Day the Country Died: A History of Anarcho Punk 1980-1984

(Author)
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Product Details
Price
$27.95  $25.99
Publisher
PM Press
Publish Date
Pages
496
Dimensions
6.2 X 9.1 X 1.7 inches | 1.4 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781604865165

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About the Author
Ian Glasper is a writer, the founder of the now-defunct Blackfish Records, which released 20 punk, hardcore, and metalcore albums, and a member of many DIY punk bands. He is the author of Armed with Anger and Trapped in a Scene: UK Hardcore 1985-1989.
Reviews

"The oral testimony assembled here provides an often-lucid participant's view of the work of the wider anarcho-punk milieu, which demonstrates just as tellingly the diversity as well as the commonality by which it was defined. The collection hints at the extent to which--within a militant antiwar, anti-work, anti-system framework--the perception and priorities of the movement's activists differed: something the movement's critics (who were always keen to deride the uniformity of the 'Crass punks') rarely understood."
--Rich Cross, Freedom

"With a backdrop of Thatcher's Britain, punk music became self-sufficient and considerably more aggressive, blending a DIY ethos with activism to create the perfectly bleak soundtrack to the zeitgeist of a discontented British youth. Including such iconic bands as Crass, Conflict, Flux of Pink Indians, Subhumans, Chumbawamba, Oi Polloi, Amebix, Rubella Ballet and Zounds to name but a few, Ian Glasper's history of punk stands out as an important and relevant history of the genre."
--Dave Faulds, Dulwich Books Review

"Glasper is thorough and democratic. He lets everyone speak, tell their own story, edits out the rambling and bullshit and presents a fair picture of all the main bands from all over the UK and Ireland. Geographically divided up. It's an encyclopaedic but down-to-earth reference book, full of detail and anecdotes."
--Ged Babey, LouderThanWar.com