Stuff You Should Know - Selects: A Brief Overview of Punk Rock
Episode Date: March 12, 2022Punk rock really needs about 10 episodes to do it justice, but we'll try and tackle anyway. Learn all about this movement right now in this classic episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https:...//www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
And a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never,
ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart
radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to
believe. You can find in Major League Baseball, International Banks, K-pop groups, even the White
House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject, something completely unbelievable
happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive
on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, everybody. It's your old pal, Josh, for this week's S-Y-S-K Selects. I've chosen our 2019
episode, A Brief Overview of Punk Rock. And it's just that. And I have to say we did a pretty good
job for a couple of squares, a couple of uptight weirdos, you know what I mean? So I hope you
enjoy this brief overview of Punk Rock because we did.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart radio.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Thrashcorp.
I'm already regretting this. There's Chuck Bryan over there.
Charles W. Chuck Bryan. There's Jerry Jerome Rowland. And like I said, I'm Josh. This is Stuff
You Should Know. Hey, ho, let's go. Exactly. I want to issue a COA off the top here to fans of Punk
music. Get ready to be mad at us. Yeah, please don't beat us up though. Yeah, here's the thing.
Punk is sort of like the hip hop episode. It's not just music. It's a culture. Sure. It's a movement.
And it is so, there are so many tentacles. Alternative tentacles. So many subgenres,
so many like, the more I started getting into it, I was like, why are we even doing this?
In a single episode. I had the same feeling. Because it can only disappoint. But we're doing it.
No, there's a lot of people out there who don't know squat about Punk who are going to be like,
cool, I'm Punk now. I get it. And the people who are Punk now are going to love us for it.
Well, I mean, you know, there are certainly podcasts, I'm sure, that are dedicated to the
history of Punk. Right. Now, I know. And the thing is, with a big distinction here between
the hip hop episode and this episode, is that the hip hop episode doesn't beat you up if you
show up to their shows and you're not wearing the right thing. That's true. Punk's kind of
protective of Punk, which makes sense because that's pretty Punk, right? Like you kind of, you
can't allow for commercialization of Punk or else it stops being Punk. So by definition, it has to
be vigilantly defended and protected. But the irony of the whole thing is when you do that,
you actually strangle it from becoming anything ever. And you kind of kill Punk,
strangling it in the cradle, the end. Yeah. And I listened to a lot of music
while researching this. And there's just so many things that could possibly fall under
the banner of Punk and probably so many real Punk fans that will fight you on any of them,
if you say like, you know, the talking heads were Punk or television was Punk. Not really,
but were they New Wave? I don't know. Yeah. The New York Dolls, I was listening to them. Protopunk.
When you listen to them though, they sound like sort of like dressed up rock and roll,
like Rocky Horror Picture Show style. Right. But make no bones about it. The New York Dolls were
a direct predecessor of Punk. Yeah. But then I started listening to things I never listened
to growing up at all. Like I wasn't a Punk kid, but I saw all the jackets with minor threat and
circle jerks and dead Kennedys on them. And I started listening to that stuff today.
And I liked a lot of it. Oh, it's good music. And some of it I didn't quite love.
Okay. Which ones? I think, you know, my deal is I like vocals and vocalists and Punk is not known
for that. No. But stuff like that had a really unique bent and it wasn't just screaming,
I liked a lot more. Did you? So you like the misfits a lot? I like the misfits. I like the
damned. I like the circle jerks. Yeah. Very great. Did not like the germs. I was never into the germs.
So what about the cramps? I didn't listen to the cramps yet. They're like Rockabilly Punk.
All right. I'll probably like it. Yeah. But stuff that had a little more melody.
Okay. Little more vocal styling. I liked much more than the germs, which, you know,
Darby Crash just screaming things that you can hardly understand. Right.
Didn't love Black Flag. What little I listen to. Like the Henry Rollins Black Flag? I listened
to a little bit of both, but it's all very interesting to me and I dig the music for sure.
Yeah. It's hard not to in some way shape or form like Punk when you hear it. Right.
Like it's, it's, it's just too, it just gets under your skin just too easily, really quickly.
Yeah. You might not even realize like your, like your head's like kind of nodding and your knees
like shaking or whatever. That's right. But like, no matter who you are, Punk can get to you like
that. Now, whether you like, I'm going to start buying Punk records and like get a mohawk or
something like that. That's, that's maybe a couple of steps down the road. Yeah. Most people probably
wouldn't, but I think everybody can appreciate Punk on some level, especially to me, the greatest
Punk band of all time. And what I would argue would be the first Punk band is the Ramones.
Right. If you like melody and you like singing, but you also like Punk, they've got everything
you need. Yeah. And if you like songs that are 95 seconds long. Sure. Well, that was a big thing.
Like Punk grew out of this idea that Led Zeppelin had like 11 minute songs they were playing on
the radio and guys like the Ramones were like, shut up. So they, they purposefully and deliberately
went the opposite way and they started making songs that were sometimes less than a minute. Like
one of the greatest Punk songs of all time, in my opinion, Circle Jerks Wasted is like 50,
52 seconds long. Get in, get out. It's all you need. He gets the point across. He talks about
all the drugs he's on. He talks about all the stuff he does when he's on drugs all in less than a
minute. Yeah. But I think you bring up an important point is Punk was a reaction. It was a reaction
to the bloated money and the bloated song links and the arena rock, cucumber in the pants, hard rock,
machismo, getting the ladies like this great quote from one of the Ramones. These were kids on the
outside and he said, Johnny Ramone in 1976 and Rolling Stones said, you know, they got together
because none of them could get girls. So they all found solace in each other and he said,
girls always wanted to go with guys who had Corvettes. So we had nothing to do but climb
on rooftops and sniff glue. The Ramones in a nutshell. But if you look at 1977, like the albums
that came out in 1977, you know, you've got the Sex Pistols and the Ramones and stuff like that.
But you've got Eric Clapton, Slow Hand, Fleetwood Max Rumors. Okay. Not bad. Point of no return from
Kansas. Okay. The Stranger from Billy Joel. Which one was that? It was one of the great ones. Okay.
But they all were great. Right. Asia from Steely Dan. Okay. And like these are like the big chart
toppers. And so Punk came along and was just like, no, screw all that. To heck with you guys.
Yeah. That's what it says. So it was an ethos and a spirit, even as much as it was music. Yeah. And
I think one of the other things I commonly ran across in researching this was that it was not
just kind of like rock sucks because it's getting so, you know, 11 minutes long per song and there's
lots of guitar solos and stuff like that, but also that it was hopelessly commercialized.
And so Punk was like, there's nothing inherently wrong with rock. It's just gone on this path
that it's been on for so long that it's just become, I think like you said, bloated. Let's take
rock back and scrape away all the blow and just get back to like the core and the point of it
originally, which was rebellion, which is, that was what Punk was built on in the late 70s.
And the Ramones, again, I'll go to my grave saying they were officially the first punk band
that ever existed, but there were, there was music that led up to that immediately before it.
And even a decade or so before it that really laid the foundation in the groundwork for bands
like the Ramone and the punk that, the punk music that took off right afterward.
Yeah. And you also got to remember that coming into the early 70s, where some of these proto-punk
bands started, this was coming off of the late 60s and the hippie movement and Nixon and Vietnam.
Which so all that had proved a failure. Yeah. And flower power and the peace and love and all
that stuff. They're still cries who stills a Nash and hanging around, but there's also a younger
generation that thumb their nose or more specifically their middle finger at that whole generation.
Right. And that's what sort of birthed the punk movement and the proto-punk movement at least.
Right. So I saw the earliest proto-punk band I could find that you could trace a direct line to
is actually from Peru. Okay. They were around in 19, starting in 1964, Los Secos, S-A-I-C-O-S.
And if you go listen to a Los Secos song, you will, it's quite clear that this was
proto-punk. Did it have the speed? A little bit. Yeah. Because I think that's a bit of the
distinction. Like there was that whole Nuggets era garage rock of the 60s. Sure. You can hear
a little bit of that, but it still didn't have that chugga chugga chugga speed that punk rock
would be known for. Yes, it did. You know? It did. Yeah. No, like another proto-punk band
that's more garage rock, but kind of some of the sentiments they came up with, the chocolate watch
band had this anthem called like, I'm not like everybody else. And it's like real kind of,
it's groovy. But if you listen to the words, it's like, this guy's talking about being a punk.
Right. But it's long before punk, but musically they were not punk at all. Los Secos was punk.
Like their sound is definitely punk and they were around at the same time.
Yeah. And the specifics of what you're doing musically on a guitar with punk
is the downstroke. So, you know, it's hard to talk about it without showing you, but if you're playing
like an Eric Clapton rhythm part, it's like, you know, you're stroking down and up ching ching
a ching a ching. If you're playing punk, you're just going down that ching ching ching ching ching
nice. And that's a really, really great impression. And the Ramones made a career out of
two or three chords, played fast, playing that same rhythm and downstroke over and over and over
and over. Like I'm convinced you just did a two second snippet of a misfit song. I could hear it
like playing his day. It's great though. I was listening to stuff today. I was like, man, I
really like a lot of this and I missed out. So I see myself diving into it again, or diving in
for the first time rather. You totally should. I mean, I know about the clash and the Ramones
and stuff like that for sure. But oh, there's like, I mean, as you know, a whole world out there.
Yeah, there's a whole world. And then the thing about punk is the more like you find, oh, I like
this band. And then, oh, it turns out this guy was used to be in this other band. Yeah, there was a
lot of that. But they're from the same scene as this other band. It just keeps going and going
and going. Yeah. Because one of the through lines of punk is that anybody could be in a punk band.
Yeah. It was super democratized. And the DIY ethos was basically the foundation of punk music.
All right. Well, let's take a break. Okay. We'll go back in time a little bit and talk about
New York and London. And then we'll get to that. What I think is kind of the coolest part of this
whole thing is that DIY aesthetic. Okay. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when
questions arise or times get tough, or you're at the end of the road. Okay, I see what you're
doing. Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give
me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you. Oh, God. Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because
I'll be there for you. Oh, man. And so my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yeah,
we know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you
through life step by step. Not another one. Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody,
yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye,
bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Mangesh Atikulur. And to be honest,
I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life.
In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're going to get secondhand astrology.
And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and
pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars, if you're willing to look for it.
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses,
major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had a handle
on this sweet and curious show about astrology, my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't
look good. There is risk to father. And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a
skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the
iHeart Radio App, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right. So I mentioned London and New York. I sourced this from a bunch of articles. I can't
remember if this was the pitchfork one or not. But the headline of this part is A Tale of Two Cities,
New York and London. But LA would come along a bit later with its own scene.
And also London gets mentioned here at the expense of Manchester, which I would say is like,
that's ground zero next to New York. Right. Also ground zero, which doesn't get nearly enough
press, is Australia. Oh yeah? These things are going on in parallel all over the world.
That's really interesting to think like this stuff is happening almost independently than another.
It was because not like someone in Australia heard someone on the internet in 1974.
But there were a couple of bands, one called Cheap Nasties on the Western, I think in Perth,
and then the Saints, probably the biggest punk band to come out of Australia.
This is at the same time that CBGBs and the Stooges were like getting big. It's crazy.
Yeah. So the Stooges would technically qualify as proto-punk too. Right.
But they came from Michigan along with MC5. Right.
And Death. Death is an even earlier proto-punk band than the Stooges.
That documentary is great. I actually haven't seen that one.
Yeah. There's one on Death. It's just called like a band called Death, right?
Yep. Yeah. It's very like, they're amazing. Yeah.
And they were, I think, three, three African American brothers from Detroit.
Just killing it.
Who in 1971 formed like a punk band. Yeah.
Yeah. And this was before the Stooges. I think this was before MC5.
Before Bad Brains, for sure.
For sure. So all of these bands are starting to kind of lay the groundwork.
And then it's almost like it just kind of ignites like we're saying in different parts of the world,
virtually at the same time. Yeah.
Which I just find endlessly fascinating.
Yeah. And I think that's what really lends a lot of credence to the fact that it was a movement.
It was a feeling people were rebelling against more than anything.
Right.
Which can happen parallel in different parts of the country and world, you know?
If there's anything that can bring the whole world together, it's disdain for hippies.
You know? They really bring that out in everybody.
Did you see the Tarantino movie yet?
Once upon a time in Hollywood. Oh, yes.
There's a lot of anti-hippies stuff in there that was pretty funny.
Yeah, a little. Some of them are beaten to death, literally.
Well, I just mean all the de Caprio stuff was really funny how much he hated the hippies.
I know. But Tarantino really like pointed out like,
you know, the Manson family's been celebrated and romanticized at least in some weird ways.
And they should not be. And this is why I think he did a really good job of doing that.
So we were talking about the Stooges and MC5 in Michigan in New York cities where
things really crystallized with the club CBGB owned by Hilly Crystal.
Crystal. No, just crystal.
Is it crystal? I think so.
Like Billy Crystal.
Right, by Hilly.
And originally, you know, that stands for country blue grass and blues.
Right.
And that was what it was supposed to be when it opened in 1973.
Yeah. But then in about two years, the Ramones started playing there.
Talking Heads started playing there in 1975. Blondie.
Television, I think.
I love television.
Television. I'm okay with them. I don't love them. I don't hate them.
But they were essential to that scene happening, for sure.
And a lot of people kind of overlook them, I think, is like one of the foundation bands for punk.
Yeah, which is like I mentioned earlier, like it's such different kinds of music.
Like I love Talking Heads and television and Blondie and the Go-Go's.
And they were all in that early scene, but I don't think it's that's anything like
the Misfits or the Damned or the Ramones.
No, but the Misfits and the Ramones both started their careers at CBGB.
Yeah.
So it was like the place where punk began in the United States.
Yeah, but also at Maxis Kansas City in New York, legendary club. This is where like Patty Smith
is hanging out, the Velvet Underground is hanging out. Again, they're not punk at all,
but they were in that scene.
Right. And one thing that we're kind of not really mentioning that is a common thread to
all these bands, not necessarily music, but heroin was a huge thread.
They shared their deep, deep, deep love of heroin in common.
And that definitely bound them together at CBGB for sure.
And that was a huge factor on the early punk scene was heroin.
That's right.
Which I mean, this is, you know, if you remember back just a few years ago,
before Oxycontin turned everybody into junkies in the world, heroin was not a big drug at all.
And back then, especially, it was like you were a total burnout if you were doing heroin,
like it was not done.
So the fact that these people were shooting heroin in the clubs,
that was another kind of badge that they took on that separated them from everybody else.
Even their preference of drugs was super hardcore.
Yeah, for sure. Another interesting thing happened early on in 1977,
when these two scenes sort of exported one of their early big bands to play in the other city.
In 1977, The Damned played in the United States.
And less than a year before that, the Ramones had gone to the UK to play shows in London.
And that was a big deal because all of a sudden you had these two different scenes
swapping bands.
Of course, it wasn't anything they planned, but they got a taste of New York City in London
with the Ramones in a big, big way.
Right.
And the same can be said in New York City with The Damned, very British.
And then a month before the Ramones played in London,
in Manchester on June 4th, 1976, the Six Pistols had their first show.
And a lot of people point to this is this is when UK punk happened.
It was this one show at the Lesser Free Trade Hall, which is like a hall,
might as well be a VFW basically, and that's where the Sex Pistols had their first show.
But some of the people who were there were so influential,
including a 17-year-old Morrissey who went to cover the thing for New Music Express,
that it just spread out like a germ.
Like it was the single point that UK punk spread out from.
And this was June of 1976.
And within six months, the major record labels were lining up
to sign any and every punk act they could get their hands on.
Six months, so not only did it spread and grow in parallel around the world at the same time,
when it hit the scene, it's hard to overstate how quickly it just blew up.
Like just from nothing to it in six months.
Yeah, I mean, if there's one thing, I mean, I don't know about the music industry today,
but previous to digital content, the music industry was always there waiting
to commodify the next big thing.
Yeah, and they did it to punk big time.
Yeah, so let's talk about this DIY thing for a little bit.
It was really cool, this article about these DIY origins in punk music.
What happened was when punk started coming around in the mid-1970s,
this coincided with a big shift in equipment and recording gear and modernizing recording gear.
Among like the big labels.
Yeah, sure.
And so all of a sudden, there was all of these rooms and this gear
that you could either rent cheap or buy cheap.
Yeah, they're old stuff that they didn't need anymore.
Yeah, and so the punks came along and started using it.
And the very first punk labels were self-started.
Miles Copeland started Step Forward.
Bob Last started Fast Product.
And of course, very famously, Tony Wilson started Factory Records.
Yes, dude, which by the way, see 24-hour party people if you never have everybody.
It's amazing.
Yeah, I need to see that again.
I saw it once when it came out.
Yeah, it's a good movie.
But it follows this progression of punk into new wave into the 80s.
It just does it in a spectacularly great way because it's Steve Coogan who's great at it.
He's so good.
But people trace the punk on record or on recorded tape, rather,
to the very first single they claim, very first punk single, November 76, The Damns, New Rose.
Which I thought that was weird because the Ramones released their album before them.
But maybe because the Ramones were on a label when they released their album,
they're saying like, this is the first DIY punk release.
Maybe.
When was the Ramones first album?
I think like the full year before.
75.
I'm pretty sure.
Oh, wow.
If not at least 76 then, but I'm pretty sure 75.
Well, the Buzzcocks put out an EP and I listened to a lot of that today.
I enjoyed that.
Yeah, it's good.
Spiral Scratch was this EP, was apparently the first British homemade record.
And that was a really big deal.
This was in 1977, they sold out 1,000 copies that they printed,
then they went on to sell another 16,000.
And the influence on Spiral Scratch really spread out and told everyone because they printed.
It was very cool.
They printed on the little record jacket, like how much it cost, how they produced it,
and what the money was all about for 153 pounds.
Basically saying, go do this.
Right.
And here's how to do it.
Yeah.
They kind of set the tone for other records, like other punk bands released their own records,
also included instructions on the sleeve that the record came in.
And the whole DIY record release thing that the Buzzcocks kicked off,
other people started to find other ways to kind of make it so punk could exist outside
of the influence of the record companies.
Yeah.
Like people would release records in Ziploc baggies.
Like that was the record sleeve that your record came in.
And people loved it.
Like you didn't need like this expensive sleeve for the thing to come in.
Like you could just pop it in a Ziploc bag and sell it.
It's very punk.
It's super punk.
And then also if you can form a band, it was put like this.
Like the Sex Pistols showed that anybody could be in a punk band.
Yeah, if you didn't even need to be very talented.
Right.
You didn't even need to know how to play an instrument.
And you could be in a punk band.
And the Buzzcocks came along and showed that anybody could press a record.
But there was still one very essential ingredient missing.
And that was distribution.
Yeah.
And like you said, mail order made up for a lot of the Buzzcocks EP sales.
But they realized that there were more people out there who wanted this stuff,
but didn't have a way to get to it.
So what was called the Cartel was formed, which was a group of independent record stores
around the UK that would basically serve as a distribution network for these DIY punk records.
That's so cool.
It is.
Not only that, but Zines were very important early on in the punk and really kind of a lot
of music genres.
Zines were really big, which are these, you know, fan made magazines.
Yeah, maybe with like photocopy, not even photocopy like Mimeograph stuff.
Yep.
And you would just print out your Zines.
And some of these Zines got to be pretty big.
And they would attach distribution to these Zines sometimes and sneak 45s.
Not sneak them, but a pack of 45 in the Zines.
And that's how you could release your stuff.
Yeah.
And it was just this, again, it sounds so trite to say very punk rock attitude.
But that's exactly what it was.
The way they were doing things was all under the radar, all on their own.
And that changed pretty quickly.
It did.
And it's because the big players came in.
Yeah.
They smelled money.
They smelled something new, the next big thing.
And they started signing everybody they could left and right.
And these punks weren't going like, no, bollocks.
I don't want your money.
They're like, what if we pay you in heroin?
They said, oh, okay.
Yeah.
Like, no, you put it that way.
You could buy drugs with money.
Right.
So again, within six months of what most people point to as the source of UK punk,
that one specific show by the Sex Pistols, the Sex Pistols were so new.
Sid Vicious wasn't even in the band.
He was still Susie in the band.
She's drummer.
So this is how young this stuff was.
Within six months, they were signed onto a major record label.
The clash was signed onto a major record label.
The fall, the jam, the stranglers, everybody got signed in this feeding frenzy where everyone
who had a punk band could get a record deal with a major label six months after the Sex
Pistols had their first show.
Yeah.
Generation X with a young Billy Idol, which I didn't ever do that dance with myself was
originally a Generation X song.
I didn't know that either.
They released it.
Then he re-released it as a solo artist like a year later.
Wow.
And it became a much bigger hit.
Yeah.
Sure.
They were like, thanks a lot.
But yeah, Sex Pistols went with EMI, the stranglers at UA, the clash signed to CBS,
the jam went to Polydor, Generation X and Stiff Little Fingers went to Chrysalis,
and even the Buzzcocks, they were very quick to hop on that train too with United Artists.
Which actually, that's not too bad.
You could have signed with worse because United Artists was started by Mary Pickford,
Douglas Fairbanks, Charlie Chaplin and D.W. Griffith so that artists could have more control
and ownership over their work.
Yeah.
I mean, it was a movie company and I guess they dabbled in records.
Yeah.
So one of three things happened basically to the little DIY small label movement.
You either got Pilferd, they used one example in Belfast, the Good Vibrations label.
Four of its first six bands were stolen away or signed away, I guess.
So you either got Pilferd and then just shut down and gave up or you grew and got bigger
to where you were like Rough Trade and Factory Records.
So those all became like bigger independent labels.
Yeah, Rough Trade's still around.
I checked they have state-of-the-art cutting edge bands right now.
Oh yeah, it's great.
Or they stayed small and just kept going.
Right, they went punk and went back underground.
Yeah, they didn't all go away.
They didn't all say, you know, we're all getting Pilferd so we're just going to shut down.
They would just find more underground bands and go deeper and deeper and deeper.
But then something happened in 1979, February of 1979 that a lot of people point to just as
they point to that first Sex Pistols show as the beginning of punk in the UK.
They point to the death of Sid Vicious as the end of punk, at least the first wave of punk.
His death from a heroin overdose is widely pointed to as the death of punk,
which is a really dumb thing to say because punk very clearly went on.
But what I think people are saying, sorry, I guess it's not entirely dumb now that I say it out loud,
but what people are saying is that punk transformed into something else.
And that punk really, as it originally existed, was only around for about two, three years.
Yeah, maybe four or five. I'm sure there are some people at a bar right now
that are just saying that over and over again. Punk only lasted three years.
Okay. Well, I agree with you, drunk person in this sense,
but it's not like punk went away. It transformed and became something else.
And so what it transitioned into is commonly called hardcore, hardcore punk,
where stuff just got faster, louder, a little angrier.
Yeah. And it just went in a different direction, predominantly in the United States.
Yeah, there were a couple of scenes. The LA scene had already sort of been born by the late 70s.
If you haven't seen it, the great documentary from Penelope Sviris,
The Decline of Western Civilization, released in 81, but filmed over, I think, 78, 79, 80 maybe,
covered the LA scene. And that's the germs. And like, I think Blondie and the Go-Go's and stuff
like that. All right. And circle jerks have like one of the best sets ever in The Decline of Western
Civilization. Yes. It's very good. And the germs too. That's where I was, I was watching some of
that today. And that's when I knew I didn't like the germs. Right. But Pat Smear, of course,
the Foo Fighters, he was in the germs. You know, he liked money. And also if you're like,
who's Penelope Sviris, you may be familiar with her work if you've seen the movie Wayne's World.
That's right. Or the movie Black Sheep, the Chris Farley David Spade movie.
Or The Decline of Western Civilization. I think she ended up doing like three or four of those,
right? At least three. Because I know she did one on metal. The second one was metal,
which is good too. Yeah. Those are the only two I saw. Did you ever see that documentary about
heavy metal parking lot? Yes. Yeah. Where everybody's smoking PCP at a Judas Priest concert?
Yeah, it's pretty great. Did you know early 80s metalhead smoked PCP? No. I didn't until
that documentary because it was quite a surprise. No, I was scared of all those people. Well,
they were kind of scary because they were all on PCP, especially when you're like eight or 10.
They're very scary. So American, we were talking about the, you know, punk bands releasing their own
albums. This started happening on the West Coast. They started forming their own labels even to
release their albums and sign other like bands. Right. Like SST, very famous punk label was started
from the guy, the original guy from Black Flag, right? Yes. What's his name? Greg, G-I-N-N,
either Gin or Gin. Jigin. I'm sorry, punkers. I know you're mad at me right now that I don't
know this. Yeah. I think he was like the founder of Black Flag. Okay. Jello Biafra, of course.
Ted Kennedy's. Right. They formed or he formed Alternative Tentacles. With East Bay Ray. Yeah,
in 1979. And 79 was a big year because that's the same year that a band called Bad Brains came out
in Washington DC, which I didn't love. Did you see the Dave Grohl documentary series? No. So
I can't remember what it was called, but he did this like 10-part documentary series where he
would do the music of a different city. And it was really, really good, except for the last like
15 minutes of it, he would get the Foo Fighters together in a studio and they would play like
some of those songs. And if you're really into the Foo Fighters, I imagine you loved it all.
Not into the Foo Fighters. Right. So I would just stop it there. But he does Seattle. But what got
me on this was one of the most interesting episodes was the Washington DC episode. Sure.
Because I didn't know it was such a hardcore scene. Like that's where when people talk about
hardcore, they're like, well, DC is kind of the cradle of it. And Bad Brains, which my friend
Jason Jenkins in college introduced me to. And that's when it was like really fast, had a little
metal edge, but Bad Brains was also started out as like Jazz Fusion and had reggae roots. Right.
Also African-American guys. Four of them, yeah. Yeah. And really, really good stuff. Yeah. So
you've got at the same time, LA and DC as the new like seats of punk music in the US. Yeah, punk
slash hardcore. And it's going, it's going like way more hardcore, way more masculine, way more
macho than the UK went. The UK went a different route. They went way more political, way more
like class struggle. And there's, there's definitely lots of political threads that
American punk music went through. But I think the UK went to it earlier. Like Crass is a great,
great punk band from the UK. Yeah. They're kind of like, they're just great. Check them out.
But they were doing like anarchy stuff in the seventies. Yeah. The clash certainly is notable
for their political statements. Very political. And then you've got like the six sex pistols
talking about anarchy in the UK. They didn't really mean it. They were just saying something,
right? Right. But there were a lot of like politically motivated bands in the UK in the
early seventies that didn't pick up till later in the eighties in the US. Yeah. Because Ramon
certainly were not political. They were not political. Yeah. But the other thing, the other
differentiation I saw between UK and US punk was that UK punk didn't take itself quite as
seriously as the US started to in the late seventies, early eighties. And that this guy,
I read a, I think a Guardian article traced that back to a love of glam rock. That glam rock really
led to punk, especially in the UK. And if you're into glam rock, you just can't quite take anything
fully seriously, including punk music. And the, the US, even though punk came out of the New York
dolls in part, which was definitely acrylic glam rock, it just didn't have that, that through
thread. So it did get taken way more seriously. And that was a big part of hardcore and what
differentiated it from the earlier punk, taking things really, really seriously and it being
a little more political than ever before and angsty against things like the boredom of suburban
life. Yeah. I mean, I think punk is just as important for things that it inspired, that
happened afterward as it was the actual movement itself. Because you can point to stuff in Minneapolis
like Husker do or bands like the Minutemen who I loved and they had a very punk sound to them.
And maybe you're even considered punk. Probably post-punk. Post-punk. I think Minutemen are
considered punk, but I, Husker do would definitely be post-punk for sure. And stuff like Sonic Youth,
which I would call them post-punk too. Post-punk straddling into the early grunge though too.
Well, yeah. I mean, it's hard to, it's easy sometimes to trace that through line.
And sometimes it's really difficult. But we want to. We want to be able to say like,
you know, it went from bad brains to Husker do to Sonic Youth to Nirvana.
You know, four degrees of Nirvana or whatever. And green days and they're going, what about us?
Right, exactly. But you just, you can't, but at the same time, you also can't discount the effects
that these later bands got from listening to the earlier bands that came before them.
Like there's undoubtedly an influence, just not quite as crisp and clean as we like to make it.
Yeah. And it's even argued in one of these articles that the birth of hardcore came about,
because like you kind of teased earlier on, because punk, you know, flouts the rules and
norms of rock and roll, then they form their own rules and norms and we're really pretty
serious about it. And so hardcore came along because they didn't quite fit in with that,
the true punk aesthetic. Right. They took punk even further because punk was being commodified
and commercialized otherwise. That's right. Which would make it kind of easier to break from,
especially if you just go slightly angrier and faster and louder.
Right. But you also can look at stuff like, talk about tracing the through line.
If you want to think about early Manchester and stuff like joy division that goes to new order,
that goes to orchestral maneuvers in the dark and simple minds and all of a sudden it's a
John Hughes soundtrack. Sure. And then it's like, what is punk about anything? Right.
And that like sort of softer new wave. But at the same time, you can also say, well,
new order was just straight up new wave, but then new wave caught on and got commercialized
and commodified. And then you end up having a John Hughes soundtrack because the record labels
got a hold of the new wave band. Right. So that's kind of like the story with music is
somebody comes up with something raw and organic and rebellious. Yeah. Everybody loves it. The
big guys come along, get their hands on it and co-opt it, commodify it, commercialize it, ruin
it. Yeah. And then some thread kind of jumps off of that and it starts something else. And the
whole thing always, it just continues on and continues on, except until the mid 2000s when
music died forever and ever and ever. All right. Well, let's take another break here,
and we'll talk a little bit about the end of punk. And before that, maybe we'll hit on the
fashion of punk. Oh boy. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with
Lance Bass. The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road. Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation? If you do,
you've come to the right place because I'm here to help. This, I promise you. Oh God. Seriously,
I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh man. And so my husband,
Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yep, we know that Michael and a different hot, sexy teen crush
boy band are each week to guide you through life step by step. Oh, not another one. Kids,
relationships, life in general can get messy. You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now. If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure
to listen. So we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Mangesh Atikular. And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was
born, it's been a part of my life in India. It's like smoking. You might not smoke,
but you're going to get second hand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe
has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention because maybe there is magic in the
stars if you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let
me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses, major league baseball teams, canceled marriages,
K-pop. But just when I thought I had a handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology, my
whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcast, wherever you get your podcasts. Okay, Chuck. We're talking fashion and punk?
Yeah. So every genre has its own look. I cannot remember what it had to have been the safety
pin short stuff where we talked about Richard hell being considered the guy who started the
safety pin as a fashion statement. I think so. Pretty sure. But it was Richard hell. He was the
guitarist for television. Yeah. Yeah. And he was like the first guy with the mohawk,
like the Elmer's glue kind of mohawk and safety pins holding his shirt together. Yeah. Which is,
I mean, that's quintessential punk. But at the same time, dressing like a Ramon is quintessential
punk too with like the jeans with the knees in it. Black jeans, Doc Martens or Converse low tops.
Yeah. Or Converse high tops. Sure. Black biker jacket. Yeah. The New York dolls were very famous
for wearing the jean jackets. Super, super small. It jokes in this article that they could barely
fit in them. Right. They also wore super tight Lycra shiny pants and stuff too. Yeah. But they
were glam. Right. But that it was really those black ripped jeans. And this was a time where that
wasn't like the cool thing to wear. If you, you didn't walk around with holes in, you know, now
it's become a recurring thing in fashion to have holes in your jeans being cool. Right. At the
time it was not cool. It meant that you were poor. Exactly, man. This was like somebody in this
article, I think from Pitchfork said, you know, Didi Ramon had holes in the knees of his jeans.
Not because it was cool, but because he didn't have any money for some new jeans and those
his jeans just had holes in them. So that's what he wore. Now you pay like 100 or 200 bucks for
jeans that have pre-ripped holes that are just right. Yeah. That's a perfect example of the
commodization of punk. Yeah, for sure. Other, you know, in LA they have their own fashion scene
going on because it's LA and they don't have harsh winters and cold rainy weather. So they went to
the thrift stores and bought things and cut them up. And that's where you never saw a shirt on a
punk in the LA scene that didn't have like the neck cut out or the sleeves cut off or in the case
of the go-gos in their earlier punk days wearing like literal trash bags as fashion. Very funny
and blondie too. Sure. They all had a very like specific aesthetic in Los Angeles. Yeah. It's
interesting that the go-gos started out in the punk scene when they were, I think to the casual
music fan known very much for just sort of a bubblegum sing-along pop hits that they had.
Just lovable as all get out. As all get out. Great songs. And Belinda Carlisle too. Like her solo
stuff is just kiss everybody. You couldn't see that, but that's what I gave. But it's that whole
pop punk thing, which is kind of where it started to go bad. You could make the case that it's
starting in the beginning of 1977 when all those first record labels came in and started to go bad
then. But Hardcore, here's, this is where I, this is my reading of this. Okay. And I'm not a punk
or even music historian by any stretch of the imagination, but from what I gathered from
this research is that early punk got co-opted and commodified by the record labels immediately.
Hardcore grew out of that. Hardcore is way harder to commodify because it's much more raw. There's
much less melodic. It's much more in your face and angry than original punk was. And it's also
jealously guarded and defended by the fans, where at the beginning of the show, we're saying,
please don't beat us up. Like if you go to a hardcore show and they think you're a poser,
like you may get beaten up if this is the 80s or the 90s. I don't know if they still do it today.
I remember feeling that threat. Oh yeah, it was quite real. But like the punks at the school,
like he didn't want to cross them. It was part of being a punk was like you beat somebody up to
basically defend punkdom to keep it from getting commodified. Like, like seeing kids like wear
thrasher t-shirts today and they have no idea what thrasher is. Like it's like, if you did that with
punk in the 80s and 90s, you would get beaten up. Maybe even at school, definitely at a punk show.
And so in doing so, they were able to defend hardcore from commoditization because they kept
it their own violently. But at the same time, they also, it's kind of like how a language evolves.
The more people speak it and the more free and easy the rules on it are by putting these very
tight restrictions on what's punk and what's not punk and who's allowed to come to a punk show,
which is super ironic for punks to do to come up with all these rules and regulations. They kept
it from evolving. They definitely kept it underground and it's still around today, but it's
the same thing over and over again because it wasn't allowed to grow and evolve because the
fans have kept it, at least in America, have kept it underground purposefully, deliberately and
violently. So punks killed punk. Kind of. They would argue, no, punk's still around. I go see
punk shows all the time and don't come to it because you're a poser and we'll beat you up. So
they're still punk. But as far as like you and I walking around are concerned, punk is dead as
a doornail for now. Yeah. For now. Well, I mean, I remember when we did our UK tour, I remember
seeing a group of punks in Manchester that looked like they stepped right out of 1981
with the full spiked mohawks and the leather, studded leather collars and I was scared of them
then. Were you? A little bit. You're like, those are bad because they're going to try to get me
to smoke. I'm in town to do a podcast. Right. Well, what's funny is, is that fashion that
you're talking about, that quintessential punk fashion, that was a commodification immediately
too. The Sex Pistols manager used to be the manager of the New York Dolls, Malcolm McLaren,
and he owned a shop and a BDSM fashion shop with Vivian Westwood in London and he basically
used the Sex Pistols to promote the fashion he was selling at his shop, to make it fashionable
so he could sell more clothes. This is the manager of the first UK punk band ever. Well,
and he had put them together, right? It's not like the Sex Pistols all got together because
they were mates, like they were formed by a manager. Yes, by this guy, Malcolm. They were the
monkeys. Kind of. They were the monkeys of punk. They were the punks. So many people are mad at
us right now. For sure. But it's true. I mean, go look up your history if you're mad. His punks
are going to beat us up next time we go on tour. Some 13-year-old just looked down at their
shirt and went, that's what the Sex Pistols are. I had no idea. Well, it's funny though that you
talk about the pins and the, it was all homemade stuff. Like I remember it being a very, I mean,
I was certainly way too square, but I remember seeing the punks in my school doing stuff to
their clothes during class and at lunch and thinking it was the coolest thing, whether it was
black magic, black Sharpie doing the Dead Kennedys or the Anarchy symbol. Well, the Dead Kennedys
did have the coolest symbol around. It was pretty cool. Or just fraying their jackets or adding safety
pins. It was all created out of that homemade aesthetic, sort of like the music. And it appealed
to me, but I was afraid of it. And now, that's why I'm just now starting to listen to some of this
music. Are you going to turn all punk now? Maybe. Okay. That would be one of the bigger surprises
you've ever laid on me, man. But a pop punk, we should talk a little bit about.
They call it bitter sweet in this article. Sweet in the sense that you could get tons of money and
be super famous, but bitter because it, you know, it spawned a genre that I think a lot of true punks
really loathe. Like, I think true punks like a square more than they like a Blink 182 fan.
Indubitably. You know? Yeah. And that, you know, that whole scene, the Vans Warp Tour and Rancid and
Offspring and Green Day and all these groups was a part of a big second wave of these kids who grew
up definitely listening to that stuff. And I guess feeling like they were a part of it. I mean, I'm
sure Green Day really feels like they're a punk band and part of a punk movement. Whereas I remember
the first time I heard Green Day thinking, these are guys pretending to be a punk band. Yeah. Which
is a really cruddy thing to say. But I mean, it is, it, like, it's totally understandable how you
would think that, but they, they are, I mean, it is punk in some way, shape or form. It's punk.
The stuff they're talking about is pretty punk. But punk bands don't release acoustic songs
talking about the time of their lives. Definitely not. No. It's used unlike sitcoms. The first album.
Okay. Dukie, right? Is what we're talking about? I guess. Was that the first one? I think so.
I just remember hearing it and going like, why is that guy trying to sound British?
Well, that's pretty punk actually. The first big hit, is it? It's very punk. Yeah.
For sure. An American kid trying to sound British. Well, I guess so. But yeah, I don't, I would guess
you're right though. They're on Broadway. That punks. For God's sake. Well, yeah. There was a brief
shining moment where you could have conceivably called them a punk band. Here's the thing though,
man. People like money. Yeah. But that's been a through, not just in the punk scene, but, but
it's just in music in general, although hats off to the punk culture for keeping it at bay
better than anybody ever has any other genre. I would like to hear, I'm sure there are people
listening that know of punk bands that did stick their middle finger up to the money and say, nope.
I can tell you one, Fugazi. Well, I love Fugazi. So Fugazi is out of DC. Or I guess hardcore.
Hardcore. Yeah. And they, I think they formed Discord Records. If not, they're a big act on
Discord Records and they have done this whole DIY thing like from the get-go. They've eschewed
the major labels. As far as I know, their whole career and they were extremely successful despite
that. Yeah. I saw them in Athens once. Oh, yeah? What'd you think? That was great. This is, you
know, I think they got together in the like 87-ish and this was more like 92. Okay. Well,
they were still huge and probably bigger. That was when they were at their height, I would guess
as 92. Yeah. I mean, technically they had a, I don't know about how it performed on the literal
charts, but they had that one song that had a big MTV hit. Waiting Room. Yeah. It's a good song.
It's a really good song. Yeah. So I just want to give some shouts out to anybody who's like,
this is really interesting. I want to know more. Go listen to the cramps. I would recommend the
cramps. Listen to crass. Go watch the decline of Western civilization. Definitely check out the
circle jerks. Who else, Chuck? I'm going to say the, for my picks, the bad brains and the damned.
Okay. For sure. I'm going to toss Gigi Allen out there. Although he kind of transcends
everything. Just punk. And Yumi was sending me some, I didn't catch any of the names,
but she said there's a big punk scene in Japan still. And that was another thing too,
is somebody said, punk's not dying. It's just coming up in other places. Right. Like in Islamic
countries, there's a big punk movement. I saw Mexico's got a big one right now. Apparently,
Japan has it. And then there's a whole riot girl feminist punk that is, man, if that's not punk,
I don't know what it is. Like Eastern block punk riot girls. I love it. Yeah. So punk is still alive.
Punk not dead. Punk no dead. Punk's not dead. Okay. If you want to know more about punk music,
go listen to that stuff we just told you to go listen to. And since I said that, it's time for
Listener Man. If you want to learn more about punk music, you can probably go to literally any other
place other than this episode and learn more about punk music. If you want to know more about
punk music, go to your local library and read up. It's fundamental. All right, guys, I'm going to
call this poop. Nope. No poop on that short stuff about the guy who didn't eat for a year.
We talked about the fact that he didn't poop that much. And she said, this is the norm for
people with a colostomy or ileostomy. I had a temporary ileostomy and ostomy connected to the
ileum instead of the colon due to Crohn's complications. My colon was completely severed
from the rest of my digestive system during this time and basically sat dormant while food
exited into an ostomy pouch. No food means no poop, but the body still produces the normal gut
stuff like mucus and cells and needs to evacuate on occasion, which I think that's what we talked
about. For people with years of bowel issues, such as pain and running to the bathroom every 30
minutes, this can be a literal lifesaver. Anyway, my colon is currently now reattached to the rest
of my intestine and my Crohn's is in remission. I had no idea. So this person had a colostomy
and then it was reversed. Yes. I had no idea they could do that. Yeah, we should do something on
Crohn's and just tie all this stuff together. Okay. Just wanted to give you a little perspective
on the topic. Actually, ostomies would be an interesting topic for you to tackle. For sure.
Thanks for doing the best podcast around. According to my podcast app, I've listened to
over 400 episodes. Yikes. Well, Sonia in Canada, you have another, what, 750, 800? What are we up to
now? What? Number of episodes. 850 were up to like 1200. Well, she's listened to 400. Oh, okay.
So just do a little math. Oh, wait. Okay. Hold on. I can do this. So another like 800 or so? Yeah,
I would say so. All right. Well, you're a third of the way there. Keep at it. Yeah, roughly. Yeah,
you got a third. You guys should have just seen Chuck like look up into the air from the side of
his eye. She said, we'd love to see you come out to the Prairie provinces. So I know in Canada,
we do Toronto and Vancouver, but there's a lot of country in the middle there that we should
probably go to at some point. In the US, we call them flyover states. In Canada, they call it Prairie
Country. Well, if you want to get in touch with us like did, Sonia. Thanks again, Sonia. You can go
on to StuffYouShouldKnow.com and check out our social links. And you can also send us an email
to StuffPodcast at iHeartRadio.com. Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio.
For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you
listen to your favorite shows. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips
with Lance Bass. Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite
boy bands give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here
to help and a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never,
ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology
is way more widespread than any of us want to believe. You can find in Major League Baseball,
international banks, K-pop groups, even the White House. But just when I thought I had a handle on
this subject, something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology
changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, give me a few minutes because I think your ideas
are about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.