
Full on lockdown has finally
given me the chance to finish Simon Reynold’s mammoth volume on post-punk, Rip
It Up and Start Again. I’ve already mentioned the book twice on this blog (#1,
#2),
and for good reason: it’s an extraordinarily fun and informative read.
Despite being journalistic in
style, committed to and bound by the sheer actualities of what happened, Rip
It Up and Start Again reads like a loosely-arranged novel, with recurrent
characters, motifs, and themes perpetually cropping up, disappearing, and then
re-appearing in other contexts. Indeed, it reminds me of anthology TV series
such as Easy or High Maintenance: always grounded in one
lifeworld – in this case, the post-punk milieu – but always entering (and
exiting) it from different perspectives, different bands, different periods,
thereby allowing the singular consistency alongside the sheer complexity and
multiplicity of the lifeworld to be expressed. It’s precisely this mode of
composition that makes Rip It Up such a joy to read: it faithfully
expresses post-punk not as some historical artefact bound by chronology and
stuck in the past, but as an almost timeless countercultural milieu,
sensibility or organism that one can tap into and channel in the here and now.
The stories and anecdotes regaled in the book aren’t just thrilling because
they express something that, unbelievably, happened (see below for a list of
just some of these), but also because they express a potentiality in the
present, a set of resources and practices to be simulated and put in
motion. In short, the book doesn’t just make you want to read more about bands:
it makes you want to start a band yourself.
The book functions through its
26 chapters which simultaneously possess a singularity (each focuses on a
particular “scene”, for example late 70s New York No Wave, the rise of British
indie labels such as Rough Trade, or the antics of producer Malcom McLaren)
while expressing a larger whole (the aforementioned post-punk milieu). Contained
within these chapters are some remarkable anecdotes and stories that, as argued
above, really fire up one’s imagination, jolt one into laughter, disgust, or
disbelief (sometimes all at once). They’re wonderful little nuggets, charged
with a countercultural libidinal energy.
At 537 pages*, though, the
book is a hefty volume, and it’d be a shame for its countercultural libidinal
potential to be blocked because of that. So, both as a tribute to the book and
as a way of extending its countercultural archive, here I’m going to retell and
recap my favourite anecdotes, characters, and themes from the book in digested
form. Hopefully this imparts just a slither of the post-punk energy onto you,
dear reader, or even better, it will get you to read the book yourself…
More via the 'Read More' button...
Brechtian alienation, or,
pissing off audiences
A recurring theme throughout
the book, expressed by countless bands cited within it, is the notion of intentionally
challenging audiences, rather than catering to their most common and
predictable desires. Against the backdrop of the contemporary cultural climate
that shuns confrontation and antagonism, constantly opting for the “safe” over
the “risky” or “experimental”, reading how countless post-punk and punk bands challenged
– and sometimes outright abused – their audiences was hugely refreshing (and
often funny). Unlike postmodernist PR, which today is so ingrained that you’re
as likely to hear vacuous spiel about “markets” and “target audiences” from
freelance YouTubers and writers as from an actual marketing executive, the
(post-)punk mentality is fundamentally elitist: strictly opposed to the
lowest common denominator, a.k.a. “common sense”. From this viewpoint the
function of (post-)punk was not simply to cater to common pre-existing tastes
but to confrontationally jolt and shove people into new terrain; to create new,
more complex tastes through a kind of creative destruction. (For more on this, see
my last post on Pop and nihilation, inspired by k-punk.)
(Post-)punk’s modernist
criticality and confrontation was the motor throughout the period covered in Rip
It Up that fuelled the dizzying array of sonic, musical and aesthetic
innovations that was central to that period’s constant sense of excitement,
confidence, and buzz. It also resulted in some amusing anecdotes and stories
that act as little glimpses into the radical forms music and art can take. Below
are how just some bands covered in the book approached the issue of challenging
their audiences:
James Chance and the
Contortions: Like other New York No Wave groups, gigs by the Contortions
had a strong performance-art element, dedicated to involving audiences in them
and thereby turning them into “happenings”. This was partly driven by
sensationalism and desire to grab press attention, and partly impelled by an
avant-garde urge to deconstruct the performer/audience dichotomy. As Reynolds
documents:
Chance … turned
gigs into happenings by attacking the audience: jostling, slapping, legendarily
grabbing a girl by the hair at one show and biting another woman ‘on the tit’
(or so he claimed in an interview). ‘James was like a Jackson Pollock painting,
such an explosive personality,’ says Adele Bertei, Contortions’ keyboard
player. ‘And he had a strong masochistic streak. So he’d jump into the crowd
and start kissing some girl. The boyfriend would push him off and a fist-fight
would ensue. Our bassist George Scott and me would leap offstage and get into
the mêlée. Then we’d all get back on to the stage with blood running down our
faces – James being the worse for wear always because he’d get the brunt of it;
plus he’s so tiny.’
Lydia Lunch: Lunch
played the role of self-described dictator of no wave band Teenage Jesus and
the Jerks, recalling in the book how she would “literally beat [the other band
members] with coat hangers if they made any mistakes at a gig. We rehearsed ad
nauseam and were pretty fucking tight. It’s pretty fascist sounding, and I was
the fucking dictator.” This demeanor was matched when performing live:
Onstage,
Lunch remained rigid, disdaining to engage with the audience through eye
contact or banter, maintaining an unbridgeable moat of alienation between
performer and spectators. James Chance was an early member of Teenage Jesus,
but Lunch kicked him out for having too much contact with the audience: ‘I
didn’t think TJ should mingle with the audience, even if to attack them. Don’t
touch those bastards, let ’em just sit there in horror!’ (p. 62, italics
added)
Alternative TV: Mark
Perry, founder of ATV, had also founded influential punk fanzine Sniffin’
Glue, and acted as one of punk’s early ideologues, but soon found its
commitment to DIY to be a constriction on musical progress. ATV, therefore,
sought to push the punk boat out, with their debut LP acting as a pioneering
blend of punk and reggae. By their second album in 1978, this sonic
experimentation had escalated further: the album incorporated spoken-word
elements, clarinets, free-jazz influences, and an almost complete lack of
guitar. Reynolds recounts how this experimental transformation caused difficulty
for ATV’s fanbase, the core of which were punks:
Determined
to practise onstage what [the second album] had preached on vinyl, Perry
decided there would be no rehearsals, ‘just this spontaneous improv thing’.
Rock conventions got turned on their heads whenever possible: a guitarist was
given the job of playing drums; Perry sawed away discordantly on a violin; and
Anno, the singer from hippy festival band Here and Now, joined the group
onstage, despite being pregnant. But Alternative TV still had a hardcore of
punk fans, and they reacted violently. ‘In Portsmouth, the crowd wanted to kill
us! I can laugh now, but back then I was so passionate about it, I got furious
with them. I was yelling, “You thick bastards! That’s not what the punk
spirit is about, just giving you what you want!”’ Everything came to a head
– Perry’s head, to be precise – in Derby when a hurled bottle knocked him
unconscious. (p.80, italics added)
Cabaret Voltaire: “In
June 1977, all three members of Cabaret Voltaire joined Marsh, Adi Newton,
Glenn Gregory, Martyn Ware and 2.3’s drummer Hayden Boyes-Weston for one gig
only as the punk-spoof supergroup The Studs. ‘It was an anarchic raw event,’
recalls Newton. ‘One of our helpers had a bag of pigs’ ears which were
liberally thrown at the audience.’ After chaotic improvised versions of The Kingsmen’s
‘Louie Louie’, Lou Reed’s ‘Vicious’ and Iggy Pop’s ‘Cock in my Pocket’, plus a
bizarre version of the Dr Who theme, the band left the stage to howls of
abuse.” (p.158)
Throbbing Gristle: Genesis
P-Orridge, founder of TG, frequently underlined that the band were anti-music:
P-Orridge
and crew were sceptical about punk’s credentials as radical music – it was too
rock, too musical. Speaking in the famous ‘New Musick’ November 1977
issue of Sounds, P-Orridge declared that Sniffin’ Glue’s
exhortation ‘Here’s three chords, now start a band’ conceded far too much to
traditional musicality. ‘It starts with chords. They’re saying “Be like
everyone else, you gotta learn to play”. You can start with no chords.
Why not just say, “Form a band and it doesn’t matter what it sounds like or
whether you even make a noise, if you just stand there silent for an hour, just
do what you want.”’ […] At one early gig – the Nag’s Head, High Wycombe,
February 1977 – P-Orridge poured scorn on the jeering punks in the audience:
‘You can’t have anarchy and have music.’ During the cacophonous
performance, Cosey bared her tits and P-Orridge poured fake blood over his
head. Then he invited half a dozen kids from the audience onstage and handed
them instruments. (p.230)
This was, of course, evident
in TG’s music: cold, metallic, an assault on the senses. Reynolds details in
Chapter 12 how TG’s basement became, in P-Orridge’s words, a “chaotic research
lab”, where a full range of sonic effects were explored and experimented with:
high and low frequencies, distortion and extreme volume, with P-Orridge and
bandmate [Carter] acting as the guinea pigs. The band’s goal, Reynold’s writes,
was to be as visceral as possible, creating “a total body music, immersive and
assaultive. They jettisoned songs, melody and groove in favour of the pure,
overwhelming force of sound itself” (p. 228). This was, naturally, reflected
in their approach to live performances:
TG’s gigs
were sadistic assaults on the audience. TG pursued a ‘metabolic music’ that
directly impacted on the nervous system. They were fascinated by military
research into the use of infrasound as a non-lethal weapon, with certain
frequencies triggering vomiting, epileptic seizures, and even involuntary
defecation. ‘People … think music’s just for the ears, they forget it goes into
every surface of the body, the pores, the cells, it affects the blood vessels,’
declared P-Orridge. The effects of volume, ultra-high and sub-bass frequencies
and sheer repetition induced altered states in the band, too. P-Orridge
recalled his whole body shaking and trembling; sometimes he’d reach the point
where he was talking in tongues, a mere vessel for forces from ‘beyond’. TG
also used lighting as a retinal barrage – convulsive strobes, high-power
halogen lamps aimed into the audience’s faces. (p.235)
Flipper: The San
Francisco band added a “frat-party riotousness” to punk’s audience
confrontation, writes Reynolds, noting how at one gig their bassist, Bruce
Loose, pelted the audience with three weeks’ worth of soiled nappies from his
newborn son. He recalls: “The audience tended to throw them right back at the
band. Steve got a dirty diaper in the face. The band thanked me a lot for that
bright idea!” (p. 259)
Josef K: The Scottish
post-punk band were defiantly anti-rockist, opposing laddishness or sexism,
doing very little drugs, and being proud bibliophiles, mining Kafka, Camus and
Dostoevsky for lyrics and inspiration. This puritanical approach meant that
traditional rock approaches to live music and audience participation were
thrown out the window: for example, encores were strictly banned on the grounds
of being too patronising, recalls guitarist Malcom Ross:
‘The
roadies would came on to pack up the guitars, but if you clapped loud enough
the band would come on again. That was the kind of ritual that Postcard [the
band’s label] wanted to change.’ [Vocalist Paul] Haig also refused to indulge
the audience with banter or pleasantries. ‘Instead, Paul taped intros to the
songs that we’d play over the PA,’ says Ross. ‘We were into all these Brechtian
alienation techniques.’ Haig recalls being barely able to bring himself to utter
the word ‘gig’ because it was too disgustingly rock ’n’ roll: ‘I preferred to
say “concert”, but you couldn’t really say that when you were playing just a
wee venue.’ (p.352)
The Banshees: As
Reynolds details in Chapter 22, the early 80s revival of Goth was significantly
inspired by the elegance, decadence, and elitism of glam, while charging it
with a certain punk negativity and angst. Mixing elitism and antagonism, this
led to a distinct inequality between audience and artist:
The Banshees
believed in maintaining an enigmatic distance from the audience – both offstage
(‘That whole concept of The Clash letting their fans stay in their hotel rooms
…’ chuckles Severin, ‘I mean, no! We’d let them stay out in the rain’)
and in performance. ‘There’s something magical about a stage,’ muses Severin.
‘You think of all your favourite people, like The Doors, and you can’t imagine
them being the blokes next door. The stage is their church. That’s what
appealed about the intelligent side of glam – the fact that there was some kind
of theatre going on, a drama was being presented.’ (p.427)
Stevo: The notorious
producer to-be started out as a DJ with a taste for the avant-garde, and
thereby a remarkably non-DJ attitude towards pleasing the crowd:
Raised in
Suffolk, but often mistaken for a working-class east London boy, Stevo was a
fan of all kinds of weird music. Dismissing punk as ‘just rock ’n’ roll played
badly … not that revolutionary’, he looked to more avant-garde or electronic
outfits – TG, Cabaret Voltaire, The Residents, Chrome, Metaboliste. He started
out as a DJ, playing exactly this kind of non-crowd-pleasing material. ‘I was
more interested in terrorizing the dance floor. I used to go out just to fuck
the audience’s heads,’ he says. (p.477)
![]() |
Throbbing Gristle |
Visionary (and egotistical)
producers
Producers, and not just
bands, emerge as central players in the post-punk milieu covered by Rip It
Up. Reynolds often describes them
as “Svengalis”, and for
good reason: clearly high on a mixture of egotism, pop-cultural buzz and some
kind of narcotics, the antics many of these producers got up to over the period
Reynolds covers is genuinely shocking, and often deeply problematic. However,
it does point to a sense of vision and purpose of notable
individuals in the music industry that is refreshing, and clearly absent today
(although it clearly gets directed towards some incredibly twisted ends).
Malcolm McLaren is the main
character of this type who appears again and again throughout the book,
originally as the Sex Pistols’ hype-obsessed, egomaniac manager. Like many of
post-punks key players, McLaren was a product of various art schools, himself
deeply attracted to the Situationist movement and a fan of, for instance,
Valerie Solanas’ SCUM Manifesto. McLaren thrived on provocation, which
naturally drew him to punk and the Pistols. After a fiery split from them
(which eventually ended in McLaren losing all legal control and rights to the
band), McLaren attempted to manage The Slits, seeing them as the female Pistols.
This small episode gives just a telling glimpse into McLaren’s maniacal (and
sexist) visions as a producer, as Reynolds recounts:
Legend has
it his managerial come-on was: ‘I want to work with you because you’re girls
and you play music. I hate music and I hate girls. I thrive on hate.’ But
instead of thinking up outrageous ideas worthy of Solanas or Sid Vicious,
McLaren’s masterplan was wildly sexist and degrading. After attacking the rock
industry, he wanted to infiltrate the disco movement. At first, he tried to get
The Slits to sign to the cheesy German disco label Hansa. Then, when Island
moved to sign the band and invited McLaren to make a movie around them, he came
up with a screenplay that envisioned The Slits as an all-girl rock band who go
to Mexico only to find themselves effectively sold into slavery and ultimately
turned into porno-disco stars. (p.81)
Down and out in 1979, having
lost control of the Pistols, McLaren ended up soundtracking some softcore porn
films, leading him to team up with a pair of French screenwriters to write a “softcore
rock ‘n’ roll costume musical for kids”, which involved three fifteen year old
girls and their sexual exploits with adults around Paris. When this unsurprisingly
failed to find any backers, being outright paedophilic, McLaren ended up
managing – or rather, controlling – a band called Bow Wow Wow. Again, the despicable
paedophilic themes re-emerged: McLaren got a then 14 year old Anglo-Burmese
girl, Annabella Lwin, to be the band’s singer, and then unsuccessfully tried to
get the rest of the band – all adult men – to sleep with her. Like all McLaren’s
bands, they were his project: Bow Wow Wow were to be McLaren’s rebellion
against drab, sexless and puritanical post-punk (e.g. Gang of Four or Public
Image Ltd.) by making overtly stylish, seductive, and ostentatious music.
Rather than bemoan mass unemployment, McLaren was insistent on framing it as a
liberation, rather than affliction, which was reflected in the Bow Wow Wow
single “W.O.R.K (N.O Nah NO! NO! My Daddy Don’t)”. Indeed as Reynolds notes,
McLaren’s advice to the unemployed was:
’Be a
pirate. Wear gold and look like you don’t need a job.’ Gold and sunshine
were linked in his mind as un-English – the quintessence of spiritual
extravagance. (p.310)
McLaren was obsessively
forward-thinking, always looking for the next new trend to exploit. Indeed,
some of his antics pre-figured the contemporary state of music consumption and
production. McLaren, for instance, was interested in the notion of making music
more disposable – something to pick up and put back down again (much like our
current age of online streaming). The result was Bow Wow Wow’s debut
mini-album, Your Cassette Pet – a cassette only album release at the
cheap price of £1.99 in a flip-pack carton similar to a cigarette packet:
McLaren
wanted music to become much more disposable, something kids casually picked up
at their local cornershop as they breezed through on roller-skates – mere
software to pop into their portable cassette players and boomboxes. Traditional
record shops, already ailing because of falling sales, would disappear. (p.311)
Another Svengali manager/producer-type
who stands out in Reynolds’ account is a character called simply Stevo, manager
of Soft Cell and head of Some Bizarre Records. A larger-than-life character
trying to turn the music industry inside out from a fringe space in-between
alternative and mainstream, Stevo’s slogans were “use the industry before it
uses you” and “conform to deform”. Stevo developed various systems for dealing
with the big labels: he would sign avant-garde bands to Some Bizarre, financing
the production of their albums, and then license it to bigger labels to make
use of their distribution muscle. The result of this was a band as experimental
as Psychic TV (another Genesis P-Orridge outfit) securing a contract with major
label CBS. And this was all done with Stevo’s own eccentric flair:
Stevo used
his larger-and-louder-than-life persona and surreal mind games to throw
industry executives off-balance. He became notorious for his eccentric
negotiation techniques. In one deal, he peremptorily summoned Maurice
Oberstein, the supremo of CBS, to Trafalgar Square for the final contract
signing; in another, he insisted the deluxe office chair used by WEA’s managing
director be included as a bonus gift. When ‘wooing’ the major labels for a
Psychic TV deal, he sent nine-inch brass dildo statuettes to all of the big
companies, etched with the slogan ‘Psychic TV Fuck The Record Industry’. (p.480)
![]() |
Poster for Made In Sheffield, a film on the Sheffield post-punk scene |
Mooching off the Fordist
state: Meatwhistle
While there’s no doubt Rip
It Up is a remarkably energising, life-giving book, there’s also an
inescapable and underlying sense of grief and mourning to it. Because,
as Reynolds notes in the conclusion, the sheer energy and radicalism of the
post-punk milieu had exhausted itself by 1985, and never seemed to properly
return in itself. This is, no doubt, related to the drastic political and
economic changes that occurred over the period from the mid-70s to the mid-80s
in the form of the birth of neoliberalism via Thatcher and Reagan. Although
Reynolds never makes this point explicitly, its clear that the pre-1979
political consensus gave far more affordances to artists and musicians and
facilitated a far greater range and distribution of artistic experimentation
and expression.
This fact often crops up in
small moments at the margins of Rip It Up’s central story, almost in the
form of off-hand remarks: for instance, at one point Reynolds discusses
post-punk producer James Thirlwell and how he started his own label Self
Immolation using the sick pay from his day job at a Virgin Megastore which he
saved while in hospital after his lung collapsed. Now consider if such a
situation had happened today: that job at the record store most likely wouldn’t
have existed, the sick pay at the other job would’ve been far less generous,
and the result would have been, of course, less chance to experiment and set up
your own label.
There is one example that
makes this particularly acute, explored by Reynolds in Chapter 9, which covers
the Sheffield post-punk scene: Meatwhistle. Meatwhistle was a local youth
theatre project founded in 1972 and funded by the city council, who gave the organisers,
bohemian playwright/actor Chris Wilkinson and his wife Veronica, an entire
disused grammar school to play with. Subsequently, Meatwhistle became a local
experimental performance space for artistically-minded teenagers, and helped
give rise to a number of future post-punk greats, The Human League and Heaven
17 amongst them. Ian Craig Marsh, a founding member of The Human League,
recalls the sheer openness and creativity of the space:
‘From ’72
onwards, Meatwhistle got a lot more experimental and creative, as all the
disaffected juveniles in Sheffield started congregating there,’ says Marsh.
‘Bands were rehearsing at Meatwhistle because there were loads of spare rooms.
Generally speaking, everyone was free to do what the fuck they wanted. If the
council had kept a close eye on the place, seen some of the stuff going on –
like people smoking dope – it’d have been shut down instantly.’ There was a
strong element of everybody colluding, says Marsh, to pull the wool over the
authorities’ eyes, get away with as much as possible. […]
Each
Sunday, the Meatwhistle crew put on a show. ‘Everyone who wanted to get up and
do a half-hour slot would get the chance, whether it was a band or a comedy
sketch or a play,’ recalls Marsh. ‘There’d be a big meal which everyone would
cook together. There was that communal vibe – sort of semi-hippy but with an
edge.’ (p.153)
Again, reading this, one is
struck by awe and inspiration – the communal, creative vibe basically bleeds
off the pages – but also grief: what local council in Britain would do
this now? Even ostensibly radical Labour councils run by Momentum-aligned
politicians, such as Lewisham or Southwark, are awful nowadays, openly engaging
in social cleansing and gentrification, comfortably in the pocket of property
develops and actively closing down any Meatwhistle-esque space that may appear
(I am thinking here of the Old
Tidemill Garden in Deptford, for one).
Rip It Up’s joys and
potentialities therefore open onto, and logically result in, a field of
political action. Reviving punk for the current age means not simply taking up
a radical aesthetics of confronting audiences but also a radical politics, an
engagement and confrontation with capital, the state and their arms. Punk is a
politics, not just an aesthetic. The two are immediately implicated in one
another, immanent in one another.
____
*Throughout this post I’m
referring to the 2019 “Faber Social” reprint, not the 2005 original pressing.
No comments:
Post a Comment