Punk rock is a genre of rock music that emerged as a raw, energetic style characterized by simple melodies, loud instrumentation, and often rebellious attitudes. It matters as a cultural movement because it influenced music, fashion, and youth culture while challenging the complexity and commercialism of mainstream rock music.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Punk rock (or simply punk) is a genre of music that emerged in the mid-1970s. Rooted in 1950s rock and roll and 1960s garage rock, punk bands rejected the overproduction and corporate nature of mainstream arena rock. They typically produce short, fast-paced songs with rough, stripped-down vocals and instrumentation, and anti-establishment themes. Artists also embraced a DIY ethic, with many bands self-producing and distributing recordings through independent labels.
During the early 1970s, the term "punk rock" was originally used by some American rock critics to describe mid-1960s garage bands. Subsequent developments such as glam and pub rock in the UK, along with the Velvet Underground and the New York Dolls from New York, and the MC5 and the Stooges from Detroit, have been cited as key influences. By the mid-1970s, the term "punk rock" had become associated with several regional underground music scenes, including Television, Patti Smith, Suicide, the Dictators, Richard Hell and the Voidoids, and the Ramones in New York City; Rocket from the Tombs, Electric Eels, and Dead Boys in Ohio; the Saints and Radio Birdman in Australia; and the Sex Pistols, the Clash, the Damned, and the Buzzcocks in England. By late 1976, punk had become a major cultural phenomenon in the UK, giving rise to a punk subculture that expressed youthful rebellion through distinctive styles of clothing, such as T-shirts with deliberately offensive graphics, leather jackets, studded or spiked bands, jewelry, bondage clothing, and safety pins.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).