Saturday, February 16, 2008

Punk Fashion in the Early Days of the 1970s

What Was Punk Fashion in the Early Days of the 1970s?

Today everyone knows what punk fashion is, but in 1970 it didn't exist. Punk first emerged in the mid 1970s in London as an anarchic and aggressive movement. About 200 young people defined themselves as an anti-fashion urban youth street culture. Closely aligned was a music movement that took the name punk.

Anti Fashion - Torn Fashion Becomes Punk Fashion

The clothes suited the lifestyle of those with limited cash due to unemployment and the general low income school leavers or students often experience.

Punks cut up old clothes from charity and thrift shops, destroyed the fabric and refashioned outfits in a manner then thought a crude construction technique, making garments designed to attract attention. It deconstructed garments into new forms. Whilst torn fabrics, frayed edges and defaced prints are now considered normal in the 21st century, in the 1970s it shocked many people, because it had never been seen before. Until then fabric had been treated as a material to keep as pristine, new looking and beautiful as possible.

Trousers were deliberately torn to reveal laddered tights and dirty legs. They were worn with heavy Doc Martens footwear, a utilitarian, practical traffic meter maid type of footwear in that era, not seen on many young women until then. Safety pins and chains held bits of fabric together. Neck chains were made from padlocks and chain and even razor blades were used as pendants. The latter emerged as a mainstream fashion status symbols a few years later when worked in gold.

Self Mutilation and Body Piercings

Body piercing was done in parts other than the usual accepted placement in the ear lobe. The placement of studs and pins in facial body parts such as eyebrows and cheeks, noses or lips for the masses was then quite unusual even after the freedom of the 1960s.

Although it is known that Edwardian ladies used to have rings inserted into their nipples to make their breasts stands up more pertly, this was not a usual practice among the masses of the 1960s and 70s. Self-mutilation, rejection of prettiness and body piercing was not a norm then. The chosen placement of body jewellery and tattoos of the new punks was deliberately intended to offend the more conventional members of society. The fashion was also unisex and men began to sport facial jewellery. What we take as a normal strand of fashion today was all quite unusual then.

Body piercing seems everyday now in the 21st century. It entered mainstream fashion quite rapidly, beginning with the three stud earlobe, progressing to the whole ear outline embedded with ear studs. This was followed by Goths sporting nose studs in the early 80s. Then in the 1990s belly, tongue and genital piercings all gathered a following among the masses.

Twenty five or thirty years ago it was true anti fashion and anti establishment, but now it is so everyday that not even great grandmothers titter. Thirty years after Punk emerged as a rebellious youth oriented fashion many grandmothers and great grandmothers sport a tattoo or piercing somewhere on their body.

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Bondage in Early Punk Fashion

Black leather, studs, chains, mufti fabrics, greyed sweated out black T shirts, bondage animal print bum flaps and leg straps epitomise some of the looks that immediately spring to mind when thinking of the early punks. What was then thought to be blatant and obvious sexual references in written form, on dyed and destroyed vests have again become a norm and the masses happily don Tshirts emblazoned with fcuk or crave a graffiti print covered Louis Vuitton bag, both fashions very much accepted because of the path set by the early punk movement.

Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren Open Seditionaries Shop

Punk as a style succeeded even more when Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren formerly Malcolm Edwards, publicized the ideas through their joint design ventures. McLaren launched the 'Sex Pistols' Punk music group. The punk group wore clothes from a shop called 'Sex' that Vivienne Westwood and her partner Malcolm McLaren opened on the Kings Road, London. They sold leather and rubber fetish goods, especially bondage trousers. Later the shop was renamed Seditionaries.

Not long after, Westwood launched alone renaming the same shop as 'World's End'. Westwood was soon translating her ideas into the fresher Pirate and Romantic looks. The collections were innovative, but were spoken of as unwearable, yet so often other designers picked up on ideas she had instigated and soon started another new trend.

In later years as her talent developed, her moods and methods changed. She mastered tailoring techniques combined with flair, frivolity and sexuality creating new looks that others copied. With a long stream of firsts behind her, Vivienne Westwood is now considered to be one of the most innovative designers of the 20th century.

Loads of Hair or No Hair

Punk hair is worthy of mention - A focal point of the punk look was the hair which was spiked as high as possible into a Mohican hairstyle by a variety of means including sugar and water solutions, soaping, gelatine, pva glue, hair sprays and hair gel.

It was big hair before 80s big hair became everyday. Often it was coloured pink or green with food dyes. It was intended to startle the onlooker and attract attention. Over bleaching was common and also became deliberate as home methods were initially employed to achieve hitherto unknown effects.

An alternative look was to shave areas of the scalp. Both sexes did this. They intended to make themselves look intimidating. Hair was sometimes dyed jet black or bleached white blonde. Eyes were emphasised with black and sometimes cat like eye make up and vampire like lips drew more attention to the face.

Punk Gets Refined - Punk Chic From Zandra Rhodes

Around 1977, Zandra Rhodes the British dress designer, took elements of the punk style and used it in her collections making refined and more elegant versions in bright colours which were more acceptable to the rich and famous. She used gold safety pins and gold chains to connect and decorate uneven hems and slashed holes. The carefully placed holes were edged with gold thread and the hems adorned with exquisite embroidery. She had always coloured her hair with exotic colours and worn it as a form of plumage.

Watered down punk chic worked its way to the top end of the market. Versace too, also decorated dresses with large safety pins, most notably a black dress that Liz Hurley wore to accompany Hugh Grant at the premiere of the film 'Four Weddings And A Funeral' in about 1992.

Now every fashion shop has torn and distressed clothing items. Many are similar in concept to those originally sported by the first punks of the 1970s.

You may also be interested in the page Laver's Law a timeline of fashion style by James Laver.

Please do not write to me requesting Punk pictures. I have none.

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If you are interested in other less conventional trends in fashion you will enjoy this book called Surfers Soulies Skinheads and Skaters: Subcultural Style from the Forties to the Nineties

Selfridges' Celebrate Punk

Selfridges Bags The Future of Punk (Press Report)

March 4th 2006 sees the launch of the biggest punk rising since the BBC’s veto on Johnny Rotten’s rendition of God Save the Queen!

Inspired by next season’s modern take on glam-rock and to mark the thirtieth anniversary of Punk, Selfridges will present FuturePunk, its own twenty-first century interpretation of the attitude that has dominated youth culture and influenced fashion for three decades. With FuturePunk, Selfridges builds on its heritage of retail innovation and edginess, pushing boundaries in the name of the Punk spirit.

It will be a multi-dimensional event featuring music performances, exhibition and talks, where exclusive luxury goods will sit alongside vintage, punk classics and products such as t-shirts, badges, toys, books and CDs.

Alannah Weston, Creative Director for Selfridges, said: 'The project captures the spirit of this highly influential movement. We’re involving Punk luminaries from the past- such as Malcolm McLaren – as well as using it to launch new talent in fashion and music who are inspired by the challenging, DIY attitude of Punk.'

Nostalgia, Fashion and the Future will all play their part in FuturePunk, which promises to elevate Britain’s last working class movement into next season’s cult craze through its electrifying punk-inspired 4-week lifestyle event.

Representing a contemporary take on the spirit of Punk, Selfridges has collaborated with la crème de couture including Givenchy, Fendi and Chloe. The result - a rocking range of exclusive accessories, inspired by the trend that catapulted black-clad punks into an iconic status.

These coveted bags, belts and hair embellishments, many of which have only ever been viewed by those lucky enough to possess a pass to Paris fashion week will be available exclusively at Selfridges during March. Prices start from an affordable £89 for DKNY’s Logo X bucket bag to a glam £1,119 for Chloe’s chic ‘Gladys’.

A Final Word on Subcultural Styles

Subcultural styles developed around the 1940's and were identified in a book called Surfers Soulies Skinheads and Skaters - Subcultural Style From the Forties to the Nineties written by Amy de la Haye and Cathie Dingwall.

1970s Subcultural streetstyles include Afrocentric, B-Boy, Beatnik, Bhangra, Caribbean, Casuals, Cowboy, Cyberpunk, Eco, Fetish, Funk, Gay style, Glam rock, Greasers, Grunge, Head-Bangers, Hippy, Hipsters, Indie, Jungle, Madchester, Mod, New Age, Northern Soul, Old Skool, Preppy, Psychedelic, Psychobilly, Punk, Ragga, Rasta, Rave, Rude Boy, Skater, Skinhead, Soulies, Streestyle, Surfer, Techno, Teddy Boys (Teds), Travellers, Two Tones, Workwear Rockabilly, Yardies, Young British Radicals and Zoots.

I suggest that if you have an interest in any of the street styles listed above you obtain the illustrated and informative book.

It is interesting how many of the styles above continue to provide inspiration for designers. Many aspects have invaded the catwalks in the past decades, so that we now see these once original styles in a new light as high fashion innovations in mainstream clothing. Once again another aspect of my page Laver's Law is at work here.

Real fans of punk will find a great Canadian site covering all aspects especially punk music here.

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Punk Clothing And Clothes

Followers of punk are into a certain political standpoint, music and fashion. Punk clothing is the outward expression of punks and has its roots in the 1970s. Punk bands exploded onto the scene in America and the UK. The bands and certain fashion designers led the way in an alternative mode of dressing. Malcolm McLaren, manager of the Sex Pistols, owned a shop in which designer, Vivienne Westwood displayed her clothes. These became very popular. On the other side of the Atlantic, fans copied the New York Dolls and The Ramones.


Some of the new fashion was shocking to the older generation. Torn and ripped clothes were all the rage, accompanied by safety pins, body piercing and studded and spiked jewelry. Hair was often dyed in shades of blue, purple, green or orange and was spiked or given a Mohawk style. Razors and chains were also added to punk clothing outfits. Leather jackets and rubber or vinyl items were popular along with bondage trousers.

Footwear was big and bold and involved military style boots, motorcycle boots or Dr Marten's boots for both sexes. Females would often combine dresses and skirts with masculine looking boots. They would also wear spiked bands and torn, fishnet stockings. Both men and women liked to sport T shirts with offensive slogans, band logos and anarchy symbols.

A new generation of punk fans came along in the 1980s with their own innovations on punk clothing. Hooded sweatshirts became commonplace and combat boots were the norm. Sometimes, punk clothing would incorporate some tartan and studded chokers were very popular. Bandanas were also sold and hair was worn in a short, spiky cut or shaved. Tattoo parlors sprung up to meet the demand. A lot of punks supported the political left and displayed anti-racist and anti-fascist symbols.

Punk music has fragmented today into various sub genres, each with their own fashion style. The bands within these strands still greatly influence clothes and accessories. Punk clothes are an important part of Hardcore, Crust Punk, Deathrock, Skate Punk and Pop Punk.

As with all movements that seem extreme at the time, punk has been largely integrated into the mainstream. A safety pin now seems a nostalgic symbol for the past. Famous fashion designers and labels use punk in their designs. Purists distance themselves from the commercial end of punk fashion. Many fans still like to make their own clothes or buy in thrift shops to get an individual look.


Source: www.statssheet.com

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History of Punk Rock

A Brief History of Punk

The Foundations of Punk Rock

The beginnings of punk rock are often furiously debated. This is partially because everyone has different definition of punk rock, and partially because its foundation stones are found in several places.

"Punk Rock" was originally used to describe the garage musicians of the '60's. Bands like the Sonics were starting up and playing out with no musical or vocal instruction, and often limited skill. Because they didn't know the rules of music, they were able to break the rules.

The mid to late '60s saw the appearance of the Stooges and the MC5 in Detroit. They were raw, crude and often political. Their concerts were often violent affairs, and they were opening the eyes of the music world.

The Velvet Underground is the next piece in the puzzle. The Velvet Underground, managed by Andy Warhol, were producing music that often bordered on noise. They were expanding the definitions of music without even realizing it.

The final primary influence is found in the foundations of Glam Rock. Artists like David Bowie and the New York Dolls were dressing outrageously, living extravagantly and producing loud trashy rock and roll. Glam would end up splitting up its influence, doling out portions to hard rock, "hair metal" and punk rock.

New York: The First Punk Rock Scene

The first concrete punk rock scene appeared in the mid '70s in New York. Bands like The Ramones, Wayne County, Johnny Thunders and the Heartbreakers, Blondie and the Talking Heads were playing regularly in the Bowery District, most notably at CBGB.

The bands were unified by their location, camaraderie, and shared musical influences. They would all go on to develop their own styles and many would shift away from punk rock.

While the New York scene was reaching its heyday, punk was undergoing a separate creation story in London.

Meanwhile, Across the Pond

England's punk scene had political and economic roots. The economy in the United Kingdom was in poor shape, and unemployment rates were at an all-time high. England's youth were angry, rebellious and out of work. They had strong opinions and a lot of free time.

This is where the beginnings of punk fashion as we know it emerged, and they centered out of one shop. The shop was simply called SEX, and it was owned by Malcolm McClaren.

Malcolm McClaren had recently returned to London from the U.S., where he had unsuccessfully tried to reinvent the New York Dolls to sell his clothing. He was determined to do it again, but this time looked to the youths who worked and hung out in his shop to be his next project. This project would become the Sex Pistols, and they would develop a large following very quickly.

Enter The Bromley Contingent

Among the fans of the Sex Pistols was an outrageous bunch of young punks known as the Bromley Contingent. Named after the neighborhood they all came from, they were at the first Sex Pistols shows, and quickly realized they could do it themselves.

Within a year, the Bromleys had formed a large portion of the London Punk scene, including The Clash, The Slits, Siouxsie & the Banshees, Generation X (fronted by a young Billy Idol) and X-Ray Spex. The British punk scene was now in full swing.

The Punk Rock Explosion

By the late '70s, punk had finished its beginning and had emerged as a solid musical force. With its rise in popularity, punk began to split into numerous sub-genres. New musicians embraced the DIY movement and began to create their own individual scenes with specific sounds.

In order to better see the evolution of punk, check out all of the subgenres that punk split off into. It's a list that's constantly evolving, and it's only a matter of time before more categories appear.


Source : http://punkmusic.about.com

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How to Find Punk Clothes Online

A handy guide that shows you where to find punk-style fashions online.




If you're looking to expand your wardrobe, but aren't exactly sure where to find the latest punk fashions, you'll be happy to know you're literally only a few mouse clicks away! These days, it's possible to find nearly anything online, and there are scores of websites that cater to the punk subculture.

How do you wade through the muck to find the hidden gems? This guide aims to direct you to some of the best online punk fashion stores around, regardless of your budget.

Infectious Threads

While their website color scheme may leave a little to be desired, their selection of punk clothes offers even the most discriminating consumer something to choose from. From t-shirts to dresses and everything in between, Infectious Threads lives up to its name - it's definitely infectious!

Plus, if you sign up for their free newsletter, you can receive special discounts each month on their merchandise.

Sourpuss Clothing

The neon pink color scheme demands attention the moment you enter the website, and their reasonably priced merchandise keeps you there. Sourpuss Clothing offers a fair selection of kids, guys, and gals merchandise from $3.00 and up.

Whether you're in the market for a nifty new necklace or a skull-print purse; thigh-high socks or a striped tee, Sourpuss Clothing offers a fresh twist on the punk fashion scene.

Electric Chair

If you have a little more money to spend, you definitely want to check out Electric Chair and pick up a few new pieces to add to your punk-inspired wardrobe. With clothes for men, women, and kids, you're sure to find something for the entire family.

Organized by brands, Electric Chair offers a large selection of merchandise from punk brands like Dogpile, Lip Service, Lucky Thirteen and Squidfire, to name a few. They even offer a sales section where you can find the latest punk fashions at a fraction of the price.




Daddy Zero

An online retailer of punk fashion, Daddy Zero also has a brick and mortar store in the TampaFlorida. The store offers a large selection of unique, one of a kind items you won't find anywhere else. From boots to dresses; plaid pants to belt buckles, Daddy Zero is a worthwhile website to check out. area of

What's more, they even offer an exclusive 50% off Sale Section, where new products are offered every day at half-off their original prices. It's a great way to refresh your punk wardrobe without missing the rent check this month!

Rebel Girlz

A beautifully organized website, Rebel Girlz ISN'T just for females, despite the deceptive name. While they specialize in female punk clothing, men aren't discriminated against at Rebel Girlz - you'll find a decent selection of punk footwear and clothing for men.

Their closeout section seems to offer the best deals, with prices ranging from $1.50 to $20.00. Rebel Girlz offers a huge selection of various punk accessories in addition to their healthy selection of clothing, such as belts, purses, and chokers to name a few.

If you're in the market for a new wardrobe, Rebel Girlz is definitely worth checking out.

Finding Hot Fashion Doesn't HAVE to be Hard

While this is definitely not an all-inclusive list, I've taken the liberty to showcase some of the best punk stores online where you can replenish your wardrobe and pick up something fun for yourself.

Whether you're searching for the perfect accessory to go with your new outfit, or need to replace your worn out Converse, one of these websites are sure to meet your needs. Stop stressing over where you can find the latest punk clothes and visit these websites.

Who knows? You may discover something you can't live without!

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The Mutated Child of Punk

Industrial subculture was born as a mutated and futuristic form of punk style. It has inherited many aspects of punk style, but has also updated them to be more modern and futuristic. Every aspect of both subcultures converges to one main point: chaos, and both subcultures find their greatest joy in flaunting that chaos and lack of control. Punk represents this chaos in the near past and industrial subculture is a continuation of that chaos in the future. It is a future that we are on the verge of discovering, but at the same time remains dark and foreboding. It is a future that is filled with an excess of technology and a lack of morals. It is a future where machines have more communication between each other than human beings do. Each aspect of each culture illustrates this connection in a unique way, but fashion and music stand out as particularly strong areas for semiotic analysis of the various signs that characterize and typify each group

Hebdige says that through semiotics, everything a person wears, does, says, etc., can be viewed as a sign, and that all of those signs together can be analyzed to obtain an accurate representation of who a person is and why they portray themselves the way that they do. Of the conscious and subconscious choices made everyday, Hebdige says that the total effect "gives itself to be read" (101). Hebdige's basic idea is that through the use of semiotics we can recognize these signs and evaluate what they mean. For punk and industrial subculture, it is a very conscious choice of dissension. Before we can understand that choice of dissension, we must first exam and define society's norms. Hebdige says that society's norms "are distinguished by their relative invisibility, their appropriateness, their naturalness'" (101). The norms in society are what we fail to notice everyday because of their invisibility.' It is both because of their appropriateness' and their naturalness' that when we are surrounded by the poster children of Gap and Abercrombie and Fitch we dismiss them without so much as a second glance. Society's norms are represented in those poster children, and punk and industrial subcultures consciously chose not to be a part of that stereotype.

Punk music is characterized by screeching vocals, distorted instruments, and explicit use of foul language. Punk used this wide variety of crashing and destruction to create a surreal effect that emphasizes different elements of chaos. Hebdige describes punk musical style as "relentless (un)melodic lines against a turbulent background of cacophonous drumming and screamed vocals" (109). Describing punk music, Johnny Rotten said, "We're into chaos not music" (109). There is a certain anger and angst that goes side by side with punk music which, according to Hebdige, "reflected the tendency towards willful desecration and the voluntary assumption of outcast status" (110). Punks were proud to be who they were. They were proud to be viewed as outcasts in society, partly because of what that society represented to them, and perhaps partly because of the attention that it brought to them. Punks were trapped in a society that they wanted no part of. They had no desire to belong to a world ruled by hypocrisy and janus faced politics. They escaped through their music. The Sex Pistols, the Clash, the Unwanted, and hundreds of others were their saviors.

Industrial subculture is entirely synonymous. Many of the same elements can be seen in industrial music as in punk music. The most obvious of these is the anger. Anger and dissatisfaction are two key elements in much of industrial music. The actual rhythms in industrial musical style, like punk, tend to be loud, and fast. Another interesting component of both punk and industrial music is the use of abnormal sounds to create surreal effects. For instance, both punk and industrial style bring in elements to their music that contemporary styles would not. Industrial music in particular makes use of an extreme amount of sampled audio. Industrial music samples everything from screaming to audio taken from science fiction and cult movies to gunshots resulting in a more surreal atmosphere. This surreal effect also creates a certain kind of chaos that is on par with the chaos created by the punk style of music. Industrial music's strong focus on sampled audio is another reminder of the subculture's strong ties with a disjoined, technological future.

Just as the actual mechanics of the industrial musical style strongly emphasize chaos and disorder the lyrics emphasize this same chaos and disorder to an even greater extent. In his industrial anthem, Capital Punishment, famous industrial musician Rudy Ratzinger rasps "Capital punishment for me, capital punishment for I have sinned. Capital punishment for me, capital punishment for I was wrong." He expresses a certain willingness to be punished, because he is fully aware of what he has done. He is aware of the rules that he has broken and he is similarly aware of their resulting consequences. Rudy admits that he "has sinned" and is very proud of it. He is proud of his actions and faces his punishment as if it were an honor. Industrial subculture and punk subculture have certainly both broken many rules, and have been forced to face many consequences of those broken rules. The members of industrial and punk subculture have treated their punishment just like Rudy. They know that they must face their punishment for the "sins" that they have committed, and they face it proud of what they have done.

Punk fashion similarly emphasizes chaos. Mismatched plaids and ripped school uniforms are commonplace. Hebdige reports "lavatory chains were draped in graceful arcs across chests encased in plastic bin-liners" (107). Punk subculture stole what society as a whole deemed to be void of meaning and filled that void with their chaos. They empowered themselves with a certain feeling of control by being able to take what was not theirs and turn it into something that was distinctly their own. They replaced an emptiness of value with their twisted views of society and anger, and after they had stolen those symbols they proudly flaunted them by covering their bodies with them and parading them around in a living protest of society's norms.

Punk fashion also demonstrates a strong tendency towards fetishism. From bondage pants, clothing adorned with used condoms, to rusty medals of masochism pinned through eyebrows and lips, punk fetish fashion was anything but vanilla sex. Hebdige says:

Rapist masks and rubber wear, leather bodices and fishnet stockings, implausibly pointed stiletto heeled shoes, the whole paraphernalia of bondage the belts, straps and chains were exhumed from the boudoir, closet and the pornographic film and placed on the street where they retained their forbidden connotations.

The recurring theme of chaos is not absent from this fashion statement. Punk fashion took what society was not willing to talk about and shoved it in society's face. They forced society to rethink and reevaluate their moral stances by forcing people to feel awkward and embarrassed.

Industrial fashion is a reflection of the punk style but twisted to the same darker more futuristic time frame that is the basic characteristic of industrial subculture. The same chaos is clearly evident in the small pale faces and tattered black clothes of the industrial subculture. The carefully applied black and blood red shades of lipstick as well as the massive amounts of black eyeliner running circles around blood shot eyes are all semiotic signs of a desire to stand out from the norm by being more dangerous and more chaotic and out of control than society's standards. When society said, "less is more", punk and industrial turned around and said, "no, more is more." Common practice in many subcultures is the achievement of power through the ability to alter and modify an individual's appearance, and industrial and punk subcultures are no exceptions.

However industrial subculture has taken the punk's fetishism to an even more extreme level. Eighteen inch black vinyl corsets and tight black chokers, thigh-high vinyl boots and clothing adorned with hypodermic needles, ritual body scarification and tattoo, all flaunt the chaos of the industrial subculture. They all show how out of control each member is, and how each member takes pride in that lack of control. In a sense, the chaos comes from giving in to desires that society has frowned upon and forced to be repressed. Fetish fashion, whether punk or industrial, allows the wearer to transcend those societal boundaries and become the antithesis of society's accepted values and norms. It is the ultimate revolt from society's conformist poster children wrapped in Gap and Hilfiger.

What is the future of this mutated child of punk? Today, the punk movement is still alive after several decades of major changes in the world. Will the industrial subculture prove to be as durable, or will the parent outlive the child? What will the children of industrial subculture be like? If examining industrial subculture as a futuristic child of punk subculture has revealed anything at all, it has revealed how strong the thread of chaos is. It weaves itself through out both industrial and punk music, fashion, fetishism, dancing, and countless other aspects of subculture, and ultimately is the bond that brings them all together and unifies them. If one thing is certain it is that the future will undoubtedly be a future that is tightly tied together by the interweaving threads of chaos.

Source: http://project.cyberpunk.ru

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The popular misperception

Thepopular misperception is that Punk Rock began during the late 70's in London, England. However, Punk was in fact an American creation that grew out from the tangled roots of early Rock and Roll. Its now been nearly 25 years (33 if you start with the Velvet Underground) since Punk first emerged from New York's Greenwich village and surfaced at the small bar in the Bowery called CBGB's.

It was here in 1975, among the Hell's Angels, wino's, junkies, and prostitutes that bands such as the Talking Heads, Richard Hell and the Voidoids, the Patti Smith Group, Deborah Harry (Blondie), and the Ramones all launched their careers and reinvented the sound, look, and attitude of rock music for generations to come.


Ramones at CBGBOne of the driving forces behind punk rock, as with most forms of rock music, was rebellion. The general consensus was that the rock and roll industry had become too safe, mainstream, corporate, and therefore no fun. Many of these early punk groups took it upon themselves to express their displeasure with the direction music had taken in the mid-70's and tried make rock dangerous again. Although these attitudes were shared by early punk rock groups, a similar sound was not. Each of these early groups developed their own unique sound that separated them from the others.

The word 'dirty' comes up frequently in a discussion about punk rock. Often this term is a reference to the discordant sounds produced by guitars amplified to the point of feedback, or white noise. "Dirty" could also refer to the lyrical content that is often considered vulgar. But it also has as much to do with the appearance of the practitioners. In this respect it is important to consider the visual aesthetic of punk rock musicians because of the impact these styles had on underground youth culture of the time, and mainstream culture that followed in the 80's and 90's. Additionally, punk rock fashion, an oxymoron to some, signified the movement as a more individualistic, and a reaction to mainstream culture.

In New York, punk rock might have signified a rebirth of rock and roll, but in London an entire culture was conceived. Like a blowtorch, punk roared throughout the towns of England leaving the charred remains of popular culture in its path. Although stylistically punk was a world away from 1960's protest music, both shared the same basic goal to inspire change through musical expression.

This was especially true in London where the social climate was one of poverty and frustration. Unemployment soared to record levels while the economy plummeted into the deepest depression since World War II fueling the uneasiness of the younger generation. While 1970's America offered boundless opportunities for the baby boomers, British youth were faced with few choices for their future. In addition to economic despair, increasing division between the upper and lower class people outraged many sparking violence throughout the country.

These factors contributed to the deeply political overtones that punk embodied once it made its way across the pond. Britain's youth were desperately bored and seeing no future on their horizon sought alternative means of survival. Punk rock offered an escape from the hopeless conditions of late 1970's London, while simultaneously empowering the thousands of young people who had been marginalized by a culture in turmoil.

Punk fashion

In addition to the raw musical aggression, punk embraced an almost primitive fashion aesthetic which featured spiky hair, multi-colored mohawks, and ripped t-shirts cleverly held together with safety pins that made their way into the noses, ears and tongues of those eager to push the boundaries of acceptable attire. For many, punk fashion took the gender bending kinkiness of glam rock and injected it with a lethal dose of black leather and gothic barbarism in the form of heavy make-up. The resulting styles were caustic and offensive, however they were also refreshingly inventive, fascinating, and sublimely rebellious.

The abrasive character of punk was as unsettling to hear, as it was to observe for many, however as it has always been viewed with skepticism by mainstream audiences, it has endured to permanently alter the look, sound and attitude of rock music to this day.

Source: http://arted.osu.edu

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