The Very Black History Of Punk Music| AJ+

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  • Опубликовано: 5 июл 2024
  • Stories about punk music tend to picture thin-framed white guys and girls with shaved heads, part of an angry, energetic scene born out of the working class angst of young white England in the 1970s. But the actual history of punk - as a type of music and movement - is more complicated than that.
    Black punks have been an integral and pioneering part of punk history - and they're keeping the movement alive and growing today. Host Sana Saeed explores that history and talks to proto-punk band Death, musician and journalist Greg Tate, the band The 1865 and festival organizer Shawna Shawnté.
    Learn more here:
    New York Times. “This Band Was Punk Before Punk Was Punk.”www.nytimes.com/2009/03/15/art...
    Vice. “The Bands Taking British Punk Back to Its Multicultural Roots.” noisey.vice.com/en_us/article...
    GQ. “Nazi Punks F**k Off: How Black Flag, Bad Brains and More Took Back Their Scene from White Supremacists.” www.gq.com/story/punks-and-na...
    Relevant links:
    A Band Called Death: drafthousefilms.com/film/a-ban...
    The Universe Is Lit: www.theuniverseislit.com/
    Bay Area Girls Rock Camp: www.bayareagirlsrockcamp.org/
    The 1865: / the1865band
    Presented by: Sana Saeed
    Edited by: Brian Joseph and Michael Zipkin
    Animations by: Chia Liu
    Produced by: Sana Saeed and Kathryn Wheeler
    Executive Producer: Sarah Nasr
    Music tracks courtesy APM, RUclips and The 1865.
    Footage and images courtesy of Getty Images, The Universe is Lit, Keep on Knocking, LLC, Ed Marshall Photography NYC, Evan Carter and Paul Rosenfield.

Комментарии • 2,6 тыс.

  • @hf3262
    @hf3262 4 года назад +460

    From a Black Brazilian, Latin American to the world 🇧🇷 Punk is an attitude, punk is the union of men and women against all rotten systems in the world. Punk is the union of all races. Punk is rock and roll.

    • @NiteDriv3r
      @NiteDriv3r 3 года назад +3

      Punk Iz Whit Musizk

    • @NiteDriv3r
      @NiteDriv3r 3 года назад +2

      Nu

    • @hf3262
      @hf3262 3 года назад +2

      @@NiteDriv3r Here's brazilian black my friend.

    • @NiteDriv3r
      @NiteDriv3r 3 года назад +1

      @@hf3262 Better believe punk is whit muszick boi

    • @carolinacosta7825
      @carolinacosta7825 3 года назад +5

      @@NiteDriv3r falou pouco mas falou merda, punk é para todos. Não música de gente branca . Responder em pt mm

  • @threadthathasnoend1212
    @threadthathasnoend1212 6 лет назад +1601

    Punk never cared about race or gender.

    • @grandsome1
      @grandsome1 6 лет назад +236

      Say that to the Punk inspired skin heads.

    • @TheAbstruseOne
      @TheAbstruseOne 6 лет назад +46

      Perhaps. But it took a LOT of bruises and broken bones for that to be the case today. I've still got a finger that doesn't bend right from my time with the ARA.

    • @TheAbstruseOne
      @TheAbstruseOne 6 лет назад +65

      As true as that may be, that's not what people think of when you say "skinhead". They picture Neo-Nazis, not TradSkins or SHARPs. Because history.

    • @evad520
      @evad520 6 лет назад +101

      Real skinheads listen to Reggae/ska/punk and are both black and white. Thanks for playing though.

    • @oolong2
      @oolong2 6 лет назад +166

      If you're a white guy sure, you get that privilege. But if you're a black kid in the 80's and 90's and you have people looking at you weird or think you're in the wrong place when you show up to a punk bar or mosh pit. Or when all of the people you meet assumes you're into hip-hop and never punk or heavy metal, then it certainly feels that punk cares about race.

  • @Hairspraygoblin
    @Hairspraygoblin 3 года назад +351

    Death is such an underrated gem of a band.
    Shame they didn't mention screaming Jay Hawkins at all; that guy was proto psychobilly, shockrock, punk and goth all rollen into 1 sick act

    • @PsychedelicSkull
      @PsychedelicSkull 3 года назад +18

      exactly, I find it very weird when these "documentaries" almost never mention Screamin' Jay Hawkins or other big names.

    • @kevinw8276
      @kevinw8276 3 года назад +9

      @@PsychedelicSkull I had seen a video about all the influences that led to goth music and he was the first artist they mentioned

    • @kevinw8276
      @kevinw8276 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/p/PLooaZ33lSalcWG8J6JuqPWWJVraFNHt9X

    • @PsychedelicSkull
      @PsychedelicSkull 3 года назад

      @@kevinw8276 Thanks for the suggestion. A bit of a long video, but I'll try to watch it xD

    • @NiteDriv3r
      @NiteDriv3r 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/2ZdoFm-8Crs/видео.html

  • @boneheded2819
    @boneheded2819 6 лет назад +454

    I am SO HAPPY that Death is getting some recognition. Such a under rated band.

    • @existential_raccoonmusic4119
      @existential_raccoonmusic4119 3 года назад +8

      They’re underrated because there’s also a death metal band named death, they’re also good but I personally prefer death (the punk band)

    • @LigaFantasma
      @LigaFantasma 3 года назад +3

      It's impossible to under rate Death.

    • @TheK.R.A
      @TheK.R.A 2 года назад

      🤘🏾

    • @TheK.R.A
      @TheK.R.A 2 года назад

      @@existential_raccoonmusic4119 🤘🏾

    • @ericgee7381
      @ericgee7381 2 года назад +1

      Black Flag doesn't have shit on Minor Threat and Bad Brains. They're popular because their singer is a jackass and they had a cool symbol. I hate that they're thrown in with BD and MT.

  • @williamolsen20
    @williamolsen20 6 лет назад +302

    I found punk when I was 10, I am 47 now, and I still consider myself a punk. My musical interests have grown and expanded, but the punk ethos is still in me. I do think punk is just a term that means different things to people, to me it is about pure expression, regardless of technical skill. It is an outlet for aggression, passion, love, and everything that describes the human condition. I do think to many people unfortunately it has been reduced to a fashion, and to some a phase they went through. I try to keep these things alive in my spirit whether I am playing loud electric guitars, soft acoustic, or making noise with a synthesizer. You may not agree, but I really don't care.

    • @dyr234
      @dyr234 6 лет назад +5

      express my feelings towards punk rock through skateboarding and playing guitar. black flag,the saints,the damned all influential bands on me

    • @CarynDPrescott
      @CarynDPrescott 5 лет назад +4

      Hello kindred spirit 😊

    • @SpaceGhostFan
      @SpaceGhostFan 5 лет назад +9

      William Olsen
      You definitely got the soul of a punk fan, man. Props to you for being real about it.

    • @yasuke9317
      @yasuke9317 3 года назад +8

      I'll be 50 next month and My heart is still black with spikes in it.🤘🏾😛🤘🏾

    • @theevildrummingsithlord1492
      @theevildrummingsithlord1492 3 года назад +6

      This is awesome! Well, in my case, I found punk when I was 14. I'm 18 now, and I'm grateful to it for guiding me so far through my life.

  • @chrisgetchell6337
    @chrisgetchell6337 5 лет назад +404

    These people in the comments acting like punk is a white genre is hypocritical and cringe

    • @SM-4359
      @SM-4359 3 года назад +23

      punk was always white

    • @chrisgetchell6337
      @chrisgetchell6337 3 года назад +101

      @@SM-4359 and you'll always be a dumbass

    • @primeparadox9796
      @primeparadox9796 3 года назад +82

      Exactly. The fact that people can’t reconcile the African American contribution to punk and rock and roll is the perfect example for cultural erasure of African Americans, and whites claiming it as their own.

    • @adrianshephard378
      @adrianshephard378 3 года назад +25

      @@primeparadox9796 But it's not true, punk has generally been white. It's you guys who need to virtue signal and pretend it was super black or something. Why don't you talk abut the very black history of blues or mowtown? you don't see us making videos like,"the very white history of hip hop."

    • @sooyoungs
      @sooyoungs 3 года назад +42

      shanise miguel punk literally came from black people um...

  • @evedurand9974
    @evedurand9974 4 года назад +325

    Punk always fought against discrimination, that was the whole premise of it!

    • @mopes2713
      @mopes2713 3 года назад +13

      No punk rock was about stopping fascists and eating the rich.

    • @ndogg20
      @ndogg20 3 года назад +20

      @@mopes2713 ,stopping fascists etc. was just an excuse for self righteous zealots to yell and scream how important and all knowing they were while accomplishing nothing. Had nothing to do with punk.

    • @mopes2713
      @mopes2713 3 года назад +39

      @@ndogg20 Poor people do not have the Power to make fundamental systemic change. All they can do is yell and scream a write songs about how messed up society is.

    • @comedianfreak
      @comedianfreak 3 года назад +1

      @Eve Durand EXACTLY!

    • @nanchanger
      @nanchanger 3 года назад +2

      you eat people?

  • @barbarianblood2316
    @barbarianblood2316 3 года назад +153

    Bad Brains and Death were groundbreaking and it wasn’t simply because of their color. It was the music.

    • @THCMusicBlog
      @THCMusicBlog Год назад

      YES

    • @JCOdrjones
      @JCOdrjones 11 месяцев назад +12

      But their color is important to their history

    • @omalone1169
      @omalone1169 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@JCOdrjonesGreg Tate editor of everything but the burden

    • @JetWindTV
      @JetWindTV 9 месяцев назад

      @@JCOdrjonesIs it or is it more because they were African Americans? You can be a person of color in another country and not have the African American experience. Also, worth-noting Bad Brains and Death have lots of white influences too. I am sure that wasn't how they looked at those bands though. They just thought they were making good shit and used them to find their sound. Music connects people. The moment we start making white music and black music categories again is the moment we lose something special. These were very talented musicians that were black and not very talented black musicians. The wording makes all the difference. It is very discrediting to these talented artists. It is like saying somebody is pretty for a black girl instead of just treating her like a person and telling her she's pretty. You can acknowledge it. Just don't forget that is a person.

    • @JCOdrjones
      @JCOdrjones 9 месяцев назад

      @@JetWindTV I feel like you misread what I said and projected a lot here :v

  • @0dis0bedience
    @0dis0bedience 6 лет назад +176

    It feels nice to see videos like this. It just reminds me, im not alone out here especially being the only black punk guy throughout high school.

    • @ferdinandndo8097
      @ferdinandndo8097 6 лет назад +7

      Joshua Young Definetly you're not alone, but this video is bad, and missinformed...

    • @CarynDPrescott
      @CarynDPrescott 3 года назад +9

      @@ferdinandndo8097 What did they get wrong?

    • @daisymagnus306
      @daisymagnus306 2 года назад +4

      @@CarynDPrescott Because they point out the lack of diversity in Punk and they hate that (for some reason)

    • @ramonw9430
      @ramonw9430 Год назад +8

      @@daisymagnus306 No it has more to do with it being inaccurate and snarky. The punk scene looks like they have a lack of diversity if you watch Greeb Day videos because they are more of a pop band then a punk band and at the time pop was all about suburban white faces. If you were actually involved in the actual DIY punk and metal scenes then you already know how diverse it is. Especially if you live in a large city. This lady is clearly not part of the scene and is really talking about the "Warp Tour" punk scene which isn't really considered punk by most punks. Being a nazi at a hardcore punk show could possibly get you killed. And that's a fact. Punks have a hard time taking criticism from outsiders just like hip hop or country or any other genre of music that is heavily tied to a culture/subculture. And the reason for that is outsiders often get it wrong. Especially mainstream journalists who have a vested interest in using clickbait and giving misleading information. It's unfair to say it's because we don't like a lack of diversity being pointed out. I think for most of us, we have a problem with being lumped in with mainstream "punk" because it doesn't reflect the real scene at allwhich is VERY diverse and inclusive. Green Day is for jocks, not punks. The real litmus test for punk is if it is on a major label then it is probably not really punk. Shout out to all my black and brown brothers in the scene. It would not be the same without you. And shout out to all punks/metal punks/crusties who hate fascists and also mainstream media. Fight the power and up the punx.

    • @Gearsturfs
      @Gearsturfs Год назад

      I bet you hate the white hip hop heads tho

  • @javircarrillo9526
    @javircarrillo9526 6 лет назад +371

    Latinos that we’re in or still in punk bands: Suicidal Tendencies, Adolescents, D.I., Flipper, Descendants, The Vandals, The Plugz, The Zeros, Misfits, Dr, Know, Black Flag, Circle One, Bad Religion, No FX, Dead Kennedy’s after Jello Biafra, Wasted Youth, Legal Weapon, CH.3, that is just to name a few or I would be hear all day. Shit even speed metal bad asses Tom Araya and Dave Lombardo from Slayer. Someone should do a Latino punk documentary.

    • @monochromaticaddict311
      @monochromaticaddict311 6 лет назад +7

      Also Alan Vega

    • @manuam98
      @manuam98 6 лет назад +17

      Starting with peruvian pioneers Los Saicos

    • @JonasDaniel95
      @JonasDaniel95 6 лет назад +4

      Who is Latino in Misfits? I've never noticed that

    • @jp19034
      @jp19034 6 лет назад +4

      manny martinez

    • @javircarrillo9526
      @javircarrillo9526 6 лет назад +7

      To Jonas Jergensen: original drummer from the Misfits was Manny Martinez, later Robo who is Colombian played with them, he also played with Black Flag. Then you have Dez Cadena who also played with Black Flag, and now you have Dave Lombardo who is cuban.

  • @sacrebaikal7303
    @sacrebaikal7303 5 лет назад +307

    I've always disliked that "punk" and so many other genres I enjoy are considered "white people music" by many people.

    • @WilMars-rr1ny
      @WilMars-rr1ny 4 года назад +2

      Like what?

    • @ignarly3583
      @ignarly3583 4 года назад +18

      Wil Mars grunge rock, I always get called out for listening to it as a black person

    • @saywhatagain6176
      @saywhatagain6176 3 года назад +8

      i dislike that hip hop is considered black music too!! but you dont see people crying over it!!

    • @alecoram7874
      @alecoram7874 3 года назад +12

      I've literally never heard anyone label punk, metal, or grunge as "white people music." Get over yourselves and stop injecting race and victim hood into everything.

    • @j6154
      @j6154 3 года назад +2

      It’s ridiculous, if you like punk also listen to bad brains, a predominantly black band but also one of my favourite punk bands ever

  • @lilmikey1275
    @lilmikey1275 5 лет назад +13

    The only people that judged blacks that were into rock music were others blacks.
    And it wasn't just rock music, blacks judged black people that were into/did the following:
    - Skateboarding
    - Dressing formally
    - Speaking/talking "white"
    - Wanting to go college
    - Reading
    - Math/Science
    - Dated outside of their race (still are judged for this to this day)
    - Vote Republican
    If your black and you did any of the following I listed, your race would be questioned.

  • @kevinw8276
    @kevinw8276 3 года назад +40

    I'm loving that Death gets so much more recognition the past several years

    • @greghauser742
      @greghauser742 Месяц назад

      I mean...it's the only recognition they've gotten. No one knew they existed until 10 years ago.

  • @libertarianpenguin3303
    @libertarianpenguin3303 2 года назад +30

    To anyone who grew up in the 80's hard-core scene this is not suprising Fishbone, Bad Brains, In living Color, all the two tone Ska bands. The scene was diverse, we had a blast! I was an old school skinhead had friends who were black skinhead. Big fans of rock steady, Ska and reggae, the Clash the list goes on. Just heard about Death which is amazing! Sad they didn't make it back in the day! It the immortal words of Sham 69 "if the kids are united we will never be divided" For the most part the history of punk is very diverse. I hope it always stays that way. We were united in our passion for each other!!

  • @gabe_s_videos
    @gabe_s_videos 5 лет назад +41

    The more I learn about Death the more I like them! They are the truest punks, imo: just doing exactly what they wanted to do.

    • @ishtlutz1261
      @ishtlutz1261 3 года назад +1

      as are many other punk bands.

  • @dannieast
    @dannieast 4 года назад +133

    So many angry whites in the comments lmao

    • @snow-puppetsofficial360
      @snow-puppetsofficial360 3 года назад

      What's a white

    • @avertthymortaleyes3460
      @avertthymortaleyes3460 3 года назад +6

      @@snow-puppetsofficial360 the figment of your imagination you claim is oppressing you everyday lol

    • @snow-puppetsofficial360
      @snow-puppetsofficial360 3 года назад +5

      @@avertthymortaleyes3460 What? Read my reply again. I don't think you got the context right. First, I'm white, so how can I be oppressed by my own skin? Second, I agree with you. The BLM movement is made up *predominantly white* leftists who claim that black people are oppressed. I'm not a leftist.

    • @steevrawjers
      @steevrawjers 3 года назад

      lol classic

    • @Andromeda_CT86
      @Andromeda_CT86 3 года назад +3

      Understandable, blacks would be mad if it was a hip hop documentary but only focused on white artists. Giving whites full credit for the movement.

  • @lalaland2107
    @lalaland2107 4 года назад +159

    Damn, these comments are so mad!

    • @RihannaIsIluminati
      @RihannaIsIluminati 4 года назад +4

      Deadass

    • @retardedrabbit135
      @retardedrabbit135 4 года назад +6

      I think it's gets people get mad when you take something that they create and completely misconstrued it and distort the information

    • @maxdibble4169
      @maxdibble4169 4 года назад +3

      G how, the people who made and funded this video support modern day slavery and had nothing to do with punk

    • @VPS_Reports
      @VPS_Reports 4 года назад +12

      nazi punks lol they filled the coments

    • @hotepkiller1180
      @hotepkiller1180 4 года назад +13

      Black ppl in my music....im mad better cry on RUclips about it

  • @gravenewworld6521
    @gravenewworld6521 5 лет назад +28

    Grew up in a white catholic community but my parents were both writers so I had access to a great deal of culture. Luckily for me my father has an extensive music collection and had a death album, so I was introduced to them somewhere around 2003

  • @aquaferme1346
    @aquaferme1346 3 года назад +50

    the weird thing is that back in Britain... al these band started as tribute to african american musics of all kinds and it was not hidden at all. They really worshiped that stuff and came to make it their own. African american musicians from the 1940s onward toured in the UK and did great there... all the way to the 1980s with house music.

    • @crowhillian58
      @crowhillian58 Год назад +3

      Influenced by, yes, tribute to, not really. British musicians were just as influenced by ska & reggae which was Jamaican, not American.

    • @crowhillian58
      @crowhillian58 Год назад +1

      @@77Creation I can't disagree with your comment, my point was that British music had a wider influence than just America and punk specifically was more home grown than American influenced despite what the American in the video tried to claim. I'm replying after a few weeks so I can't remember his name. ✌️

  • @dekaiaverett3265
    @dekaiaverett3265 4 года назад +63

    They never said Death pioneered punk they said Death were pioneers in punk which is very different.

    • @midnightstorm4290
      @midnightstorm4290 3 года назад +2

      Because if you think about it punk not only from one band but multiple bands to mold what we know punk is today

    • @philmstud2k
      @philmstud2k 3 года назад +2

      But they weren't even that. Pure Hell and Bad Brains? Definitely. Death? Nobody had even heard of those guys.

    • @camerondodge2070
      @camerondodge2070 3 года назад +1

      @@philmstud2k Nobody in the mainstream has ever heard of Pure Hell either, so...

    • @letshugandlove324
      @letshugandlove324 3 года назад +1

      do you agree with the title of the video though?

  • @bb-of3qz
    @bb-of3qz 6 лет назад +232

    If you watch this and believe what these people say then you are a fool.

    • @forshigity5000
      @forshigity5000 6 лет назад +9

      especially when the annoucer listens to PINK

    • @semperfiarcher
      @semperfiarcher 5 лет назад +10

      @DJ Bob-omb!Uh no. Black Americans created Gospel, Blues, Rhythm and Blues (and thereby Rock n Roll), Funk, Disco, and Rap (among other genres). However, to site mid 70s groups as creators of Punk doesn't wash. The Stooges came out in 1969. The New York Dolls self titled album was released in 1973, when Death was still a funk band called "RockFire Funk Express." Patty Smith released "Hey Joe" in 1974. The first track on the album "Politicians in my Eyes" was not released until late 1975.
      That said, Death were most certainly early contributors to Punk and deserve to be credited as such.
      This isn't about race; it's about the history of punk. How's this for credit? The ultimate foundation of all recorded Rock music is Mamie Smith, who recorded "Crazy Blues" on Tuesday, April 10, 1920.

    • @justinibatzchi7970
      @justinibatzchi7970 5 лет назад +4

      DJ Bob-omb! I’m a black punk musician. This isn’t true.

    • @DPoner
      @DPoner 5 лет назад

      @DJ Bob-omb! He's just doing that because of your prejudice.

    • @barbarianblood2316
      @barbarianblood2316 2 года назад

      Well said.

  • @doughboysxe
    @doughboysxe 6 лет назад +190

    D.H Peligro - Dead Kennedys, never gets any love?

    • @dspan9
      @dspan9 6 лет назад +2

      thats what i was sayin too

    • @SoupEater32
      @SoupEater32 6 лет назад +5

      Yes! One of the best early punk drummers!

    • @maxxxmodelz4061
      @maxxxmodelz4061 6 лет назад +6

      Dead Kennedys were great, and one of the early examples of true punk, but they came about two years after the British explosion of the genre. The Sex Pistols had already broken up and other bands like the Damned and the Stooges were active for several years when the Kennedy's were formed back in 1978. They definitely took the torch and blazed up some new paths with it though.

    • @Frijolero18
      @Frijolero18 6 лет назад

      They were early forerunners to the SoCal hardcore scene though.

    • @xdeadbeatboi6666x
      @xdeadbeatboi6666x 6 лет назад +2

      Frijolero18 They're from San Francisco

  • @FrankMendez1969
    @FrankMendez1969 6 лет назад +211

    Don't talk about something you don't understand. Punk has never cared about race. I bet she doesn't even support local punk bands.

    • @znedrow4
      @znedrow4 5 лет назад +13

      True, i grew up in punk and race meant nothing, you were punk or you werent. Nothing else mattered. Race identity is not a thing in punk.

    • @oddiodiscoursemusicchannel6112
      @oddiodiscoursemusicchannel6112 5 лет назад +4

      @Val 91 what do you know about being black and punk would you shut up. You're the race obsessed because you would rather not hear our side of the story

    • @oddiodiscoursemusicchannel6112
      @oddiodiscoursemusicchannel6112 5 лет назад +4

      @@znedrow4 are u black?

    • @oddiodiscoursemusicchannel6112
      @oddiodiscoursemusicchannel6112 5 лет назад +6

      @@tafkapi9840 punk wasnt totally right wing either . It expressed the ideology from whoever was playing it. you're just telling one side.. "rock against racism" was there just like "rock against communism" as a matter of fact Poly Styrene ,Don Letts and Pauline Black ( who were in this documentary )were apart of that RAR movment. As a matter of fact "rock against communism" was started to counter "counter Rock Against Racism ." Rock Against Racism" was first so stop your rediculous fairy tale revisionism. And although it was irresponsible The swastika was used as a shock mechanism by many punks back then, even black punk rock bands like pure hell wore them Also lots of outlaw gangs from NY did the same thing and most of them were non white. I'm glad they ditched that trash because nazi pigots used that as an excuse to infiltrate a lot of white youth in the UK. . punk rock was nihilistic but with nihilism always leaves and opened space for all kinds For an ideology no matter what . There were also more black punks than were mentioned in this video. And white journalist like lester bangs calling out racism in the scene as well. With his article "white noise supremacists " .punk is like any other subculture or any where where there is people , you have a variety of ideologies swimming about . You're acting like screw drivers view was the only view and that only punks were white. Punk wasnt totally anything but what it was - another outlet of a bunch of ideas .

    • @tafkapi9840
      @tafkapi9840 5 лет назад +3

      @@oddiodiscoursemusicchannel6112 You're arguing against points I didnt even make. Not once did I say punk was "totally" right wing, or even predominantly so. And when I say "right wing" I obviously dont mean tory voting toffs with mohawks.
      I brought up RAC and not RAR becuse RAC was pertinent to the context of the comment (that punks didnt care about race etc). There is just a misconception nowadays that punk was always some kind of anti-racist, pro-gay, pro-feminist movement that had monolithic ideals that would allign with a modern SJW, which is obviously FAR from the truth. As you said it was largely nihilistic, there was a lot of anger and hate in the music, it was a contrast to the idealism and utopianism that had come before in the late 60s.

  • @1TakoyakiStore
    @1TakoyakiStore Год назад +10

    I remember reading a bunch of stuff in the Allmusic guide to Rock back in 2003 and was surprised at just how many early rappers started out in hardcore bands.

    • @RevShifty
      @RevShifty 8 месяцев назад +3

      Early rap and hardcore had a lot of overlap. In NYC, the first white fans of hip hop were punks, because they came from really similar communities and backgrounds. To this day, some of my favorite NYC hardcore bands have hip hop side projects, and that early overlap gets missed or ignored far too often.
      And while not really punk or hardcore, Candiria are still Brooklyn legends. They were combining hardcore, metal, and hip hop before any nu metal bands were, and they were never corny about it. They'd also manage to throw some funk, jazz, and even acoustic music into the mix over the years.

  • @michaelsnodden5084
    @michaelsnodden5084 2 года назад +5

    Why pick some youngster to read a script for this? Clicks? There is a story to be told but we're not that far on that it can't be told by someone who was there

  • @thisisthewatch2918
    @thisisthewatch2918 6 лет назад +35

    I'm a Hip Hop guy with an alternative soul. I hope no non racist white punks take this video offensively or weird. This video shows your community being leaders of acceptance, love and art. I just wanna say thank you for that. Even Hip Hop isn't exactly an accepting culture.

    • @ramonw9430
      @ramonw9430 Год назад +2

      Many of us love hip hop too. I'm glad that's what you took from it. From the view point of someone who grew up in the west coast scene it is a bit painful to hear some of the stuff they are saying regarding punk not accepting Death as an influence or that that is somehow our fault as a community. They tried to sign to a major label who were trying to market to a mainstream audience, Not a punk audience. I think had they gone the DIY or punk label route or maybe even a black label we probably would have heard of them much sooner.

    • @claudiasolomon1123
      @claudiasolomon1123 9 месяцев назад

      If they aren't racist, they won't have a problem with any of this.

    • @omalone1169
      @omalone1169 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@ramonw9430check out the book
      Everything but the burden

    • @guessundheit6494
      @guessundheit6494 7 месяцев назад +1

      When Miles Davis said he wasn't making music for whites, he wasn't being "a bigot", he was making a point about how Black people exist, were important, and should be as much at the centre of society. Anyone who didn't get that point proved his point.

  • @carlwinslow5905
    @carlwinslow5905 Год назад +5

    Death is cool and all but no one cited them with anything until that documentary. They were not really that known at all. Just a local band. There were plenty of bands doing what they did waaaay before the early 1970s.

  • @Desmodontidae78
    @Desmodontidae78 3 года назад +10

    Nearly all of the dedicated fans of Punk that I have met are well aware of the multi-cultural history of Punk, so it feels a bit misleading to imply that there's an overall ignorance to Punk's history within its fanbase regarding the contributions from people of color. Folks outside of the scene don't typically know, but those who love the music usually are well enough aware, at least in my personal experience. Perhaps the wider world is different.
    The historical evolution of Punk is deep and varied. The Punks of African descent in England and America definitely had a strong influence. They were one of many vectors helping to shape the sound and culture of Punk. I am ecstatic that bands like A Band Called Death are getting love again. The history of Punk is a treasure and it is worth preserving.

    • @kikidulalinko5570
      @kikidulalinko5570 3 года назад +1

      what history we grew up multiracial it is our culture

    • @rwmartinez1262
      @rwmartinez1262 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@kikidulalinko5570yes, it's BLACK CULTURE

  • @EliteXtasy
    @EliteXtasy 6 лет назад +136

    I'm quite sure "proto-punk" started in the 50s/60s. Screaming Lord Sutch, Los Saicos, The Kinks... All sound very much like punk and all older than 1973.

    • @MrMmnngghh
      @MrMmnngghh 6 лет назад +13

      Glad you mentioned The Kinks. "You Really Got Me" is proto - punk and proto - metal.

    • @johnr8820
      @johnr8820 6 лет назад +2

      exactly

    • @monte4974
      @monte4974 6 лет назад +3

      The seeds

    • @maxxxmodelz4061
      @maxxxmodelz4061 6 лет назад +7

      Finally, someone mentioned the Kinks. So many bands copied their style and low fidelity sounds but never gave any credit to them for that.

    • @pointlessgimmickyusername9196
      @pointlessgimmickyusername9196 6 лет назад +5

      Black Merda were very similar to DEATH, but earlier- Detroit garage rock/'proto-punk', also all black. They started mid-60s IIRC. Personally, I think it's impossible to claim someone was "the first punk band", but that mid 60s detroit garage scene- MC5, Stooges, as well as bands like Black Merda, was pretty damn close.

  • @raquelnunes9793
    @raquelnunes9793 4 года назад +57

    looking at the comment makes me realise why you do need to punch fascists.

    • @adrianshephard378
      @adrianshephard378 3 года назад +2

      Lets punch the Communists and Fascists

    • @niknak8299
      @niknak8299 3 года назад +1

      These so called “Fascist” you call aren't even Fascist I have never seen someone that's actually cool with Fascism. No one likes Fascism except for very few dumbasses.

    • @Lwilight
      @Lwilight 3 года назад

      @@niknak8299 Fascists don't think they or their beliefs are Fascist. Flowery words, dog whistles, and political influence are used by "educated" fascists and the morons tend to occupy Internet forums and publicly announce their vile rhetoric. So "i've never seen someone cool with fascism" doesn't make sense - because you have likely; their have been quite a few instances recently.

    • @daisymagnus306
      @daisymagnus306 2 года назад

      Nazi punks*

  • @Donself1978
    @Donself1978 5 лет назад +5

    Why are so many people in the comment section in there own feelings. No one said black people created punk, they were just naming some black punk rock artists. I’m from the dirty south and I love 60s and 70s rock (All genres of those era), 80s thrash metal, 90s grunge and scattered other groups from that era. When people hear that they instantly are in AWE down here. That’s why I see nothing wrong with an Afro Punk festival cause down here if you’re black and not listening to Migos, Lil Wayne, Cardi B and other groups like that well people seem to instantly judge you.

  • @ChristianVBlue3
    @ChristianVBlue3 6 лет назад +67

    She said no Latino recognition in punk? What about Ron Reyes?? What about that 60s Peru band Los Saicos? These people should make more research before they upload anything and bringing up race

    • @monochromaticaddict311
      @monochromaticaddict311 6 лет назад +4

      Also Alan Vega. He was Puerto Rican and pioneered punk, electronic and no wave music in the early 70's in NYC

    • @xbiggermx
      @xbiggermx 6 лет назад +4

      Los Crudos, Agnostic Front, Sick of it All.

    • @ramonw9430
      @ramonw9430 6 лет назад

      Lack of Interest

    • @dyr234
      @dyr234 6 лет назад

      ron is from y home town Puerto Rico. he was a mad singer love those early black flag songs with him on them same goies for keith.

    • @glasses9995
      @glasses9995 5 лет назад +3

      Robo, the second Black Flag's drummer. He's Colombian

  • @c.dracula
    @c.dracula Год назад +4

    Death "we wanted to be like Alice Cooper"
    AJ+ "They invented punk not white people"

  • @user-qs2le2cs2r
    @user-qs2le2cs2r 6 лет назад +17

    Just saw Poly -Styrene on the front and I was like Yeap, got to watch this!

    • @florenceoztas6186
      @florenceoztas6186 2 года назад

      Yes I saw Poly Styrene too!
      Really disappointed Poly is not celebrated by this presenter .
      Just window dressing - shameful !

  • @AlfBenny
    @AlfBenny 6 лет назад +98

    you didn't grow up where I grew up, if you didn't see many punks that weren't white, myself included.

    • @ramonw9430
      @ramonw9430 6 лет назад +9

      +Alf Benny Yup. I'm half Mexican and I grew up in California. Plenty of other Latinos in the scene here. Some of the biggest bands out here are at least part Latino. Quite a few black punks as well.

    • @ramonw9430
      @ramonw9430 6 лет назад +1

      Skyy Gamez Clearly you don't live in California.

    • @exeuroweenie
      @exeuroweenie 6 лет назад +2

      Zeros were a great,pioneering Mexican punk band,now that you mention it.And Alice Armandariz(The Bags) spoke for herself.

    • @tonyarichelle8380
      @tonyarichelle8380 5 лет назад +1

      Raymond Wright WORRRRRD brotha✊🏾

    • @athaprince9359
      @athaprince9359 5 лет назад +4

      When I lived in Chicago I most of my alternative friends were Mexican. I did meet some Black metalheads, not many. Now back in rural Virginia you might be one the only alternative kids of your race in a predominantly White town. You're probably one of the few alternative kids White or not lol. It depends on where you live. At least that was my experience when I was younger.

  • @Hobbofett
    @Hobbofett 6 лет назад +218

    The host knows literally zero about the punk and hardcore movement, how hard would it have been to have found somebody with one iota of a clue ?

    • @phuckgoogle4027
      @phuckgoogle4027 5 лет назад +15

      its all about superficial image and aesthetic with these pathological leftists. they dont understand content, just how shit looks. thats what popular culture is based on though - image and aesthetic, not actual understanding of technical artistry.

    • @Maveriks1010
      @Maveriks1010 5 лет назад +5

      if they got someone with a clue the person wouldn't allow themselves to talk all this crap.

    • @Alexmustdie-zy6kz
      @Alexmustdie-zy6kz 4 года назад +12

      @@phuckgoogle4027 you realize punk started as a left wing movement the Dead Kennedy's were super left wing and the sex pistols were started to sell a brand of clothing

    • @s2sHoXXs2
      @s2sHoXXs2 4 года назад +8

      found the dogwhistling skinheads, if theyre not then they're just dumber than I thought. In that case, then my bad.

    • @dubsideproductions2859
      @dubsideproductions2859 4 года назад +5

      phuck google punk is leftist

  • @melodyebuskin5490
    @melodyebuskin5490 3 года назад +8

    Wow! I had noooo idea and I was playing Boston music clubs in the late 70’s. When I moved to the UK in 1980 I saw black and white musicians playing all kinds of music together and soon I was jamming with people from many diverse cultures.

  • @Lunatic4Bizcas
    @Lunatic4Bizcas 6 лет назад +11

    A note on the original band 'Death:' As much as I truly enjoy punk of the 70's, I love 70's R&B as well. A drove of phenomenal R&B music came out of the 70's era.

    • @Lunatic4Bizcas
      @Lunatic4Bizcas 6 лет назад

      +MrMmnnggh: "¿Black Merda?" ¡You can go fv

    • @MrMmnngghh
      @MrMmnngghh 6 лет назад

      Black Merda is the name of a very good R & B band, influenced by Jimi Hendrix. Do some research before you post misguided insults.
      Below is a link to their excellent self - titled EP, released in 1970 on Chess Records.
      ruclips.net/video/pkELExkrvRs/видео.html

  • @mrfarkyhars9192
    @mrfarkyhars9192 5 лет назад +66

    Stop rewriting history

    • @freudianslippers6567
      @freudianslippers6567 5 лет назад +13

      How is black people talking about their experiences "re-writing" anything?
      You people are so melodramatic, I swear.

    • @mrfarkyhars9192
      @mrfarkyhars9192 5 лет назад +1

      @@freudianslippers6567 ruclips.net/video/nOOSmyxNE3s/видео.html

    • @s2sHoXXs2
      @s2sHoXXs2 4 года назад +2

      @@mrfarkyhars9192 how about you use your own words instead, buddy. No one's rewriting history here

  • @carlospayan5638
    @carlospayan5638 4 года назад +7

    Punk can't be explained in words. Either political, misfit, musical, nihilistic, rebellious, some of these things can be explained. Just make friends with punks, find the way to be punk, and you will know what punk is.

  • @maxxxmodelz4061
    @maxxxmodelz4061 6 лет назад +11

    Well by their own admission, they were heavily influenced by the MC5 which can really be considered the precursor to Punk movement as well. The MC5 were out in the 60's, laying down some fast paced tracks and crazy live shows that no one else were doing at that time. The Kinks were probably the earliest example of that kind of anti established music, but MC5 were way heavier and played faster.

    • @misfit2022
      @misfit2022 3 года назад

      They were well down the line in ‘68. The Kinks ‘64, Los Saicos ‘65, Sonics ‘65 and 13th Floor Elevators ‘66 were all earlier

    • @rwmartinez1262
      @rwmartinez1262 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@misfit2022and who were they influenced by? It always boils down to blacks.

  • @FrankTulloch
    @FrankTulloch Год назад +4

    Gravitating towards rock music as a young black Jamaican made me feel like an outsider... Had we known about these pioneers earlier, we wouldn't have felt so alien...

    • @FrankTulloch
      @FrankTulloch 8 месяцев назад

      @aofmual I found a community out here that is into it. We are small, but consistent. Got bands, concerts, event and more. "Alternative Entertainment"

  • @buzzbuzzerson3592
    @buzzbuzzerson3592 5 месяцев назад +2

    You wanna agree with this lady that Death invented punk so you are not accused of being racist, but then reality kicks in and you have to realize there were bands like the stooges, Mc5, It’s All Meat and a bunch of unsigned garage bands playing this sort of stuff in the 60’s before Death emerged.

  • @dj_daddy_yonqui
    @dj_daddy_yonqui 6 лет назад +10

    How can you forget the influence of Don Letts on punk

    • @ramonw9430
      @ramonw9430 Год назад

      Very influential and he was probably left out either because the journalist here didn't know enough about the history of punk to know who he was or because he didn't fit the narrative.

  • @UltraAntiEverything
    @UltraAntiEverything 6 лет назад +8

    I've heard rumors that Pure Hell, despite releasing nothing but a 7" in the 70s/80s, became a major influence on the UK punk scene through touring back in the days... And holy hell, if their LP (released within the 10 years) doesn't sounds as good as any '82 Boston HC punk band!

  • @crimsonwolf9099
    @crimsonwolf9099 6 лет назад +11

    A few corrections: The term hardcore, applied to punk, was definitely FIRST used by Canada's DOA with their lp "Hardcore '81". 2nd, original drummer for Black Flag, Robo, was from (I think) Puerto Rico and was brown. He got deported. The Dead Kennedy's amazing drummer D.H. Peligro was black. DC was not "the center of hardcore", there was no "center of hardcore". In Texas there were a lot of Latino punks including members of the Offenders and I believe the guitarist for the original Dicks. There was nothing punk about Debbie Harry and Blondie except that they had started playing at CBGB's. I never considered Patty Smith a "punk" any more than I considered Springsteen (no, dis... love him) a "punk" and I still don't. Poly Styrene, on the other hand, big time punk. Still, a great little documentary. Thanks.

    • @LigaFantasma
      @LigaFantasma 3 года назад

      Robo was from Colombia and he was as white his band mates in the Misfits and Black Flag. Stop rewriting history to support your racist fantasies.

    • @crimsonwolf9099
      @crimsonwolf9099 3 года назад +3

      @@LigaFantasma "Racist fantasies"???? Isn't that just a little over-the-top? So I was wrong about Robo. He was a killer drummer either way. What difference does it make? Racist fantasies? I have none.

    • @emilianosintarias7337
      @emilianosintarias7337 2 года назад +2

      @@crimsonwolf9099 I agree with you but you only talking the US. By the early 80s punk was already getting underway everywhere on earth, except sub saharan africa, and that means most scenes were not "white" (not that anyone cared about that). To this day most punks are not white. The biggest punk scene in the world history is surely in west java

    • @gregvaldez1269
      @gregvaldez1269 Год назад +1

      @@crimsonwolf9099 All he was saying is that ROBO is a white dude from Colombia because Hispanic can be of any race .

  • @ericschwartz2756
    @ericschwartz2756 6 лет назад +173

    Death did not get discovered until just a few years ago. They were not an influence in punk at all.

    • @moko9hoko
      @moko9hoko 6 лет назад +25

      Eric Schwartz Yes they were. They werent well known until a few years ago but early underground punk bands/kids knew of them and for sure impacted them in some way

    • @jpjpjp453
      @jpjpjp453 6 лет назад +41

      Have to disagree. Not a single person or notable zine i ever knew that was in it from the beginning ever mentioned them at all. And i was a fanatical record/demo collector back in the 80s. I could jump on the phone right now with people i've known that were into it going back to the 70s and i'll guarantee that none heard of this band back then since they would have come up in discussion over all these years.
      The only band they'll know by that name was the metal band that released a series of demos that pioneered death metal

    • @ramonw9430
      @ramonw9430 6 лет назад +6

      +JP JPJP Although I do have to agree that the Floridian Death is definitely much more influential even though they were death metal, not punk. However Alice Cooper himself has sighted them (the Detroit Death) as an early mutual influence (he stated so on his radio show). He's plays their songs from time to time on his show. If they were on Alice Cooper's radar back in the day then I'm pretty sure they were an influential local band. I've seen it happen personally. I'm from a part of California that doesn't always get the respect it deserves musically yet many musicians come from here. Some of them are in big bands. Many of them were influenced by local bands that are huge in the area but nowhere else really. You'd be hard pressed to find anything written about most of these influential local bands in the "big" publications. Never the less they were hugely influential on many of the local musicians who have become "famous" musicians.

    • @dannyapeshit
      @dannyapeshit 6 лет назад +1

      I hear you, but I don't think MC5 were truly influenced by Sun Ra, even if they say that. Sun Ra is way more complex and intellectual music while MC5 to me were just influenced by rock n roll music of the 50s. Stooges were influenced by Chicago blues for sure as documented by Iggy himself. Howlin Wolf pretty much influenced all of the garage rock growlers of the 60s if you ask me, especially Captain Beefheart.

    • @dannyapeshit
      @dannyapeshit 6 лет назад +8

      Yeah agree overall. The "Band Called Death" documentary clearly explains that Death were not known at all and they only recorded demos for a label that vaulted them. The reporter needs to do their research. However, obviously black culture has heavy influence on punk regardless, you know since blacks created rock n roll. And the Ramones, the first "official" punk band said the whole purpose was to put the roll back into rock again. Punk was created out of the frustration of heavy metal bands that pretty much killed rock n' roll with their narcissistic 20 minute guitar solos etc. Bands like Zeppelin pretty much made the music about themselves and not the energy of the people. The Ramones, the Clash and Sex Pistols were on a mission to do the reverse.

  • @LadyLossehelin
    @LadyLossehelin 4 года назад +1

    I love whoever put the captions, they are great xD

  • @thalazt
    @thalazt 2 года назад +5

    Punk like hip hop is beautiful because it's message transcends race. It reminds the world its not our neighbors that are the enemy, it's the rich, elite, ans those that force control.

    • @jnaz3thirty1
      @jnaz3thirty1 Год назад

      All music transcends race ……..and why do you hate Rich people ? Many of them worked their asses off for their Money…….

    • @thalazt
      @thalazt Год назад +2

      @@jnaz3thirty1 because most the people I have know that worked their asses off for money forgot about being good people or parents. Do you really think they work harder then some poor people? Maybe take some time and research how hard it is to navigate generational curses, lack of oppertunity, guidance, and direction. In punk and hip hop we deal with those things. And you either get it or you dont.

  • @robertdawson2743
    @robertdawson2743 3 года назад +21

    This is stunning stuff. I,m more of an alternative Metal fan but definitely appreciate what I call Real Punk and and Real Hardcore. No music genre should be exclusive in it's ethnic membership as music is for everyone and anyone who appreciates it, gets its messages or is directly affected by its it's messages and lyrics.
    I love to see audiences at gigs really go off, not violent but really feeling the music, the empowerment and the cathartic therapy of letting the music take you and Metal, Punk, Hardcore, Industrial...whatever genre it is it's for ANYONE WHO GETS IT no matter the Ethnicity, Skin colour, Religion, Sexuality of the Musicians or Audience.

    • @guessundheit6494
      @guessundheit6494 7 месяцев назад

      I wish this had included Suicidal Tendencies, which you probably like as much as I do. They straddled Punk, Hardcore, Metal, and Thrash like no one else, and with a lineup of Black and Latino members have massively influenced many, from Metal to NuMetal to Rap.

  • @klinkee688
    @klinkee688 5 лет назад +7

    GAVIN!!!!! I want my very black history of country and bluegrass music now!!!!!! The truth needs to be told!!!!!!

  • @wildcatste
    @wildcatste 4 года назад +5

    Fascinating history- thanks for sharing!

  • @themetalcowboy6
    @themetalcowboy6 6 лет назад +23

    You guys are missing out on the powerviolence band Soul Glo

    • @PookieDaExzile
      @PookieDaExzile 6 лет назад

      Finna,Check em out. Thanks bruh

    • @retrospect702
      @retrospect702 6 лет назад

      holy crap, thanks! so good

    • @rokch1ck
      @rokch1ck 6 лет назад

      themetalcowboy6 they’re so sick.

  • @bigmoneysteppa
    @bigmoneysteppa 6 лет назад +119

    Now we colour coding punks too lol. Earth 2018.

    • @grandsome1
      @grandsome1 6 лет назад +14

      steppa money Music was colour coded from the beginning in American culture go check the distinction they made at the beginning with Rock and RnB which were essentially the same thing. The best art often comes from struggling and black people in America for most history were struggling more than the average and had to get creative to survive.

    • @MichaelKerr71
      @MichaelKerr71 6 лет назад +10

      Nobody is colour coding anything here. They are just stating that black people were also involved in punk/proto-punk.

    • @bigmoneysteppa
      @bigmoneysteppa 6 лет назад

      NoneOfTheAbove why does that matter?

    • @MichaelKerr71
      @MichaelKerr71 6 лет назад +7

      What are you even really talking about? We can't celebrate black musicians now? YOU are the one color coding here.

    • @bigmoneysteppa
      @bigmoneysteppa 6 лет назад +1

      NoneOfTheAbove why does that matter? You idiot you are calling people black musicians. I think you dont even know what your hands are doing. Take your confused feelings somewhere else.

  • @bloodboughtbigphilr8266
    @bloodboughtbigphilr8266 3 года назад +5

    In the early days of punk in the U.K., the Hammersmith Palais in London was a key venue for live shows. This was a club known more for reggae and in between bands, the only in house records to play were reggae discs. This turned a lot of punks on to reggae and of course, there were punk bands who started incorporating reggae elements into some of their output and even performing straight up covers. Especially noticeable with The Clash but also The Ruts and Stiff Little Fingers and it sure worked a treat. Proved an impetus too for the Two Tone movement though a cross pollination more with reggae's forerunner of ska and rocksteady.

    • @crowhillian58
      @crowhillian58 Год назад

      Even Blitz did a couple of reggae influenced tracks

    • @roylle6346
      @roylle6346 2 месяца назад

      Americans are getting disgusting with the lies now

  • @locoog7971
    @locoog7971 6 лет назад +73

    The stooges came much before death though

    • @cocopops4974
      @cocopops4974 6 лет назад +19

      Loco OG ur right but the stooges were more of a hardcore rock and roll band... There one of my favorite band... It was mixed with Alot of genres... Rock and roll/blues/ and punk... Legends... If u watch the whole video the band in the view said that they didn't claim the created punk...but us black people aren't recognised for doing it

    • @radovanpopovic4934
      @radovanpopovic4934 4 года назад +2

      there's no real point in time when Punk started....50's, 60's.....

    • @tiefighter3445
      @tiefighter3445 3 года назад +2

      @@cocopops4974 Then why is there a whole video given credit that they invented punk? 😆. Besides Death even said they were trying to sound like rock music probably had no idea they were making - sort of punk music style.

    • @robertoacevedo6247
      @robertoacevedo6247 3 года назад +2

      I'm 55 I heard death before I heard the stoogies, back in Jersey in 73, even iggy pop says he was influence by death.

    • @midnightstorm4290
      @midnightstorm4290 3 года назад +2

      Punk wasnt born on a particular day
      It evolved as different bands came in and experimented with their sound..

  • @NegativeBodhiImage
    @NegativeBodhiImage 5 лет назад +174

    Wow this takes KANG posting to astronomical heights.

    • @oddiodiscoursemusicchannel6112
      @oddiodiscoursemusicchannel6112 5 лет назад +10

      And you take being a whypt stupremashit to where its always been, in the toilet. I will challenge your sorry bass what do you even know about the black history of punk let alone rock n roll NOTHING . And you know nothing about what you saying . Come on pigot let's go l let's go

    • @NegativeBodhiImage
      @NegativeBodhiImage 5 лет назад +5

      @@oddiodiscoursemusicchannel6112AHHHHha ahahahahahahahaha I checked out your channel, guess what you suck! LOL You shouldn't be qualified to listen to music when you cant even keep a simple 4/4 line
      On A Bass …. !!!!!!!BwaaaahhhhhahahaHAHAHHAhahahahah

    • @WAVYU5
      @WAVYU5 5 лет назад +1

      how sad of you. lol

    • @Brian-ul2mw
      @Brian-ul2mw 5 лет назад +5

      I look forward to your documentary on how white people made hip hop,jazz,soul,blues,dancehall,rock,r&b,reggae,funk etc lmao

    • @dubsideproductions2859
      @dubsideproductions2859 4 года назад +3

      Why do you hate black people

  • @lightstar52899
    @lightstar52899 5 лет назад +4

    Fishbone came after the punk wave in the early 90’s. and therefore could not influence a past wave.

  • @brianlogsdon4824
    @brianlogsdon4824 2 года назад +2

    I was late to the party, didn’t get into punk until 1996 (16 yo) when I had a crush on a punk girl. Started with pioneers like the pistols and ramones, got into DK, misfits, descendents, Circle Jerk, Black flag, early Anti-Flag (die for your government), SubHumans, Exploited, NOFX, total chaos, Bad Religion, newer (at the time) punk like pennywise and offspring. Also discovered some Ska (bosstones, glow skulls, the specials, goldfinger)
    Later in my mid 20s I discovered X ray specs, the germs, Minor Threat.
    In my 30s I discovered indie rock like the Pixies.
    Before I discovered punk I was listening to rap, metal, crossover bands like Korn and RATM, as well as grunge, but I like pretty much all genres.
    I love 80s stuff like Depeche Mode, The Cure as well.
    But learning about bands like Death and Bad Brains, as well as Fishbone it’s clear I’m still learning and I enjoy learning about old bands too

  • @MrJimbo-ew9vk
    @MrJimbo-ew9vk 11 месяцев назад +2

    Blacks have been doing Rock since its very beginning. Little Richard, Chuck Berry and Jimi Hendrix have to be the three big ones as far as I'm concerned on the top of my head. There's probably a shit-ton of others I don't know about.
    As for blacks in punk rock bands, I might also recommend also listening to: Whipping Boy (1/2 of the band, including the frontman, is black), Dag Nasty ("Dag with Shawn"-era; Shawn Brown, who is black, was the first frontman of this band), the Chicago punk band The Bollweevils (black frontman), the Dead Kennedys (black drummer) and the Plasmatics (black bassist; fun fact: same bassist would produce the "Animal Boy" album for the Ramones).
    EDIT: Forgot about Lenny Kravitz (half black, half Jewish).

    • @aotctd
      @aotctd Месяц назад

      Yeah. None of it was ' Hidden '
      *L M F A O*

  • @NinjaContravaniaManX
    @NinjaContravaniaManX 6 лет назад +26

    Death didn't pioneer shit. No one ever got to hear them back then. Only in recent years, their music came to light and now hipsters gonna be like "oh yes, black proto punk, that was the shit back then don't you know?!" and all of a sudden, we need pointless documentaries like this... -.-

    • @ChristopherBatson
      @ChristopherBatson 6 лет назад +6

      SiLeNCel2 A group of people's early efforts in the formation of something going unrecognized, only to later be given more prevelance and placed in higher esteem. Also known as... pioneers

    • @markward661
      @markward661 6 лет назад +6

      Christopher Batson pretty sure the original comment is in reference to this video implying that bands like death shaped punk and have just been "white-washed" out of its history. Most importantly punk isn't about race but in this instance of the band only more recently being credited and appreciated in the timeline of punk then how can they have shaped the genre and pioneered sounds outside of a position of influence? It's great that African American influence on punk is being recognised but this video takes it a step beyond and creates a racial divide by playing off the relative obscurity of two punk bands (both incredible imo) compared with the status given to some white punk groups and claiming this is a racial divide/issue.
      Punk has been influenced by people of all races and awareness of that is good, but I guess it takes a race baiting video like this to make that step and try and attribute it to a specific race/imply a group has been excluded from its history.
      If you actually listen to punk you won't give two shits about what this woman's saying and you'd just enjoy it for what it is.

    • @ChristopherBatson
      @ChristopherBatson 6 лет назад +4

      Mark Ward 1. Pioneer =/= influencer. Many "settlers" of America as well as pioneers of art, business, etc. didn't meet with initial material success or raise immediate interest. However, this doesn't negate their importance as early voices in a movement.
      2. I appreciate the often visceral stance against bigotry that many in punk culture take; the push against Nazi skinheads appropriating punk signifiers being an exceptionally notable example. That doesn't mean punk is immune to the structures of bigoted thinking. Nothing is.
      3. Race is in all things, all the time, everywhere. Or rather, it's found its tendrils, along with its negative thinking and power structure, in every aspect of culture. Enjoying something - in this case, Punk - for what it is is fine, but if you don't periodically examine the negative history permeating everything, you run the risk of supporting the ethos Punk stands against.

  • @richieriot9014
    @richieriot9014 2 года назад +3

    Thank you for mentioning Pure Hell, being from Philly I grew up on them but they need the exposure that so many other bands have gotten over the years. If you don't know them, you are missing out.

  • @GUIZMO190207
    @GUIZMO190207 3 года назад +2

    Punk is punk. It doesn't matter your race, yout nationality, only import that you hate the tirany and injustice, be yourself, and having fun in the pit

  • @risingrightside
    @risingrightside 2 года назад +2

    Death: "We're not a punk band, we're rock and roll band"
    AJ+: "Death is legendary black punk band"
    Lol

  • @tiocfaidharla251
    @tiocfaidharla251 6 лет назад +24

    Death maybe would have been pioneers if people actually heard thier music. They were basically dug out of a dust bin and rediscovered. Meaning no one had really heard of them at all during the time when punk was starting to come into it's own. It was only in the early 2000 that a wider audience had heard them. You cant say someone or something was inspired or originated from something they were unaware of. If a tree falls in the woods and nobodys there, does it make a noise?

    • @evileyelash8094
      @evileyelash8094 4 года назад +1

      The music got around differently back then, through shows, local distribution, travelling and word of mouth. If you were a musician or someone with particular interest in something, you could be influenced by the smallest, nobody ever. I was signed up to a mail-order music catalog that distributed a zine back in the 80's and learned about a lot of artists only musicians, music nerds or people in any particular place/location knew about - none of my friends or people in my area might have known about a particular artist, but other people did, including anyone who went out of their way to keep on top of this genre of music. Also, if you were a DJ, especially of a local or college radio station that occupied a channel waaaaay down the far end of the radio dial, because these bands couldn't get major radio stations to play their music, they would find out who you were and send you their records, thus getting aired for the consumers of that type of music or whoever was able to pick up the signal and tune in, no matter how niche or small the audience was. These were the typical ways punk (and other forms of underground music) got around. In other words, just because you didn't know bout it doesn't mean that no one else knew, especially if they were in the movement themselves.

    • @evileyelash8094
      @evileyelash8094 4 года назад +1

      Also, if you knew who Siouxsie and the Banshees were back in their punk days, you were special, because they were very niche and unknown where I lived in the States at that time until they slowly started to break through in their "goth" or "post-punk" years while most punks were into the Sex Pistols and Ramones. So, not that different.

    • @alfiex6667
      @alfiex6667 3 года назад +1

      Yes it does make noise you just can't hear it cuz your not there.

    • @ramonw9430
      @ramonw9430 Год назад

      @@alfiex6667 Exactly. In this case nobody was there to hear the tree fall so how could they have been influential?

    • @photonfartsqueeze6694
      @photonfartsqueeze6694 Год назад

      Tell that to the Dead Boys in CLE who were aware of and respected Death.

  • @dkgshizzy
    @dkgshizzy 5 лет назад +4

    The best part is watching them interview Dead and the band themselves telling AJ+ they were never a punk band and were into hard rock. Not much was said after that. Amazing they left that bit into this video though without that extra footage in the video it'd be even more terrible than it already was.

  • @stevelikesgummybears1662
    @stevelikesgummybears1662 3 года назад +2

    Fun fact, Bobby was the basist in my local church choir in rural VT, USA. Took years of him complimenting my bad brains patch before I realized who he was... Nice bit, thanks for doing it.

  • @snotrat2
    @snotrat2 6 лет назад +2

    Reggae was an influence on British punk. It wasn't through black punk bands though, it was through reggae

  • @mamonpret
    @mamonpret 3 года назад +4

    Because ART is Universal. whatever is the genre, everbody can do as long as we love it

    • @starbrite526
      @starbrite526 3 года назад

      In theory, yes. But going to shows and playing music, people often look like I don't belong unless its a black artist.

    • @yhb4682
      @yhb4682 3 года назад

      @@starbrite526 Yeah its sad. Why does it matter what color you are.

  • @MyAFDA
    @MyAFDA Год назад +8

    Fantastic short. Thank you for this. My wife is currently curating a show about a Black South African photographer who has turned his lens on the SOWETO punk and skateboard movement. I am a punk from way back and have always loved punk from different parts of the world. Keep it up.

  • @joshuasaner2965
    @joshuasaner2965 3 года назад +2

    Why is she addressing this like it’s new information? There’s been enough documentaries and interviews long before this girl was alive

  • @jaymack8182
    @jaymack8182 3 года назад +3

    first rule of Punk: There are no rules.
    carry on.

  • @unhallowed45
    @unhallowed45 6 лет назад +32

    It's so true about the industry being controlled by Jim Crowe gatekeepers.

    • @alecoram7874
      @alecoram7874 3 года назад +1

      We're well past that. Hip hop has been dominating the music scene for over 15 years.

    • @HAUNTEDRECS
      @HAUNTEDRECS 3 года назад +1

      @@alecoram7874 seriously, what are these people smokin?

    • @biancachristie
      @biancachristie 3 года назад +2

      The music business is still segregated. Hip hop sells, but it has to be conformist in ways that include skin color and ethnic identity if it’s going to be perceived as commercial by the gatekeepers.

    • @punkisinthedetails1470
      @punkisinthedetails1470 3 года назад +1

      Totally read that as "goat keepers" haha.

  • @ben_has_hobbies
    @ben_has_hobbies 6 лет назад +14

    If you talk Blues or Rock'n'Roll or Rap/Hip Hop I am all on your side. But the arguments in this video just don't hold up. The Bad Brains are very influential for Hardcore (and everyone knows that and acknowledges that). But Death starting the Punk movement? Cut me some slack. Of course you have to acknowledge that the music industry has racist structures and it was harder for black bands to get into certain markets. But what does that contribute to the argument that Punk was "pioneered" by a black community.

    • @rocknroll_jezus9233
      @rocknroll_jezus9233 5 лет назад +1

      Meh, Black Flag and the Germs were more influential I think but you hit everything else on the spot

    • @coetzerrautenbach2485
      @coetzerrautenbach2485 3 года назад

      I'll take "not understanding the English language" for $500, Alex

    • @alfiex6667
      @alfiex6667 3 года назад +1

      No but the sound spinned off of black sounds for the most part

    • @ramonw9430
      @ramonw9430 Год назад

      It also highlights punk went the DIY route. Punk had no chance for mainstream radio at the time and being black wasn't going to help them. Most punks knew this and did everything on their own or through very small mostly DIY punk labels. Had they gone that route we would have been talking about them a lot sooner. But it never happened. That doesn't make it punks fault. Punk was the underdog from the gate.

  • @alber.a1232
    @alber.a1232 3 года назад +41

    “When you’re black,you’re punk all the time”. 😄👌🏻

    • @kikidulalinko5570
      @kikidulalinko5570 3 года назад +2

      lol not true
      attaching to things one didn´t even grow up with is funny punk is individual and multiracial

    • @Andromeda_CT86
      @Andromeda_CT86 3 года назад +5

      So lame and untrue

    • @dnikkithatsame5990
      @dnikkithatsame5990 3 года назад +6

      What she meant is you’re (black people) outside of the margins... which is what punk is, outside the margins.

    • @redshift912
      @redshift912 3 года назад

      These videos are for clicks . It’s pretty obvious.. at least they are possibly turning people on to cool music .

    • @yhb4682
      @yhb4682 3 года назад +4

      @@kikidulalinko5570 I don't think that's what he meant by that. He meant that they are always different and excluded. Punk was diffrent and excluded back then.

  • @tonymarshall3978
    @tonymarshall3978 6 лет назад +5

    We in the uk don’t care that much about race when it comes to music. A lot of white American artists spent the 50s trying to become known as the greatest rock and rollers ever and to,d everyone how they were better then everyone else. The unk artists of the 60s spent there time worshipping at the alter of Chuck berry, little Richard and Bo diddley. Eric Clapton a man referred to as the god for his guitar abilities has never claimed to be the best instead pointing to his favourite American blues artist B.B King.
    In the 70s white uk teens knew more about black music in America then almost anyone else due to northern soul. An underserved nd movement where teens were going to America and digging up any song by a black artist that had never gotten big and taking it to play around the uk at parties they DJ. They diddnt cover them they instead just gave these forgotten American blues and soul tunes a new audience.
    As well as punk there was ska which was popularised in the uk by Jamaican imagrants playing classic tunes from the genre to there white neighbours who loved it so much that they formed there own bands. Often these bands would be mixed race such as the beat and the specials. Weirdly racist skinheads loved ska music and adopted the Jamaican rude boy fashion and were usually the crowd that bands that could sometimes have more black then white members would be playing too.
    The most famous example of this though is of course jimi Hendrix who after famously de throbbing the god at a live event formed his own band was immediately adopted in England as the face of rock and roll before he returned to America and became the legend he is today.
    The uk is weird like that

    • @Mosel66
      @Mosel66 2 месяца назад

      Weirdly non racist skins were listening to reggae years before the racist skinheads

  • @PirateRadioDude
    @PirateRadioDude 6 лет назад +58

    The Velvet Underground was proto-punk.

    • @mypartyisprivate8693
      @mypartyisprivate8693 5 лет назад +18

      The Stooges too. What a trash vid.

    • @mohammedmaher9697
      @mohammedmaher9697 5 лет назад +1

      The VU was also a poto-noise rock band

    • @jody8526937
      @jody8526937 3 года назад +8

      The Velve Underground first two albums were produced by a black guy.

    • @PirateRadioDude
      @PirateRadioDude 3 года назад +1

      @@jody8526937 after spending couple of years researching and re-educating myself on this issue, i understand the history better

    • @kevinw8276
      @kevinw8276 3 года назад

      The best description of Velvet Underground that I've ever heard is that they're a "proto-everything" band

  • @xdeadbeatboi6666x
    @xdeadbeatboi6666x 6 лет назад +12

    Bad Brains were also Rastafarians

    • @laughterhappiness5436
      @laughterhappiness5436 6 лет назад +2

      MasterAD 2247 it's Rasta.

    • @xdeadbeatboi6666x
      @xdeadbeatboi6666x 6 лет назад +1

      Zikhona Kwela Same thing but yea

    • @tonymarshall3978
      @tonymarshall3978 6 лет назад +1

      You seen the documentary “finding Jospeh I” about the singer.
      It’s crazy he wanted to move into reggae immediately after the first album and they had to keep convincing him punk was better. Also because rastas are all about possivitvity his Rasta friends wanted the band to change its name to good brains but luckily they had the sense to say no

  • @lehliladevandria5712
    @lehliladevandria5712 10 месяцев назад +1

    Poly Styrene is literally my personal idol. I'm obsessed with her.

    • @aotctd
      @aotctd Месяц назад

      I LOVED growing up in our multiracial City when she was around

  • @zlg1388
    @zlg1388 6 лет назад +3

    Amazing band,great discovery!

  • @dcon4762
    @dcon4762 5 лет назад +3

    Just watched a vid of Bad brains playing at CBGB’s in 1982. There were all types of people in the crowd, black, white, asian... punk is not about race.

  • @--Paws--
    @--Paws-- 3 года назад +16

    3:50 I knew "punk" was a black slang for some time, especially when I worked with a lot of black older folks at work. Punk was just as how he described it and how my coworkers defined it.
    Gatekeeping really has affected how music is perceived and even how a music's origin is remembered.

    • @quincy9908
      @quincy9908 2 года назад +2

      I thought punk simply was another word for wuss. And the word was used towards this music aesthetic to reclaim the social ostracization. Also wouldn't call it slang. It's just another word to me

    • @greghauser742
      @greghauser742 Месяц назад

      No one was "gatekeeping" punk. Where do you people get these ideas from?

  • @Thought_Police
    @Thought_Police 5 лет назад +15

    since this history is really only about one band: bad brains, i think we should have a discussion around how openly homophobic they were. only makes sense when trying to speak about inclusion. and in the first wave of U.S. hardcore there were so many black musicians involved, just not entire bands comprised of all black dudes. YDI singer, VOID guitarist, Dead Kennedys drummer, etc etc. this is one of the worst pieces on punk i've ever seen.

    • @whiteymamasan4138
      @whiteymamasan4138 5 лет назад +1

      If you refuse to respect the black kangz your a Nazi

    • @ramonw9430
      @ramonw9430 Год назад

      Defintely true. It doesn't take away from the influence they had on the sound and the culture but H.R. has said rediculous things regarding LGBTQ people. And MANY in the punk scene denounced him for it. HAving said that this is a hit piece and just not true. It borders on propaganda.

  • @the_real_tay_loud2072
    @the_real_tay_loud2072 9 месяцев назад +1

    I was taught about Bad Brains and Death from the beginning. Punk was never about color it was about not accepting color

  • @Chrisleero
    @Chrisleero 6 лет назад +17

    Whole Wheat Bread, At the Drive In, TV on the Radio

    • @liquidswords0335
      @liquidswords0335 6 лет назад +3

      Christopher Lee at the drive-in is hispanic. Tv on the radio is indie.

    • @matthewatwood2581
      @matthewatwood2581 3 года назад +1

      You call Tv on the Radio punk? I never thought of them as such. Doesn't matter though. Just a label. Great band.

    • @matthewatwood2581
      @matthewatwood2581 3 года назад

      @@liquidswords0335 Being Hispanic doesn't mean it's not punk.

  • @thejking
    @thejking 6 лет назад +37

    End racism and segregation! Let's have an all afro-punk festival.. Makes perfect sense..

    • @Char10tti3
      @Char10tti3 6 лет назад +3

      Love how they basically said nothing about Rock Against Racism in the U.K. too. They’re trying to make it sound like they’re talking about U.K. and us punk but then just talk about the us and used the U.K. examples to say that punk is political? Like, that’s the point of the genre?

    • @SuperVladamere
      @SuperVladamere 5 лет назад +3

      @@Char10tti3 Almost like it's propaganda or something.

    • @skullsouljah2836
      @skullsouljah2836 5 лет назад

      Most afropunk artists nowadays are r&b or something else. Only about 10% of afropunk artists are even punk

  • @cazgerald9471
    @cazgerald9471 6 лет назад +50

    When you were growing up? You weren't even born during punk!

    • @arianrhodhyde7482
      @arianrhodhyde7482 6 лет назад +10

      there is no 'during' for punk fucko, when tf do you draw the line? 1976? 77? 78? 79? whatever time and place you were a punk and only then?

    • @stinkyfingies3598
      @stinkyfingies3598 3 года назад +1

      I didn't grow up in the time where punk was active but found it from my mom and dad since they were punks so your claim is bs

    • @alfiex6667
      @alfiex6667 3 года назад

      @azazazazazazazazaaa if you can get your own apartment and car your not a child.

    • @honestalex5790
      @honestalex5790 3 года назад

      Its 2021 and guess where I went a few weeks ago? A local punk show near the train tracks that I actually have to look around to find the address (which is actually non existent for its just really a big lot behind some warehouse like place). Point is, punk is very well alive to this day and seems to be gaining a bit in popularity as well. The term punks not dead is literal lol, its not dead and never was dead, its a local scene like a hidden gem in most places that takes some digging in order to find. Also w the internet I can say that finding punk bands both new and old is much more a breeze now compared to back then.

    • @cazgerald9471
      @cazgerald9471 3 года назад

      @@honestalex5790 did you wear a mask?

  • @6AM_YT
    @6AM_YT 6 лет назад +196

    The Bad Brains were an important band because of what they did, not the color of their skin. Get your identity politics out of our music.

    • @kingboobs20
      @kingboobs20 6 лет назад +31

      The refusal to address identity politics is why punk hasn't been relevant for over 30 years.

    • @albertoramona38
      @albertoramona38 6 лет назад +9

      +Bill Jones - It sure did to them, even though I understand where you're going to.

    • @Houseless_socialist
      @Houseless_socialist 6 лет назад +8

      Said No one that had a firm understanding of race relations and why that's an important subject matter in punk music, ever.

    • @thisisthewatch2918
      @thisisthewatch2918 6 лет назад +37

      As a black alternative kid I'm here and feeling like I belong somewhere. Do not take that away.

    • @ramonw9430
      @ramonw9430 6 лет назад +7

      +Sav Speaks As a Mexican punk i get what you're saying but this video is not really punk. The Bad Brains are amazing and are one of favorite bands of all time but this video is wack. Punk has always been for everybody. It's our own communities that got us believing we can't take part in it. I love my people but they are judgmental.

  • @jseaux
    @jseaux 6 лет назад +35

    MC5 started in 1964.
    The Velvet Underground started in 1964.
    The Stooges started in 1967
    The New York Dolls Started in 1971.
    Death didn’t come out until 1971.
    You left out that info. and the fact that Punk’s roots were more derived from New York than London.
    Punk and Metal have always been welcoming to the disenfranchised, race notwithstanding.
    You’re literally taking one of the last bastions for commonality between people of the struggling class and making it about race.
    I’ve always considered punk and hip-hop kin. They came from the same places and brought people together. The influence is still existent today.
    This video is the extent of Fox News for the regressive left.

  • @jakebogacki5322
    @jakebogacki5322 6 лет назад +166

    The fact youve made this video shows how little you understand of punk music

  • @johneboy910
    @johneboy910 3 года назад +2

    I hear you. I also understand that Beethoven and Chopin were black. Any truth in that?

  • @IXINOSIS
    @IXINOSIS 6 лет назад +2

    Punk is Punk and attitude is attitude and neither of these two things has anything to do with race, gender, politics, (maybe) or religion. Its music made to be heard just like any other form of music people enjoy. Punk is about being yourself and having a free mind of your own with an attitude that comes with it and things like fashion do not matter unless you give it a reason to matter, social media just like AJ+ and the people who work for them and follow them don't understand that and they try to make Punk into their own image to suit their personal ideologies. Punk is for all types of people no matter who you are.

  • @ethandanielson8144
    @ethandanielson8144 6 лет назад +4

    Get your modern corporate bull out of here, punks didn’t care who you were cause they were all rejects… unless you were a neo. Also if you call yourself a punk, then you’re not cause you ain’t goin hard enough to not care

  • @thegenericnerdking
    @thegenericnerdking 5 лет назад +3

    Death kinda also had a problem similar to Oasis and Nirvana in that they share a name with one of the most influential bands in rock. No one knows about the 80s Oasis because the Britpop Oasis got huge. No one knows about 60's Nirvana because Kurt Cobain helped bring Alt Rock into the mainstream. No one knows about Death because they share their name with one of the founders of the Death Metal genre.

    • @ramonw9430
      @ramonw9430 Год назад

      Right mucbh like the stoner band The Orchid and the noise band Orchid. Every time I would bring up Orchid people would think I was talking about the stoner band.

  • @LetsGoMetsGo33
    @LetsGoMetsGo33 Год назад +2

    Other pioneers: Ivan Julian of Voidoids and DH Peligro of DK. Screamin Jay Hawkins is the original horror punk (and horror bluesman). The whole two tone scene. 24-7 Spyz played all genres. Of course Little Richard, Chuck Berry, and Bi Diddley started it all. Chuck Berry once reviewed a bunch of punk records, from the Pistols and Ramones to Wire, and he was all like “yup, these guys are doing my shit, but what’s with those vocals” lol. Bo Diddley was on the first US tour by the Clash (who also played with the likes if Bad Brains and Grandmaster Flash). Jamaican Brit Don Letts played with Mick Jones of the Clash in BAD, directed 2 punk documentaries, and influenced Bob Marley to write Punky Reggae Party, which name dropped the Pistols, Clash, Jam, and the Damned.

  • @MultiAmbivalent
    @MultiAmbivalent 6 лет назад +2

    To say Death were influential is a bit of a stretch. They can't have been influential because no one heard them at the time. Not to disparage their stuff, which is incredible. But influential? Not really. There were no significant live shows to speak of.in the 70s. Any influence came later. Interesting piece though.

  • @camerondodge2070
    @camerondodge2070 3 года назад +4

    I wasn't even aware that there was a problem of under representation in punk, and I'm still not sure it was ever true. I mean, punk has always been a pretty diverse genre. I see plenty of stuff out there. The mainstream doesn't recognize it, but that's the mainstream. Meanwhile, the underground punk community doesn't to have had as big a problem there. So, yeah, I don't quite get this video, and that's coming from a guy who is part of another supposedly missing demographic in punk, Native Americans. I don't mean to upset anyone, I'm just coming from the point of view of someone who's been part of this scene a long while and has never encountered this problem before.

  • @Pedroleum100
    @Pedroleum100 6 лет назад +3

    Death came from the Detroit scene which was very important for garage rock (or proto-punk as it is named in hindsight): MC5, The Stooges and Alice Cooper (not so much proto-punk, but still influential) all came from Detroit. And besides them, even the Detroit funk band Funkadelic was playing rock songs in this era, check out Funkadelic's Super Stupid or Alice in My Fantasies for example.

  • @phoenixstopmotions
    @phoenixstopmotions 5 лет назад

    What's the song at 0:09 straight after Holiday in Cambodia?

  • @j6154
    @j6154 6 лет назад +3

    The sonics were playing arguable Porto punk 10 years before death

    • @HAUNTEDRECS
      @HAUNTEDRECS 3 года назад

      Thank you

    • @misfit2022
      @misfit2022 3 года назад

      The Kinks were before them but yes. Sonics May ‘65 I think but Los Saicos have a claim in second spot March ‘65 but The Kinks were ‘64