Thursday, November 28, 2019
Punk Era Essays - Punk Rock Genres, Punk Rock, Proto-punk
  Punk Era  "Sex, drugs, and rock and roll" was the rallying cry for a movement that  changed American culture forever. Rock and roll first startled the American  scene in the mid-1950's, but no one then could have predicted the remarkable  vitality and staying power of this new music. The early tradition of rock has  gone through many transitions. Provocative and outlandish stage attire and  behavior have been an important resource since the birth of rock and roll.    Decades following the birth of rock and roll, many have witnessed a steady ever  changing parade of hair styles, costumes, gestures and props. As the level of  tolerance and acceptance grew, rock stars adopted more bizarre and shocking  images. It is in this context that "punk" rock, seen by some as a startling  new direction in the late 1970's must be considered. Rock music achieved a new  respectability and power at the same time (Ward, Stokes, Tucker, Rock of Ages,    547). Punk was rock's most notable attempt in the late 1970's to inject  angry, rebellious, risk taking notations into the music. The musical style  called punk rock developed in the United States out of raw and energetic music  played by the garage bands of the mid-sixties. These bands were mainly teenagers  playing basic guitar chords, and failing away at drums and cymbals in their own  garages. This resulted in sounds that were rough, raw, and musically  undisciplined, which expressed their interests and brought music to their level  (Charlton, Rock Music, 204). Given that the greatest garage bands could barley  play, we may assume not only that virtuosity has nothing to do the form, but  also that the Utopian dream of every man and artist can come true right here, in  our suburban land of opportunity-- the ultimate proof that rock and roll is the  most democratic and all-American of art forms (Miller, History of Rock &    Roll, 261). While teenage garage bands were becoming a hit and making it onto  the pop charts, slightly older, artistically trained but jagged musicians were  writing poetry and singing about urban decay. This artistic expression was not  the first, this sort of idea far artistic expression had been at the root of  several literary, artistic, and musical styles in the twentieth century,  including the dadaist movement and the Beat movement (Charlton, Rock Music,    204). The dadaists, a group of artists from Switzerland, expressed their views  of madness and chaos exemplified by World War I. The dadaists saw this kind of  devastation and destruction of human life that took place during the Was, and  expressed their views by fashioning artwork out of trash or other material put  together in a chaotic form. The same fear of the potential human animal had for  violence, along with the awesome power of modern-day weapons, influenced many  later artists to share the concerns and emulate the work of the dadaists  (Charlton, Rock Music, 204). The Beat poets and writers of the fifties, directed  their feelings of anger towards society in their poetry and writings. The manner  in which the Beats openly confronted the problems that most people ignored, as  well as the dada, influenced desire to produce an anti-art to express the belief  that society had lost all sense of value was at the philosophical root of the  punk movement, which eventually spawned a style of music (Charlton, Rock music,    204). The grandest example of a risky, aggressive, cynical yet ambitious  sensibility worming it way into the rock world was the man many called a  godfather of punk: Lou Reed (Ward, Stokes, Tucker, Rock of Ages, 547). Lou Reed  stands as crucial figure in 1970s rock. Reed wrote poetry about street life,  prostitution, and drugs in New York. He was Classically trained to play the  piano, but felt he could not express what he had to say about society playing    Mozart (Charlton, Rock Music, 204). Reed combined controversial common places  with a profound cynicism to yield music. Reed maintained a highly adversarial  relationship with his audience. He would insult them one minute and challenge  them the next. Reed's influence on others, good or bad, can be heard in the  work of other rockers, such as David Bowie and The New York Dolls. Before there  was Lou Reed as a solo artist, there was the Velvet Underground, a band that in  the midst of the utopian, freedom-loving, feel-good 1960's, proffered  apocalypse, addiction, and feel bad. The Velvet Underground left traditional  rock and roll styles aside to experiment with new forms of expression. The    Velvet Underground consisted of Lou Reed, Sterling Morrision, John Cale,    
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