• Lad
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    03 months ago

    Trump supporters are the American idiot

  • folkrav
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    03 months ago

    Did these conservatives miss American Idiot, or are they just being reactionary as they so often are?

    • @[email protected]
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      03 months ago

      Most of them are just peanut brains with the Goldfish attention span who only like the sound but never listen to the lyrics. Hell one of the local grocery stores around here in their mix has a few tracks by the stones in particular give me shelter. It’s an iconic song. But most people have no idea what the lyrics are. It’s sort of surreal to walk through the store listening to the singer scream out rape and murder it’s just a shot away. It’s a fun sort of irony I suppose.

    • kora
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      03 months ago

      Tbf, they did sell out a tad after that album

      • folkrav
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        03 months ago

        American Idiot and the what, 3 albums before it and all the following, were all on Reprise Records (Warner). American Idiot specifically had some very strong marketing campaigns. If one really does subscribe to that “selling out” rhetoric, they did so much earlier than that.

    • @[email protected]
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      3 months ago

      This is the same group of people who (somehow) thought Killing in the Name Of was aligned with their views, and now make comments like “I liked RATM until they got so political.”

    • @[email protected]
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      03 months ago

      I don’t man, I don’t consider them punk punk but pop punk, but still doesn’t change your statement.

      I’m still surprised punk hasn’t made a come back. We are dying of old age and this is the right environment for punk to flourish.

      • @[email protected]
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        03 months ago

        The day Trump was elected I was excited for a new wave of anti-government human-rights protest music. The best we got was “This Is America”.

        • sarcasticsunrise
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          03 months ago

          NOFX atleast had “The War On Errorism” during the W years, but it was mostly whelming

        • sarcasticsunrise
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          03 months ago

          Oh shit! How could I forget the best of the best when it comes to leftist punk: Propagandhi! "Less Talk More Rock and Today’s Empires, Tomorrow’s Ashes are essential listening. I’m hella dating myself with these albums, the Adderall has kicked in way too late I guess

      • @[email protected]
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        03 months ago

        Check out Desaparecidos, side project of Conor Oberst. They have 2 albums, one in 2002, one in 2015, both just as relevant today.

        • @[email protected]
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          03 months ago

          TL;Dr: Long, rambling old man shit incoming.

          You’re absolutely right. The DIY landscape is so incredibly different. Now you can get an electric guitar with reasonable QC and an amp with modeling and a hundred presets that plugs directly into your computer to record. There’s loads of free lessons online that show people how to play instruments. There are tabs for almost every song put out by any semi-popular artist so you don’t have to try to reverse engineer them anymore. There are backing tracks. We didn’t have any of that shit. We had a solid state amp with two channels, one of which was poorly distorted.

          And I’m here for it. It’s not my dad’s punk. It’s not my punk and pop punk. It belongs to new people and I’m excited for them to look back at it the way I look back at the bands that excited me when I was a kid. They’ll have new genres built upon the shoulders of the ones I listened to, which stood on the shoulders of those that came before.

          • @[email protected]
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            03 months ago

            Yep at the time an old guitar and a beat-up drum set was realistically what you’re getting. Maybe a basic organ / keyboard. Which is what led to the distinct sound along with General lack of prediction and mastering.

            Now you can pick up second hand synthesizer sequencers etc etc etc. The Landscapes opened up a lot more and as you said with digital audio workstations Etc pretty much make any sort of sound you want.

          • @[email protected]
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            03 months ago

            Huh, TIL. He’s a shitbag, but I really think guys like him do it because being a backwards ass hat is unpopular now and he only knows how to be against things, not for them.

            I was like that in my teens and early 20s. Not conservative, just hated anything that appeared popular. I was insufferable. This dude really seems like an old ass pizza cutter. All edge, no point.

      • @[email protected]
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        03 months ago

        I’m down with you being all in on the statement but I have a question for you.

        What would you consider Punk in 1990 or even 94?

            • @[email protected]
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              03 months ago

              Narcoleptic youth, total chaos, rancid, one way system, nofx, penny wise.

              Playing? TSOL, circle jerks, the adicts, D.I, the exploited

              • @[email protected]
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                03 months ago

                On Wikipedia Rancid, NOFX, Penny Wise all have a similar paragraph about all the other bands that came out of the same area and Green Day is in all of them.

                Green Day may have shifted over time into Rock or Pop Punk as you say but make no mistake when they originated they were Punk. Especially if NOFX, Penny Wise, and Rancid is. The problem is that when a band hits it, they are usually tagged with whatever they were defined as from then on. So they are punk because they were originally punk. I know I am arguing and I am not meaning to. Just trying to point out that there isn’t much reason to say they aren’t punk anymore.

                It’s like my argument about “hover boards” I lost that one a long time ago and it doesn’t help anyone to keep correcting people an say it’s not a hoverboard. The name stuck from the start.

      • Ech
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        03 months ago

        The least punk thing is to gatekeep the genre.

        • @[email protected]
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          03 months ago

          Classifying them pop rock would be gatekeeping. I still classified them within the punk genre and still agreed with their statement of punk.

        • @[email protected]
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          03 months ago

          People have been saying Green Day aren’t punk since Dookie. That’s always been a thing with punk. Once you leave the underground clubs of NYC, you’re pop.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 months ago

          classifying in genres is by definition gatekeeping. somewhere you have to draw a line between punk and everything else, otherwise the term punk loses all meaning.

      • @[email protected]
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        03 months ago

        I grew up in (what I perceive as) the heyday of punk, but mostly ignored it. Lately I’ve been tempted to take a closer look at some of those old punk bands I always heard about back in the day.

        • @[email protected]
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          03 months ago

          Those kids were right. Not so much as adults anymore some of them. John Lydon in particular having become a bit of a disappointment. But it’s still a fun era and easy to listen through. Seeing as it really encompassed about a 5 to 6 year span.

          Post Punk/ dance Punk is having a bit of a Resurgence again though. Lots of good new stuff coming out. Though not as much political necessarily.

          • @[email protected]
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            03 months ago

            it’s still a fun era and easy to listen through

            Posing the same question as I did to someone else - can you recommend an entry point or two? Heavy on the political/social messaging is fine with me, but a more understandable lyrical style than what I remember of a lot of those old punk bands would be preferred.

            • @[email protected]
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              03 months ago

              Wikipedia has a decent list to get an entry point. At least for the big ones. Start following any of those through YouTube Spotify Etc and you’ll get down into rabbit holes of small bands that only put out a few songs as live bootlegs that only five people in the world remember. Rabbit holes are always a good time.

                • @[email protected]
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                  03 months ago

                  Punk was a musical big bang of a sort. I spend most of my time in adjacent subgenre. Most people do without realizing it honestly. Postpunk, goth, new wave, alternative, and industrial all descend from it. As well as other genera like ska, psychobilly, and horror punk. Though I’d argue that a lot of the political sentiment today is in industrial and EBM. Alec Empire and Atari Teenage Riot 20 years ago were suuuper political. I mentioned KMFDM elsewhere, they go way way back to the early 80s. Even Trent Reznor and nine inch nails, very political. Even male model Marc Massive and his group Massive Ego. Really continues the political and social commentary.

          • @[email protected]
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            3 months ago

            I will do - can you recommend an entry point or two? Heavy on the political/social messaging is fine with me, but a more understandable lyrical style than what I remember of a lot of those old punk bands would be preferred.

            • @[email protected]
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              03 months ago

              The partisans, subhumans, the exploited, discharge.

              Cheap sex, the casualties, cockney rejects for newer late 90s early 2k. Some of the ones I think would be what your are looking for.

              Hardcore punk, oi, crust, anachro punk.

  • @[email protected]
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    03 months ago

    I chuckled heartily earlier today when I saw a post on the front page of the R-word site that was posted to the conservative sub. It was a picture of the band holding up a mask of Trump with idiot written on it and a title along the lines of “After Trump assassination attempt, Green Day holds up head of Donald Trump”.

    Literally, it was just a mask of Trump with something like “Idiot” written on it from a band that quite literally is known for criticizing the government (understatement).

    They were making it sound like it was an implicit threat to Trump and hateful rhetoric inciting further violence.

    I swear there must be some brain damage involved in those types of conclusions.

  • @[email protected]
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    03 months ago

    ROFL!! Apparently the folks complaining haven’t actually ever listened to Green Day. Though the severed Trump head at the concert was probably a bit much.

    • GingaNinga
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      03 months ago

      I went to a green day concert before trump was even president and they had the crowd cheering that line, its not new. They were awesome by the way.

  • @[email protected]
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    03 months ago

    Green Day used to be anti-establishment, now they are the establishment.

    American Idiot is almost 20 years old and the message hasn’t changed. Do these people just have zero media literacy?

    • @[email protected]
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      03 months ago

      Media literacy has never been a thing with conservatives - to this day they don’t understand what the Bruce Springsteen song ‘Born In The USA’ is really about. Reagan famously wanted to use it for his campaign in 1984.

      Also somehow conservatives have been so keen on appearing as ‘not the establishment’ that by now they have terminally deluded themselves into believing that they really aren’t part of the establishment. How their voters believe this is anyone’s guess.

      And let’s not talk about how the self-proclaimed defenders of free speech constantly take issue with speech they don’t like.

    • PorradaVFR
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      03 months ago

      Yes. They also think Rage Against the Machine “got political”.

      RATM.

  • @[email protected]
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    03 months ago

    So Green Day does the most Green Day thing ever and the MAGA crowd loses their minds. Who are the snowflakes again?

  • @[email protected]
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    03 months ago

    Green Day drew controversy among conservatives during their first U.S. gig this week after changing a lyric to anti-MAGA.

    I don’t really see the controversy honestly. Band modifies their own lyrics in a way magas don’t like. Magas whine like the snowflakes they are, rest of world shrugs. (And I think they have done this at least one other time recently.)

    I was kind of amazed that neither this Dropkick Murphy’s speech nor this Dropkick Murphy’s album, nor especially this song from that album, seems to have generated any anger from that crowd. They seem like exactly the sort of band that magas might just have assumed were “on their side.”

    • @[email protected]
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      03 months ago

      I’m not sure the Dropkick Murphy’s are a band most folks have ever heard of. I think the only song of theirs I’ve heard someone else play was Shipping Up to Boston. It was being used for a commercial. Great band with great music, but I don’t think they ever hit mainstream.

    • Angry_Autist (he/him)
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      3 months ago

      cuntservatives have been outraged by SOMETHING literally every year I have existed on this planet, and my first console controller only had one button…

      Still remember my mother freaking out over a satanic panic and throwing away all of my action figures because I was apparently worshipping satan by playing with my Ninja Turtles.

  • @[email protected]
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    03 months ago

    Oh do conservatives not like a bisexual man singing about how bush is a war criminal anymore?

  • @[email protected]
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    03 months ago

    "Since when did punk rock talk about politics "

    Ummmm… pretty sure that’s a defining point.