Punk band?

Post a reply


This question is a means of preventing automated form submissions by spambots.
Smilies
:smile: :sad: :eek: :shock: :cool: :-x :razz: :oops: :evil: :twisted: :wink: :idea: :arrow: :neutral: :mrgreen:

BBCode is ON
[img] is ON
[url] is ON
Smilies are ON

Topic review
   

Expand view Topic review: Punk band?

by Worm » Mon Jan 31, 2005 1:59 pm

Ice Cream Jonsey wrote:It was Internet radio that I found through Shoutcast, PAL.
I'm pretty sure it's all radio, no matter what.

Honestly, I've found my best bet for music is reading a book or two to find out about old shit I've never heard, the similar artists link over at allmusic.com, asking Caltrops about hiphop, and oink.me.uk/.

by Ice Cream Jonsey » Mon Jan 31, 2005 1:58 pm

It was Internet radio that I found through Shoutcast, PAL.

by Worm » Mon Jan 31, 2005 1:43 pm

Ska?
Citizen Fish, (EDIT: Pietasters), and Dancehall Crashers.

That's really all I have on that. =(

Honestly, I don't see how anyone gets so fucking hung up on genres. Also, the fucking radio? That's mistake number -1 for finding good music.

by Ice Cream Jonsey » Mon Jan 31, 2005 1:26 am

Furthermore, has there ever been a more self-indulgent band that had absolutely no listenable songs than "Reel Big Fish"? Wow are these shits satisfied with themselves.

"The Kids Don't Like It" came up on this station. They've got to be fucking kidding me. The kids don't like ska! Oh, not ska! The reason certainly isn't because you're simply a SHITTY BAND, it's because these kids today don't appreciate brass instruments or made-up songs about lesbians from guys who look like they haven't touched a woman since clawing their way out of their fucking birthing canals.

Blaming your audience is the last, desperate ploy of the terminally untalented.

by Ice Cream Jonsey » Mon Jan 31, 2005 12:54 am

In other news, I had my headphones on the punk-pop (which is neither punk nor popular) tonight and heard a female punk-pop band for the first time. "The Eyeliners." For Christ's sake they're called the fawking "Eyeliners."

OK, I hate to say it, but it's time for the genre to die. I was pretty much the only person who still cared, but still. Thanks and last ones to leave please lock up and give the Something Corporate guy some socks.

by Worm » Fri Jan 28, 2005 2:25 pm

Fuck! I even knew this shit. A few books, torrent sites, usenet groups, and allmusic.com and you'll know you ever need to know about punk rock.

by Vitriola » Fri Jan 28, 2005 12:04 pm

Knuckles the CLown wrote:Also, that fat bag of fopping goo called Jack Horkheimer used to be known as the Star Hustler. He changed his schickt to Star Gazer. Coincidentaly the name change took place at the same time he became unwatchable. My guess is the wanks at PBS thought Star Hustler was to edgy for their target viewing audience of corpses, fish and yours truly.
I used to love that show. it was on for 12 minutes or so after a nature show that went for less than it's alloted time. It was cool when--
Bugs wrote:REO Speeddealer
BWA-HAAAAAHAAAAAAAA

by Bugs » Fri Jan 28, 2005 10:50 am

REO Speeddealer

by Ice Cream Jonsey » Fri Jan 28, 2005 10:34 am

Bugs wrote:Translation: "When I was a douchey teenager, Beaver seemed like an excellent name for a band. Now that I didn't Make It and am destined for the life of a cubicle monkey, I have no choice but to criticize the stupid band names of douchey teenagers who made something out of themselves."

The Hilton Psycho Killers would've been better.
COME ON BUGS!! What is your band called? I will bump this thread EVERY DAY till we find out.

"I will bring this to your door." -- Jason Bourne

(Actually, you probably rock, either currently or in a previous musical venture, and I would like to listen to MP3s if you had any. But because this is the Internet, I will become increasingly more abrasive as time drags on, up until the whole of the conversation is shocking accusations, unflattering impressions, and cruel jibes.)

by Ice Cream Jonsey » Fri Jan 28, 2005 10:06 am

I like the idea of a guy who can hustle stars out of something. What do stars have, except hydrogen, helium and fury? I know not, but I slept well knowing there was a guy driving the best bargains for us earthlings.

by Knuckles the CLown » Thu Jan 27, 2005 11:27 pm

One of my kids was in a band called "Star Gazer" that is until a certain Jack Horkheimer showed up demanding tribute.

That's why bands call themsleves stupid shit like "Pork Spliced Meat Hammer" "Jaded Chimp Kewl" and "Garth Brooks". You come up with the gayest name possible to avoid confilct.

Also, that fat bag of fopping goo called Jack Horkheimer used to be known as the Star Hustler. He changed his schickt to Star Gazer. Coincidentaly the name change took place at the same time he became unwatchable. My guess is the wanks at PBS thought Star Hustler was to edgy for their target viewing audience of corpses, fish and yours truly.

by Ice Cream Jonsey » Thu Jan 27, 2005 9:44 am

I have an office, not a cube, thank you very much.

And what is this shit? We're ragging on our dearly departer Beaver all of a sudden?

What is your band called, Bugs? I still maintain that "Beaver" is an excellent name.

by Bugs » Thu Jan 27, 2005 8:43 am

Translation: "When I was a douchey teenager, Beaver seemed like an excellent name for a band. Now that I didn't Make It and am destined for the life of a cubicle monkey, I have no choice but to criticize the stupid band names of douchey teenagers who made something out of themselves."

The Hilton Psycho Killers would've been better.

by Ice Cream Jonsey » Thu Jan 27, 2005 12:52 am

"Beaver."

In 1992 this was a very good name.

by Bugs » Wed Jan 26, 2005 10:43 pm

What the fuck was your band called? The Hilton Psychokillers or some shit?

by Ice Cream Jonsey » Wed Jan 26, 2005 6:06 pm

Additionally, I think today is the day where we officially ran out of names for bands.

They've been stupid for a very long while now, but now bands are picking names that one doesn't even think is their name. At all.

Oh well! Someone will eventually be GangofFour182, so I guess till then I shall wait and watch.

by itgirl » Wed Jan 26, 2005 5:13 pm

you guys rock my world.

by Vitriola » Wed Jan 26, 2005 11:55 am

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/24/arts/ ... 4gang.html

After Postpunk? Post-Postpunk by the Gang of Four
By JON PARELES

Published: January 24, 2005

LONDON, Jan. 23 - Clank. Clank. Clank. Clank. Jon King, lead singer of the Gang of Four, was methodically bashing a metal rod against a microwave oven that he found at a recycling dump. Each blow added a dent; paint chips went flying.

It wasn't petulance; it was the introduction to "He'd Send in the Army," a bleak, brittle song from the Gang of Four's 1981 album "Solid Gold." Stubbornly slow, with Hugo Burnham's drums, and Dave Allen's bass stopping and starting, and Andy Gill's guitar shrieking across the spaces, it is one of the band's most rigorous and unforgiving songs, and one of its favorites.

On Friday night at the Montague Arms, a packed pub in the scruffy New Cross neighborhood of South London, about 200 latter-day punk fans greeted the song with a curiosity that quickly turned into cheers. The four men, now in their late 40's, were playing their first show together since 1981.

They immediately reclaimed the meticulous ferocity that made the Gang of Four one of postpunk's most influential bands. Its old blend of the cerebral and the visceral was in full force as Mr. King sang lyrics like "Fornication makes you happy/No escape from society" with hips pumping and hands in the air. Afterward, one sweaty patron in his 20's said, "I hadn't realized how much all the bands I like sound like them."

It's exactly the right moment for the Gang of Four to reappear. The sound of postpunk - the smart underground rock from the late 1970's and early 80's that followed through on punk's iconoclasm, noise and eccentricity - has made a startling comeback. Though few postpunk bands breached the Top 40, they left their mark on musicians a generation younger. In Britain and the United States, bands like Franz Ferdinand, the Rapture, Radio 4 and Bloc Party have latched on to the jumpy, clattery beats and combative guitars of the Gang of Four and its contemporaries. Members of the Gang of Four hear themselves echoed in their children's album collections.

Reunited postpunk bands like the Pixies and Mission of Burma have found eager young audiences on tour, and now the Gang of Four is headed for the road. "The goal is to be as incredibly intense as we were the first time around," Mr. Allen said. "What we have to do is leave them with their tongues hanging out again. If not, we don't retain our authority in the musical canon. There's no excuse that we're 23 years older."

Mr. Burnham added, "I realized that we could do it because we all still had our hair."

This week the Gang of Four is playing five shows at 2,000-capacity clubs around Britain, and it starts a United States tour with an appearance in California at the Coachella Valley Music Festival, which runs from April 30 to May 1. Last year the Pixies probably set the gold standard for reunion tours by barnstorming festivals and by selling out 3,000-seaters for eight months. The Gang of Four's music was far more ascetic than the Pixies' songs, and its reunion is more modest, with the band members returning to day jobs between stretches of touring. But if the band's first show was any indication, it should galvanize a new audience.

Formed in 1977, the Gang of Four came up with what would soon be called punk-funk.

The band was conceived by Mr. Gill and Mr. King, high school friends and fellow art students at Leeds University. They visited New York in the summers of 1976 and 1977 as punk, primitivism and art-rock were conspiring at CBGB. "It suggested the possibility that anything could happen," Mr. Gill said. (The band's sardonic name came from the radical leaders in China who fomented the Cultural Revolution. These days Mr. Gill uses a cigarette lighter shaped like Mao's Little Red Book.)

The music Mr. Gill wanted to make was like paintings he was doing at the time: precise black grids with blotches of paint smeared across them. "It would be the juxtaposition of tight, fixed patterns that were very physically energizing and relentless, which would largely be supplied by the bass and drums, and the guitar, which would sometimes completely go along with that, and sometimes not," he said. "If you took one of these elements out and made it ordinary, the whole thing would lose its authenticity. Every part of it had to be radical. It was building musical tension in a precise way."

by Bugs » Wed Jan 26, 2005 11:22 am

Gang of Four

Punk band?

by itgirl » Wed Jan 26, 2005 8:28 am

Ok, so I have a new job once I pass the FBI background check, which I think I will because the whole arrest was made with an alternate name and stuff, and the cop ended up just driving me to the Krispy Kreme on Ponce, I think he was sorry for me because I had the whole broken ankles thing and I showed him my cookie and I was wearing light-up 9 inch platform shoes which fascinated him and anyway I was skinny and white in the fat black crack whore neighborhood, and so anyway my friend and I are curious about my soon-to-be new boss who is like my age, early 30s, because he won't give up any personal details, so we've made up some for him, i.e. frequents fetish clubs, was a young assasin for the KGB, etc. And since I'll be working out of Atlanta and he's in DC I won't be seeing much of him and I must know all I can know.

So what we did find out is that he flew to Europe ("somewhere") this weekend to see a reunion concert for a punk/alternative band and the mangled name passed on to me was "Group of Four."

I must know the name of the group.

Help.

Top