[kj] ot new york hadfirst punks,sorry mik ;)
B. Oliver Sheppard
bigblackhair at sbcglobal.net
Thu Jan 24 17:53:01 EST 2008
Did I say Stooges, MC5, etc were the 1st punk bands? I was pointing out
they weren't from NYC originally, since someone included in a list of
first punk bands the Stooges, MC5 etc. saying they were NYC rockers.
The rest of my statement agreed with you, basically -- that it's an
endlessly contentious/pointless debate. But it's nice to put a starting
date on it somewhere. I'm fine with 1975 and think it makes some sense,
and you're right, the bands that I did mention -- MC5, Stooges -- but
whom I did not say were punk -- only that they were from the Detroit
area and not NYC originally -- were done by 1975. Of course, Iggy
wasn't. And MC5 and Stooges members had formed Sonic's Rendezous Band by
then, IIRC.
-Oliver
Alexander Smith wrote:
> "I know a lot of historians/writers/critics say 1975, which I think is
> about right, everything else ebing even (which it isn't)"
>
> If that's right (as you say it is), that it renders your initial
> statement about the Stooges and the MC5 moot, as they were all done by
> `75.
>
> Whatever. Since joining the Gathering in 1999, I've had *FAR TOOOOO
> MANY* debates about the origins of Punk. It's not that I don't care
> anymore, it's that it's simply not worth it.
>
> No future.
>
> Alex in NYC
>
>
>
> On Jan 24, 2008, at 4:26 PM, B. Oliver Sheppard wrote:
>
>> Iggy, Dead Boys, MC5 all originally from Midwest. MC5 = "Motor City
>> 5." "Motor City" = Detroit, not NYC.
>>
>> But, yes, this is an endleslly contentious debate, and a lot of it
>> depends on when you want to arbitrarily say punk began. I know a lot
>> of historians/writers/critics say 1975, which I think is about right,
>> everything else ebing even (which it isn't). There are people who
>> will say Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash were "punk" in 1950s, and the
>> Punk 365 opens with Roky Erickson and the 13th Floor Elevators
>> (Austin, TX) and other '66 garage bands, etc., but this is all
>> because the term "punk" has become so elastic as to be applied to
>> almost anything.
>>
>> -Oliver
>>
>>
>
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