I AM A CONFUSED TEENAGER (or, the punk’s secret of immortality)
ANGER IS ENERGY (or, we come to praise, and bury, the sex
pistols)
DIY (or, doing it yourself is doing it right)
FURY’S HOUR (or, talk minus action equals zero)
IF THE KIDS ARE UNITED (or, we shall never be divided)
FUCK ART, LET’S DANCE (or, fuck dancing, let’s get artsy)
THERE IS A FUTURE (or, punk will never die!)
Appunkdix One: the top ten punk albums of all time
Appunkdix Two: the top ten punk singles of all time
Appunkdix Three: the top ten categories of punk writings (sort
of)
Acknowledgements
Index
WARREN KINSELLA is a lawyer, pundit, political consultant, and a newspaper and magazine columnist. He is the author of The War Room and the bestselling Web of Hate. He lives in Toronto, is a dad to four amazing kids, still plays in a punk band and is the president and founder of the Daisy Group, a political consulting group.
“I'm always fascinated by the musical creativity of youth. Just
recently I was spinning some vinyl in Lisbon . . . Punk rock? Well,
I'm still working on that one.”
– Rt. Hon. Jean Chretien, former Canadian Prime Minister (and
Warren’s former boss)
“Once a punk, always a punk! Kinsella makes it clear that, in its
origins, punk became a really fucking fun way to take on the
establishment’s bullshit, and he shows why rebelliousness is still
alive and kicking. It’s a bloody good thing that old punks never
die, otherwise they would never write any cool books.”
–Joey Shithead Keithley, DOA
“Make no mistake, a book about Punk is not Punk Rock. But in this
aggressive and energetic book Kinsella successfully tackles the
complexities of what it is that makes this misfit youth culture so
potentially empowering.” –Craig O’Hara, author of The Philosophy of
Punk
“An insightful look into the world of music and politics when most
people would rather hear about Ashlee Simpson and FOX TV.”
–Jim Lindberg, Pennywise
“Readable, angry and trenchant, Fury’s Hour falls somewhere between
memoir and critical exposition, ranging incisively over the history
of the genre.”
–Toronto Life
“Discussing punk politics, the birth of the Sex Pistols and why
anger is energy makes this an intelligent read for any rocker.”
–Chart magazine
“He’s very sharp and candid on the paradoxical appeal punk has
always had with certain elements of the far right, and certain
muddleheaded proponents of “anarchy.” His belief in punk as a tool
for social change reads like a tonic in an age of irony. He can
convey the sheer heart-in-your-throat enthusiasm of the true fan
with a verve that wouldn’t shame his critic hero Lester Bangs.”
–The Gazette (Montreal)
“His admiration for Joe Keithley, Joe Strummer, Today Vail and Joey
Ramone is genuine, as is his enduring belief in the power of punk
to change lives.”
–Calgary Herald
“The book–which combines a history of punk rock with a survey of
punk’s various sub-cultures, plus a sprinkling of memoir from the
author’s won punk salad days–celebrates the punk rock of his youth
while still insisting on the relevance and vibrancy of the music
today as a subversive, politically engaged movement.”
–The Globe and Mail
“Fury’s Hour succeeds because Kinsella combines a young person’s
idealistic love for punk with a boring old fart’s perspective on
the subculture’s blemishes, contradictions, commercialization,
history–and, yes, its future.”
–The Globe and Mail
“Kinsella, a product of southeast Calgary, emerges from an earlier
age as an angst-ridden teenage bass player with the Hot Nasties.
Which, more than any political pedigree, gives him the credibility
to write an intensely personal account of the punk movement. And
when he picks, as his best-ever punk singles, Anarchy In The UK and
White Man in Hammersmith Palais, then it’s obvious he actually
knows what he’s talking about…. To be in the crowd of the White
Riot tour, to sneak in to see the Pistols play under another name
because they were banned throughout England, to marvel at the
ferocity of the Damned, the ingenuity of the Buzzcocks, and to wait
for another issue of Sniffin’ Glue–those were strange, important
days. To understand them so well from the other side of the
Atlantic shows uncanny insight.”
–The Calgary Sun
“In seven concise chapters, filled to the brim with interviews,
first-hand accounts, captivating stories and historical factoids,
Kinsella not only writes what could be considered a fairly
definitive short history of punk–both music and lifestyle–but also
lays out a passionate argument in favour of the genre’s continuing
relevance… a great book and a worthwhile addition to the canon of
punk literature (or literature on punk).”
–View (Hamilton)
Praise for Kicking Ass in Canadian Politics:
"Eminently readable. . . Truly entertaining. . . Turns the tables
on the mean and nasty by being meaner and nastier."
—Calgary Herald
"Interesting reading. Kinsella writes in a quick-paced, animated,
highly accessible style. . . Kinsella is one smart dog."
—The Globe and Mail
"A hard-nosed look at how to win political campaigns [by] Canada’s
version of James Carville."
—The Toronto Sun
"A must-read for those who appreciate politics as a blood
sport."
—eye Weekly (Toronto)
"Highly readable. . . As many see it, the Alliance’s slide into
oblivion hit the point of no return when the toe of Warren
Kinsella’s shoe made contact with Stockwell Day’s rump."
—National Post
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