Did the British Steal Punk Rock From America?

Please keep this in mind: I don’t feel strongly, one way or another, about this particular subject. If anything, I believe that punk rock was simply the natural evolution of rock music when it first came to life in the 1970s. Musicians and listeners alike, especially those in the younger generation, had grown sick of the corporate manufactured nature of rock music by that point. It only makes sense that something as “out there” as punk would eventually happen.

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However, plenty of punks around the globe and music historians alike have debated this surprisingly controversial question: Did the British steal punk rock music from America?

There’s no real answer to this question, but there are plenty of opinions on the subject. I’ll let you come to your own conclusion.

Did the British Steal Punk Rock From America, or Simply Build on It?

The battle between American punk and British punk has been going on for decades. One can’t forget that fateful incident in which Sex Pistols’ Johnny Rotten and The Ramones’ Marky Ramone got into a bit of a fight over Ramone’s assertion that Sex Pistols were a cheap copy of The Ramones.

The origins of punk rock have been fought over for years. But one can’t deny that a lot of proto-punk bands were birthed in the heart of America, from The Velvet Underground to The Stooges to The New York Dolls. However, when most people think of punk rock, they think of icons like Sex Pistols or The Clash.

I don’t fault anyone for thinking that the Brits were the harbingers of punk rock as a genre and culture. Never Mind The Bollocks, Here’s The Sex Pistols is the definitive punk rock album. However, I do think we ignore the contributions a lot of American bands made to what would become that very subculture. And many of those bands were born in New York City.

It makes sense that the early iterations of punk would be born there. The city was awful in the 1970s and 1980s, rife with crime, poverty, and harrowing architecture. The disenchanted youths of the time didn’t want to sit around and listen to Pink Floyd. They wanted grit and rage and recognition about how badly their lives actually sucked.

So, clubs like CBGB opened up in the rotten city, and proto-punk bands called such places home. It makes perfect sense that British youths would be feeling the same way, and would opt to take the growing subculture to another level across the pond. 

Is it so bad to say that the British did, in fact, “steal” punk rock from America? Is it that hard to say maybe that theft was a good thing, at least culturally?

“All punk is is attitude,” Joey Ramone once said. “That’s what makes it. That attitude.”

Photo by Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

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