eduardo_b wrote:Which is to say, it's all relative. And there are two sides to it -- the musician and the listener. From vurt's point of view, those musicians who were in punk bands were having a great time not giving a shite, but from the listener's side, most punk was shite most of the time. The music, such as it was, was really a vehicle for an attitude, and thus while it was largely mediocre or worse, it functioned well as an anti-establishment rallying cry. And then it died a well-deserved death. Those who were into punk didn't care about how good or not the music was, and everyone else thought it wasn't even music.Aroused by JarJar wrote:The real problem is the worship of mediocrity, and the Procrustean bed of "mediumness", not mediocrity in and of itself. As illustrated so keenly by George Carlin: everyone who drives slower than you is an "idiot", and everyone who drives faster than you is a "f**king maniac!".
punk music?
as i said, many people mistakenly think it was a musical genre.
