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No Thanks! The '70s Punk Rebellion ()

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No Thanks! The '70s Punk Rebellion - Various Artists
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Track Listing
  1. Blitzkrieg Bop
  2. White Riot
  3. Heart of the City
  4. Boredom
  5. (I'm) Stranded
Show All Tracks
  1. Blitzkrieg Bop
  2. White Riot
  3. Heart of the City
  4. Boredom
  5. (I'm) Stranded
  6. Neat, Neat, Neat
  7. In the City
  8. Final Solution
  9. Roadrunner
  10. Little Johnny Jewel
  11. One Chord Wonders
  12. Born to Lose
  13. Search and Destroy
  14. Let Me Dream If I Want To (Amphetamine Blues)
  15. Oh Bondage Up Yours!
  16. 12XU
  17. Blank Generation
  18. (Get A) Grip (On Yourself)
  19. Cherry Bomb
  20. Personality Crisis
  21. Teenage Depression
  22. Two Tub Man
  23. Hey Joe
  24. Your Generation
  25. Lust for Life
  26. Gary Gilmore's Eyes
  27. Saturday Night in the City of the Dead
  28. What Do I Get?
  29. X Offender
  30. Lookin' After No. 1
  31. Don't Dictate
  32. Bingo Masters Breakout
  33. Free Money
  34. The Modern World
  35. Chinese Rocks
  36. New Rose
  37. Ambition
  38. See No Evil
  39. Suspect Device
  40. Mannequin
  41. Baby Baby
  42. Love Comes in Spurts
  43. First Time
  44. Sonic Reducer
  45. Shot by Both Sides
  46. Mystery Dance
  47. Trash
  48. The Day the World Turned Day-Glo
  49. Do Anything You Wanna Do
  50. Ready Steady Go
  51. Teenage Kicks
  52. Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll
  53. Ever Fallen in Love?
  54. Rocket U.S.A.
  55. Mongoloid
  56. Homicide
  57. Mr. Big
  58. Warsaw
  59. Where Were You?
  60. Lexicon Devil
  61. (My Baby Does) Good Sculptures
  62. The Wait
  63. We Got the Neutron Bomb
  64. Pablo Picasso
  65. Action Time Vision
  66. 2-4-6-8 Motorway
  67. We Are the One
  68. Borstal Breakout
  69. Wasted
Show Fewer Tracks

Like all the great rock revolutions, punk was fueled by singles. Sure, there were a lot of tremendous albums, but all the artists that cut great LPs also had great 7"s -- and in the case of Television and Patti Smith, they had independent singles released prior to their first albums that never appeared on their debuts. Since rock criticism tends to be album-driven, singles tend to get slightly overlooked, and since punk is a rock critic's favorite, some revisionist historians paint the era as fueled by albums, not singles. ...

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