DeepHour wrote:
^ The stuff I mentioned from the early 80s was better than Punk, to my ears at least. I did like releases such as 'Ever Fallen In Love' (The Buzzcocks), 'Hong Kong Garden' (Siouxsie and the Banshees), 'Oliver's Army' (Elvis Costello) - does that count? - 'God Save The Queen' (Sex Pistols), 'Do Anything You Wanna Do' (Eddie & The Hotrods) and quite a few others. I used to show 'The Great Rock And Roll Swindle' to my classes in the 1990s during my teaching career, though I'm not sure they ever much understood or appreciated it.
I guess what I'm getting at is that genres like new wave, new romantic and synth pop all have roots within post-punk, if you Venn diagram those terms there's pretty heavy overlap. Punk's influence ranges extends into all sorts of genres that aren't punk, from country to metal to electronic dance music to hip-hop.
That's not to try to downplay how important stuff that grew out of disco was to that era as well, but it's worth noting how even a lot of those styles adopted more stripped down arrangements compared to earlier stuff that was more obviously disco. House, along with eurobeat/hi-nrg/italo disco/
whatever you'd like to call it both tend to be more minimalist and energetic than disco was.
I'm not even really discussing preferences, although I won't act like my fondness for punk and a lot of it's offshoots might not bias me. I'm largely talking about importance for influencing how popular music continued to evolve.
One other factor is how long punk has managed to last as a genre, which has helped it to spawn offshoot genres for decades. There's a glut of bands to be inspired by the American first wave (including the British first wave that drew a lot of British pub rockers in), there's a glut of bands inspired by the first British wave, which includes all of the founding post-punk bands, along with all of the founding UK82 and adjacent bands, along with at least some of the American second wave.
From there on it gets a lot messier to try to describe waves because there starts to be less separation between them, but if you follow that American second wave I'm describing you'd see hardcore, college rock/alternative rock, grunge and emo emerge from it during the 80s, thrash metal and crossover also drew from it.
By the time the 90s had started you'd be hard pressed to find examples of rock music that weren't influenced by punk in one way or another, whether it was the DIY/own your own label or distro business model, the simpler arrangements or the intensity or something else.
TL;DR: Punk has buggered the ancestors of such a wide array of genres it's hard to escape music that's been influenced by it in some way.
_________________
The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.
You can't advance to the next level without stomping on a few Koopas.