Throughout the entire world, music is one thing that is a constant. From Africa to Antarctica, music can be found. There are literally millions of types of music out there: Rock, Rap, Pop, EMO, Hard-core, Ska, Latin, Classical. The list goes on and on. But one form of music has had one of the most significant histories of them all: Punk rock. A look into the history of this type of music will help us understand why punk rock sounds and feels the way it does. It is necessary to look at the types of dancing, different types of punk rock, and the reasons behind it to understand how and why this type of music formed.
Through the years some punk has had influences from country to the Grateful Dead. Some of this may not even be punk at all. An example of this can be clearly seen in a song by Rancid entitled “Time Bomb” off their album, “… And Out Come the Wolves”5. In this song a clear form of Reggae is seen with one listen. Punk originated in Britain in the mid Seventies. The first commercially successful punk band was The Sex Pistols. Then came groups like Black Flag, Husker Du, and Bad Brains. The first American punk started in a New York club called CBGB’s.
CBGB’s would attract a crowd of about 500 with its Sunday-afternoon hard-core matinees. The concerts could be over by a reasonable time so kids could get home to eat dinner with their parents. Most punk groups don’t make much money at all. Once in a while a punk group will hit it big time but that is very rare. Paul Westerbert, lead singer of the Replacements quotes, “We are the hungriest band I’ve ever seen. We get in the van and drive to a town, play, stay at a friend’s house. Wake up when they throw us out. Drive the rest of the day. Play the next night. We get fifteen dollars a day.
And when we’re home, we don’t get nothing. We’re way in debt. We own a van, it breaks down, and you know when you play that the gig money goes to pay for the broken-down van. We’re used to it. ”(6) Slam dancing has been popular through the history of punk. You may have heard of called “moshing” or “stage diving. ” Moshing is just a big game of bumper cars like you played when you were a kid. I think Natalie Jacobson who is dating the lead singer of “Murphy’s Law” describes stage diving best when says, “It’s like diving into a human carpet. Something like the old kids’ trust game.
Just my way of getting into it. Gospel people got their thing, I got mine. “1 Some punks consider themselves Nazis’, or are concerned with issues like peace, racism, and nuclear war. Most punk is against parental, musical, and political authorities. On the other hand some isn’t. Bob Mould of Husker Du talks about politics quite frequently in his songs. I don’t write about politics because I’m not an expert. Some bands find it very necessary to claim they’re politically relevant when in actuality they don’t know censored about politics. Not informing people is much better than misinforming people.
We’re sort of like reporters in a way. Reporters of our own mental state. Reporters of the state of the air. Consciousness. Of the day. We make personal statements. 2 Most punks that live in small towns have trouble making friends. They find it hard to relate to most people. Sixteen-year-old Becca Levine finds it hard to make friends in her small town. She comes from a family of divorced parents that never have understood her. Her mother thinks it’s just a phase she’s going through. As Levine Quotes, “Parents around here treat me like I’m kind of weird. 3 She has met someone from New York City that understands her.
She meets with him at concerts at clubs like the Ritz or CBGB’s. She met someone else also. Someone about 20 minutes away from her hometown who wrote an ad in a national magazine looking for someone to associate with that would understand him. He got a lot of responses, but when he saw the letter from Levine, he called her right up. They met for the first time at a Hard-Core show in New York City. But still no one in her hometown understands her. Fitting in with the New York hard-core scene is one of her goals. Punk has its very own unique style.
Although punk sports hard edges, bright colors, shaved heads, leather jackets, Mohawks, and army boots. You can’t really tell if a person is a punk by the way they dress or do their hair. Wanda Draper, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Oklahoma says, “We need to look at their reactions and responses to what goes on around them in everyday life. When we know that this is a fad-that it is an effort to be a part of the ‘group’-we can usually relax. “4 Punk is also related to Hard-Core and Ska. Hard-Core is usually heavier and more upbeat than regular punk.
Ska is punk with some trumpets or saxophones playing along. Drugs, rock star ego’s, and in some cases death ruined the development of punk bands back around 1980 like the Sex Pistols, Black Flag, and The Germs. It made a recent comeback in the early nineties. Julia Sazbo quotes, “Music lovers will argue that it all started in early 1993 when Rhino Records came out with D. I. Y. (Do It Yourself), a nine-volume aural history of punk. They came tours by the Ramones, the Stranglers, and Television. “7 Believe it or not. Punk has been and still is surviving mostly on minor labels.