"Mid '70s punk music was basically about two words -- 'fuck you.' But sooner or later you knew a band was going to come along and say something different, and that was Joy Division. Punk said 'fuck you' -- Joy Division said 'we're fucked.'" -- a comment heard near the halfway point of Grant Gee's Joy Division, which the Weinstein Co. acquired for distribution last Thursday.
Posted by Jeffrey Wells on September 15, 2007 at 10:32 AM
comment #1
christian
says ...
waaah! but then, i prefer duran duran.
Posted by christian
at September 15, 2007 10:44 AM
comment #2
vansmith
says ...
back then it was US disco/dance music, the brits werent doing shit, they ruled the 80's with the advent of video and mtv and DURAN DURAN - they ruled!!!
Posted by vansmith
at September 15, 2007 11:31 AM
comment #3
christian
says ...
duran duran always claimed they were the lovechild of chic and the sex pistols. which they were. anyway.
Posted by christian
at September 15, 2007 12:15 PM
comment #4
CitizenKanedforChewingGum
says ...
Not really much to say about Duran Duran except that badass hook in the Union of the Snake is hella addictive -- new wave crack!
Posted by CitizenKanedforChewingGum
at September 15, 2007 12:20 PM
comment #5
dawgzilla67
says ...
Two words for the speaker of that quote: "The Clash".
Posted by dawgzilla67
at September 16, 2007 12:38 PM
comment #6
Discount Christian Louboutin Shoes
says ...
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Even before Cinderella's step-sisters tried to squeeze their feet into her glass slipper, women's shoes were already the schizophrenic icon of female subjugation and folly, as well as sexuality and power.
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High-heeled shoes have long signified power and status, even among men. In the French court and in Europe of the 17th century, men wore heels to mark themselves as part of the elite (prompting women to hike their heels up even higher). In the early 1700s, Louis XIV, the Sun King, who wore heels as high as five inches, decreed that red heels were to be worn only by nobility and that no one's heels could be higher than his.
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