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Five Reasons No Wave Pisses over Post-Punk
1. No wave lyrics explored deep philosophical issues, unlike the tripe that predominated in post-punk at the time. I'll take a monologue about confrontation over M. Smith's ruses about wherever the obligatory ******s were.
2. Texture over melody. No wave artists used their instruments to invoke a deeper sonic experience. More preferable to the bland (and often vain) attempts at capturing kosmiche musik's drive. 3. There's no such thing as bad no wave music. Just varying shades of nihilism. 4. More imagination was poured into records produced during the no-wave movement than the rest of the lot of the seventies and eighties. 5. Nowhere else in music history has there been as diverse a smattering of artists belonging to the same movement as there were with no-wave: James Chance & the Contortions , Suicide , Glenn Branca , the Bush Tetras , DNA , Teenage Jesus and the Jerks , Mars , Swan , etc... I'd take this any day over Joy Division / Nick Cave / the Fall / what-fucking-ever: http://i180.photobucket.com/albums/x...978_godlis.jpg |
i thought Suicide pre-dated no wave by a few years? Not to mention Bush Tetras who are quite generically post-punk sounding (if we go by your definition of the term, i take it to mean more of a worldwide mindset that incorporates all manner of sounds, including no wave)...
I totally get the angle you're coming from, but I think you're attacking the music media's regurgitation of what has long since become a nice pigeonhole for skinny jean-wearing pop groups over the last decade - like Bloc Party and god knows how many other bands i don't give a sh*t to name |
I don't see post punk as a genre but as an era influenced directly or indirectly by punk of which I would consider no wave a part of.
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Amusing thread.
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Just what this forum needs, another 'this genre is better than this genre' thread.
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I always thought they went hand and hand.
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lol
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Yada Yada Yada. Just buy Wires Missing Chairs and behave yourself.
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I'm still waiting for someone to have enough courage to speak out against Post-Punk-Country-Hiphop-No Wave.
I mean, what the hell's that crap even about? |
should be a straight up genre wars forum for this sh*t.
cow-punk v. all comers i swear lucifer did this for a laugh still |
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It'd be hypocritical of me to say post-punk sucked; some of my favorite albums exist within this era. I personally believe, however, that the New York no-wave movement was superior to everything else during that era. |
The Fall are unconscionably better than any no-wave band.
I'd argue the same for many other English bands, however The Fall are most obviously better so I'll stick with them. |
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The US had some other great post-punk bands in the early 80s that weren't considered no wave though. Wall of Voodoo, Scratch Acid and Devo are all favorites of mine that come to mind. |
No-wave is far from under-appreciated anyway, to the extent of swathes of no-wave revival bands down the years, Erase Errata et al (although I think they dilute the original intent somewhat).
Da tread: http://www.musicbanter.com/avant-gar...no-wave-2.html |
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Or... Yourre Momm!@ LOLzZ |
I absolutely love James Chance & The Contortions, Swan and Theoretical Girls, and i totally appreciate the No Wave aesthetic, though i think it was quite limiting overall.
I also love post-punk. as others have said, i think both movements are far too broad to be defineable in terms of a specific genre, i've always seen them as interrelated |
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