1976 Festive 50
thebarguest
thebarguest@...
Mon Jul 7 23:36:02 CEST 2008
I'll be eternally grateful to JP for introducing me to the
beauty and grace of reggae (esp dub) and The Fall...
The latest Fall album is brilliant ! But was the golden age of
reggae from 76 to 83 ? .......
--- In peel@yahoogroups.com, John Bravin <john.bravin@...> wrote:
>
> I'm listening to some of the older shows where Peel invited
listeners to
> choose their selection of the best music they would pick as
> representative of the 10 years of the John Peel Show on Radio 1 - a
kind
> of pre-Festive Fifty. Regarding the comment on 1976 below (and
bearing
> in mind the listener shows were broadcast in September before the
punk
> explosion took off), he actually comments on the fact that "almost
all
> of shows compiled by listeners ignore the years 1973-1976 which he
> describes as 'fallow years'". Very perceptive given what happened
a few
> months later.
>
> I can remember the excitement generated when Bob Marley released
his
> Live at The Lyceum album (actually in Dec 1975) but I didn't really
hear
> it until 1976. Although that wasn't Punk there was a feeling that
it
> was breath of fresh air, and for a few months it was the hottest
sound
> around. It certainly influenced Peel as he started playing some
> interesting non-pop reggae culminating in his championing of the
Misty
> in Roots Live at the Countervision album four years later. And it
> certainly influenced some of the Punk movement.
>
> John
>
> dunelm61 wrote:
> >
> > Which is all fine and dandy except that (whisper it) nobody was
> > actually listening to those records in 1976!
> >
> > 1976 can be summed up in three words which will strike fear into
the
> > heart of anyone of my age and in themselves are enough to explain
why
> > punk had to happen: Frampton Comes Alive.
> >
>
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