Gregory2Smith1
J'les aurai!
Melody Maker poll winners 1977, makes interesting reading with Punk/new Wave just starting to make an impression but still dominated by prog
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Good too see the Stranglers well represented there
Melody Maker poll winners 1977, makes interesting reading with Punk/new Wave just starting to make an impression but still dominated by prog
View attachment 94945
Essential reading on the train to School in the early 60's.
Exactly NME and IT, had to look cool.
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Melody Maker poll winners 1977, makes interesting reading with Punk/new Wave just starting to make an impression but still dominated by prog
View attachment 94945
NME was mostly punk (or "new wave" if you really must)
The sweet spot went well into the 1980s for me - but otherwise I agree with everything you've written'NME magazine to end print edition after 66 years'
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/music/news/nme-magazine-end-print-edition-66-years/
*sigh*
Required Thursday morning reading during our formative punk years. Or as a rare late-night treat on Wednesday nights from the newspaper shack outside Victoria station following a gig before catching the train back to BN1.
Melody Maker was for earnest students who wanted to read a thesis on empty pomp rock. Sounds was with honourable exceptions (Jane Suck, Dave McCullough) for dafter younger brothers. But NME hit that sweet spot between 1976 and 1979.
RIP NME
So much is now online, why would you bother with print media?
As an aside really looking forward to Friday Nights BBC4 Minimalist Evening, I'm a big fan of Philip Glass & Steve Reich, hoping they will have a bit of Brian Eno & the Krautrockers of the 1970's as well.
For example...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubdHYhnersU&list=PLwR9whaosec_tkR5ADPSyl2S8d8JoP38L&index=1
Put out of its misery.
They totally ****ed up, if they'd come up with a decent internet offering in the late 90's/ early 00's when Pitchfork started to get going they could have been top dog rather than a free paper more concerned with flogging hair-gel than any serious music journalism as it has been for the last two and a half years of existence.
'NME magazine to end print edition after 66 years'
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/music/news/nme-magazine-end-print-edition-66-years/
*sigh*
Required Thursday morning reading during our formative punk years. Or as a rare late-night treat on Wednesday nights from the newspaper shack outside Victoria station following a gig before catching the train back to BN1.
Melody Maker was for earnest students who wanted to read a thesis on empty pomp rock. Sounds was with honourable exceptions (Jane Suck, Dave McCullough) for dafter younger brothers. But NME hit that sweet spot between 1976 and 1979.
RIP NME