crackedpleasures wrote:
I like the early punk. The feeling of being part of it must have been so exciting, knowing that a whole new form of art and subculture was forming, something never done before and you were part of it... That sort of feeling of excitement I miss nowadays, still talented bands but rarely something you hear that sounds unlike nothing done before.
We really didn't consider it as really forming a new subculture, so much as rebelling against the dominant culture. Forming a 'New subculture' was a secondary thing that came along with the general f**ked-uppedness of a culture that was more concerned with Disco, Who shot JR on the TV show 'Dallas', rather than attempt to deal with the fact that humanity was flirting with the very real threat of thermonuclear annihilation. --It's so much easier to not deal with that, and get turned on to the (then) newest Styx album instead.
In another sense, the punk scene in the early days also had a very real immediacy to it due again to the threat of thermonuclear annihilation, and the punk scene was in a way not unlike a wild party on the Titanic as it was sinking, due to the fact that we felt that chances were quite likely that we, and the rest of humanity wouldn't exist at the beginning of the 21st Century.
The punk scene back in the early days was essentially comprised of the freaks and misfits who could not or flat out refused to fit in and process the bulls**t 'Normal Society' had to offer. Now punk is really nothing more that a fashion/music/lifestyle commodity that you can find at any shopping mall. Anybody can get a 'punk haircut' clothes, and fashion accessories and buy themselves into a lifestyle of tamed down, assimilated, processed and conveniently canned rebellion. It's no longer an edgy, intelligent, and subversively dangerous thing, and that sucks.
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When There's No There to get to, I'm so There!
Last edited by Fogman on 16 May 2009, 6:46 am, edited 3 times in total.