Complete Control

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"All the power in the hands of the people rich enough to buy it"
 
(Clash - White Riot)

Its hard to believe in this cradle of democracy that people in authority and power could try so hard to repress punk music. As we have seen record labels wanted nothing to do with it believing it a fad and at first music writers dismissed it as well still stuck in mid seventies time warp. Unfortunately 2 incidents made it public increasing its notoriety and thus helping disseminate what they wanted to repress. The first was a glass thrown at the 100 Club punk festival which injured a girl and was reported by the tabloid media who then became fascinated by the violence, anger and one suspects the clothes of punkettes in a frenzy of moral outrage. The second was the Bill Grundy swearing on live national tv which doubled the interest and outrage. As a result of these incidents many local councils and venues banned punk groups from playing ( Menace - GLC)

Repression always spawns a subculture which in turn is accepted back into the mainstream. We had clubs that played specifically punk music, fanzines that promoted local bands etc and record labels sprang up to release the songs of punk bands.

And places to play. At this time there was a well established rock circuit where you were expected to learn your trade and pay your dues. If there's one thing that punk did it was to smash this. Armed with three chords bands multiplied like cockroaches and they needed places to play. I'm sorry if I concentrate on London. The Roxy Club and Vortex were the main clubs where nearly all the punk bands first cut their teeth. The Roxy was open only 100 nights and set up by Andy Czezowski. Both have live albums. The Roxy is particularly interesting with its little snippets of conversation and photos. Other places such as the Hope and Anchor and Nashville also put on punk bands. It helped that they were owned by the management Albion, who had The Stranglers and 999 under their wing.
Fanzines such as Ripped and Torn and Sniffin' Glue were formed. The latter by Mark Perry and featuring the writing of Danny Baker featured bands and the legendary "Here's a picture of a chord and another one and another one - now go form a band." . Shoddily zeroxed or photocopied these fanzines kept the fans in touch with what was going on. This was especially essential in local areas - I well remember my copy of Teeside Smells !!!
At the same time record labels sprang up, the most famous being Stiff (Damned, Adverts), Step Forward ( Chelsea, Sham 69), Illegal ( Menace), The Label (Eater), Raw (Users, Killjoys etc), Small Wonder (Menace & Angelic Upstarts) and loads more like Bonaparte, Chiswick, Rough Trade and Deptford Fun City. Inevitably these labels didn't sell many records as the major record companies cherry picked the best artists or deliberately ruined others (Cortinas).
Soon every major label had its quota of punk bands and punk bands/fans would regularly be in the press more as creatures in a zoo. As the shock wore off that the barbarians weren't at the gate, punk died off to come back in an ever more tribal form that backed itself in a corner with the oi/ hardcore movement. The graffiti and song " No Fun" had come to pass and we all moved on.

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