Yes. I agree.Ms Harmless wrote:as I said earlier, I think SBWM captures post-punk / new wave, which is why I mentioned The Clash, since they did bothAnders wrote:The Clash has some good stuff, but their good stuff mostly isn't punk imo. More rock or new wave.Ms Harmless wrote:I think it sounds very like The Clash
Spritzy punkers
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Re: Spritzy punkers
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Re: Spritzy punkers
post-punk and new wave are huge genre blends
The Clash, Blondie, The Cure, Talking Heads etc. all sound totally different
edit: also The Police, who bring in Scar
The Clash, Blondie, The Cure, Talking Heads etc. all sound totally different
edit: also The Police, who bring in Scar
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Re: Spritzy punkers
Agreed but also punk in general is a "genre blend". It's a music genre that started with 50s garage-rock aggressiveness, 60s Motown/Phil Spector melodies, Pete Townshend guitars, krautrock minimalism, the DIY spirit of skiffle, dub, reggae, Velvet Underground, etc. It's a melting pot. I hate that when people think of it their mind goes to Blink 182 or whatever.Ms Harmless wrote:post-punk and new wave are huge genre blends
The Clash, Blondie, The Cure, Talking Heads etc. all sound totally different
edit: also The Police, who bring in Scar
Anders wrote:I do not have a «neoliberal assessment of geopolitics», so please stop writing that I do.
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Re: Spritzy punkers
oh yeah, totallytheplatypus wrote:Agreed but also punk in general is a "genre blend". It's a music genre that started with 50s garage-rock aggressiveness, 60s Motown/Phil Spector melodies, Pete Townshend guitars, krautrock minimalism, the DIY spirit of skiffle, dub, reggae, Velvet Underground, etc. It's a melting pot. I hate that when people think of it their mind goes to Blink 182 or whatever.Ms Harmless wrote:post-punk and new wave are huge genre blends
The Clash, Blondie, The Cure, Talking Heads etc. all sound totally different
edit: also The Police, who bring in Scar
it's kind of both frustrating and endearing to me that PJ keeps trying new wave, because 1. so many of their attempts haven't worked (it's my opinion that Gigaton is shaping up to doing so), and 2. if they can crack it, it makes total sense that a "grunge" band would do that, since "grunge" was also a big clash of different sounds, based in classic rock, Blues, Punk, Metal, Folk / Country, etc.
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Re: Spritzy punkers
While I know and agree wit all of this, my mind goes to a certain type of guitar playing.theplatypus wrote:Agreed but also punk in general is a "genre blend". It's a music genre that started with 50s garage-rock aggressiveness, 60s Motown/Phil Spector melodies, Pete Townshend guitars, krautrock minimalism, the DIY spirit of skiffle, dub, reggae, Velvet Underground, etc. It's a melting pot. I hate that when people think of it their mind goes to Blink 182 or whatever.Ms Harmless wrote:post-punk and new wave are huge genre blends
The Clash, Blondie, The Cure, Talking Heads etc. all sound totally different
edit: also The Police, who bring in Scar
This is also why i define two separate genres....Punk and Punk Rock
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Re: Spritzy punkers
Jorge and I have chatted about our experiences with Punk a bit and US / UK have pretty different traditions so I'm not sure how / if they connect
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Re: Spritzy punkers
The first place my mind goes to in regards to punk:
Last edited by Anders on Thu February 20, 2020 2:35 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Ms Harmless
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Re: Spritzy punkers
same here; for me punk is primarily politicalAnders wrote:The first place my minds goes to in regards to punk:
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Re: Spritzy punkers
No doubt about that.Ms Harmless wrote:same here; for me punk is primarily politicalAnders wrote:The first place my minds goes to in regards to punk:
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warehouse
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Re: Spritzy punkers
i guess i was thinking more energy and power chords. its also funny we cant agree on the definition of 'punk' but we are all pretty much on the same page with 'spritzy'theplatypus wrote:I think you're right that it's too angry to be categorized as "spritzy", but just to zero in on this point: "Blood" is in an odd time signature and has funky wah-wah guitar part running through the verses. I don't think it's "one of their most punk songs"warehouse wrote:'blood' is one of their most 'punk' songs.
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Re: Spritzy punkers
lmaowarehouse wrote:i guess i was thinking more energy and power chords. its also funny we cant agree on the definition of 'punk' but we are all pretty much on the same page with 'spritzy'theplatypus wrote:I think you're right that it's too angry to be categorized as "spritzy", but just to zero in on this point: "Blood" is in an odd time signature and has funky wah-wah guitar part running through the verses. I don't think it's "one of their most punk songs"warehouse wrote:'blood' is one of their most 'punk' songs.
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Re: Spritzy punkers
I love the studio version of Leatherman so much. It's a top 20 PJ song for me. It's so much better than the live versions.theplatypus wrote:Hold on a second, all this time I was talking about the Touring Bank 2000 version of "Leatherman" because that's the only version I've ever heard. I just listened to the studio version (for the first time ever!) and it has a completely different rhythm, feel, and aesthetic, and I agree with you that I would not call it punk at allStrat wrote:It bounces. It doesn’t thrash or propel.
Gonna have to disagree with you all idiots here and this is where I part ways from rm. good luck. Morons
Makes me wonder how some of these "spritzy punkers" would have turned out if Jack Irons was still in the band. Maybe they would have leaned more towards "garage pop-rock".
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Re: Spritzy punkers
evenslow wrote:man, people are really having a lot of trouble with the whole "spritzy" part of this. you can't just throw out any fast punk song.
spritzy is bubbly, can't-sit-still, sunny, giggly, hyper, bouncy. aka not anything off of vitalogy. whipping is not spritzy for god's sake.
stip is probably right that mankind is patient zero but that feels weird with stone on vocals. it's really more of a post ST phenomenon to be honest. they seemed to double down on that specific type of song as an automatic part of their repertoire after the self-serious approach of that record.
the fixer absolutely needs to be on the official list.
I agree with this overview, and I personally don't think anything until the self titled record fits the definition. I've seen some people suggest Save You, Get Right, and Green Disease as being spritzy, but I think those have too much of the old Pearl Jam dark mystique to fit the definition.
If you have to go before S/T, maybe Gremmie and Don't Gimme No Lip, but I think Big Wave is the original spritzy rocker.
Last edited by guitar_davey on Thu February 20, 2020 3:55 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Spritzy punkers
there are about as many on the no code-riot act run as there are after. the big change is that they started putting them on albumsevenslow wrote:man, people are really having a lot of trouble with the whole "spritzy" part of this. you can't just throw out any fast punk song.
spritzy is bubbly, can't-sit-still, sunny, giggly, hyper, bouncy. aka not anything off of vitalogy. whipping is not spritzy for god's sake.
stip is probably right that mankind is patient zero but that feels weird with stone on vocals. it's really more of a post ST phenomenon to be honest. they seemed to double down on that specific type of song as an automatic part of their repertoire after the self-serious approach of that record.
the fixer absolutely needs to be on the official list.
I Am No Guide - Pearl Jam Song by Song - Out now!
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guitar_davey
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Re: Spritzy punkers
Gremmie Out of Control
Don't Gimme No Lip
Big Wave
Gonna See My Friend
Got Some
The Fixer
Supersonic
SBWM
Don't Gimme No Lip
Big Wave
Gonna See My Friend
Got Some
The Fixer
Supersonic
SBWM
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Re: Spritzy punkers
Needs more skiffle.
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Re: Spritzy punkers
Strat wrote:Leatherman isn’t punk for fucks sake. It’s basically a folk song.
Really glad this was worked out. From the jangly guitars to the relatively monotone but somehow really musical vocal melody, "Leatherman" always felt very REM-ish to me; even the storytelling component has a very "Fables of the Reconstruction"-ish feel. It takes on some punky elements live but it's not really in the song's DNA. I think the same applies to "U."theplatypus wrote:Hold on a second, all this time I was talking about the Touring Bank 2000 version of "Leatherman" because that's the only version I've ever heard. I just listened to the studio version (for the first time ever!) and it has a completely different rhythm, feel, and aesthetic, and I agree with you that I would not call it punk at allStrat wrote:It bounces. It doesn’t thrash or propel.
Gonna have to disagree with you all idiots here and this is where I part ways from rm. good luck. Morons
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Re: Spritzy punkers
The PRAMG-era punkers are less offset by other things, I think -- I can understand someone placing "BRY," "Hitchhiker," "Green Disease," etc. with "Supersonic" and "Superblood Wolfmoon" on the same general end of the Pearl Jam spectrum, but there are other things going on in them that make one (me, anyway) less confident about dumping them into a clearly defined "spritzy punk" bucket.evenslow wrote:stip is probably right that mankind is patient zero but that feels weird with stone on vocals. it's really more of a post ST phenomenon to be honest. they seemed to double down on that specific type of song as an automatic part of their repertoire after the self-serious approach of that record.
This probably undersells punk's diversity as a genre, as per Jorge's post above, but I also think this "spritzy punk" label that has been trending on RM is deliberately honing in on a reductionist interpretation of the genre.
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Re: Spritzy punkers
"spritzy punk bucket" is a really pleasing phrase
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Re: Spritzy punkers
I can see the REM comparison for Leatherman (much less for U), but this would be one of the worst songs REM ever wrote.Kevin Davis wrote:Strat wrote:Leatherman isn’t punk for fucks sake. It’s basically a folk song.Really glad this was worked out. From the jangly guitars to the relatively monotone but somehow really musical vocal melody, "Leatherman" always felt very REM-ish to me; even the storytelling component has a very "Fables of the Reconstruction"-ish feel. It takes on some punky elements live but it's not really in the song's DNA. I think the same applies to "U."theplatypus wrote:Hold on a second, all this time I was talking about the Touring Bank 2000 version of "Leatherman" because that's the only version I've ever heard. I just listened to the studio version (for the first time ever!) and it has a completely different rhythm, feel, and aesthetic, and I agree with you that I would not call it punk at allStrat wrote:It bounces. It doesn’t thrash or propel.
Gonna have to disagree with you all idiots here and this is where I part ways from rm. good luck. Morons
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