @johna8973
      @johna8973 Год назад +1

      Until you discover the Who circa '65-'67 then you ain't got the whole Picture, friends . Thank me Later 😎👍

    • @hankworden3850
      @hankworden3850 Год назад +1

      The Three Stoogied woob woob woob woob

    • @johna8973
      @johna8973 Год назад

      @@hankworden3850 heyy What's the Big Idea ❓ whadaya a Wise Guy o sumpin'

  • @adisantoso7515
    @adisantoso7515 Год назад +3

    Just a kid from 99’s but love 70’s era, specially the ramones was my fav band and shoutout to new york dolls , jhonny thunders and the heartbreaker also the clash 🔥

    • @yoooohooooo
      @yoooohooooo Год назад

      70's kids are the 90's generation

  • @paulbfields8284
    @paulbfields8284 Год назад +1

    On my honeymoon September of 82… Virginia Beach.. We walk into a bar , the Rocks I think..with about 13 total people in it.. I grab a drink at the bar and the band comes out on stage… it’s David Johansson… he could’ve given a shitty performance since it was so dead… instead he and his band blew my socks off.. it was what a consummate professional would do.. I swear he was playing for me.. thank you David!!

  • @ecwwwrasslin7663
    @ecwwwrasslin7663 Год назад

    The Country Blue Grass Bar!

  • @donaldfeger91
    @donaldfeger91 4 месяца назад +1

    These guys are so New York City!

  • @strengthandbulkMadness
    @strengthandbulkMadness Год назад +3

    Weird! David Johansen doing a Mick Jagger impersonation started punk or was it Iggy Pop impersonating Jim Morrison?

  • @thesaints-7-andrew.
    @thesaints-7-andrew. Год назад

    Watching from Greece.hi everybody.
    Great video.
    PUNKS NOT DEAD.

  • @clydesampson6966
    @clydesampson6966 Год назад +1

    Back in the day in 1978 we listened wxrt in chicago punk rock was really under ground I love a lot of these tunes .✌️🤘😎

  • @Flyrodder68
    @Flyrodder68 Год назад +1

    i did a giant rail off the bar on the right in its final days of closing

    • @finnmcginn9931
      @finnmcginn9931 Год назад +1

      Better than the back of the toilet, cheers.

  • @M_C79
    @M_C79 Год назад +5

    I was a bit too young to get to see the Dolls live, but as soon as I could, I'd take the train into the city, find my way down to the Bowery and get myself into CBGBs - I was 14, but they didn't seem to mind. All those Ramones clips? The kid you don't see at the foot of the stage was me...

    • @ASM881
      @ASM881 Год назад

      Perhaps the above story is true. But I’m sure the amount of people who said they saw The Ramones at CBGBs could fill MSG when I’ve heard CB’s could hold 200 if they squished them in like sardines.

    • @M_C79
      @M_C79 Год назад +1

      @@ASM881 The Ramones played there are lot. A lot. I saw them at least three times there (and a couple dozen times elsewhere). There's nothing to be jealous about, I just happened to be in the right place at the right time. I'm sure you've done interesting things in your own life. Öh, and I went to a bunch of concerts at MSG too.

    • @ASM881
      @ASM881 Год назад +1

      @@M_C79 that was a beautiful response MC. Clearly I am envious of your experiences and I admit that I have mythologized that era of NY history within the leviathan of my own mind. I love The Ramones. I think that they created a wonderful legacy and I am very sorry that I missed them play Vancouver at the end of their career when I was old enough to see them. It’s nice to hear from thoughtful and mature people in a RUclips comment section. You are a Unicorn in the RUclips world. Cheers, from Vancouver.

    • @M_C79
      @M_C79 Год назад +1

      @@ASM881 Funny, I stopped listening to the Ramones after Road to Ruin. Still a huge Suicide and Television fan though.

    • @leahflower9924
      @leahflower9924 Год назад

      I forgot Jerry Nolan always played pink drums

  • @pcpablo2
    @pcpablo2 Год назад

    Played at both Max's and CB 4 or 5 times in the early 80's with various bands. CB was tiny and Max's medium. Dressing rooms in both had a flophouse bathroom vibe. CB was much better because it was ground floor. Schlepping drums and amps up Max's stairs was a killer.

  • @billkingston4402
    @billkingston4402 Год назад

    Rock n Roll baby

  • @jonathanmitchell9886
    @jonathanmitchell9886 Год назад +4

    CBGB was integral--that's beyond dispute. But Suicide (the first group to self-identify as punk) and Wayne County were performing at the Mercer Arts Center before CB's had even opened.

    • @Kris_P._Bey_Ken
      @Kris_P._Bey_Ken Год назад +1

      What is funny is that even the ramones didn't call themselves punk. They didn't like that label.

    • @MrJett1971
      @MrJett1971 Год назад +1

      And The Sonics and Los Saicos were performing anywhere from 1960 to 1964…before any of these bands were even a dream.

    • @lencolby4605
      @lencolby4605 Год назад

      @@MrJett1971 1965, just like several other garage bands around the world.

  • @markvickroy6725
    @markvickroy6725 Год назад +2

    Something very French about television I'm not sure what it was.....
    Couldn't have been the French lyrics or Arthur rimbaud references or anything like that I just I don't know they were so French!

    • @mitchelvalentino1569
      @mitchelvalentino1569 Год назад +2

      Hahaha. And Tom Miller renaming himself Tom Verlaine. Still. I can’t figure out why they seem French. 😆

  • @wanderingspacecritic
    @wanderingspacecritic Год назад +2

    Got my CBGB’s tee on right now. 🤓

  • @romanticandperky
    @romanticandperky Год назад

    Ah, yes, CBGBs. I actually sang in that club with my brother's band. They played there twice; once as opening act for The Dictators; once to open for The Ramones. I can't quite remember which show it was, but after one of them, I went out front and peed into the gutter right in front of the club. I just discovered a few minutes ago that Bon Scott once did the same thing; ahh, not at the same time, of course.

  • @ForARide
    @ForARide Год назад

    Interesting documentary, but it misses out on one of the main protagonists in the shaping of the early Punk and Underground sound and that was John Cale. Not only was he the main architect of the Velvets then revolutionary sound, but he also produced the debut albums by The Stooges, Patti Smith and The Modern Lovers. Furthermore he produced (the latter two) and arranged Nico's lp triology The Marble Index (1968), Desertshore (1970) and The End (1974), laying the foundations of what was later to become Postpunk and Goth.
    I can't think of anybody else being so influential on the future sounds to come. Yet his role as a musical pioneer and influence are still so overlooked, it beggers belief. Possibly only when he eventually dies someday (may that be far in the future), will his story be retold and he'll be credited as one of the real Godfathers of Punk and Alternative music. Without his musical genius the music we all love would sound so much different.

  • @jazzypaul75
    @jazzypaul75 Год назад +4

    Television rules.

  • @STR82DVD
    @STR82DVD Год назад +5

    I was a Dead boys fan. Sonic reducer. Classic stuff.

    • @M_C79
      @M_C79 Год назад +2

      One of my fondest memories was from a time I saw the Dead Boys play in a shitty dive bar out in the middle of nowhere NJ. I was hanging out outside when the guitarist came out to take a leak against a tree. Except he was so wasted, he couldn't. So his girlfriend helped him out by aiming for him. "That," my 15-year-old self said to himself, "is what true love is." I was also there for the Dead Boys' New Years Eve show at the CBGB Theater - we trashed the place!

    • @STR82DVD
      @STR82DVD Год назад

      @@M_C79 Kind of sounds like a perfect Dead Boys show. That is an amazing memory to have. I wasn't geographically advantaged when growing up so my opportunities to see live acts was negatively impacted. Needless to say, all my Dead Boys vinyl were imports. My mother was really pissed at a 16 year old me when she found my copy of Sonic Reducer in my bedroom in 1979 rural Saskatchewan. Mind you, she completely lost her shit when she found my McLean and McLean album "Bitter Reality" that same year, 1979.

  • @Riskmangler
    @Riskmangler Год назад

    Very interesting but I prefer the LA bands: X, Circle Jerks, Black Flag, Los Lobos, The Blasters, Social Distortion. But love the Ramones. Saw them numerous times. Just the best of all time.

  • @elisaperez714
    @elisaperez714 Год назад +2

    The New YorK DollS did not play at CBGB. The one who did play was Johnny Thunders but with the Heartbreakers once they separated, the already named NYD. I tell you this for your group from the beginning and the title of your video ☺😉

    • @caseyconfoy805
      @caseyconfoy805 Год назад

      Yes, they did. Saw their "farewell concert" in 1977. They came on a little late. Johansen announced last call (4AM) before the first song.

  • @valdane8371
    @valdane8371 Год назад +1

    David Johansen looks like a punk Joe E. Brown.

  • @rastachicagomataderos
    @rastachicagomataderos 6 месяцев назад +1

    Is the dwarf from game of thrones a rockstar? I never knew that !!

  • @jerrilehane7815
    @jerrilehane7815 Год назад

    I gave Richard Hell advice when he was in high school,that to get anywhere with his band they'd have to move to nyc to get discovered 1975-76 and gave him the name Television,and his tag line"Love comes in Spurts".He married Patty Smyth.1987 I ghostwrote Patty Smyth a whole album.It came out 1992.1995 Ramones played w firecrackers at Delaware club Stone Balloon.I told them I was ghostwriting Private Parts movie for Howard & told them they have "carte Blanche" on Stern show & tell him you want to be in his movie.

    • @samthunders3611
      @samthunders3611 Год назад

      Your a Liar

    • @jerrilehane7815
      @jerrilehane7815 Год назад

      @@samthunders3611 Richard Hell & the Voidoids/Love Comes in Spurts.

    • @jerrilehane7815
      @jerrilehane7815 Год назад

      @@samthunders3611 McKean high school Dlaware is where he met up with the Television band.

  • @cjg8604
    @cjg8604 Год назад +2

    The album bloodbrothers by the dictators is classic punk

    • @supergristmill6195
      @supergristmill6195 Год назад +1

      I loved their song "Next Big Thing". They were great. In the early 2000's Handsome Dick Manitoba owned a bar in Alphabet City on the lower east side which I visited and had him autograph my Dictators CD. Great memories.

    • @cjg8604
      @cjg8604 Год назад +1

      @@supergristmill6195 I liked his solo album. Manitobas wild kingdom. The party starts now is a great tune

    • @supergristmill6195
      @supergristmill6195 Год назад +1

      @@cjg8604 I forgot he released a solo album. Thanks for the info on it cuz now I'm going to look for it.

  • @crazyprincess789
    @crazyprincess789 Год назад +2

    dude at 1:20 was so freaky almost shit my pants

  • @monkeybusiness1999
    @monkeybusiness1999 2 месяца назад

    While most punk bands in the 70s were menacing, the Ramones were oddly loveable. Sweet guys trying to be tough & nobody buying it. ❤

  • @alaplex100
    @alaplex100 Год назад +2

    The Dolls ended my interest in Classic rock the first minute I heard them.

  • @markvickroy6725
    @markvickroy6725 Год назад

    Luigi at 9:00
    My dude

  • @mjh5437
    @mjh5437 Год назад

    Glen Branca looks like Nick Kent

  • @chastitywhore6141
    @chastitywhore6141 Год назад +6

    When I heard the early Punk bands who covered the Stooges, I had to go to the source and listen to who actually influenced Punk, The Stooges.

    • @M_C79
      @M_C79 Год назад +1

      Well... NY punk was a whole lot more than just the Stooges, but yes, the Stooges was important (if only for Danny Fields). Don't forget the MC5!

    • @chastitywhore6141
      @chastitywhore6141 Год назад +2

      @@M_C79 The New York scene was long hair hippies who couldn’t play their instruments all that well.

  • @banceart1205
    @banceart1205 Год назад +1

  • @BillPeschel
    @BillPeschel Год назад +4

    Boy, the Dolls are really full of themselves.

    • @kathikay8942
      @kathikay8942 Год назад +8

      They were awesome

    • @juangarcia-ej5wv
      @juangarcia-ej5wv Год назад +2

      No one harder than the dolls in 70’s scene

    • @xdef1ne
      @xdef1ne Год назад +4

      How? Because they know they broke barriers at the time?

    • @stuartfishman1044
      @stuartfishman1044 Год назад +6

      Maybe the NY Dolls were full of themselves, but they had the songs to back it up. David Johansen was a major league Rock'n Roll songwriter.

    • @kathikay8942
      @kathikay8942 Год назад +1

      @@stuartfishman1044 Heck Yeah!!!. Had they been more famous then it's OK to be a bit full of oneself? Jo was only saying that at first glance he didn't realise the worth of the Ramones. Thats a valid and honest statement.

  • @smartprocesssolutions748
    @smartprocesssolutions748 Год назад

    Anyone remember Teenage Head & Forgotten Rebels?

  • @bouzoukiman5000
    @bouzoukiman5000 Год назад +1

    All the popular music of today came from the 1970's New York Detroit and England. Hip hop, electronic dance, punk, and metal

  • @davidbouchard2499
    @davidbouchard2499 Год назад +1

    The world misses Sylvain Sylvain!

  • @pauljohnson4497
    @pauljohnson4497 2 часа назад

    I wonder. If financing wasn't an issue, and I had about 7-10 bands that do actually rock well, whether getting club space would create lightning in a bottle again? Like #Starcrawler #Avoid #skatingpolly and a few others.

  • @marcpadilla1094
    @marcpadilla1094 Год назад +2

    NYC attracts better Artists than it produces. Bohemian privilege by association.

  • @struthersboyz4990
    @struthersboyz4990 Год назад +1

    The dolls were the best dressed band ever

  • @daviddog2722
    @daviddog2722 Год назад +1

    Punk was never really big in the USA , but for 2 years in the UK 76/77 punk was massive but then sold out to the safer more lucrative New Wave. A lot of the original punks died from Heroin as this drug really took off on the UK punk scene.

    • @stevecarey2030
      @stevecarey2030 Год назад +1

      It was big in Southern California in the late 70s-early 80s. I don't live there anymore but when I visit I can still see the influence.

    • @known_film4081
      @known_film4081 Год назад

      It was big, in Cali and NY and areas in Washington , Chicago. Heck look at Seattle, where the influence of punk created grunge music

    • @yoooohooooo
      @yoooohooooo Год назад

      @@stevecarey2030 Now is lameass imitators

  • @thomasdudley6514
    @thomasdudley6514 Год назад

    Please no comments cause you will loose ! I'm delco to the core a real punk but keep it up it's just about having fun oh Patti Smith has delco roots also .

  • @mircobernado7028
    @mircobernado7028 2 месяца назад

    The Misfits are Punk and played often in Max's. I think you have to talk about that if you want to show the History or Birth of Punk Rock.

  • @fletchkeilman2205
    @fletchkeilman2205 Год назад

    Thunders forever

  • @napoleonzivkovic1679
    @napoleonzivkovic1679 Год назад

    Same footage as ‘Punk: Attitude’ (2003)

  • @haraldtheyounger5504
    @haraldtheyounger5504 Год назад +1

    So many talk so much nonsense concerning the times, band like The Stooges, Hawkwind, Black Sabbath, Slade, T. Rex, etc, never get the credit they deserve. Although The Ramones were always honest enough to state them as influences. There was a media backlash, and many later "punks" rejected the actual history of what led to 70's "Punk" which has its roots firmly in the late 50's. People like John Lydon became so egotistical to think they invented it all from scratch. It's so petty. For most of us, "Punk" was natural, it's what we were before there was a music scene.

  • @barrycardiss4043
    @barrycardiss4043 Год назад

    Listen to early Hawkwind ....The spitting, anarchistic raw punk was born in the UK...

  • @nickcs4488
    @nickcs4488 Год назад +6

    Syd Barrett was one of the great pre-punk innovators but never gets credited.

  • @ismaeluribe3219
    @ismaeluribe3219 Год назад +1

    RAMONES!!

  • @stevenimeson902
    @stevenimeson902 Год назад

    Don letts rules

  • @intima.kreativa
    @intima.kreativa Год назад

    Where do you put Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren on the history of punk?

  • @circussounds855
    @circussounds855 Год назад +2

    PATTI SMITH

  • @denisejaklitsch9505
    @denisejaklitsch9505 8 месяцев назад

    Max's birthed Punk not CBGB. They came onto the scene after Max's Kansas City. Other imp small venues like the forgotten Mother's, 171A and TR3 were vital. CBGB gets all the attention tho from those who prob weren't around during these pivotal times for Punk developing in NYC.

  • @mrabrasive51
    @mrabrasive51 Год назад

    That $20 wig almost looks like real nylon!🤣🤣🤣

  • @craigbroussard1010
    @craigbroussard1010 Год назад

    you a skreemen ballarena on a spring afternoon

  • @markwasthere
    @markwasthere Год назад +6

    CBGB did not birth punk, try a few blocks north at Max's

    • @arthurdalton517
      @arthurdalton517 2 месяца назад

      You are correct and it's the Velvet Under ground in 1967 at Max's

    • @pmaigotthat7211
      @pmaigotthat7211 2 месяца назад

      @@arthurdalton517lmao everything is punk rock now somehow. NUH uh it started with Screaming J Hawkins or some other bullshit 🙄 shut up

    • @hanskloss1331
      @hanskloss1331 9 дней назад

      East Coast Punk for the West Coast try Hong Kong Cafe and Madame Wong's

    • @arthurdalton517
      @arthurdalton517 9 дней назад

      @hanskloss1331 we are talking about the birth of punk. Punk wasn't on the west coast until 73 or 74

  • @admiralbenbow5083
    @admiralbenbow5083 Год назад

    Punk US style was just hard glam rock, bands who chose their live clothing carefully, got their hair seen to, and producers who, at least these days, go on about the """meaning""" of it all and how profound things were etc. In the UK it was a flash in the pan, it was a piss take and only the fashion houses made any money, and maybe Malcolm McClaren!.
    In the UK it was spontaneous, rough and ready, in the US the scene had a contrived and image conscious feel to it. When it was over here in the UK a very few bands survived and went on to change their style pretty rapidly because punk just `stopped` it didnt fade away. I have in mind The Police, The Damned and The Clash. The Stranglers were never a punk outfit. They had too much talent. Siouxsi too.

  • @alwaysright3718
    @alwaysright3718 Год назад +2

    The Saints invented punk...

  • @djc7039
    @djc7039 Год назад +1

    Patti sounded best with BOC Vera Gemini (no more horses, horses)

    • @mournblade1066
      @mournblade1066 Год назад +1

      You're boned like a saint
      With the consciousness of a snake
      I always wondered if she meant "conscience" instead of "consciousness."
      One of the greatest guitar solos in history is in that song.

  • @robertshaefer7760
    @robertshaefer7760 Год назад

    Pretty funny him announcing that the Dictators were first in 74. Fine with that but, what's funny is what do they show them playing but an Iggy Pop song from about 6 years earlier! Good choice.