Artist: Various Album: 1979 (Revolt Into Style) Label: Cherry Red – CRCDBOX120 Series: The Punk Years – 1979 Format: 3 x CD, Compilation Box Set Released: 2022 Genre: Post-Punk, Punk, New Wave, Synth-pop, Ska Audio codec: Mp3 @320 kbps
Tracklist: DISC ONE:
- Bill Nelson’s Red Noise – Revolt Into Style
- Eddie And The Hot Rods – Media Messiahs
- Andy Arthurs – I Feel Flat
- Magazine – Rhythm Of Cruelty (single version)
- The Cannibals – You Can’t
- John Cooper Clarke – ¡Gimmix! Play Loud
- Dead Fingers Talk – The Boyfriend
- The Only Ones – You Got To Pay
- Glaxo Babies – Who Killed Bruce Lee?
- Sham 69 – Questions And Answers (single version)
- Fingerprintz – Night Nurse
- Siouxsie And The Banshees – The Staircase (Mystery)
- The Squares – Stop Being A Boy
- The Fall – Rebellious Jukebox
- Alternative TV – Graves Of Deluxe Green
- Patrik Fitzgerald – All Sewn Up
- Tubeway Army – Me, I Disconnect From You
- The Outsiders – White Debt
- The Members – Soho-A-Go-Go
- Three Party Split – Dubious Parentage
- X-Ray Spex – Highly Inflammable
- Jonnie And The Lubes – I Got Rabies
- Toyah – Victims Of The Riddle (Part 1)
- Ian Dury And The Blockheads – Sink My Boats
DISC TWO:
- Squeeze – Up The Junction
- The Clash – Groovy Times
- The Records – Girls That Don’t Exist
- The Skids – Masquerade
- Clive Langer And The Boxes – The Whole World
- Echo And The Bunnymen – Read It In Books
- The Faders – Library Book
- Gang Of Four – At Home He’s A Tourist
- Joy Division – Disorder
- The Numbers – Alternative Suicide
- The Jags – Back Of My Hand
- The Teardrop Explodes – Bouncing Babies (Zoo version)
- The Cravats – Burning Bridges
- Adam And The Ants – Whip In My Valise
- Fashion – Citinite
- The Undertones – Here Comes The Summer
- Cult Figures – Zip Nolan (extended mix)
- Pretenders – Kid
- The Quads – There Must Be Thousands
- The Jam – When You’re Young
- The Cheetahs – Radio-Active
- The Ruts – Something That I Said
- The Teenbeats – I Can’t Control Myself
- The Stranglers – Don’t Bring Harry
- The Barracudas – I Want My Woody Back
DISC THREE:
- XTC – Making Plans For Nigel
- The Revillos – Where’s The Boy For Me?
- The Monochrome Set – The Monochrome Set (single version)
- Passage – Taking My Time
- Swell Maps – Real Shocks
- The Zipps – Friends
- Disco Zombies – Disco Zombies
- The Pack – Number 12
- The Human League – Empire State Human
- The Wall – Kiss The Mirror
- The Mekons – Work All Week
- 999 – Found Out Too Late
- The Outcasts – Self Conscious Over You
- Public Image Ltd – Memories (single version)
- The Monks – Johnny B Rotten
- The Freshies – Children Of The World
- The Vapors – Prisoners
- Madness – Bed And Breakfast Man
- Secret Affair – Glory Boys
- Dexy’s Midnight Runners – Dance Stance (demo)
- The Regents – 7 Teen
- The Lurkers – New Guitar In Town
- The Boys – Kamikaze
- The Carpettes – Easy Way Out
- Scritti Politti – Messthetics
- Spizzenergi – Where’s Captain Kirk?
- Notsensibles – I’m In Love With Margaret Thatcher
Not long after exploding into being as a raw, angry, and politically driven hypercharge of rock & roll, punk quickly mutated. Historians, fans, and purists will argue over the exact timeline, but if punk was truly born in 1977 with the Sex Pistols, the Clash, the Ramones, and other classic early bands of the genre, it had already begun sprouting new branches a few years later in the form of post-punk, new wave, industrial, punkers experimenting with dub, funk, and disco styles, and even more new approaches to a genre that was relatively new itself. The extensive compilation 1979: Revolt into Style collects dozens of tracks from what was a banner year for post-punk, setting familiar essentials side by side with more obscure cuts. Inclusions from punk upstarts like Sham 69, the Clash, and the Jam illuminate how those bands were maturing past the energetic three-chord rippers they started out with to explore more thoughtful songwriting and instrumentation. The next wave that was rising out of punk's initial crash is represented here by excellent songs from some of the most important names in post-punk: Joy Division, the Fall, Gang of Four, Siouxsie and the Banshees, and Gary Numan's Tubeway Army. Revolt into Style does a great job of balancing out the better-known post-punk acts with less commercially successful but equally exciting bands like Swell Maps, Alternative TV, and the Mekons. This is true of every subgenre the compilation explores. New wave superstars like Adam and the Ants, Dexy's Midnight Runners, and the Pretenders appear beside more obscure artists like Glory Boys, the Regents, and the Zipps. With 76 songs and around four hours long, Revolt into Style is a solid entry point for anyone getting their feet wet with what came after punk. It's a deep dive that showcases both certified hits and lost gems, offering a sense of just how quickly styles were changing, and how the different players in the scene were influencing one another as those changes played out in the form of exhilarating new music. (AllMusic review by Fred Thomas)
Continuing Cherry Red's yearly overview of the late 70's UK “new music” scene, ‘Revolt Into Style’ features the best of a fast-splintering scene, rife with creativity