nijinsky's fetlocks said:
brass neck said:
Dave H said:
brass neck said:
Blondie was def new wave around the time of there first album imaginatively titled Blondie!!!
Blondie - Blondie came out in '76.
"New Wave" was what the media called anything that remotely had balls after the initial wave of media friendly punk passed through the charts.
Different eras.
aaaahhhhhhhhhhhh the age old debate, were they punk, were they a preempt of new wave? this is what one bloke on a forum said about the debate........." new wave & punk evolved out of the same musical cespool. blondie was around early on before the primordial ooze had clearly differentiated between the two, hence the confustion in terminology. traditionally genres were created by marketing people after the music had carved a nitche, not by bands trying to conform to a standard.".......... There has always been bands that nobody could pin down..the stranglers punk...I dont fucking think so!! was the Cure realy Punk just because Robert Smith had messy hair, they certainly didnt sound Punk for my taste. I think maybe some bands are sent down the road of linking themselves to a genre to gain acceptability, The Who initially linked them selves to the MODS but with in two years there music had gone avent guard and pretentious...surely that wasnt what the MODS were all about. The album Blondie had Punk undertones but for me was more new wave...the debate goes one!!!
Good point.
Another case in point - The Jam.
Heard them variously described as mod/punk/new-wave.
IMO just a great band,but "pigeonholing"like this must piss Weller off big style.
True but it's undeniable that The Jam rode the coat tails of The Clash to a certain degree until they blossomed into their own band, much like The Clash were a Pistols inspired band who eventually outgrew the whole scene and became a very good rock n roll band.
Labels are always up for debate as the lines are blurred.
Joy Division are a good example, they are viewed as both a new wave band, sometimes labelled post punk but it's essentially the same for this argument, and also labelled as a precursor to the whole gothic scene. So you could legitimately label them Punk, new wave, post punk, goth or indie (given that they were on the best indie ever).
I love Joy Division and I also like the genres I just listed but I never personally think of Joy Division as being any of the above.