Book description
Following on from his successful trilogy of books about the UK's
underground punk scene of the Eighties, Ian Glasper's Armed With
Anger: How UK Punk Survived The Nineties' is the fourth and final book
in this well-received, critically-acclaimed series, this time focusing
on the much-maligned period of the Nineties. Thought by many to be an
absolute nadir in the history of UK punk, this overlooked era still
spawned many important and intriguing bands, and no stone is left
unturned when uncovering the inspirations and motivations that drove
the acts of the time. From the likes of Therapy?, Understand and
Lostprophets, who all went on to major label success after starting in
humble underground hardcore bands, through to bands who only released
one demo or one 7-inch but still left their mark in some vital
fashion, Armed With Anger: How UK Punk Survived The Nineties'
examines almost a hundred bands, allowing them to tell their own
stories in their own words, and is brimming with previously unseen
photographs and long-thought-lost gig flyers. The many disparate
sub-genres of the scene are all minutely examined; from old school
punk rock through pop-punk, ska-punk, raging hardcore, militant
straightedge, metalcore and even love-it-or-hate-it emocore, the
leading lights of all these styles (and many more, of course), reveal
their warts n' all stories with honesty and conviction. And, as well
as the music, Armed With Anger...' also ponders the importance of
sincere politics, underground fanzines and DIY labels, standing by
your friends and never betraying your roots. A must for anyone who
enjoyed the first three books, this fourth book in the trilogy' pulls
together many of the threads started in those earlier volumes and
brings Glasper's celebration of the UK's underground punk heritage to
a very satisfying, informative conclusion. Following on from his
successful trilogy of books about the UK's underground punk scene of
the Eighties, Ian Glasper's Armed With Anger: How UK Punk Survived
The Nineties' is the fourth and final book in this well-received,
critically-acclaimed series, this time focusing on the much-maligned
period of the Nineties. Thought by many to be an absolute nadir in the
history of UK punk, this overlooked era still spawned many important
and intriguing bands, and no stone is left unturned when uncovering
the inspirations and motivations that drove the acts of the time. From
the likes of Therapy?, Understand and Lostprophets, who all went on to
major label success after starting in humble underground hardcore
bands, through to bands who only released one demo or one 7-inch but
still left their mark in some vital fashion, Armed With Anger: How UK
Punk Survived The Nineties' examines almost a hundred bands, allowing
them to tell their own stories in their own words, and is brimming
with previously unseen photographs and long-thought-lost gig flyers.
The many disparate sub-genres of the scene are all minutely examined;
from old school punk rock through pop-punk, ska-punk, raging hardcore,
militant straightedge, metalcore and even love-it-or-hate-it emocore,
the leading lights of all these styles (and many more, of course),
reveal their warts n' all stories with honesty and conviction. And,
as well as the music, Armed With Anger...' also ponders the
importance of sincere politics, underground fanzines and DIY labels,
standing by your friends and never betraying your roots. A must for
anyone who enjoyed the first three books, this fourth book in the
trilogy' pulls together many of the threads started in those earlier
volumes and brings Glasper's celebration of the UK's underground punk
heritage to a very satisfying, informative conclusion.