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Possibly the best punk basslines ever?


jmchich
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[quote name='Adrenochrome' timestamp='1373491465' post='2138341']
[url="http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=RTWSSCYUD4E#t=7s"]http://www.youtube.c...TWSSCYUD4E#t=7s[/url]

[url="http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=-KTsXHXMkJA#t=5s"]http://www.youtube.c...KTsXHXMkJA#t=5s[/url]
[/quote]

Great shout on both.

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[quote name='waynepunkdude' timestamp='1373491403' post='2138339']


I'm sorry but anything after 1980 isn't punk, apparently that's how music works.
[/quote]

I'd say '79 - '80's was just 'power pop with attitude (much of which was 'pretend').

Punk was more than a musical style. People had been playing hard and fast for a long time and will continue to do so for many more years I'm sure. It just ain't 'punk', maybe 'thrash' is a better term :(

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Guns of Brixton? Surely that's the most well known?

I really like matt freemans 100mph scale runs on Animosity from the first Rancid album as well.

At the time I liked the melodic edge Randy Bradbury gave to Pennywise after JMT passed away, the Full Circle album had a new edge to it because of this.

If anyone mentions Mark Hoppus they're getting punched in the balls!


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[quote name='Ziphoblat' timestamp='1373487794' post='2138269']
Not really classic punk, and perhaps not even punk by the standards of some, but I always loved the bass to this track (not really a big fan of the band though):

[url="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R34SA1qTfQw"]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R34SA1qTfQw[/url]
[/quote]

I used to love AFI, when they were classic hardcore. They went a bit overboard with the goth angle for my liking.

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[quote name='Lozz196' timestamp='1373493893' post='2138371']
2 pages in and no mention of JJ yet. Hmmmmm.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-55d4XkfW8w
[/quote]

Was thinking that myself Lozz! Not nearly enough Simonon either.

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Bruce Foxton anybody.
From the beginning-In The City and onwards
That geezer from Ian Dury and the Blockheads
Does the guy from the Attractions qualify,suppose new wave is a bit out of bounds for this one.
There was some good players about then as there is now.
JJ had some great moments as well,what about the beginning of Peaches.
Basss players were allowed to be right up there in the mix as well with a nice clanky sound unlike the psuedo keyboard basss sound nowadays or is it the producers that are to blame.
Even the telly broadcasts do this they squeeze and compress all the goodness out and shove the bass into a corner with no dynamics allowed,just watch any broadcast.
Maybe there is a technical reason why.
Oops strayed a bit there,my apologies

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[quote name='molan' timestamp='1373493064' post='2138360']
I'd say '79 - '80's was just 'power pop with attitude (much of which was 'pretend').

Punk was more than a musical style. People had been playing hard and fast for a long time and will continue to do so for many more years I'm sure. It just ain't 'punk', maybe 'thrash' is a better term :(
[/quote]

Well, thrash is a totally different genre...

I believe the genre police called Suicidal Tendencies and the Dead Kennedys 'West coast skatecore' or something, but punk will do for most of us. ;)

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[quote name='Myke' timestamp='1373482916' post='2138195']
Paul Gray
[/quote]

He did a couple of albums with them, so he lasted longer than most. I think he was the one who dictated his will to his girlfriend down the phone during an Italian tour (things were getting a bit hairy, apparently), and joined UFO of all people shortly afterwards.

Edited by Prunesquallor
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[quote name='Prunesquallor' timestamp='1373529883' post='2138552']


Well, thrash is a totally different genre...

I believe the genre police called Suicidal Tendencies and the Dead Kennedys 'West coast skatecore' or something, but punk will do for most of us. ;)
[/quote]

There are no American punk bands. . .

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[quote name='molan' timestamp='1373487585' post='2138266']
Have to agree with this - most of the nominations so far are not what I'd call 'punk'.

As an example Suicidal Tendancies were formed a good 2 years after the last thrashings of punk had finished. . .
[/quote]

You mean punk finished in 1985, why did nobody tell me?

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[quote name='Roland Rock' timestamp='1373531422' post='2138581']
[b]What about Canadian punk bands[/b] ;-)

[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2oElH1zBvws[/media]

Also, some Detroit greatness, such as Kick out the Jams by MC5 and Loose by Stoogies
[/quote]

can't forget DOA

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[quote name='PaulWarning' timestamp='1373531466' post='2138583']

if you're being serious, the Ramones, they practically invented it
[/quote]

Ramones were never a punk band - just a fast rock band with short songs.

If any US band can get any credit for stirring future punk imaginations I guess the New York Dolls could have an honourable mention. Johnny Thunders and the Heartbreakers were pretty much adopted as punks because they spent so much time over here.

The reast of the US bands that tagged along coined the horrible 'new wave' epithet so beloved of Radio 1 and BBC DJ's when they were forced to play things they so obviously detested.

Post '79 most genuine punk bands had floundered and/or turned into cheap parodies of themselves. The Americans were merely copping a style of music.

Saying that punk lives on is a bit like saying genuine Mod or Ska or Rock 'n' Roll is still with us. Sure, there are bands playing this type of music but they are just copyists not the 'real thing'. I don't have anything against them (I, unashamedly, play in a covers band) I just can't accept that they are 'punk' bands.

Maybe you had to 'live the life' in the late '70's to understand it.

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