Listening to a teenage band play Black  Sabbath's 1970 song "Paranoid" today, I was reminded of how the  history of punk rock in the 1970s provides an excellent example of a point made  by T.S. Eliot around 1920 in his first volume of literary criticism: the  innovative artist is a catalyst that creates his own tradition by highlighting  common elements in various past works of art that nobody had previously noticed  had much in common.
 Punk rock emerged as as a distinct genre in 1976-77, primarily due to The  Ramones and the Sex Pistols. But once you knew what punk rock was, you would  also notice older songs, such as "Paranoid" and Led Zeppelin's  "Communication Breakdown" that were clearly punk rock before the word  existed, in that they followed the much more linear riffing style enshrined by  The Ramones. And for English working class thuggishness of the Sex Pistols  style, there's a remarkable predecessor in the 1973 song "Saturday Night's  All Right for Fighting" by Bernie Taupin and ... Elton John, of all people.
 Until The Ramones and the Sex Pistols came along, though, nobody noticed that  these isolated, and uncharacteristic songs were part of a genre.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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