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Indy In-Tune #327: Gay Black Republican

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Manage episode 309307528 series 3030772
Content provided by Darrin Snider. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Darrin Snider or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
History lesson for you: "Punk Rock" was not invented by the British in the mid 1970's. I know, it surprised me too. The term was apparently coined by music critics (those guys) back in the 1960 to refer to the aggressive, low-fi music coming from Detroit, Chicaco, and New York that was a direct sonic counter-point to the radio-friendly, squeaky clean, "hippie dippy" music (Fifth Dimension, Turtles, Sonny and Cher, BJ Thomas, et al) popular at the time. As with American blues, it was adopted and refined by "post-Mod" Londoners (some would say directed by Malcom McLaren) who gave it much of the subsequent imagery, fashion, and culture surrounding it. Since then, as with any good genre, it has been reclaimed, lost, split into a dozen sub-genres, buried deep in the earth for years at a time, dug up, recycled, made mainstream, driven back underground, and so forth. This week's guests, Gay Black Republican, while certainly not one of the original punk bands of Indy, are long-time veterans of the Indianapolis music scene and could be argued are the current reigning kings of that scene. Through six full-length albums and about as many EP's, bootlegs, and live recorded sets, the band has evolved from the garage band ethos to a more refined, intelligent-but-irreverent powerhouse of energy and musicianship. Next month marks the 20th anniversary of the founding of the band, and as we learn in this interview, they show no signs of letting up or slowing down. Links Referenced in the Show: Gay Black Republican can be found here: | Their latest album, U.S.A. L.L.C. can be found here: | Older albums can be found on . Rich Barker is famous for running , find their upcoming events on their . The bad toured with and When they first played with the Dead Kennedy's they were fronted for the night by another local icon, . Catch them at on June 18 (2021)
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347 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 309307528 series 3030772
Content provided by Darrin Snider. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Darrin Snider or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
History lesson for you: "Punk Rock" was not invented by the British in the mid 1970's. I know, it surprised me too. The term was apparently coined by music critics (those guys) back in the 1960 to refer to the aggressive, low-fi music coming from Detroit, Chicaco, and New York that was a direct sonic counter-point to the radio-friendly, squeaky clean, "hippie dippy" music (Fifth Dimension, Turtles, Sonny and Cher, BJ Thomas, et al) popular at the time. As with American blues, it was adopted and refined by "post-Mod" Londoners (some would say directed by Malcom McLaren) who gave it much of the subsequent imagery, fashion, and culture surrounding it. Since then, as with any good genre, it has been reclaimed, lost, split into a dozen sub-genres, buried deep in the earth for years at a time, dug up, recycled, made mainstream, driven back underground, and so forth. This week's guests, Gay Black Republican, while certainly not one of the original punk bands of Indy, are long-time veterans of the Indianapolis music scene and could be argued are the current reigning kings of that scene. Through six full-length albums and about as many EP's, bootlegs, and live recorded sets, the band has evolved from the garage band ethos to a more refined, intelligent-but-irreverent powerhouse of energy and musicianship. Next month marks the 20th anniversary of the founding of the band, and as we learn in this interview, they show no signs of letting up or slowing down. Links Referenced in the Show: Gay Black Republican can be found here: | Their latest album, U.S.A. L.L.C. can be found here: | Older albums can be found on . Rich Barker is famous for running , find their upcoming events on their . The bad toured with and When they first played with the Dead Kennedy's they were fronted for the night by another local icon, . Catch them at on June 18 (2021)
  continue reading

347 episodes

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