Entrevistas originales con los pioneros del punk estadounidense y las bandas más conocidas del Reino Unido.Entrevistas originales con los pioneros del punk estadounidense y las bandas más conocidas del Reino Unido.Entrevistas originales con los pioneros del punk estadounidense y las bandas más conocidas del Reino Unido.
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- 3 premios ganados y 1 nominación en total
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Opiniones destacadas
Have to say that in Australia we're very disappointed in the lack of mention of bands such as The Saints, The Birthday Party and Radio Birdman as key influences in early/mid punk rock in the series. Take a look at NME's review of 'I'm Stranded' 1974...
WHERE ARE THE FOOKIN MISFITS??? And if you talked about SoCal sound, where's the mention of Social Distortion and then a quick mention or recognition of psychobilly as a genre? Otherwise it was an entertaining and good watch.
Sure you may not like Green Day but they helped put punk back on the map. Bands like No Use for a Name, Lagwagon, Pennywise and Good Riddance all exploded off the back of Green Day getting so much attention. Nofx sold 500k records off the back of it too.
UNK (Epix, 2019) - A four hour Documentary co-Produced by Iggy Pop does an okay job of outlining the history of the music sub-genre from it's earliest roots in the late-60s to the grunge boom in the 90s. Director Jesse James Miller and his writing team break down the Doc into four chapters: 1. 60s and early 70s Proto-Punks like the MC5, New York Dolls and Iggy's The Stooges. 2. Mid-70s NYC's CBGB's with the Ramones and London's scene including the Sex Pistols. 3. 80s California's Hardcore bands like The Circle Jerks and Black Flag. 4. 90s with Nirvana and Green Day. The interviewees range from Marky Ramone to Blondie to Johnny Rotten to Penelope Spheris to Henry Rollins to, of course, the patron saint of Rock Docs, Dave Grohl.
As will all these survey shows, one can always argue about which artist deserved inclusion or not, or which bands got too much or too little attention, but PUNK has a genuinely large chapter missing - the late 70s/early 80s 'Post-Punk' movement which included such major stars as Elvis Costello, The Jam, Sonic Youth and Rotten's own band Public Image Limited. It seems like Miller and the Producers wanted to focus on harder edged bands, which is fair enough. Still, if lighter groups like Blondie, Television and the Talking Heads are covered why not Joy Division, Wire, Devo and The Fall? It's a major missing chapter and feels somewhat arbitrary.
PUNK is an entertaining enough sampler with some obvious gaps. If nothing else, it's kind of interesting to see the interviews and hear disparate voices like Jello Biafra, Bikini Kill's Kathleen Hanna, Legs MacNeil, Flea, Exene Cervenka and Joan Jett look back at that era in music.
Absolutely outstanding documentary about the history of punk with a who's who of punk. Loved hearing the stories and the revival of punk in the 90's. Could not recommend highly enough.
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- ConexionesReferenced in Last Stop for Lost Property (2020)
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- 1h(60 min)
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