I AM A MEDIA MAXI-PAD ABSORBING THE CONTINUAL FLOW OF POP CULTURE.

THIS JOURNAL DOCUMENTS MY INTAKE OF ONE BOOK, ZINE, CD OR DVD A DAY. RATINGS ARE: ***** = Godhead, **** = Great, *** = Good, ** = Fair, * = Why Bother?

Monday, April 23, 2018

Punk at 45 RPMs

Soul Jazz Records' "PUNK 45" Series
PUNK 45 Vol. 7 - Les Punks: The First Wave of French Punk 1977-1980

The only pride I take in my underwhelming career as a lowly public servant at a large urban library is in curating our pop music collection with worthy Jukebox Heroes. To wit, that means ordering anything and everything put out by Soul Jazz Records, the UK independent record label dedicated to the herculean task of documenting "the sounds of the universe."

Lately I've been listening obsessively to French rock 'n' roll - yes, that is NOT an oxymoron! - specifically, a Soul Jazz compilation called Les Punks: The French Connection - The First Wave of French Punk 1977-1980


PUNK 45: Les Punks: The French Connection - The First Wave of French Punk 1977-1980 (Soul Jazz Records, 2017)

This the latest entry (Volume 7 by my count) in Soul Jazz's PUNK 45 series, which documents assorted punk singles (many previously only available on vinyl) from around the world, though mostly by American punk and proto-punk groups. Les Punks follows on the heels of the previous PUNK 45 releases Kill the Hippies (Volume 1: USA Punk), There Is No Such Thing As Society (Volume 2: UK punk and post-punk), Sick On You! One Way Spit! (Volume 3: US proto-punk), Burn, Rubber City, Burn!(Volume 4: Akron, Ohio punk), Extermination Nights in the Sixth City (Volume 5: Cleveland, Ohio punk), and Chaos in the City of Angels and Devils (Volume 6: Los Angeles punk).

PUNK 45: Charting the forgotten corners of punk rock, one 7-inch record at a time


(Although this title and others in the series are available as LPs and MP3 digital albums, this review looks only at CD format releases, as this is the lingua franca of the Non-Hipster Modern World for us Baby Boomers - at least for now.).

PUNK 45 is an invaluable resource, collecting and digitizing songs otherwise lost in the record bins, as many of these bands either never released a long-player or disbanded into obscurity after a sole single or EP. Or as Louis Pattison observed in his Pitchfork review:


Soul Jazz’s Punk 45 series has made it its mission to chart the forgotten corners of punk rock, one seven-inch record at a time, training its magnifying glass on the obscure groups or regional scenes that familiar histories overlook. In particular, its more localized iterations suggest that how punk sounded depended very much on where its seeds fell. 

Indeed, Les Punks' accompanying 44-page booklet (another invaluable resource, with liner notes by S. Baker and interviews with major players like Marc Zermati of Skydog Records, Michel Esteban of Harry Cover/Rock News and Ze Records, Patrick Eudeline of Asphalt Jungle and Eric Debris of Metal Urbain) argues how punk in France "emerged out of the country’s history of rebellion and revolution" (from Serge Gainsbourg to the Paris ‘68 riots) and even how the seeds of its artistic and intellectual ideas (Dadaism, Surrealism, Rimbaud, Voltaire, et al) influenced punk's eventual emergence in New York and London.

"Parlez-vous anarchy?": Johnny Rotten goes Continental in Paris, September 1976

The Sex Pistols (whose manager Malcolm McLaren clearly learned a thing or two from the French Situationists) played in Paris in September 1976 and while that no doubt inspired a number of groups to emerge from their garetts to "dare it," bands like Marie et les Garcons ("Rien a Dire," "A Bout de Souffle"), Dogs (whose "Here Comes My Baby" sounds like a perfect Rezillos retro-rocker), Angel Face ("Wolf City Blues"), Les Olivensteins ("Euthanasie"), and Fantomes (here presenting a pretty straight-forward cover of "I Wanna Be Your Dog" - in English, no less) were already wearing the influences of the Velvet Underground, New York Dolls, Johnny Thunder's Heartbreakers and especially Iggy's Stooges on their French-cuffed sleeves.

This was due in no small part thanks to Marc Zermati's Skydog Records; founded in 1972, the label was one of the first independent record labels of its time (preceding Stiff, Chiswick, and Greg Shaw's Bomp! by three years) and was responsible for releasing the Stooges' legendary live LP Metallic K.O. (which documented the Stooges' last-ever show at Detroit's Michigan Palace), as well as important records by the MC5, Flamin' Groovies, and Johnny Thunders, while Zermati himself organized the first-ever European punk festival in Mont-de-Marzon in August 1976. Small wonder that eight of the 19 tracks collected here are sung in English. After all, as Marc Zermati observed, "If you sing in French, you reach a Belgian guy or a Swiss guy. In Africa, they don't care."


Marc Zermati's influential Skydog Records, founded in 1972

Iggy and the Stooges - "Metallic K.O." (Skydog Records, 1976)


Zermati recorded practically every punk band of the time (often under pseudonyms, in case a group was signed or planning to sign with a major label), but never released an full-length album - 7-inch singles and compilations were Skydog's modus operandi. As S. Baker writes in Les Punks liner notes, "The label's French punk releases captured a moment in time and place similar to that of, say, Dangerhouse in Los Angeles, or Factory in Manchester, Clone in Akron, Ohio, or Postcard in Scotland." That's elite company, indeed.

Despite Skydog's efforts, Punk Francaise was pretty much lost in translation across the channel and the Atlantic (where the Village Voice critic Robert Christgau famously quipped "Somebody tell Claude Bessy zat zere is no such thing as French rock and roll!"), unless your name was Plastic Bertrand (aka Roger Jouret, who wasn't even French - he was a native Brussels Sprout! And Bertrand not only wasn't French, but he didn't even sing his hit - later admitting that his producer Lou Deprijck sang as Bertrand in exchange for a cut of the royalties, making Jouret the Milli Vanilli of Punk!) Bertrand's hit "Ca Plane Pour Moi" inspired countless cover versions and prodded the major labels to try and land more Continental punks; Polydor quickly signed up the Stinky Toys (whose September 1977 single "Boozy Creed" was perhaps the first non-English punk record) and Guilty Razors, but they turned out to be commercial failures.

Guilty Razors - "I Don't Wanna Be A Rich" EP (Polydor, 1978)

Guilty as Charged

Which is too bad, because the Guilty Razors - represented here by two of the three songs ("I Don't Wanna Be a Rich," "Hurts and Noises") from their 1978 Polydor guillotine-sleeve EP (which was pressed but never released to the masses after Polydor got cold feet over the group's violent reputation and behavior) - sound pretty good. Though only a few copies of the (indefinite article-challenged) "I Don't Wanna Be a Rich" single that were sent to journalists for review were saved from being pulped, pirated audio tapes soon spread the word to avid collectors and bootleggers and created an underground buzz about the band.

Les garcons mal: Guilty Razors. Note the "Provocate" shirt, advertising a song from their 1978 EP.


Guilty Razors acting au so contraire

Guilty Razors didn't want to be "a rich" and thanks to their record label shelving their EP, they were'nt. A similar fate kept the full-length album they recorded for Polydor in 1978 from seeing the light of day until 2006, when Seventeen Records CEO Steve Hoffman tracked down the tapes from the surviving members of the group (singer Tristam Nada and bassist Jose Perez - R.I.P. guitarists Carlos Perez and Jano Homicid), as he considers them "probably the best punk rock band that ever existed." On his Music Forums page, Hoffman waxes:
They were more dangerous than Sid Vicious or the most hardened skinheads : they would threaten punters with knifes in front of gigs, in order to steal their wallets, and would smash their way to any party, drinking and eating anything they could find, including the ladies. Stories of stolen motorbikes from their own audience, trashing pop singers at parties etc abound, and are legendary. Some of them are true, other false, but you get the picture...

Guilty Razors were famously associated with The Slits - frontman Tristam Nada had a "love/hate" relationship with young singer Ari Up (whose mom Nora later married John Lydon) - who were in the studio when the Razors were recording "I Don't Wanna Be a Rich." (Hmm...I wonder if that's Ari's voice introducing "I Don't Wanna Be a Rich"?)

Slits singer Ari Up

Never mind les bollocks, here's the Guilty Razors playing "I Don't Wanna Be a Rich":




And here's the photogenic band lip-synching to "I Don't Wanna Be a Rich" on French television:





Though the French TV presenter above name-checks the Sex Pistols, to me Guilty Razors sound like they were more influenced by The Damned. They delivered short, fast and furious songs and "Hurts and Noises" even opens with a stolen riff (or is it a knowing loan) from the Damned's "New Rose."






Fight the Power: Paris Calling

Guilty Razors were also friends with Metal Urbain and played most of their gigs with them. The synth- and drum-machine propelled Metal Urbain stood out from the field, holding the distinction of being the first group to sign to - and release a single on - Rough Trade Records (1976's French Resistance homage "Paris Maquis"). Influenced in equal parts by the gnarly guitars of the Clash and Sex Pistols and the grating industrial noise of Lou Reed's experimental Metal Machine Music, they dispensed with the traditional bass-and-drums rhythm section in favor of an EMS synth-and-Linn drum machine base to create a unique electro-punk sound. They were post-punk before it was even a genre.


Metal Urbain - "Paris Maquis" b/w "Cle de Conact" (Rough Trade RT 001, 1977)

Watch Metal Urbain lip-synch "Paris Maquis" on French television:




And here's a clip of the band performing their first single, 1977's "Panik" on French television:





Metal Urbain were, briefly, the exception to the rule of not finding success across the Channel. "Ground-breaking, subversive, challenging and controversial - and perversely more commercially appealing than Stinky Toys, especially in the UK, even though they sang in French," was how S. Baker described their appeal. "Panik" was even named "Single of the Week" by New Musical Express in 1977.

The Dangerous Minds blog picks up the story of Metal Urbain in their "Anarchy in Paris" review:
Métal Urbain were Francophone contemporaries of the Sex Pistols and The Clash. Formed in 1976 by Clode Panik, Hermann Schwartz, Pat Luger and Eric Debris, the French punk rock group’s harsh and noisy sound replaced the rhythm section with a synthesizer and drum machine. Sonically, they came across as aggressive—if not more so—as their English or American counterparts with the exception of maybe Suicide or The Screamers. Lead singer Clode Panik sounds a bit like a French version of The Fall’s Mark E. Smith. 
The group’s second single, “Paris Maquis” was Rough Trade’s very first record release and John Peel showed his support on his BBC 1 Radio show, going so far as to record a “Peel Session” with them. Sadly they never really made it and broke up in 1979 as there was no appreciable French punk scene to begin with and the media in their home country just couldn’t be bothered with them. Métal Urbain’s distinctively raw guitar sound is said to have had an influence on Big Black’s Steve Albini and The Jesus and Mary Chain.

Listen to Metal Urbain's 1978 "Peel Session."






Metal Urbain later renamed themselves les Metal Boys and (later still) Dr. Mix and the Remix, continuing to tour and record into the early '80s until guitar-playing brothers Jean-Louis Boulanger (Hermann Schwartz) and Patrick Boulanger (Pat Luger) left to form Desperados. Metal Boys strike me as having a similar aesthetic to the John Foxx-era Ultravox (circa the Systems of Romance LP).

Listen to Metal Boys play their 1979 Rough Trade single "Sweet Marilyn":






Happiness is a Warm Gun

But while Guilty Razors and Metal Urbain may be the marquee names of this collection, for me the standout French punk outfit here is Warm Gun (formerly known as Bitch or Bitches). This Parisian quartet (energetic vocalist Paul Ersatz, guitarists Philippe K and Thierry Dioniso, and drummer "Patrick") released a lone four-song EP on Isadora Records in June 1977 (produced by Paul Pechenaert, ex-Les Dogs), from which Les Punks samples "Broken Windows"...





...but for my money this EP is the stuff of legend, a spiritual brother-in-arms to Buzzcocks' DIY classic Spiral Scratch.

Warm Gun EP cover sleeve (Isadora, ISE-110, June 1977)


Warm Gun EP, back cover


In "Broken Windows," Ersatz sings (in heavily accented English), "I would quit your boring jobs/That's just a threat from me to you...You wanna tell me about your pent-up frustrations/You wanna tell me I belong to the Blank Generation...Smashing windows, having lots of fun/Breaking glass, and watch us run/Smashing windows, don't need no gun/Breaking glass and a run run run."

I had previously only ever heard their "Crapy Hands" (aka "Crappy Hands"), but it was the stand-out track (and the only one not by a New York or London band) on a vinyl-only RCA Italian import 12-inch called Punk Collection.

Punk Collection (RCA, 1977)


Listen to Warm Gun play "Crapy Hands":





Though heavily influenced by the usual suspects (New York Dolls, Velvet Underground, Stooges), Warm Gun's embrace of melody sets them apart - they had a very commercial pop-punk sound and a charmingly charismatic singer.

The other outstanding punk bands gathered here are Marie et Les Garcons, Electric Callas, Dogs, Asphalt Jungle, 84 Flesh and A3 Dans les WC.

Tous les Garcons et la Fille

Marie et Les Garcons debut double A-side single was so strong that both tunes are reprised here: "Rien a Dire" (literally, "Nothing to Say") and "A Bout de Souffle" (perhaps a nod to Godard's "Breathless"?).


Marie et les Garcons - "Rien a Dire" 45 picture sleeve (Rebel, 1977)





This Lyon-based band was founded by in 1975 by a group of Lycée Saint-Exupéry students, whose core players were drummer Marie Girard (who was initially the vocalist), main songwriters Patrick Vidal (erstwhile bassist turned vocalist) and Eric Fitoussi (guitar) and bassist Jean-Pierre Charriau. Heavily influenced by American proto-punk, they were clearly big fans of Velvet Underground (listen to their cover of "White Light, White Heat") - you can hear it in Vidal's Lou Reed vocal stylings and "A Bout de Souffle" could easily have appeared on any VU album - as well as the early Modern Lovers (listen to their "Roadrunner"), Television (listen to their version of "Little Johnny Jewel"), Patti Smith and The Seeds.

Marie Girard a la batterie, 1978

Marie et les Garcons at CBGBs, 1978

Skydog Record's Marc Zermati invited them to perform at his Mont-de-Marzon punk fest and Michel Esteban released their debut single on his Rebel label in December 1977. After hearing their demos, John Cale produced their second single, "Attitudes" b/w "Re-Bop" in New York in March 1978, where they played in support of X-Ray Spex at CBGB's before returning to Paris to support Patti Smith and Talking Heads during their tours there. The teaming with the Heads made "heady" booking sense, because les Garcons definitely leaned toward the more New Wavish (or should I say Nouvelle Vague-ish) side of Punk; their debut album (again produced by Michel Esteban) even featured a Lacoste polo shirt - shades of the preppy attire the early Heads wore onstage. Blondie is another musical signpost.


Marie et les Garcons LP (Celluloid, France, 1980)


Marie et les Cretins - er - Garcons!

Listen to Marie et les Garcons perform "Rien a Dire" live at the Olympia Paris:





Marie Girard later left the band to join Electric Callas, where she reunited with her brother Patrick Girard, who was the original drummer in Les Garcons when they formed in 1975. Upon her departure, the remaining trio became simply (and accurately) Les Garcons. Alas, Marie Girard died of an aneurysm in 1996, age 40.

Lyon was a legitimate music scene at this time, with Electric Callas and Starshooter also calling it home.

Electric Callas shared the same American rock influences as Les Garcons, not to mention Roxy Music and David Bowie, as exemplified on their scorching "Kill Me Two Times."

Listen to Electric Callas play "Kill Me Two Times":





Dogs formed in Rouen (also home to Les Olivensteins) in 1973, recording two EPs during 1977-1978 before releasing their debut LP Different in 1979. They would go on to sign with Phonogram and, later, Epic Records. The Rezillos-sounding retro-rocker "Here Comes My Baby" is taken from their 1978 Go Where You Want To Go EP and features core members Dominque Laboubee (vocals, guitar), Hugues Urvoy de Portzamparc (bass, vocals) and Michel "Mimi" Gross (drums). Laboubee, who died in 2002, was the only constant member through the band's long history.

Dogs - "Go Where You Want To Go" 12-inch EP (Melodies Massacre, France, 1978)


Rouen's Dogs

Dogs' pedigree owes more to the influence of '60s American garage rock than punk, as the band was weaned on listening to Gene Vincent, Shadows of the Knight, Chocolate Watch Band, Flamin' Groovies, Pretty Things and other Nuggets-y influences, as well as Stooges, Velvet Underground and Brit Invasion bands like the Kinks.

Listen to Dogs play "Here Comes My Baby":




Asphalt Jungle was the brainchild of Best magazine scribe Patrick Eudeline, another journalist-turned-musician following in the footsteps of Pretender Chrissie Hynde (NME), Pet Shop Boy Neil Tenant (Smash Hits) and Morrissey (Record Mirror).



Eudeline was originally the frontman for proto-punks Angel Face, but left them after a year to join forces with Angel Face guitarist-turned-bassist  Riton in Asphalt Jungle, along with former Metal Urbain guitarist Rikky Darling and drummer Chino. Asphalt Jungle recorded just three singles for Skydog - including the one included here, 1978's "Plante Comme un Prive" - before ceasing to exist. As to why the group disbanded so early, Eudeline says, "Too much too soon. Ego and junk. When I split with Rikky the guitarist, it was the end. The band was Rikky and me."


Asphalt Jungle - "Plante Comme un Prive" 45 (Skydog, 1978, picture sleeve by Bazooka)


Asphalt Jungle - "Plante Comme un Prive" b/w "Purple Heart" (Skydog, France, 1978)

Listen to Asphalt Jungle play "Plante Comme un Prive."





Incidentally, the cover of Asphalt Jungle's single was produced, like many of the releases in this collection, by a Paris arts collective called Bazooka. Bazooka was formed at art school in 1974 by Christian Chapiron (aka Kiki Picasso), Jean-Louis Dupre (Loulou Picasso), Olive Clavel (Electric Clito), Berard Vidal (Banana), Ti5 (Phillipe Bailly), Dominque Fury and Lulu Larsen. Their provocative work eschewed galleries - preferring self-publication via newspapers, magazines and record covers - and was heavily indebted to the ideas of the Situationists. S. Baker characterized Bazooka's aesthetic as being "based primarily on the politicized use of collages using images taken from newspapers, comics etc., reworked with a variety of drawing and painting styles, taken to extremes and subverting original meanings," and acting as a graphic counterpoint to the music. They were, in the words of Loulou Picasso, "Political without an ideology" and "Activist without a doctrine."

Bazooka created signature work for numerous Skydog singles, including covers for 84 Flesh and Starshooter. They also did Iggy & The Stooges' 1977 "(I Got) Nothing" single, and later created works for Elvis Costello (working with Barney Bubbles) and James Chance.

Iggy and the Stooges - "(I Got) Nothing" (Skydog, 1977, cover by Bazooka)


In the liner notes to Les Punks, Asphalt Jungle's Eudeline traces the roots of Punk Francaise to New York and Detroit: "The turning point was The Dolls and the writers of Creem magazine. And a French book written in 1972 by Jean-Jacques Schuhl called Rose Poussiere. As John Lennon said, the hippy dream was over. We were dreaming of mods, rockabilly, decadent cinema or writers. A rock 'n' roll attitude, far away from a hippy way of life."

Jean-Jacques Schuhl's "Rose Poussier": a study of life's impermanence

Proto-punks Angel Face formed in 1975 and recorded demos with Cobra, Rough Trade and Pathe Marconi, but the tapes sat on the shelf until the mid-'80s. On the Stooges-indebted "Wolf City Blues," which first surfaced on 1985's A Wild Odyssey LP (Pacific Productions), the line-up is comprised of vocalist Eric Tende (who replaced Henri Flesh, who himself replaced Patrick Eudeline), guitarist Riton Angel Face, bassist Pascal Farrey and drummer Frederik Goddard.

Henri Flesh and Frederik Goddard would go on to join the short-lived 84 Flesh (previously named 1984), who thankfully released the rocking single "Salted City" on Skydog before splitting in 1978.

Listen to both sides of 84 Flesh's lone Skydog single "Salted City" b/w "D-Section":




84 Flesh - "Salted City" b/w "D-Section" (Skydog, France, 1978)


84 Flesh picture sleeve by Bazooka


Below is the lyric sheet included with 84 Flesh's "Salted City" single:




Another Rouen group, Les Olivensteins, took their unusual name from a French psychiatrist who specialized in addiction. Ironically, the real-life Dr. Olivenstein caused the band to split up after his refusal to let them use his name cost them a record deal with Barclay. Sacre bleu! Well, at least they got to record their lone three-song single in 1979 on the Melodies Massacre label.





Watch Les Olivensteins play "Euthanasie" in their one and only appearance on French television:





One of the most interesting groups appearing here is Gazoline. They were founded in 1977 by Alain Kan, who is considered one of French pop's great mysteries: after starting his career in 1964 with Paul Anka covers, he worked with Serge Gainsbourg and singer Dani in the '70s before embarking on his punk phase with Gazoline. According to legend, he disappeared without a trace after boarding a Paris subway train in April 1990.

Gazoline - "Sally" b/w "Electric Injection" singe (Egg, 1977)

Alain Kan (left) with Gazoline


Listen to Gazoline play "Sally":






Calcinator's brisk 2-minute rocker "Electrifie" is the final track on Les Punks. It was the B-side of the band's lone single "Billard" (F.L.V.M, 1978; later re-released on Euthanasie, 2013) and also appears on the compilation LP Skydog Commando (Skydog SGSC 0018, 1978). There's not much information about this band (unless you speak French) other than the group consisted of  songwriting guitarist-vocalist Mick Giani, bassist Jef Eddedguy and drummer Pat  Vandenbroeck.



Calcinator - "Billiard" b/w "Electrifie" 45 (Euthanasie, 2013)


Listen to Calcinator play "Electrifie":





Cold Wave, or New Wave Francaise

So much for the punk tunes. The remaining tracks by Kas Product, A3 Dans Les WC (aka WC3) and the cleverly-named Charles de Goal are actually a brand of minimal post-punk synthwave that France (and the Belgian trio Telex) embraced in the '80s called "Cold Wave."

The standout Cold Wave track is Charles de Goal's Wire-y "Dans le Labyrinthe" (from the 1980 New Rose LP Algorithms). Charles de Goal was the nome de sythnwave of Patrick Blain, who went solo after the 1979 break-up of his Devo-esque band C.O.M.A. An introspective programmer-turned-musician who didn't perform in front of audiences until 1985, Blain liked the anonymity of creating music behind a mysterious alter ego.



As he told French music blog Rockfort, "...it was about anonymity, not knowing who was in Charles de Goal because the group was really just me. I made the music by myself with the assistance of other people on some tracks. I was quite shy at that time and I didn't really want to put myself in the limelight. It had the added effect of creating a buzz, with people asking who Charles de Goal really was. So it was partly timidity and partly an artistic idea that was suggested by a friend Philippe Huart, a graphic designer and painter who played with me in the band I was in before, C.O.M.A. He had the specific idea of making sleeves that were anonymous, so you would never know who I was."

As far as his programmer background, Blain told Rockfort, "As much as you need a logical side for IT, I tried not to apply that to the music. In an analogue synthesizer it's the mistakes that are interesting, rhythms that are a bit unsteady, that kind of thing. However, I did apply the logical side to the writing of lyrics and the structuring of songs. For example, there's a song called 'Dans le labyrinthe' which I constructed as a labyrinth, so there's a phrase at the beginning which you find again later with some pieces removed, so it's as if you're in this maze and you turn around and find yourself back where you started... that relates to the programming side. Obviously with lyrics, emotions come into it, you write about what you know but there are some more artistic, intellectual exercises, even if I'm not someone particularly intellectual... I like mixing both, I'm not someone who goes just one way, I like mixing up experiences and information. I don't like things to be black and white."

Listen to Charles de Goal's "Dans les Labyrinthe":





A3 Dans Les WC (for "Water Closet")'s "Photo Couleur" (from 1981's Poupee Be.Bop LP) is also worth a listen. Later named just WC3, this guitar-synth tune is quite catchy.






A3 Dans Les WC


You can sample more from  A3 Dans Les WC/WC3 at Bandcamp, which sells their 1978/1980 compilation album in various digital formats.

Kas Product was the Nancy-based duo of Lydia Lunch-sounding chanteusse Mona Soyoc and former psychiatric male nurse Spatsz on synthesizers. Their "Mind" is an acquired taste, but if you like your synthwave cold, this just might be your cup of tea. Looking at photos and videos of the photogenic Mona and the crassly-coiffed Spatsz, I am struck by their visual similarity (i.e., ugly guy-hot chick) to UK popsters Haysi Fantayzee.

Kas Product - "Mind" EP (Punk Records, 1980)

And there you have it: tous les garcons et les filles de les Punk Francaise from Soul Jazz Records.

*** FURTHER LISTENING ***

Soul Jazz isn't the only label to celebrate French rock music. But it's the only one I've found that speaks my native language. But if, like moi, you're interested in checking out more French Punk, one of the best resources is one native to the Gallic nation: the Parisian imprint Born Bad Records.


Founded in 2006 by former art director Jean-Baptiste Guillot, Born Bad's awesome catalog offers Garage, Punk, Psyche, Ska, Rock Steady, '50s-'60s-'70s, R&B, Soul, Exotica, Hardcore, Surf, Post-Punk, Cold & New Wave, Electro, Street Punk, Shoegaze and more. Their Punk Francaise compilations include Paink: French Punk Anthems 1977-1982 (which overlaps with several bands and selections presented on Soul Jazz's Les Punks and features a cover designed by Bazooka's Kiki and Loulou Picasso) and BINGO: French Punk Exploitation 1978-1981 (featuring a cover design by Bazooka's Loulou Picasso).


"Paink: French Punk Anthems 1977-1982" (Born Bad Records, 2013, cover by Bazooka)

"BINGO: French Punk Exploitation 1978-1981" (Born Bad Records, 2017, cover by Loulou Picasso)

These come with booklets, but I'm not sure if they're in English.

Au revoir, mon amis!

FIN

***

Some More Related Links:
Punk 45 series (Soul Jazz Records)
Born Bad Records
Franco Mix: French Punk New Wave 1975-1985
Messthetics series (Hyped2Death Records) - Another singles-going-digitized catalog

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