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Punk 45 : Chaos in the City of Angels and Devils : Hollywood From X to Zero & Hardcore on the Beaches : Punk in Los Angeles 1977-81.

CD - 2016 CD Rock Punk 2 On Shelf No requests on this item Community Rating: 4.7 out of 5

Cover image for Punk 45 : chaos in the city of angels and devils : Hollywood from X to Zero & hardcore on the beaches : punk in Los Angeles 1977-81.

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Locations
Call Number: CD Rock Punk
On Shelf At: Downtown Library

Location & Checkout Length Call Number Checkout Length Item Status
Downtown 3rd Floor, CDs
2-week checkout
CD Rock Punk 2-week checkout On Shelf
Downtown 3rd Floor, CDs
2-week checkout
CD Rock Punk 2-week checkout On Shelf

Previously released material.
Program notes by S. Baker and interviews with David Brown (Dangerhouse Records), Chris Ashford (What! Records), the Urinals, Robbie Fields (Posh Boy Records), Lisa Fancher (Frontier Records), and Chris Desjardins (the Flesheaters) (63 pages : illustrations (some color)) inserted in container.
Out of vogue (the Middle Class) -- We're desperate (X) -- Disintegration nation (the Flesh Eaters) -- A life of crime (the Weirdos) -- I'm white and middle class (the Urinals) -- I got a right (Iggy and the Stooges) -- Forming (the Germs) -- Bloodstains (Agent Orange) -- Trouble at the cup (Black Randy & the Metrosquad) -- Ack ack ack ack (the Urinals) -- Don't push me around (the Zeros) -- ABCD (the Randoms) -- What's your problem (Circle Jerks) -- Survive (the Bags) -- Amoeba (Adolescents) -- Class war (the Dils) -- Brainless (the Deadbeats) -- I like drugs (Simpletones) -- World War III (T.S.O.L.) -- TAQN (Eyes) -- Hollywood square (the Hollywood Squares) -- Final ride (the Deadbeats).
Various performers.

COMMUNITY REVIEWS

The Early LA Punk Scene submitted by Meginator on July 22, 2021, 9:04pm This album is a deep dive into the early Los Angeles punk scene, comprising both the initial Hollywood bands and the later rise of suburban hardcore. The extensive and thorough history in the liner notes is essential reading for anyone interested in the scene’s history, but the songs speak for themselves. As a whole, the music has a more obvious pop influence than music from New York or London from the same period, though it is obviously fueled by a similar sense of resentment and discontent. This is essential, energizing listening for punks and a great way to learn more about the genre’s early history.