Feels like any week now it ought to be kicking off in terms of Punk Fiftieth Anniversary coverage. Magazine retrospectives, TV programs, exhibitions, books, documentaries...
But what will they pick as the commemorative fulcrum? The first, or the second, performance of the Sex Pistols at Lesser Free Trade Hall, Manchester? (The first is coming up very soon anniversary wise, just three days off, June 4... the second was in July). The Ramones arriving in London for their July 4 1976 concert at the Roundhouse, all the fledging British groups in attendance? The 100 Club Punk Festival in late September? The Damned's "New Rose", released October 22? Sex Pistols's "Anarchy in the U.K.", November 26?
As you've probably noticed, I spend a lot of time perusing old music papers. And recently - mainly because I've never seen many of that year's issues until now - it's been the weeklies from 1976.
And here's the thing - judging from the contents of NME and Sounds that year, you would hardly know that something new and revolutionary is budding. The overwhelming preponderance of the coverage is Old Wave. Which of course doesn't know itself to be Old Wave yet, since the term New Wave doesn't exist and the Discourse of the Boring Old Farts only emerges towards the end of the year. The features, the record reviews, the record company adverts are business as usual, the continuation of early Seventies sounds: prog, blues-rock, country-rock, sophisto-rock, hard rock, pomp rock, some final dribbles of glam. Nobody has the slightest idea they are about to be obsolesced.
Here below are some gleanings that give you the true Arse End of Old Wave flavour of 1976. So many artists I'd never even heard of - Roderick Falconer! Supercharge! Orleans! Spriguns! Cajun Moon! American Flyer! Frogmorton! Sparrow! La Seine! Widowmaker!

![]() |



































































































Interesting how many adverts take their visual cues from film posters or the Sunday Supplements. Credit to whoever was booking the Reading Festival though: Mighty Diamonds and U-Roy!
ReplyDeletemy first inkling was seeing "Horses" (Nov 1975) and "The Ramones" (Feb 1976) in the bins. They looked...different. Probably had a later release in the UK. not sure when Creem starting covering the scene.
ReplyDeletePaper
lol nothing arse-endiness about that years best list, at worst boring cos enduringly great (for the most part). But I guess shitty shitty English punk had to shake everyone out of the possible threat of complacency attendant upon Whispering Bob era quality (absent the also-rans that come with any era). and ‘Red Card’ (the absolute fust redemption, a preposterous recruitment of prog-era skill for big dumb thrills, searing and sharp-edged rock’n’soul) not even on there.
ReplyDeleteok it’s about a third arse-end, on it’s own old-wave terms, padded out somewhat.
ReplyDeleteReminds me that I really must check out Medicine Head.
ReplyDeleteOtherwise, surprised Hot Tuna were still going in 1976, surprised that there was a previous band called Mr. Big.
Think J.J. Cale is too minimalist to really be classed as old wave - a lot of the songs on Troubadour are closer to Neu! than anything else, e.g.:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-7XCminnffo&list=RD-7XCminnffo&start_radio=1
I dunno, I think the album covers alone - plus being covered by Eric Clapton - would qualify JJ as Old Wave.
DeleteSomeone who unexpectedly cited JJ as an influence - Spacemen 3. Well I think Spiritualized actually covered one of his songs....
Anyway,. turns out Medicine Head aren't as good as their name. Anyone know what this dude is playing here?
Deletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LPojOqTbDak&list=RDLPojOqTbDak&start_radio=1
Looks like a giant peashooter. Puts me in mind of the "Humphreys" Unigate adverts.
I was moved by some of the descriptions to check out a few of those acts, but the results were mixed. Automatic Man, featuring an ex-Santana drummer, were prog-rock-jazz-funk. Could have been cool, actually sounded like Todd Rundgren’s Utopia, or even Geoff Downes’ post-Yes excrescence Asia. Quantum Jump were just horrible: 10cc without the tunes, or the wit.John Stevens’ Away I rather liked: trying to take an Ornette Coleman-ish punk jazz sound into the rock mainstream. Defunkt before Defunkt, basically. But that picture of Stevens looking like an Open University lab technician suggests that marketing them was always going to be an uphill struggle.
ReplyDeleteImpressively proto Peter Savilleish art design on the Led Zep album advert.
ReplyDeleteRolling Stones' punk list was interesting - https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-lists/best-punk-albums-1235538842/
ReplyDeletepaper
That version of Emerson, Lake & Palmer could have sat in with Happy Mondays and nobody would have batted an eye.
ReplyDelete