[kj] An Olive Branch for Olive-r
Leigh Newton
angrytomhanks at yahoo.com
Tue Feb 27 23:14:55 EST 2007
Nirvana weren't the death of punk. Their general public's reaction to them was. Nirvana were good and at times really great.
----- Original Message ----
From: GREG SLAWSON <gregslawson at msn.com>
To: gathering at misera.net
Sent: Tuesday, February 27, 2007 6:02:01 PM
Subject: Re: [kj] An Olive Branch for Olive-r
It's good to hear others talk about Nirvana as being the death of punk. Now it all makes sense--mainly because they sucked so much, and really sounded like a metal band, but got labeled punk, alternative, etc. Then we had to listed to over a decade of bands--Suckgarden, Mudhoney, Pearl Scam, Smashing Pumkins, etc etc--that sounded pretty much like mainstream rock, but everyone said they were somehow carrying on the punk tradition. Finally some popular bands are returning to a bit more garage sound (Killers, Yeah Yeah Yeah, Artic Monkeys, etc) and are at least tolerable...
From: "B. Oliver Sheppard" <bigblackhair at sbcglobal.net>
Reply-To: "A list about all things Killing Joke (the band!)"<gathering at misera.net>
To: Alex Smith <vassifer at earthlink.net>, "A list about all things Killing Joke (the band!)" <gathering at misera.net>
Subject: Re: [kj] An Olive Branch for Olive-r
Date: Tue, 27 Feb 2007 15:56:35 -0600
>Thanks for writing that. And, absolutely -- it isn't fun to be
>bitchy, honestly. I guess I got into punk about a decade after you
>did, and even then not into Killing Joke except for a few years ago,
>though I had of course heard the name zillions of times. I'm getting
>to the age where I also am beginning to feel like an "old man" (I'm
>32) and I get cranky as well. I apologize for the nastiness.
>
>I love all the bands you mentioned, too. And obviously Killing Joke,
>who are a band I appreciate more as I get older. I also wore Bauhaus
>t-shirts in junior high ('89 - '90 -- I even still have a few), the
>era I call B.N. (Before Nirvana -- because after Nirvana in '92 or
>so -- sort of the 9/11 for punk, I think, even if Nirvana weren't a
>punk band, no matter what t-shirts they wore -- everything changed
>and suddenly the same jocks who wanted to beat you up after school
>for wearing black, wanted to "mosh" and go to shows and see punk
>bands). I dyed my hair black (still do) though I never had the balls
>to try a devillock; I had that skater haircut where the side is
>shaved but your bangs hang in your face over one eye -- "the skater
>flop," or whatever. That seems to be coming back. And I loved the
>hell out of Vision Street Wear clothing, especially the shoes. I
>can't help but notice these kinds of accouterments that come with
>musical culture! (Hair, dress, etc.) In the 80s it seemed punk and
>skateboarding were very entangled, and that was the stew I came out
>of.
>
>Yes, you know your musical shit, too. The back-and-forth and tit for
>tat between us I don't get off on a bit. If it helps any, I also
>sort of want kids to get off my lawn these days. So, in short -- my
>apologies as well. I fuck up and make mistakes. I've been an arse,
>and I shouldn't have been.
>
>By the way, those are cool pics and I'm jealous you were there!
>
>
>-Oliver
>
>
>
>
>Alex Smith wrote:
>>Fair enough, Oliver -- I have been being needlessly nitpicky with
>>you lately, and I apologize. I'm under a bit of presure these days
>>(lots of layoffs where I work), and that's manifesting itself by
>>making me needlessly argumentative.
>>
>>I know you didn't invent the term "hair metal" (or "crust" or
>>"punk" or "hardcore" or "thrash" or "goth" or "shoegazer" or "DC
>>hardcore" or "NYHC" or "Britpop" or "Darkwave" or "post-Punk" etc.
>>etc. etc. ad nauseum), but I bristle at the abuse of these terms
>>(seek ye "This Is Pop!" from XTC's first album, WHITE MUSIC).
>>
>>Sure, this band or that band may have a lot of hair and wear it in
>>silly ways (on their face, even!) -- but I don't know about you, I
>>can't seem to hear their hair when I'm listening to the music. I
>>know the tonsorial/sartorial trappings of certain genres of music
>>act as cultural identifiers, but they're just appetizer. The music
>>and the messages contained therein are the real meat of the matter
>>(or, to bludgeon this culinary analogy into the ground, "the
>>entree").
>>
>>
>
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