[The UK cover.]
Title: Rip It Up and Start Again: Postpunk 1978-1984
Author: Simon
Reynolds
Publisher: Faber and Faber (UK), Penguin (US)
Year: 2005 (UK), 2006 (US)
Publisher: Faber and Faber (UK), Penguin (US)
Year: 2005 (UK), 2006 (US)
The Post-Punk
Universe
When I first heard
about Rip It Up and Start Again in 2006, I knew this was a
book for people like me. I'd been interested in post-punk bands for a
few years by that point, mostly by virtue of alternative-oriented
family members and friends. Bands like The Cure, Siouxsie & the Banshees, Joy Division, Echo & the Bunnymen, Depeche Mode, and Bauhaus
existed in some sort of hidden substratum of my suburban, Midwestern
environment, where these once-popular British bands had become
obscure and mysterious, yet on the verge of revitalization and
reissue campaigns. The book came at just the right moment as a wave
of nostalgia for this kind of music was cresting.
Oddly, though, the book
barely spends any time at all on most of the aforementioned bands. In
fact, if you really study the author, it becomes apparent that he
doesn't even really like The Cure or the Banshees, and I'm not sure
about Depeche Mode and Bauhaus, either. So what exactly is
covered by the book?
The answer to that
question partially depends on what edition of the book you have, or
better stated, if it was printed in the UK or the US. For some
reason, the US edition is substantially shorter. Three chapters are
completely removed, at least two others are substantially trimmed,
the illustrations are missing, and the timeline, appendix, and
bibliography are cut. If that's not enough, the cover was changed
(for the worse) and the chapter sequence was reordered. The only
thing that the US version has over the UK version is that the Mutant
Disco chapter was rewritten from an oral history into an actual
narrative – although the rewritten version has since been included
in Reynolds' follow-up book, Totally Wired.
I originally read the
US version, and only afterwards realized I'd missed the complete
story. In 2006, the days before widespread digital streaming, I had
no choice but to take notes and scour record stores to find the music
described. Recently, I finally took the time to read the original,
complete UK version. It ended up being a very different experience,
primarily because I had the benefit of Spotify and YouTube to listen
to the wide array of music covered by the book. Now my curiosity is
piqued again about many bands I'd overlooked the first time or never
got around to – or that weren't covered in the US edition.
(Seriously, among others, Subway Sect, Magazine, Minutemen, Meat
Puppets, and The Teardrop Explodes were all absent!)
[The US cover.]
Additional Material
The other thing I did
differently this time was that I also read the online footnotes
and discographies [Edit 2019.11.12: link broken, but archived here]. They are welcome addenda and actually serve as excellent reading on
their own. Both are less well edited and sometimes lack a degree of
clarity or finesse, but they also provide a less structured place for
additional details and elements that weren't given space in the
primary text. Many artists and songs are only mentioned in these
extra sections, and while there might not be many gems there, there
is plenty for specialists to get excited about. In particular, the
Postpunk
Esoterica [Edit 2019.11.12: again, link broken, but archived here] includes small but important sections
about the diverse international post-punk scene.
The final subheading of
the Esoterica is particularly interesting, an issue that perhaps
should not be left to the very, very end to introduce: "Post-Punk
or not Post-Punk". This is where Reynolds tries to distinguish
New Wave from New Pop and post-punk. He does admit that the lines are
blurred and there is room to argue. He even (finally!) gives space to
several "borderline cases": XTC, Elvis Costello, The
Police, Blondie,
and The Psychedelic Furs, among others. I would
argue some of these, but his stance is that those bands are too
straight-pop or straight-rock and not actually notably influenced by
punk. Since most of the book encourages the notion that post-punk is
more about a set of ideas and ideals than any specific sound, it is
notable that the author ultimately provides some (relatively) strict
delineation in this section.
Post-Punk Heroes and
Villains
One of Rip It Up's
biggest selling points is just how many bands are featured.
Reynolds does a great job of grouping artists together and discussing
movements that might not have even been clearly defined as they
happened. This also provides space for a few words about many
smaller, easily overlooked bands. However, if one band steals the
show, it's Public Image Limited. What better poster child for
post-punk could there be than the biggest poster child of punk? John
Lydon's post-Pistols band are given the entirety of two chapters,
whereas no other band have the honor of even one complete chapter in
their name. PiL's rise from punk's ashes, their opening of the
floodgates, their brave new world of sound – they represent the
ascent of post-punk like no other story. The band's disintegration
and the wearing down of their spirit after just a few albums
similarly echoes post-punk's fall from grace.
[Public Image Limited's "Flowers
of Romance" (1981).]
If two bands take the
spotlight of the book, the second is Scritti Politti. Most listeners
would probably think of them as an icon of new wave blandness, and
until the release of the Early compilation in 2005, there was
nothing in print to dispel the notion. Their earliest singles and EPs
are the work of a lo-fi, independent, punk band trying to break out
of any preconceived boxes – all the while spreading the holy word
of Marxism. After years of squatted housing and grueling tours,
central figure Green Gartside fell ill and later emerged with the
idea of making newfangled pop music with subversive undertones. While
he certainly succeeded in some sense, he also made music that sounds
rather terrible unless you only focus on the words. But Scritti's
bold change of direction is a bellwether for a larger movement,
carefully documented in Rip It Up, of the conversion from
independent and non-commercial post-punk into slicker,
mainstream-oriented, major-label New Pop – or what is now broadly
called New Wave. (See also Orange Juice, whom I briefly discussed in
a recent, related post.)
[Scritti Politti's 4 A Sides EP (1979).]
Throughout the book,
Reynolds rarely directly criticizes bands. It makes for a great read,
because the book reads like a documentary, and the author comes
across as very equitable but also very excited about every artist he
mentions. Nonetheless, Reynolds does occasionally critique musicians
when they deserve it (Gang of Four's occasionally contradictory
masculinity, Siouxsie & the Banshees' questionable antics in
their early days, et cetera). Furthermore, in related materials (such
as the footnotes and discographies), the author is much more open
about his honest opinions. For example, he appears to have a
confusing distaste for goth bands in general, and he oddly downplays
Au Pairs in favor of Gang of Four and Delta 5. While these opinions
might be frustrating for a fan like me, it doesn't really tarnish the
primary text.
If there is one band
that gets consistently maligned throughout the book and the
accompanying texts, it's The Clash. Tom Robinson Band come in second,
and perhaps Crass would be third. This seems to be in part because
these bands overtly espoused political ideology in their music and
image. Reynolds believes that this constitutes preaching, and
apparently many bands of the time preferred to be more subtle. (The Pop Group would be a rather extreme exception.) I still don't
understand why such deliberate politicism constitutes a fault,
especially when U2's brand of preaching is not criticized at all.
[The back of The Clash's "The Call Up" b/w
"Stop the World".]
In fact, the Clash are
something of a specter paralleling the post-punk timeline. They haunt
the book from start to finish – PiL's guitarist, Keith Levene, was
an early member of The Clash, and the rest of the band consistently
incorporated many of the same elements that post-punk absorbed,
particularly with the adoption of dub and reggae influences. It would
seem that The Clash's only substantial crime was a pseudo-macho
guitar hero aesthetic, which, with hindsight, just seems like a
gimmick or charade. In the narrative of the book, the Clash are the
representative "other", always doing whatever post-punks
wanted to avoid, despite that in truth they had more in common than
in opposition.
[The Clash's "Hitsville UK" (1981), featuring
prominent indie labels. I think I see "In the Beginning There Was Rhythm" on Y Records, but with The
Slits' name crossed out!]
Conclusion
I think I have Rip
It Up and Start Again to blame for my affection for bands like
Pere Ubu and Magazine, The Slits and The Pop Group, Wire and PiL, The
Fall and Gang of Four, Young Marble Giants and The Raincoats. The
scope of the book is perfect – it is broad, yet just detailed
enough that the reader gets some reference points and recommendations
of good songs and albums. So many bands are covered that the reader
is almost certain to find something new and compelling.
However, I also think I
can blame the book for why it took me so long to ever appreciate The
Clash. I guess every story is supposed to have a villain, but that
might be the only major thing that bothered me about the book. For a
work that is so inclusive at face value, it is odd to have such
notable exclusions and enemies. I suppose the line had to be drawn
somewhere, so this doesn't amount to any great criticism – and if
that's the only thing I can think of that I didn't like about the
book, then I have to admit that Reynolds achieved just about
everything he could have wanted to.
Scores:
UK edition: A
UK edition: A
US edition: B
References and
Further Reading:
Rip It Upfootnotes
Rip It Up Discography Part 1: The Core Curriculum (pdf) [Edit 2019.11.12: archived here]
Rip It Up Discography Part 1: The Core Curriculum (pdf) [Edit 2019.11.12: archived here]
Rip
It Up
Discography Part 2: Postpunk Esoterica (pdf) [Edit 2019.11.12: archived here]
AllMusic's review of Scritti Politti's Early,
further explaining their divided history
Forgotten Moments from Post-Punk History, a related post inspired by Rip It Up
Forgotten Moments from Post-Punk History, a related post inspired by Rip It Up
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