Punk Rock Essay, Research Paper
The 1980?s are mostly known for its cheesy new wave music, with keyboards and big hair. One of the turning points in music, punk rock, was also recognized in the early 80?s. Though it was less popular then, punk rock has stuck around and managed to become a very well-known and popular music genre.
Some of the very early bands of the 1970?s helped to pave the way for punk rock bands. The Slits, The 101ers, Malcom McLauren, and the Raincoats were a few of the trend-setting bands. A UK feminist punk group called the ?The Slits? were formed in the late 70?s to early 80?s. Their unorthodox tribal-influenced rhythms single them out as the more underrated units of the time. The 101ers were formed in London in the 70?s and established itself on a fading pub-rock circuit about to be undermined by the advent of punk. They?re songs showed the singers abrasive delivery already in place. .(Ancient Punk Rock History, online dialogue, WWW.nstop.com/paloma/history.html)
By 1980 the lessons of punk were defined; keep it simple, skip the solos, pump the attitude, and each band eventually developed their own style. Mtv gave punk rock a head start, debuting in 1981, around the time punk rock had developed. .(DeCurtis, Anthony The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock and Roll, (c)1992 page #673) ?Music videos miniaturize our attention spans, lionizes beauty over talent, robs artists of their mystery, objectifies women, pacifies viewers, ruins the individual experience of a song, and destroys the boundaries between creativity and commercialism.?(DeCurtis, Anthony The Rolling Stone illustrated History of Rock and Roll (c)1992 page #640)
Kurt Kobain, a formerly well-known punk rocker, describes himself as the stereotypical punk rocker; a rebellious chi
Punk rock has come a long way, from being a small controversial music genre to an ever-growing sensation of North America. Punk Rock has also influenced many types of music including; alternative, metal, and ska. ?By all rights, punk rock should have killed off heavy metal. . . what it really did was give metal a new point of entry.?(Anthony DeCurtis, The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock and Roll 1992)
Bibliography
Its all in the citations.
p.s. I got an (A)