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Tim Booth recommended Pink Flag by Wire in Music (curated)

 
Pink Flag by Wire
Pink Flag by Wire
1977 | Punk
9.0 (3 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"After Patti, I sold all my record collection because I felt I couldn't have any music around me that didn't do something to me like Horses did. For about six months, I had no other records, except Lou Reed's Berlin as I felt that was comparably powerful and emotive. After those six months, punk started. I thought punk was fun and it reached the anger in me that needed to come out. I had been sent away to school; being sent to a boarding school was like being sent away to prison by parents who apparently loved you. So, I had a lot of anger and distress at this strange turn of events and I started going to punk gigs. The first gig I organised to see was the White Riot tour with The Jam, Buzzcocks, Subway Sect and The Slits. It turned into a bit of a riot and we were these schoolboys in our uniforms with one teacher to chaperone us, and suddenly chairs and tables were flying through the air. After that, I was banned from organising any more trips to punk gigs. So, even though I was banned, I decided to get the school magazine to employ me as a journalist. I would try to interview the first local punk band that came down to Shrewsbury. That happened to be Wire, who were a fascinating band. I think Pink Flag is one of the only punk albums that has stood the test of time. It is a remarkable piece of music. There are songs that last 45 seconds and others that last two or three minutes. It is quite a feat to pull off a 45-second song and make it work. Wire were wonderful to interview – intelligent and articulate – and their music was brutal and yet humorous at the same time, which was a very odd thing for punk. To call an album Pink Flag, after the label that the Nazis put on gay people in the camps, was an incredibly brave thing to do in such homophobic times. Punk, although liberating in many aspects, was pretty homophobic until Tom Robinson came along and confronted it directly. Pink Flag was a miracle of creativity in these short, harsh little songs. Even to this day, when I listen to it, I think it is a masterpiece. I think it would have influenced a band like Pixies. I don't know if Pixies ever heard Wire, but I would be very surprised if they hadn't."

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John Lydon recommended The Raincoats by The Raincoats in Music (curated)

 
The Raincoats by The Raincoats
The Raincoats by The Raincoats
1979 | Punk
6.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"I cared deeply about what we were doing with the Pistols and it was hurtful to be put in a ‘punk’ package alongside lesser mortals,” Rotten explained. “But the Raincoats offered a completely different way of doing things, as did X-Ray Spex and all the books about punk have failed to realise that these women were involved for no other reason than that they were good and original. “It’s a million miles away from the blancmange that is Green Day, where you have a Johnny Rotten first verse, a Billy Idol chorus and a Sham 69-second verse. Preposterous"

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Beth Ditto recommended ASouthBronxStory by ESG in Music (curated)

 
ASouthBronxStory by ESG
ASouthBronxStory by ESG
(0 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"They're so great. I've heard this, and I don't know if it's true, but they are one of the most sampled bands in hip hop. They are so fucking ahead of their time too. They're still together too, that's so cool. What is there to say? Innovative. Ahead of their time. Powerful. From The Bronx. Three black women, a family affair. It was punk. They were one of those groups respected by everybody and could acknowledge that they're one of the most groundbreaking bands for them. They really changed the sound of things. Without them I don't think there would have been a bass-driven punk, new-wave scene. I like to think of people in the New York punk scene going to see ESG shows and thinking it was really good. At dance parties if you put on an ESG song people will lose their fucking minds. It's one of the best things to watch ever. "

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Suggs recommended Clash by The Clash in Music (curated)

 
Clash by The Clash
Clash by The Clash
1977 | Rock
8.6 (5 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"I wasn’t really a punk. I was about 16 when that album came out. But I was living above Maples, a carpet shop near Tottenham Court Road, and it was right by Capital Radio, and I remember suddenly these 14-foot letters appeared in spraypaint on Capital‘s windows, ‘THE CLASH’! And there was a thing in Melody Maker, where I heard about this club called The Roxy at Covent Garden, so I went down there. Me and my friends already looked a bit skinhead-y, suedehead-y, and I had this mohair suit, but the connection was that the punks had straight trousers in this world of flares and Kevin Keegan hairdos. Nobody was wearing Vivienne Westwood clothing: there was a guy in a dinner jacket painted pink, and someone else in a boiler suit they’d made themselves, and it was really DIY. The tribalism between mods and skinheads and punks hadn’t really started at that time, and it hadn‘t fractured into a million pieces yet. In 1977, if you had short hair, and you were prepared to have someone call you a fucking cunt in your ear for it, you were in. I saw a band called Eater at the Roxy, whose average age I later found out was 14. And I first heard The Clash’s ‘1977’ and ‘White Riot’ on record there. I felt like I was at the advent of something new. I liked punk, and I liked the attitude, but by 1978 we had our own thing going. But I always had a soft spot for The Clash, because they had the reggae thing, like us, and there was a bit of soul in their music, for want of a better word. Joe Strummer definitely had a bit of soul in his voice. Every fucking track on that album’s brilliant, but my favourite’s ‘London’s Burning’. And they were fucking brilliant live. And we [2 Tone bands] wouldn’t have had anywhere to play if it wasn’t for punk. You had pub rock informing punk, and punk informing us, and The Specials were a direct amalgam of punk and ska, and we realised that the faster we played, the more likely we could get the crowd jumping up and down, which was a legacy of punk. All these different movements, fracturing then coming back together. You’d need 60,000 sociologists to untangle those couple of years."

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Books Editor (673 KP) shared own list

Sep 24, 2017
Whether classic rock, hip-hop, new wave or post-punk is your style, there's bound to be an engaging book that suits your tastes.

 If anything, 2017's autumn books deserve praise for mixing academic-calibre research, life-altering insights and highly entertaining prose.

From memoirs to rankings, here are the best titles on rock, rap and country hitting the market this season.


Reveal: Robbie Williams

Reveal: Robbie Williams

Chris Heath and Robbie Williams

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Book

An intimate, funny and frank account of the moments behind the music, of the truth behind the...


Music biography
Every Night Is Saturday Night: A Country Girl’s Journey to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame

Every Night Is Saturday Night: A Country Girl’s Journey to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame

Wanda Jackson and Scott Bomar

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Book

Wanda Jackson's debut single, "You Can't Have My Love," reached the Top 10 while she was still a...


Music biography
Bowie: The Illustrated Story

Bowie: The Illustrated Story

Pat Gilbert

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Book

David Bowie released an incredible 27 studio albums, beginning with his eponymous 1967 debut and...


Music photography
Hit So Hard: A Memoir

Hit So Hard: A Memoir

Patty Schemel

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Book

A stunningly candid and inspiring memoir of recovery from addiction and the '90s, by Hole drummer...


Music biography
What Does This Button Do?: An Autobiography

What Does This Button Do?: An Autobiography

Bruce Dickinso

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Book

The first print run of the UK hardback edition will have black sprayed edges. In order to guarantee...


Music biography
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Ross (3284 KP) rated Dookie by Green Day in Music

Jun 8, 2020  
Dookie by Green Day
Dookie by Green Day
1994 | Punk, Rock
Rolling Stone's 193rd greatest album of all time
One of the best albums of the 90s and one of the best modern punk albums. There really is not a bad song on the album. Superb basslines, intricate fast drumming and Billie Joe at his best.
  
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Ross (3284 KP) rated Pink Flag by Wire in Music

May 11, 2020 (Updated May 11, 2020)  
Pink Flag by Wire
Pink Flag by Wire
1977 | Punk
9
9.0 (3 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 412th greatest album of all time
Great noisy punk album. I had been meaning to try and listen to Wire more and loved this chance. I was surprised to learn Strange by REM (on Document) was originally by Wire - a very different version.