Thanks for those who gave me good, honest-to-proper, I suppose punk-inspired answers.
1. Punk Rock is more feasible to the average kid in his garage with a cheapo guitar and a crappy amp. He can learn three chords and start a band.
Makes sense.
2. Nothing. It's just a matter of each to their own. The two types of music I listen to the most are Punk and Jazz. The music sounds good to me and I guess to other people too.
This I guess was my main question. I'm an amateur musician, and I was referring more to how it differs musically to standard rock. Which was answered above I guess.
3. What is the shoddy genre? Do you know what is meant by the term Homogeny? Maybe this is an example of that.
It sounds to me like post-hardcore is a step back from hardcore. That's just me though, I kind of equate post-hardcore to black metal. It just strikes me in that nonsensical way and kind of makes me giggle.
4. People tell me there are stereotypical types of people who listen to one genre but I don't meet them. Why are two people ever hostile to each other? Same reasons.
It is kind of like that. I have never really felt threatened by or angry towards anyone I've met through music.
I don't really see the connections being made here.
Are you a musician? I am thinking in terms of what's used and what influences are drawn on to create music and play it, so my ideas could be alien in some regards to people who don't play music. If you do play music, I'm a dolt. D'oh.
What I meant was that hardcore isn't as heavy or fast as thrash metal, but it uses a lot of the same devices, basically.
New set of questions:
1. So does technicality within the music stop a band from being punk? I'd think not, personally, considering that punk seems largely based on attitude rather than music. I am just saying because after a while that kid with three chords does become better at his instrument.
2. How did punk become so broad? I mean when you look at rock bands today, it's hard to find one that is truly "rock" - most fall into punk or metal, usually punk. So punk has appeal to Jimmy with the Strat copy, sure, but what empowers it beyond the realm of rock and metal? I'm referring 100% to the actual sound rather than the lyrical content right now. My current observation it's that it's really balls-to-the-wall and doesn't let up. It strikes me as a similar concept to heavy metal - different lyrical content and purpose of course, but it shares the fact that it just does not let up and it determined to blow your face off.
3. Is punk as it was known, dead? There are plenty of post-hardcore and pop-punk bands kicking around for sure, but are there any modern bands in the style of early punk that I should check out?
4. If you drop a punk and a metalhead from 10m, who hits the ground first?
punk is rejecting structures you know are wrong for the world and making an effort to make a change for the better.
punk is DIY.
punk is honesty.
punk is the underdog willing to fight to the bitter end for what they believe in.
punk is a hyena fighting for a lion's share.
(blatant rancid reference)
punk is pointing out what's wrong with the world and rejecting it.
pop is pointing out what's right with the world and celebrating it.
The problem with that is that most of those can be applied to many movements of rock. Post-rock isn't going to become punk just because you're not gonna take shit from anyone.
Or does it?
Basic point here is that according to that definition, a lot of punk isn't actually punk and a lot of not-punk is actually punk. See: the music of today.
Surely you should be able to work this out for yourself.
Not possible, especially considering that the only answer I got that really explained what needed to be explained was tommy. According to most people in this thread, rock should be a subgenre of punk rather than the other way around.
*sigh*
Thank you; this reply was ever so helpful and communicated a number of insightful and intelligent comments.
Dude, what the hell?
In other news, Johnny made me laugh far too hard.
So this seems to be the definition of punk that is being communicated:
A subgenre of rock that is inspired by adolescent drives, communicated agressively through overdriven guitars, basses, drums and vocals during the early movement(s). Usually concerned with politics and social issues. It is any rock music that displays a DIY, fight-for-the-underdog attitude that embraces musical simplicity. Later movements of punk have been known to merge with pop music to create a less agressive sound that communicates issues less based on politics and wide-spanning social issues, instead focusing on personal problems.
Anybody ever read Lester Bangs's essay on the origins of punk?? I think he traces it back to a French prostitute, which is god damn hilarious.
I laughed very hard at this.