DJ Courtney: Punk and the Art of Aging

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ricecooker is shameless, ok? alright, here’s another stolen article (with proper credits of course)
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originally from the excellent American online zine: getunderground.com

Punk and the Art of Aging
[ under arts ] - 07.02.05 -
by: DJ Courtney

Tomorrow I turn 25, and still I contend that I was raised by punk rock. My political beliefs, values, and worldview all have their roots in the music I embraced over a decade ago. Yet as I grow older, I find it harder and harder to reconcile punk rock as an ideology with its physical manifestation.

By nature, punk is a youth-oriented subculture. In high school, I can recall being outraged and confused as to why bands I liked would play 18- and 21-plus shows. “Adults don’t like this kind of thing,” my young mind reasoned. Adults were the ones in power, the teachers, parents, police, all the authority figures kids rebel against. They weren’t supposed to play a part in our scene. The rare older attendee of an all-ages show was looked on with suspicion and little bit of annoyance.

Little did any of us realize that said person was probably into punk since before we popped out of the womb. We worshipped all the old punk bands, The Clash, The Ramones, The Sex Pistols, but got pissed when they reunited for some moneymaking tour or sub par new album. It was all about the local bands, our friends’ bands, having a good time. And it was a good time, for a short time.

Besides the latent sexism and racism that has always turned me off from punk, I first began to feel alienated from the scene in college. There I was, trying to get an education, taking sociology and women’s studies classes to explore the dynamics of oppression, to fill myself with the knowledge necessary to take a stand, something I considered punk rock. Y

et I would go to shows and find myself surrounded with people who just wanted to get fucked up, people who looked at me as a sell-out for pursuing higher education, people whose idea of fighting the government only went so far as yelling about it to their friends from the safety of a stage. Being angry about the state of things is a good first step, but it should not stop there.

After college I officially abandoned identity politics, stopped dying my hair various colors of the rainbow and removed my facial piercings. After all, I needed a job. I began working 9-5 at a nonprofit, something I considered a natural extension of my punk rock beliefs. Yet, this lifestyle began to eat away at me. Nowhere does punk discuss sitting in traffic during your morning commute to work. Nowhere does it discuss paying bills, running errands, and filing taxes. I was starting to feel guilty for living the life I was leading.

After all, punk says fuck work, fuck normal responsibilities, DIY or die man. Which would be fine, if one still lived at home, if one had the entrepreneurial savvy to start and maintain their own business, if one was independently wealthy or lucky enough to play music all day. But what about the rest of us? As much as we all despise it, the fact of the matter is we live in a capitalist society, and thus we must participate on even the most minimal level to survive.

Aside from my own punk rock guilt, I experienced a shunning of sorts because of my newfound non-punk exterior. I can distinctly remember walking to a job interview, wearing a skirt in my feeble attempt to look “normal”, and not being handed a socialist flyer by a guy in an Exploited shirt, ostensibly because I looked like I wouldn’t be interested. I was furious. I wanted to turn around and tell him I knew more about socialism and anarchy then he could shake a stick at, that I was wearing some lame office skirt because I needed a job to pay rent. But I didn’t.

I assuaged myself by thinking of all the radical people I had met and studied that were doing a hell of a lot more while appearing “normal” then marching around with spikes and patches like every other stereotypical punk. Similarly, I was once approached by a middle-aged white man in business attire who wanted to know what I was reading. I showed him my copy of Punk Planet. He laughed and said, “But you’re not a punk. Where are all your tattoos? Where are all your piercings?” I was so flustered I could only muster a half-smile. But I was fuming inside. “Oh my god people think I’m some normal person!” Eventually though I stopped caring. I knew inside I was more adamant than ever about my beliefs, despite the fact that on the outside people couldn’t tell.

Along with my attire, my taste in music changed. No longer could I stomach the simplistic lyrics and song structure of what is traditionally defined as punk. I started exploring more experimental and avant-garde acts, attracted to their sonic fuck you rather than benignly yelled expletives. Friends began to question my musical departure, wondering why I was listening to arty, “pretentious” stuff, wondering how this could mean the same to me as punk once did. But in my mind, it was a natural extension of punk rock, even more punk than punk I would venture, the complete antithesis of corporate bands.

In a time when mall emo was huge, when faux indie dominated the airwaves, I was laying claim to something that was truly subversive, something that could and would never be co-opted. For me, this means listening to a lot of drones and feedback. And hard as is it may be to believe, it satiates my soul and intellect in a way punk as a musical form no longer can.

Recently I quit my job and moved to Northern California, not because I felt like a sell-out, but because the ennui that accompanies office work was getting to be too much. I felt my mind and soul beginning to rot. But before I left Los Angeles, I went to one last show at my all time favorite venue, the Smell in downtown. This hole in the wall art space was always a sanctuary for me, but that night, as I sat through bands whose average age was probably 19, as I eavesdropped on high schoolers discussing extra credit assignments, I felt like I had become the token old person and I knew it was time to move on.

I’ll still go to shows of course, but they’ll probably be ones at bars that no matter how amazing the band is, will never hold a candle to shows I went to in church halls when I was 15. Punk rock as a scene, as a genre, is no longer relevant to my adult life. But all the things punk rock as an ideology taught me and inspired me to do, are still applicable, and I will hold them in my heart until I die. And that’s why I feel I will always be punk fucking rock.

END.

getunderground.com reader comments:

This has been on of the best articles i have heard it mixes idealist thoughts with the real world and i myself being 15 and liking the “punk” or so we call scene find this hitting especially close to me.
Fernando Morales
06.27.2005

Excellent piece Courtney. Punk rockers are not on any higher moral plane than anyone else, and the prejudices that are in all human beings are manifested in them also. There are still plenty of great punk bands out there that have stayed true to themselves and their fans and lots of punk rockers break the mold. For example, Milo Ackerman of the Descendents is a microbioligist. Punk rock is about being yourself and not giving a shit about what anyone else thinks. Rock on.
Blackout Matt
07.03.2005

This is the most honest and important article to appear on these pages in quite some time. Courtney, you hit the nail right on its fucking head. Punk has become anything but. And it’s true, the ideology is all that was ever truly punk about punk at all. The music was/remains to be extremely lazy, for the most part. Few acts ever bothered to break away from the three-cord formula and, as you put it, simplistic lyrics. And I am sure they would argue that playing three cords is what makes them punk rock, but that’s just a cop out. The true Radicals didn’t need to jam spikes in their every orifice (or create new orifices through piercing) just to get a point across. Granted, body art is cool and there’s no denying the tribal appeal of said art form. But it seems to me that when everyone starts doing something simply because it’s “punk rock,” that takes all the punk out of it. In short, it becomes yet another trend. The reluctant conformist conforms to non-comformity. It’s a joke…as is most of what passes for punk these days. Pseudo-punk, if you will. Half of the bands around today who claim to have roots in Punk Rock never even heard of Richard Hell and couldn’t name one song by Dead Kennedys. They missed out on the energy and now it’s just a bunch of kids doodling on Marble notebooks and dying their hair to be “different.” Sad, sad thing this thing we call punk.

The only widely known punk that I can think of is Andre 3000 (Andre Benjamin) of the hip-hop duo OutKast. The reason I say this is because he dares to be progressive and flamboyantly dressed in a musical medium that demands machismo and faux-angry posturing. It may be hip-hop to you, but its punk rock to me. Just listen to “B.O.B.” AKA Bombs over Baghdad and tell me that ain’t fuckin’ punk. The true punks don’t go around with liberty spikes telling everybody that they sold out. They accept the fact that in order to make a difference in a society like ours that you have to infiltrate the system and play by their rules for awhile…until you reach a point of advantage. Great article! Very “punk rock.” :)
Bob Freville
07.04.2005


This is an awesome article, It put a smile on my face to see someone express so clearly what I have noticed happen in myself.. Hopefully the young peoples at the concerts “grow up” with a similar outlook and understanding of a punk rock ideal as this…

Melanie
07.06.2005

Even us old hippies from 2 generations before you still struggle with the schizm… and now having made a slow, disorganized retreat from “civilazation” and living waaaay out in the Rockies, the Who’s words still haunt– “…don’t tell me you know me, I don’t even know myself…” Things change yet stay the same.
phile
07.07.2005


Here in the UK your average punk gig attendee age is 30+.

zenon
07.13.2005

The last punk I encountered was a 43-year old who was asking me for change. From my understanding, Punk has always been an attitude. The attitude is DIY, but this can be translated across many spectrums; Not taking shit from people, just being innovative. That’s the thought that begat the music. These less than middle class kids wanted to show everyone that you didn’t need a manager, new microphones, or even skill to play a show and create music/hits. It’s something born inside of you and brought to fruition through a little learning and effort.
Steven F
07.13.2005

8 Comments, Comment or Ping

  1. express-rakyat

    Wow!

  2. hafizban

    punk or underground in general is not of what u wear, but it’s about what u feel n what u can share n help others in community.. thats more adult thinking to me..

  3. Aku rasa, lagu Lines In Sand oleh Sparta ni sesuai utk article ni serta rakan² seangkatan dengan aku. Tq.

    Sometimes a struggle builds you somehow
    Tears you down, Leaves you dead
    Time will pass, back to life
    Hand on Shoulders, Bigger, Better
    Sunday night, Tempers flair
    Fights erupt and trickle down
    Apologies, threats and lies
    Backing down, compromise

    While this city burns
    These wounds will heal
    You’ll find your way
    Though lines in sand
    Become a proving ground
    In time, you’ll find
    Who can tell who is their life

    Sometimes a struggle leaves you fragile
    Shaken up, Shotgun shy
    With heartache past, and open eyes
    You’ll come back stronger, Bigger, Better
    Maybe this time, Things will change
    Brand new day, Forgive, Forget
    Time has past, back to life
    Hand on Shoulders, Bigger, Better

    Only you with time can define your life,
    Only you with time can define your life,
    Can define your life, It’s yours.

  4. aizu aizumi

    punk not dead!!

  5. eMy WeaseL

    Sungguh bersemangat… :)

  6. rupert

    True, latent sexism and racism exist in the so called scene as well. Like it all not, because of the non-elitism (or elitism) of the scene amd its community, it makes that everybody that dressed like the “dress code” to be one of the people of the scene. That includes all the kids with mohawks at the beginning of the “Romantik ISA” by Hakim as well. Why exist in this supposedly “socially aware” subculture in the society?

    That brings me to the second characteristic of the scene, especially in home ground; elitism. Some of the so-called old timers (has been involved actively or inactively for quite sometime, not necessary old guys, some youngs who has early start too) has this thing of dissing the young who has just started to involved-wannabes, posers, kids etc tag being placed at these groups. Never to invite these kids to join gigs or tell them a thing or two about anarchism, thats why they have the mohawk but doesnt understand what’s all the rebellion about.

    Some of these oldtimers even violates what “righteous” things that they swore upon in their earlier years, showing their true colours of what a fucking racist and homophobes he/she is.

    There is also these scene ego, very much related to the characteristic i mention above, its what i call the scene ego. It is the action (or inaction) of waiting for the other scenester to tegur first, kot kang malu kalau orang tak kenal dia. No community spirit I see. Where’s the unity? Also, what’s with the genre racism?

    Talk to the kids. Encourage them to join the scene before any other subculture (religious, right wing politic, thugs and others) do..don’t just keep the scene exclusive, the more the merrier, the new faces will bring the new ideas.

    I never see myself as one of the scenesters, from all the pressures to “conform to their non-conformity”, just an insider with an outsider look. I don’t see much of Malaysian punks who are outspoken over any issues, whatever their stand is. Just look at the comments posted here at ricecooker. Then what is the difference of you punks with those outside?

    C’mon, self righteous punkers, gimme some intellegent reasoning, defend your self-righteous self!!

  7. mat yie kot?

    “I assuaged myself by thinking of all the radical people I had met and studied that were doing a hell of a lot more while appearing “normal” then marching around with spikes and patches like every other stereotypical punk”

    rasa macam aku pulak yang tulis ni……

  8. zaidi

    who the hell are you to tell me what’s punk and what’s not?? he he he terkejut korang…

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