Book description
In 1976 music changed forever with the arrival of a self-empowering
alternative to the bloated, sterile rock music of the day. From
Cardiff to Caithness, from Portrush to Plymouth, bands promoted their
own gigs, designed their own artwork and organised their own pressing
and distribution. This exhaustive book, based on over 200 interviews
with the participants, chronicles not only the good and the great, the
icons of the punk movement, but celebrates some of the fantastic lost
bands and music of the era, as well as the cash-ins and artistic
failures. There are detailed accounts, often at variance with
conventional wisdom, about the career paths of the Pistols, the Clash,
the Damned, the Buzzcocks, the Stranglers and Siouxsie & The
Banshees. But No More Heroes also recounts the also-rans, the nearly
men and women and those who simply made their statement to the world
and then left the stage. Bands like the Desperate Bicycles, the Fruit
Eating Bears and Helpless Hew. Stories that take in drug addiction,
the Eurovision Song Contest, organised crime, contemptuous audiences,
shows that were so poorly attended the musicians were arrested on
suspicion of breaking and entering, jealous bingo callers,
hippy-baiting, nervous breakdowns and publishing deals written on the
back of beer mats. It is an exhaustive A-Z overview of the phenomenon,
including extensive biographical notes, complete discographies, and a
buyer's guide to help sort the wheat from the chaff among the
thousands of CD reissues that have emerged in the last decade. Many of
the accompanying photographs have never been published before. 2006 is
the 30th anniversary of Punk Music exploding in the UK and this is the
most detailed definite book on the subject to date. Alex Ogg is a
London-based author whose work includes The Hip Hop Years, which
accompanied the award-winning Channel 4 TV documentary, Rap Lyrics
from The Sugarhill Gang to Eminem, The Men Behind Def Jam, Radiohead:
Standing At The Edge, Channel 4's Top Ten, etc. He is the former
editor of Spiral Scratch magazine and has written dozens of liner
notes for punk bands including the Sex Pistols, Buzzcocks, Undertones,
Penetration, Adverts, Skids, Ruts, Sham 69 and many others.