Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan
Paperback The Dance of Days: The Early History of the Washington D.C. Punk Scene Book

ISBN: 1887128492

ISBN13: 9781887128490

The Dance of Days: The Early History of the Washington D.C. Punk Scene

Select Format

Select Condition ThriftBooks Help Icon

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$13.59
Save $6.41!
List Price $20.00
Almost Gone, Only 1 Left!

Book Overview

"A truly compelling narrative . . . a powerful piece of cultural reporting." --Washington PostWashington, DC's creative, politically insurgent punk scene is studied for the first time by local... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Must Read

I moved to DC because of the music, plain and simple. And this is a wonderful reminder of how great it was to be in a community of incredible creative people who were also passionate about politics and social change.

HARDcore

I loved reading this book. I even saw some of my good friends past and present in here. A must have for the DC Hardcore fan, what a great birthday present I give it 6 stars!

Very good

This book is not very well written, but it gives a very intresting view into the Washington D.C. punk scene. Mark Anderson, a former suicidal for whom the Sex Pistols and punk in general saved his life, knows what hes talking about. From the first punk show at a heavy metal club, a band called Overkill, to the Slickee Boys and Urban Verbs, to the Cramps Hall of Nations show, which inspired many punk there to get into it (including Ian McKaye and Henry Garfield who you know as Henry Rollins), to the Bad Brains and PMA, to the foundations of harDCore, beginning with Teen Idles and the Untouchables and expanding into one of the best bands ever, Minor Threat, and going into the 90s, with Nirvana, which actually has DC connections, to the punk civil war between sellouts and true underground punks. If you like punk, buy this. It will transform you from simply listening to punk music and into being a true punk, who lives out the true punk lifestyle. A must read. Has been compared with Jon Savage's England Dreaming.

Brings Back Memories of My Own Experiences

This book really brought back fond memories for me as well as providing insight into the inception of the music scene that inspired me to take up the drums and play with a hardcore band through my high-school years. Although I'm not from the DC area, The scene that I grew up in outside Philadelphia was heavily influenced by bands such as Bad Brains, Minor Threat, Ignition, Fugazi, Embrace, Jawbox, Shudder to Think etc... It warms my heart to see my favorite bands of all time and the political and social ideas that went hand in hand with the music being given the same kind of reverence as the bands that changed the world for my parents in the 60's. Thanks to Mark Andersen and Mark Jenkins for such a fantastic book!

Andersen and Jenkins deliver.

I was part of punk in the early days in DC and got away from it when the skinheads started rampaging. I am very happy to see an honest, accurate, thorough, and well-written documentary of the scene. The book goes well beyond band bios and delves deeply into the art and philosophy that emerged from the scene--both good (Ian)and bad (skinheads). To honor the authors, I'm donating my copy of the book to the local library to help spread the word after I reread a couple of things . Someone out there needs it. I think the Marks would like that.Nice job guys.
Copyright © 2024 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured