Sign up, and you'll be able to vote in polls. Sign upYou don't have the ability to post right now...
Aug 31, 2023
12:28:36pm
Icecat Seventh Amendment Advocate
I can’t tell if that is real or fake but if it’s real, it’s because punk was basically a museum attraction from 1985-90
If it’s fake, it’s funny enough. But if it’s real, it’s funny because of the way the music industry commoditizes itself.

My opinion is that Bad Religion saved punk in 1988 by releasing their album Suffer, showing how punk music could actually be melodic and sound good and how punk lyrics could be more than just whining about life as a teenager or trying to be shocking. But few people outside of underground punk circles even really heard the record.

Bands like NOFX saw that poppier punk music like Suffer was the way forward and changed their sound. Then, Nirvana (heavily influenced by punk bands) released Nevermind in 1991, and guitar-centric music made a comeback in mainstream places. A few years later, Green Day blew the roof off the punk world with Dookie which is now probably multiple times a diamond record, and showed punk bands they could actually make money doing recording and performing this genre of music.

So I think at the time of that commercial, most consumers probably didn’t know any better. Now, because punk made a comeback and people bought the old records and defined the genre, that commercial seems even more ridiculous than when it was made.

Sources:
• Smash by Ian Winwood (about the 1990s punk explosion);
• Do What You Want by Bad Religion;
• The Hepatitis Bathtub and other stories by NOFX; and
• Serving the Servant (biography of Kurt Cobain).
This message has been modified
Originally posted on Aug 31, 2023 at 12:28:36pm
Message modified by Icecat on Mar 9, 2024 at 9:18:50pm
Icecat
Previous username
atl
Bio page
Icecat
Joined
Jul 4, 2010
Last login
Nov 22, 2024
Total posts
4,784 (1,130 FO)