Wow I would pay many thousands to get Jonathan richman to sign me his first modern lovers. You have missed a few albums but a very nice video: I really liked it
My #1 is "The Singles" by Bikini Kill (now on blue vinyl!). Joan Jett produced, plays guitar and sings on the first 3 tracks. A melodic blast of righteous anger and passion.
The Soft boys is some of the best music on earth ,I have to say .Being there and at that time and place the Buzzcocks , The Undertones and the Dead Boys plus other more underground punk bands ruled the clubs back then.Most of the albums shown are more mainstream punks and I own most of them. ' Nice Video '
That must have been an amazing time! Yes, I'm working on expanding my punk collection, which is missing a lot of the bands that you mentioned. Thanks for watching!
As an ex-Soft Boy (though not on the Underwater Moonlight album) it's good to see the band featured here. What is remarkable about Hitchcock and the Boys, is that the band made a much bigger impact in the US than here in the UK.
Wow, this made my day! Thank you for all the incredible music! I think the music of the Soft Boys is brilliant and Robyn Hitchcock is one helluva songwriter! Which era of the band were you involved in? Thanks for watching!
Double Nickels is a great LP. The title is a reference to going 55mph (double nickels) on the 10 freeway (the dime). Minutemen lived in San Pedro and did gigs at the Anti Club and Al's Bar in LA.
Maybe I missed it, but no Dead Boys or Dead Kennedys?. Also the UK Subs have 3 great Punk albums starting in the late 70's. The Ruts, 999, and The Dickies are all pretty good as well. I did enjoy your video and all of your selections. 🤓
Thanks for checking it out! I've since gotten a 999 album and an X album. Punk albums are really hard to find and usually pretty expensive when I've found them. Thank you for the recommendations! I don't listen to punk as much as I did when I was younger, but have been getting back into it. I'm more into the '60s punk or proto-punk heavy garage stuff, but will be sure to check out The Dickies and The Ruts.
@@PluralofvinylisvinylsThey do not. But what was cool is that they toured the States in '79-'80. Got to see them in Raleigh, NC back then, and they recruited a bunch of fans with those tours..
Yeah, I don't have that one on vinyl yet. Like I said, my punk collection is still missing a lot of pieces, but I'll get there eventually! Thanks for watching!
@@giantorangerecordsHere are a few bands that demand attention Wire, New York Dolls, Dead Kennedys, The Saints, X (Australian band), X (U.S. band), Husker Du, Black Flag, Descendents, Pere Ubu, Gang Of Four, Patti Smith, Dead Boys, Fear, Crass, Joy Division, Fugazi, Social Distortion, The Birthday Party, Adolescents, The Slits, Misfits, X-Ray Spex, Flipper, The Jam, Buzzcocks, Siouxsie And The Banshees, The Undertones, The Ruts, Bad Brains, The Dictators, The Real Kids, Suicide, Radio Birdman, Stiff Little Fingers, Mission Of Burma and many more.
@@ianmcleish6113 Wire is great, love The Saints, saw X (from Los Angeles) a few years ago and they were great, never could get into Husker Du, love Descendents and Fugazi, just heard Adolescents recently and will be looking for them, I have some stuff by The Jam but they seem a little more Mod to me, wanna find some Siouxsie and Undertones, and gosh there are so many, this is a great big genre and geez these records are really hard to find because everyone wants them and once they get them they are keepers.
I’m going to add some Canadian content for you to check out: Teenage Head from Hamilton Ontario 1970’s and Dayglo Abortions from British Columbia 1980’s will blow your wig back 🔥🔥🔥 Also check out the punk rock mockumentary Hard Core Logo from Canadian director Bruce MacDonald you’ll love it I think you can still find it on TH-cam Cheers from the Great White North
I discovered Angry Samoans the same day I discovered Surf Punks. Just haven’t come across any Angry Samoans vinyl. Punk vinyl is hard to find and expensive. I suppose folks hang on to their punk music. But I’ll track down their records someday.
I've heard Wire's Pink Flag and love a few songs on there along with some tunes from their other albums. It's been a minute since I listened to X-Ray Specs and I'd love to check out the Adverts. Still don't recall ever seeing those anywhere on vinyl. This punk stuff is hard to find. What I showed here has taken me 20+ years to find, and it barely scratches the surface.
Oh God no....another list like this. The Modern Lovers are not a punk band, The Stooges are proto punk. The B 52's are not punk, BLONDIE IS NOT PUNK. Television is NOT punk Elvis Costello's only album that could remotely be called punk is This Years Model, The Soft Boys are not punk THE PRETENDERS ARE NOT PUNK......please you're killing me. Joan Jett is rock not punk. Never heard of the Body Snatchers. Surf Punks and Mojo Nixon I'm unfamiliar with. How you ever came up with Scream I don't know given your other choices but they are one of the greatest hardcore bands ever. Unfortunately its their debut, Still Screaming that is their punk masterpiece.
@@willieluncheonette5843 Old Man Yells At Cloud! oh God, another one of those “this IS punk, this IS NOT punk” folks. Just curious, were you at CGGB’s regularly in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s? I wasn’t, but I know people who were, and they told me Blondie, Talking Heads and B-52s were just as punk as the Ramones and any of the other bands that played there. It was entire movement and there was a togetherness to it with all those bands. But hey, you’re entitled to your opinion. You can split hairs between punk and new wave. Punk is an attitude, not how hardcore something sounds.
@@giantorangerecords I was there at CBGB in 1975, have hosted radio shows on punk, have written about punk, have given punk lessons in my apartment etc. Those CBGB bands you mentioned all flew under the punk banner because punk was the next "big thing" Of course, Rolling Stone magazine and newspapers and the media all lumped them all into punk bands but THEIR MUSIC IS NOT PUNK!! If you want to say it's all punk attitude and the sound of the music doesn't count, then go ahead. Its your choice of course. Here is a part of an article I had posted on an audiophile site on the top 15 punk albums . Rocket to Russia: Released November 12, 1977. Reached #69 on the U.S. charts. Ramones formed in Forest Hills, Queens in 1974. There is a video on TH-cam of them playing at CBGB's that year and an argument breaks out over which song to play next. They already had their signature style in 1974 for God's sake! So please let's not have any more fighting over who was the first punk band, Ramones or Sex Pistols. I saw them play in 1975 and years later I wrote. " Saw them at CBGB's and was blown away by their power. What a wall of sound! What a rush! Would have loved to talk to them after their set but their leather jackets gave me pause. The only other people who wore leather jackets at that time in the East Village were the Hell's Angels and I had already had an experience with one of them near their clubhouse on East 3rd Street. Not really a big deal, but after that I decided not to start up any conversations with them. So, my fear got the best of me and I missed an opportunity to talk to the greatest band in the world in the mid 70's. To this day I play their records and they remain one of my favorite bands." For most people who weren't around punk music and the Ramones at the outset, it is difficult to imagine the effect they had. Mary Harron interviewed them for the first issue of Punk magazine in January, 1976. This will give you some idea of what it was like. "When I first saw the Ramones I couldn't believe people were doing this. The dumb brattiness ‘Beat on the brat with a baseball bat.' There was this real cartoon element, and yet you're in a real place, you want to do something real, so you're in a situation where they could be real, they could be genuinely delinquent. It had an edge to it: they looked dumb-smart, smart-dumb." From the Ramones' press kit in June, 1975: " Their songs are brief, to the point, and every one a potential hit single...The Ramones all originate from Forest Hills and kids who grew up there become either musicians, degenerates or dentists. The Ramones are a little of each. Their sound is not unlike a fast drill on a rear molar." When their eponymous debut LP came out all my punk friends bought it and played it to death. Believe me, we had never heard anything like it. It was brutal and undeniable. Listening at stun levels we were in awe of its relentless buzzsaw power. In light of hardcore (the louder, faster, more aggressive music that came after punk and spawned slam dancing and stage diving) Ramones songs now seem almost mid-tempo. But I've read people at their live shows were literally holding onto their tables when they played--it was such a potent force coming at you. Choosing a best between the first three Ramones' albums has always been difficult for me. I must have heard them all fifty times and for this write-up I listened to all three twice again. And you know what? It’s still difficult. Their debut, Leave Home and Rocket To Russia all contain loads of great songs. How to pick just one? It would have been easy to pick their debut. That would have put everything neatly in chronological order, but this is not the 15 most important punk albums, it is the 15 best. There are two major differences that for me narrowed it down to just two. The mix on their first album is different from a more conventional one found on the others--Johnny's guitar is in the right channel and Dee Dee's bass is in the left. Some listeners might like this, others might not. It does have its perks. When I was giving punk lessons in my apartment, I could turn the knobs on my amp to isolate the two. The kids I was teaching loved hearing how skillful these two musicians were. Man, those guys could play! Let me tell you, hearing "I Don't Wanna Go Down To The Basement" like this was a joyful thing. Secondly, some of the best songs are faster and longer on the next two albums. So my two preferences narrowed it down to either Leave Home or Rocket To Russia. These are not 1 and 2 in my book; they are 1 and 1A. I would have chosen both of them, but decided in the end to pick only one album from each band. Actually, any of the first three LP's would make a fine choice on any best list. I nearly choked at the prospect of leaving off an album that contains "Glad To See You Go," "Gimme Gimme Shock Treatment," "Carbona Not Glue," "Pinhead," "Commando" and "You Should Never have Opened That Door," but that's just what I did. Rocket To Russia has great songs too, leading off with "Cretin Hop" (what an attack they had!) Then there's the classic "Rockaway Beach" (which reached #66 on the U.S, charts), and "Sheena is a Punk Rocker" (which reached #81). Colin Abrahall, singer in the great British punk band G.B.H. has said that hearing "Sheena is a Punk Rocker" at age 15 on the radio was a huge influence in his life. But more on that when we come to G.B.H. "Locket Love" is a sweet little bubblegum song disguising a murder. "We're A Happy Family" has just about the wittiest, funniest, pop culture lyrics ever in a song and "Teenage Lobotomy" is not far behind. I think the album has just a smidge more power than Leave Home, there are fewer songs under two minutes and Johnny Ramone's signature lightning downstrokes unleashing pure punk power are better showcased. Rocket To Russia is my choice to start our quest for the top 15 punk LP's. Here are three songs for your listening pleasure:
@@giantorangerecords Thanks for your kind reply. Roots reggae was at its apex at that time too and punk and reggae are just the best combination. IMO of course.
Some great albums mentioned here.
As far as Devo is concerned, I'll take Duty Now for the Future every time.
@@toddhill7483 ok cool, I’ll check that one out soon!
Wow I would pay many thousands to get Jonathan richman to sign me his first modern lovers. You have missed a few albums but a very nice video: I really liked it
@@zestyut1344 it was pretty wild! They typo makes it so much better! Yes, my punk collection could use some work. Thanks for stopping by!
My #1 is "The Singles" by Bikini Kill (now on blue vinyl!). Joan Jett produced, plays guitar and sings on the first 3 tracks. A melodic blast of righteous anger and passion.
Very nice!
The Depressions are my favorite band!!
@@kenandrews9754 sounds cool, will def check them out!
The Soft boys is some of the best music on earth ,I have to say .Being there and at that time and place the Buzzcocks , The Undertones and the Dead Boys plus other more underground punk bands ruled the clubs back then.Most of the albums shown are more mainstream punks and I own most of them. ' Nice Video '
That must have been an amazing time! Yes, I'm working on expanding my punk collection, which is missing a lot of the bands that you mentioned. Thanks for watching!
As an ex-Soft Boy (though not on the Underwater Moonlight album) it's good to see the band featured here. What is remarkable about Hitchcock and the Boys, is that the band made a much bigger impact in the US than here in the UK.
Wow, this made my day! Thank you for all the incredible music! I think the music of the Soft Boys is brilliant and Robyn Hitchcock is one helluva songwriter! Which era of the band were you involved in? Thanks for watching!
Double Nickels is a great LP. The title is a reference to going 55mph (double nickels) on the 10 freeway (the dime). Minutemen lived in San Pedro and did gigs at the Anti Club and Al's Bar in LA.
Maybe I missed it, but no Dead Boys or Dead Kennedys?. Also the UK Subs have 3 great Punk albums starting in the late 70's. The Ruts, 999, and The Dickies are all pretty good as well. I did enjoy your video and all of your selections. 🤓
999 doesn’t get enough love
Thanks for checking it out! I've since gotten a 999 album and an X album. Punk albums are really hard to find and usually pretty expensive when I've found them. Thank you for the recommendations! I don't listen to punk as much as I did when I was younger, but have been getting back into it. I'm more into the '60s punk or proto-punk heavy garage stuff, but will be sure to check out The Dickies and The Ruts.
@@PluralofvinylisvinylsThey do not. But what was cool is that they toured the States in '79-'80. Got to see them in Raleigh, NC back then, and they recruited a bunch of fans with those tours..
@@4tuneagent one of their songs was played in the miniseries, ‘Too old to die young’ fairly recently.
"Punks Not Dead " Bro ... cool imformative video
Thanks for checking it out!
No Raw Power or Nevermind The Bullocks?
you forgot Never mind the bollocks. great video beyond that though! keep it up!
Yeah, I don't have that one on vinyl yet. Like I said, my punk collection is still missing a lot of pieces, but I'll get there eventually! Thanks for watching!
@@giantorangerecordsHere are a few bands that demand attention Wire, New York Dolls, Dead Kennedys, The Saints, X (Australian band), X (U.S. band), Husker Du, Black Flag, Descendents, Pere Ubu, Gang Of Four, Patti Smith, Dead Boys, Fear, Crass, Joy Division, Fugazi, Social Distortion, The Birthday Party, Adolescents, The Slits, Misfits, X-Ray Spex, Flipper, The Jam, Buzzcocks, Siouxsie And The Banshees, The Undertones, The Ruts, Bad Brains, The Dictators, The Real Kids, Suicide, Radio Birdman, Stiff Little Fingers, Mission Of Burma and many more.
@@ianmcleish6113 Wire is great, love The Saints, saw X (from Los Angeles) a few years ago and they were great, never could get into Husker Du, love Descendents and Fugazi, just heard Adolescents recently and will be looking for them, I have some stuff by The Jam but they seem a little more Mod to me, wanna find some Siouxsie and Undertones, and gosh there are so many, this is a great big genre and geez these records are really hard to find because everyone wants them and once they get them they are keepers.
I’m going to add some Canadian content for you to check out: Teenage Head from Hamilton Ontario 1970’s and Dayglo Abortions from British Columbia 1980’s will blow your wig back 🔥🔥🔥
Also check out the punk rock mockumentary Hard Core Logo from Canadian director Bruce MacDonald you’ll love it I think you can still find it on TH-cam
Cheers from the Great White North
Nice! Thanks for the recommendations, will check them out! Teenage Head has some rockin' Chuck Berry kinda riffs, and I love punk versions of that!
No Angry Samoans? That's not going to make them happy.
I discovered Angry Samoans the same day I discovered Surf Punks. Just haven’t come across any Angry Samoans vinyl. Punk vinyl is hard to find and expensive. I suppose folks hang on to their punk music. But I’ll track down their records someday.
You need pink flag by wire and crossing the red sea by the adverts, oh, and germ free adolescent, xray spex.
I've heard Wire's Pink Flag and love a few songs on there along with some tunes from their other albums. It's been a minute since I listened to X-Ray Specs and I'd love to check out the Adverts. Still don't recall ever seeing those anywhere on vinyl. This punk stuff is hard to find. What I showed here has taken me 20+ years to find, and it barely scratches the surface.
Oh God no....another list like this. The Modern Lovers are not a punk band, The Stooges are proto punk. The B 52's are not punk, BLONDIE IS NOT PUNK. Television is NOT punk Elvis Costello's only album that could remotely be called punk is This Years Model, The Soft Boys are not punk THE PRETENDERS ARE NOT PUNK......please you're killing me. Joan Jett is rock not punk. Never heard of the Body Snatchers. Surf Punks and Mojo Nixon I'm unfamiliar with.
How you ever came up with Scream I don't know given your other choices but they are one of the greatest hardcore bands ever. Unfortunately its their debut, Still Screaming that is their punk masterpiece.
@@willieluncheonette5843 Old Man Yells At Cloud! oh God, another one of those “this IS punk, this IS NOT punk” folks. Just curious, were you at CGGB’s regularly in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s? I wasn’t, but I know people who were, and they told me Blondie, Talking Heads and B-52s were just as punk as the Ramones and any of the other bands that played there. It was entire movement and there was a togetherness to it with all those bands. But hey, you’re entitled to your opinion. You can split hairs between punk and new wave. Punk is an attitude, not how hardcore something sounds.
@@giantorangerecords I was there at CBGB in 1975, have hosted radio shows on punk, have written about punk, have given punk lessons in my apartment etc. Those CBGB bands you mentioned all flew under the punk banner because punk was the next "big thing" Of course, Rolling Stone magazine and newspapers and the media all lumped them all into punk bands but THEIR MUSIC IS NOT PUNK!! If you want to say it's all punk attitude and the sound of the music doesn't count, then go ahead. Its your choice of course.
Here is a part of an article I had posted on an audiophile site on the top 15 punk albums
.
Rocket to Russia: Released November 12, 1977. Reached #69 on the U.S. charts.
Ramones formed in Forest Hills, Queens in 1974. There is a video on TH-cam of them playing at CBGB's that year and an argument breaks out over which song to play next. They already had their signature style in 1974 for God's sake! So please let's not have any more fighting over who was the first punk band, Ramones or Sex Pistols. I saw them play in 1975 and years later I wrote. " Saw them at CBGB's and was blown away by their power. What a wall of sound! What a rush! Would have loved to talk to them after their set but their leather jackets gave me pause. The only other people who wore leather jackets at that time in the East Village were the Hell's Angels and I had already had an experience with one of them near their clubhouse on East 3rd Street. Not really a big deal, but after that I decided not to start up any conversations with them. So, my fear got the best of me and I missed an opportunity to talk to the greatest band in the world in the mid 70's. To this day I play their records and they remain one of my favorite bands."
For most people who weren't around punk music and the Ramones at the outset, it is difficult to imagine the effect they had. Mary Harron interviewed them for the first issue of Punk magazine in January, 1976. This will give you some idea of what it was like. "When I first saw the Ramones I couldn't believe people were doing this. The dumb brattiness ‘Beat on the brat with a baseball bat.' There was this real cartoon element, and yet you're in a real place, you want to do something real, so you're in a situation where they could be real, they could be genuinely delinquent. It had an edge to it: they looked dumb-smart, smart-dumb."
From the Ramones' press kit in June, 1975: " Their songs are brief, to the point, and every one a potential hit single...The Ramones all originate from Forest Hills and kids who grew up there become either musicians, degenerates or dentists. The Ramones are a little of each. Their sound is not unlike a fast drill on a rear molar."
When their eponymous debut LP came out all my punk friends bought it and played it to death. Believe me, we had never heard anything like it. It was brutal and undeniable. Listening at stun levels we were in awe of its relentless buzzsaw power. In light of hardcore (the louder, faster, more aggressive music that came after punk and spawned slam dancing and stage diving) Ramones songs now seem almost mid-tempo. But I've read people at their live shows were literally holding onto their tables when they played--it was such a potent force coming at you.
Choosing a best between the first three Ramones' albums has always been difficult for me. I must have heard them all fifty times and for this write-up I listened to all three twice again. And you know what? It’s still difficult. Their debut, Leave Home and Rocket To Russia all contain loads of great songs. How to pick just one? It would have been easy to pick their debut. That would have put everything neatly in chronological order, but this is not the 15 most important punk albums, it is the 15 best. There are two major differences that for me narrowed it down to just two. The mix on their first album is different from a more conventional one found on the others--Johnny's guitar is in the right channel and Dee Dee's bass is in the left. Some listeners might like this, others might not. It does have its perks. When I was giving punk lessons in my apartment, I could turn the knobs on my amp to isolate the two. The kids I was teaching loved hearing how skillful these two musicians were. Man, those guys could play! Let me tell you, hearing "I Don't Wanna Go Down To The Basement" like this was a joyful thing. Secondly, some of the best songs are faster and longer on the next two albums.
So my two preferences narrowed it down to either Leave Home or Rocket To Russia. These are not 1 and 2 in my book; they are 1 and 1A. I would have chosen both of them, but decided in the end to pick only one album from each band. Actually, any of the first three LP's would make a fine choice on any best list.
I nearly choked at the prospect of leaving off an album that contains "Glad To See You Go," "Gimme Gimme Shock Treatment," "Carbona Not Glue," "Pinhead," "Commando" and "You Should Never have Opened That Door," but that's just what I did. Rocket To Russia has great songs too, leading off with "Cretin Hop" (what an attack they had!) Then there's the classic "Rockaway Beach" (which reached #66 on the U.S, charts), and "Sheena is a Punk Rocker" (which reached #81). Colin Abrahall, singer in the great British punk band G.B.H. has said that hearing "Sheena is a Punk Rocker" at age 15 on the radio was a huge influence in his life. But more on that when we come to G.B.H. "Locket Love" is a sweet little bubblegum song disguising a murder. "We're A Happy Family" has just about the wittiest, funniest, pop culture lyrics ever in a song and "Teenage Lobotomy" is not far behind. I think the album has just a smidge more power than Leave Home, there are fewer songs under two minutes and Johnny Ramone's signature lightning downstrokes unleashing pure punk power are better showcased. Rocket To Russia is my choice to start our quest for the top 15 punk LP's.
Here are three songs for your listening pleasure:
@@willieluncheonette5843 Thanks for clarifying that! I really enjoyed reading this, thanks for sharing! It must've been an amazing time.
@@giantorangerecords Thanks for your kind reply. Roots reggae was at its apex at that time too and punk and reggae are just the best combination. IMO of course.