Young Marble Giants' Colossal Youth
By (Author) Michael Blair
By (author) Joe Bucciero
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic USA
4th May 2017
United States
General
Non Fiction
Musicians, singers, bands and groups
Composers and songwriters
Music reviews and criticism
782.421660922
Paperback
176
Width 121mm, Height 165mm
166g
Welsh post-punk band Young Marble Giants released one LP in 1980 and then, like their vanishing portraits on the albums cover, disappeared. Even though Colossal Youth received positive reviews and sold surprisingly well, Young Marble Giants quickly slid into the margins of rock 'n' roll historyrelegated to cult status among post-punk and indie rock fans. Their lasting appeal owes itself to the bands singular approach and response to punk rock. Instead of employing overt political ideology and abrasive sounds to rebel against the status quo, Young Marble Giants filled their songs with restraint, ambiguity, and silence. The trio opened up their music to new sounds and ideas that redefined punks rules of rebellion. Where did their rebellious ideas and impulses come from By tracing Colossal Youths artistic origins from Ancient Greece to the 20th-century avant-garde, Michael Blair and Joe Bucciero uncover the intricacies of Young Marble Giants idiosyncratic take on music in the post-punk age. Emerging from the gaps in between the notes are new ways of hearing the history of punk, the political and economic turbulence of the late 1970s, and the world that surrounds us right now.
Fans of this album and it is a great one should find something to chew on here. * Buzz Magazine *
Michael Blair grew up in St. Louis and lives in New York. He works at BOMB Magazine and is a founding member of the Hi Fi Snock Uptown collective. Joe Bucciero is a writer born in Chicago and based in New York. He helps edit the music zine AdHoc and the journal Blank Forms, and has written for the Quietus, the Brooklyn Rail, Los Angeles Review of Books, and others.