
Blank Generation: A Story Of US-Canadian Punk & Its Aftershocks 1975-1981 (5 CD Box Set - Imported)
⢠Over six hours of music.
⢠Includes benchmark tracks by the sceneās most influential bands plus many rare singles making their first appearance on CD.
Named after Richard Hellās epoch-defining anthem, āBlank Generationā documents the emergence in North America of what came to be labelled punk rock. A year or two prior to punk exploding in the UK, bands whoād been playing live in venues like New York Cityās CBGB started releasing records, often on independent labels, as an antidote to the prevailing disco and corporate soft rock which dominated the US charts.
This five CD reflects those influential NYC bands ā Patti Smith Group, The Ramones, Television, Blondie, The Voidoids, etc. ā as well as the sceneās other pioneers such as Pere Ubu and The Dead Boys (both Cleveland, Ohio), Dead Kennedys and Crime (San Francisco), Devo (Akron, Ohio), The Germs and The Weirdos (Los Angeles) and Mission of Burma (Boston, Massachusetts).
āBlank Generationā offers a deliberately broad definition of punk, encompassing contributions from such outrĆ© acts as Suicide, The Cramps and The Residents through to new wave/power pop combos (Sneakers, Chris Stamey & the dBās, etc.). Also present are contemporary recordings by some of the mavericks who inspired punk ā Destroy All Monsters (Detroit) boasted ex-members of The Stooges and The MC5 and The Heartbreakers and Killer Kane Band spun off the New York Dolls.
While the US punk scene was arguably always more diverse musically than that of the UK, the music evolved quickly, as evinced by the choices heard on Discs 4 and 5. Many of the acts here such as X, The Replacements, The Feelies, Redd Kross, The Dream Syndicate, The Gun Club and Minor Threat would make an even greater impact as the 1980s wore on.
Itās hard to overestimate the seismic shocks caused by the music on āBlank Generationā, not only on everything in alternative music which followed in North American, from the 80s hardcore scene and the music heard on the whole alternative college radio network through to grunge and beyond. And yet this era has never before been treated to a comprehensive retrospective of this kind.
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Description
⢠Over six hours of music.
⢠Includes benchmark tracks by the sceneās most influential bands plus many rare singles making their first appearance on CD.
Named after Richard Hellās epoch-defining anthem, āBlank Generationā documents the emergence in North America of what came to be labelled punk rock. A year or two prior to punk exploding in the UK, bands whoād been playing live in venues like New York Cityās CBGB started releasing records, often on independent labels, as an antidote to the prevailing disco and corporate soft rock which dominated the US charts.
This five CD reflects those influential NYC bands ā Patti Smith Group, The Ramones, Television, Blondie, The Voidoids, etc. ā as well as the sceneās other pioneers such as Pere Ubu and The Dead Boys (both Cleveland, Ohio), Dead Kennedys and Crime (San Francisco), Devo (Akron, Ohio), The Germs and The Weirdos (Los Angeles) and Mission of Burma (Boston, Massachusetts).
āBlank Generationā offers a deliberately broad definition of punk, encompassing contributions from such outrĆ© acts as Suicide, The Cramps and The Residents through to new wave/power pop combos (Sneakers, Chris Stamey & the dBās, etc.). Also present are contemporary recordings by some of the mavericks who inspired punk ā Destroy All Monsters (Detroit) boasted ex-members of The Stooges and The MC5 and The Heartbreakers and Killer Kane Band spun off the New York Dolls.
While the US punk scene was arguably always more diverse musically than that of the UK, the music evolved quickly, as evinced by the choices heard on Discs 4 and 5. Many of the acts here such as X, The Replacements, The Feelies, Redd Kross, The Dream Syndicate, The Gun Club and Minor Threat would make an even greater impact as the 1980s wore on.
Itās hard to overestimate the seismic shocks caused by the music on āBlank Generationā, not only on everything in alternative music which followed in North American, from the 80s hardcore scene and the music heard on the whole alternative college radio network through to grunge and beyond. And yet this era has never before been treated to a comprehensive retrospective of this kind.













