Middle class - Out of vogue

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  • Опубліковано 3 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 542

  • @TehGav
    @TehGav 12 років тому +34

    There were zero hardcore bands in 1978. This record is a jaw-dropper.

    • @rocknroll_jezus9233
      @rocknroll_jezus9233 4 роки тому +5

      Panic changed their name to Black Flag in 1978

    • @scottjohnson8316
      @scottjohnson8316 3 роки тому +3

      Couldn’t find your comment..... but no I’m not mad. I think you are a bit upset because I disagree with your assessment that nervous breakdown was first hardcore album. Most people after hearing out of vogue will agree that’s it more hardcore than any of the tracks on nervous breakdown. I’ve been listening to hardcore since 86’ so I should know what constitutes hardcore. I still love flag don’t get me wrong. But it wasn’t until damaged that black flag became a ‘hardcore’ band and that was in 81. Peace

    • @ironclaw79
      @ironclaw79 Рік тому +1

      @@rocknroll_jezus9233 black flag was raw hard punk but i never considered them hardcore because they didnt have any fast songs with the 1 2 1 2 beat .that beat is what hardcore is to me

    • @rocknroll_jezus9233
      @rocknroll_jezus9233 Рік тому +2

      @@ironclaw79 well Black Flag looked at the Ramones as pretty hardcore and in a sense they were kinda right, all the early hardcore bands, MC, Bad Brains, and the Flag started or switched to their respective styles because of the Ramones

    • @zbox6420
      @zbox6420 Рік тому +7

      Saying nervous breakdown isn’t hardcore is just wrong

  • @lonlevinholler74
    @lonlevinholler74 8 років тому +337

    Living in Philly, In 1996 or 1997, my ex-gf and I walked to The Betsy Ross House to buy a flag for our apartment. We had our mohawks up, studded jackets, etc, and a couple came over to us and asked to take our picture. The husband said that they were in town for a Teamsters convention and that he was in a punk band way back. It was Mike Patton from Middle Class!

    • @space.pirate481
      @space.pirate481 8 років тому +11

      +Lon Levin Holler wooow awesome

    • @chetrok1
      @chetrok1 8 років тому +10

      Fkn awesome

    • @pressureflipin1992
      @pressureflipin1992 8 років тому +13

      how fucking cool was that!

    • @vonhenchy3035
      @vonhenchy3035 7 років тому +12

      Mike is one cool cat..his older bro you see pop up on Pawn Stars..he will not give a financial valuation..but truly is the king of all knowledge - just ask Mike...cool experience Lon...what are the odds.

    • @justinmadrigal7364
      @justinmadrigal7364 7 років тому +9

      Lon Levin Holler i remember talking to mike he owned out of vouge in fullerton. r.i.p fuck you cancer

  • @matthatter2849
    @matthatter2849 Рік тому +10

    Why aren't these guys talked about more?! This is some SERIOUS STUFF for 1978 and shouldn't be ignored! Why hasn't Henry Rollins and the like made sure that these guys get their due when it comes to inventing hardcore?!

    • @knutsenneundorf116
      @knutsenneundorf116 Рік тому +6

      Because old people who are into HC know this already for over 40 years. Old news. Read more history books!

  • @ShadowOfNexxus
    @ShadowOfNexxus 4 роки тому +160

    Regardless of what you think nobody was making music like in this 78.
    These guys are truely visionaries.

    • @rodrigogagliano4241
      @rodrigogagliano4241 3 роки тому +8

      Me impressionou também. Porém, o Cólera em 79 também fazia um som parecido.

    • @jombiejuss
      @jombiejuss 2 роки тому +6

      I believe it. It was the last of the first wave of LA punk and the first of the second wave, wave that was washing ashore a more determined and structurally sound movement coming from the first gen x kids. I know a lot of first wave bands carried over but that’s overlap for u. Plus 70’s punk for the most part hasn’t aged well. If you hate my opinion well I don’t know what to tell you

    • @gritosmundo2048
      @gritosmundo2048 2 роки тому

      ua-cam.com/video/Yj11FVoJUh0/v-deo.html don't forget japanese punk band SS! super fast punk. they recorded a lot of music from 1978-1979

    • @nikobelliccringepolice9317
      @nikobelliccringepolice9317 2 роки тому +1

      bro they fuck with vision SUPREME

    • @sirphineasluciusambercromb9114
      @sirphineasluciusambercromb9114 2 роки тому +9

      The Germs, Black Flag, Bad Brains and the Damned were right on the heels of this record though. It's possible that more than one band devised hardcore but didn't yet have it on wax. Middle Class edged these other bands out by a matter of weeks. It's like Rappers Delight is credited as the first hip hop or rap music on wax, but there were other rap artists already active in 1979. Heck, what year did James Brown drop Mother Popcorn, 1969? It's rap before there was a word for it.

  • @fungus_am0nguz644
    @fungus_am0nguz644 7 років тому +16

    1978 …and these motherfuckers were putting out this music. Ahead of their time is an understatement .

  • @sirphineasluciusambercromb9114
    @sirphineasluciusambercromb9114 5 років тому +97

    In 1978, disco was still huge. Ozzy was still in Black Sabbath. Van Halen, a brand new band, opened for Black Sabbath in '78. Led Zeppelin and the Who also had their original lineups still intact. The Sex Pistols broke up in San Francisco. Then, way the fuck out of left field comes Black Flag, Bad Brains and the Middle Class inventing hardcore punk rock. It was a cool year to be into rock music.

    • @rocknroll_jezus9233
      @rocknroll_jezus9233 Рік тому +7

      Ramones also opened for Sabbath that year because they wanted more appreciation at shows after touring with Van Halen. They might've gotten what they wanted but to me they picked another amazing kickass band

    • @sirphineasluciusambercromb9114
      @sirphineasluciusambercromb9114 Рік тому +5

      @@rocknroll_jezus9233 yessir

    • @wilhelmklieschnikov7185
      @wilhelmklieschnikov7185 Місяць тому

      That's Rad.

  • @bacardiarti58
    @bacardiarti58 4 роки тому +60

    First met Mike in Santa Ana 1984. He worked at Omni Office products, where he hired me. Had the pleasure of knowing him. He would take his guitar and jam in his upstairs office. He told me he was a rock star, and "That chicks dig him". I never really knew, he was telling the truth. R.I.P. Mike you were a good boss and friend.

  • @harrpoe
    @harrpoe 2 роки тому +11

    I went to school with the Mike Atta. He was a friend RIP. They were not "understood" in HS in 1977/78 but they didn't care and went about playing The Cuckoo's Nest and Madame Wong's West in Santa Monica, writing the blueprint for punk rock. OC punk at its finest with The Crowd and TSOL.

  • @rsimeroth
    @rsimeroth 6 років тому +64

    I lived near these guys when I was just a teen punk . . . a friend introduced me to them and I was in awe--they were a bit older and in a real band! Shortly after this I got to see them play and was completely blown away. Mike Patton used to work at Zed records in Long Beach where my friends and I would buy punk singles and buttons. He was the nicest man . . . and MIke Atta, RIP, was really sweet as well. Matt Simon went on to do a band called The Pontiac Brothers.

    • @RadioPhreak
      @RadioPhreak Рік тому +2

      Hello out there! Yes, I used to go to Zed Records on 7th St. "back in the day."
      Bought many records and buttons also. from: Discharge, Controllers,
      the Beach Blvd. EP, the "Beat Her with a Rake" single, Germs GI, Flyboys,
      Circle Jerks, that Eddie and the Subtitles 7 inch, Avengers, Bad Religion's
      first 7 inch, Suburban Lawns, etc.... one day I asked for that "Yes L.A." clear vinyl
      record that I saw a few days before, and he said it was gone, no more.

    • @rsimeroth
      @rsimeroth Рік тому

      @@RadioPhreak All the good stuff!

    • @mrjustinesquer
      @mrjustinesquer 7 місяців тому +1

      Eat me drink me down the rabbit hole i go.

  • @Scarecrow-skate-racing-videos
    @Scarecrow-skate-racing-videos Рік тому +8

    Punk as fuck, and the lyrics too are so relevant.

  • @marcoamedrano
    @marcoamedrano 8 років тому +40

    "Insurgence" is unbelievable. The raw power. It was the blueprint for the hardcore scene that followed.

    • @gregpasq
      @gregpasq 8 років тому +1

      Has a vague resemblence to "Banned in DC"......

    • @poseursm0shpunksslam852
      @poseursm0shpunksslam852 8 років тому +6

      Greg Pasquier
      you mean banned in d.c has a vague resemblance to insurgents.
      banned in d.c. was in 82. Besides Bad Brains had a jazz infusion sound. Middle class HC was absolutely the blue print for past and present HC sounds. listen to the two and compare, then listen to Minor Threat.

    • @Abel-Alvarez
      @Abel-Alvarez 5 років тому

      @@poseursm0shpunksslam852 actually in 1979 when bad brains released "black dots" since the production goes as faras that but still "out of vogue" goes further back by 1978 as far as "nervous breakdown" by black flag, a different form of hardcore punk.

    • @rocknroll_jezus9233
      @rocknroll_jezus9233 4 роки тому +4

      @@Abel-Alvarez that was released in the 90s but your point still stands. Nervous Breakdown was recorded before The Middle Class even played their first show

    • @Fukyourfeelingslol
      @Fukyourfeelingslol 7 місяців тому

      @@rocknroll_jezus9233 Punk is not the synonymous with Hardcore. Nervous breakdown is great, but it's not Hardcore.

  • @simbolodegretel
    @simbolodegretel 10 років тому +96

    1. Out of vogue (00:00)
    2. You belong (1:11)
    3. Situations (2:26)
    4. Insurgence (4:19)

    • @x88868
      @x88868 4 місяці тому

      Thank you 😊

  • @seabasssimpson4547
    @seabasssimpson4547 10 років тому +48

    So long Mike Atta, you made a difference in this world.

  • @itsjoshramone
    @itsjoshramone 10 років тому +39

    R.I.P Mike Atta, Thanks for the music

  • @NetanyahuWarCriminal
    @NetanyahuWarCriminal Рік тому +3

    One of the most important punk records hands down. I dare say even the greatest.

  • @johncohrone3516
    @johncohrone3516 8 років тому +15

    Growing up in So Cal in the 70s and 80s was amazing. Nobody had it better!!!

    • @ladyb2423
      @ladyb2423 5 років тому

      john cohrone yeah!

    • @knutsenneundorf116
      @knutsenneundorf116 Рік тому

      yeah, fucking amazing that something like Punk developed in your Eagles, Fleetwood Mac , cocaine and surfing paradise.😅

  • @buggydriver7
    @buggydriver7 10 років тому +64

    middle class is one of the very first bands i saw in 1978. use to roadie for them cause i had a van . Rest in piece mike atta. Im so grateful i got to see you play one last time a few months ago

    • @EarlSmith2469
      @EarlSmith2469 10 років тому +5

      I Met the Middle Class in Long Beach, a few years ago - they were doing a gig at Alex's - Mike Patton introduced me to the whole band, they signed my copy of this EP. then shortly after that, Daisy, Roxy and I seen them at the Observatory. I Think the line-up was The Billy Bones, White Flag, Middle Class, Youth Brigade with the Adolescents headlining. Rodney came out and introduced the Adolescents. I met up with Bill outside and introduced my wife Roxy to him. I miss him and Mike Atta, they were unique people that have should've lived forever if possible. R.I.P.

    • @miguelmorales3289
      @miguelmorales3289 9 років тому

      You are truly right. They should live
      Forever

    • @buggydriver7
      @buggydriver7 9 років тому +5

      I met Mike Patton in 1979 I think. I always loved middle class and I'm very grateful that I got to see their very last show with Mike atta before he passed. It was awesome and brought back some great old memories. They're like the first punk band I ever saw in the early years

    • @chetrok1
      @chetrok1 9 років тому +3

      i was born 11/20/78 this 7" is a gift to me ill always cherish it perfect definition of music, i dont know i they had any clue the impact they would make with this album

    • @Crash.7434
      @Crash.7434 Рік тому

      Did you see the germs?

  • @kryptichands968
    @kryptichands968 5 років тому +17

    This band and their music kept me so far from the shitty things in my life and kept me thinking about punk rock and skateboarding and getting past my stress and suicidal thoughts, punk rock saves fuck what you heard, YOU BELONG

    • @Gab-br-z3d
      @Gab-br-z3d 2 роки тому +1

      So amazing to read it.

    • @kryptichands968
      @kryptichands968 2 роки тому

      @@Gab-br-z3d hope you got something from that, and thank you for sharing

  • @toddscrivener
    @toddscrivener 10 років тому +8

    Thanx and RIP, Mike.

  • @SlashManEXE
    @SlashManEXE 11 місяців тому +2

    It's hard to say who started a genre when all the early bands were still finding their sounds. But after hearing about Middle Class, I can say all the ingredients for hardcore were on full display here.

  • @PoserExposer
    @PoserExposer 12 років тому +7

    SS formed in mid-late 1977 to play Ramones type music "3 times as fast"..the CD rerelease of their hard to find LP includes a live spring 1978 show that shows that they had well accomplished that.Later they became the continental kids.

  • @TheMindIlluminated
    @TheMindIlluminated 6 років тому +10

    And thus, an entirely new kind of music was born. Not a subgenre, a totally new thing.

    • @rocknroll_jezus9233
      @rocknroll_jezus9233 5 років тому +2

      Sorry man but Hardcore while being a thing is within punk

  • @PtyYouTube
    @PtyYouTube 10 років тому +53

    oh cool. This IS hardcore.
    First time I hear this. Wont lie. Sounds good.

  • @andook
    @andook 12 років тому +6

    "Out Of Vogue" In the UK it was released on an ep on the Fast Records label. John Peel also played it a lot on his radio show.
    My band at the time shamelessly nicked the drum intro for the "Situations" song as well. lol. Top chunes both

  • @xadrianschroeder13x
    @xadrianschroeder13x 9 років тому +6

    The first time I listened to this I didn't realize he was speaking English. A truly unbelievable record.

  • @petewadesays12
    @petewadesays12 7 років тому +3

    The speed and sound and how fucking tight they are.,....definitely one of the greatest albums ever.

  • @kryptichands968
    @kryptichands968 2 роки тому +3

    RIP Mike Atta, all my best to the remaining band members, respect from the heart

  • @MegaRonaldo64
    @MegaRonaldo64 10 років тому +13

    The Middle Class are great! I feel very lucky to own a copy of the 'Out of Vogue' EP. They truly were/are an influential band that had an incredible impact on me. I used to listen to this EP over and over again trying to work out the lyrics, just brilliant songs that echoed how I felt as a teenager in early 80s Southern California.

  • @votejello
    @votejello 16 років тому +4

    This EP makes me feel like no other. It takes me back to a certain place for some reason. I hadn't heard it before at the time, but it takes me right back there. Great music.

  • @johnflushing9328
    @johnflushing9328 2 роки тому +5

    Some say the birth of hardcore is right here...

  • @kevinsteviestevenson4001
    @kevinsteviestevenson4001 Рік тому

    I had this when I was a young'un! 13 I think... Loved it then, and love it now!

  • @ericpinaya3510
    @ericpinaya3510 Рік тому +1

    So glad I got to see them before they retired for good

  • @chetrok1
    @chetrok1 12 років тому +1

    i was born in 78 so obviously i would gravitate towards this..good year bad sign

  • @PerfectosIdiotasPunk
    @PerfectosIdiotasPunk 4 місяці тому +2

    THIS IS THE REAL TRACKLIST:
    (A Guy Sometime 9 Years Ago Already Posted it)
    1. Out of vogue (00:00)
    2. You belong (1:11)
    3. Situations (2:26)
    4. Insurgence (4:19)
    PS: I'M TALKING ABOUT THE START TIME OF EACH SONG.

  • @bashitup
    @bashitup 10 років тому +11

    RIP Mike. You WILL be missed.

  • @ossuary1982
    @ossuary1982 Місяць тому

    Man.. this album including Redd Kross, Flipper and The Mentaly ill oh... and The Germs, Gai and Screaming Noise were the soundtrack to my life when I dropped out of highschool!

  • @SK-le1gm
    @SK-le1gm 3 місяці тому +6

    i probably have the only vinyl copy of this in india

  • @creekandseminole
    @creekandseminole 8 років тому +25

    Their full LP Homeland is quite awesome as well. They went post-punk on that album, but it's freakin' awesome.

    • @Brewzerr
      @Brewzerr 6 років тому +1

      Agreed. Homeland almost sounds like a sped-up version of Joy Division. That one really gets overlooked.

    • @blockhead8134
      @blockhead8134 5 років тому

      creekandseminole are fucking kidding homeland is a straight banger! i love that album to death

    • @blockhead8134
      @blockhead8134 5 років тому

      Brewzerr its like minutemen meet the indifference era of the proletariat.

  • @rossonero9536
    @rossonero9536 9 років тому +12

    First hardcore ep. RIP Mike...

  • @WheresPoochie
    @WheresPoochie 5 років тому +3

    Ludicrously ahead of its time

  • @nolanatlsmusic9067
    @nolanatlsmusic9067 4 роки тому +20

    This is the earliest, most extreme and fast album I've heard from punk. I'm always on the search for old music that's blazingly fast and extreme pre 1980, but it's kinda difficult

    • @jacobsanchez6924
      @jacobsanchez6924 4 роки тому +7

      This is super late, and I know you probably heard of them,but early Discharge is where it’s at for me. “It’s no TV Sketch” is Still the heaviest punk song I’ve ever heard. I don’t think any American bands came anywhere near early Discharge in terms of heaviness and pure aggression and anger.

    • @nolanatlsmusic9067
      @nolanatlsmusic9067 4 роки тому +1

      @@jacobsanchez6924 thanks so much for the recommendation!

    • @jacobsanchez6924
      @jacobsanchez6924 4 роки тому +3

      No problem! Trying not to be that guy that throws out a million recommendations, but if you enjoy that song then definitely check out “a look at tomorrow” “tomorrow belongs to us” “ain’t no feeble bastard” and all of their early EPS from the 80s are pretty solid.
      They then went on to do their most famous album which is Hear Nothing See Nothing Say Nothing, but the vocals on that album and most of the stuff afterwards aren’t my cup of tea. Still an important album for as a lot of speed/thrash bands, who actually cite that album as being an influence for them if you also happen to be into metal/speed metal/thrash stuff.

    • @nolanatlsmusic9067
      @nolanatlsmusic9067 4 роки тому +3

      @@jacobsanchez6924 yeah, I always listen to music while I cut grass, I'll definitely put them on next time I cut. I was listening to suicidal tendencies today, another influential punk/thrash band

    • @jacobsanchez6924
      @jacobsanchez6924 4 роки тому +2

      Nice dude! I gotta give Suicidal another listen. Never really ventured into their stuff besides institutionalized.

  • @satanonicuspsychoticus3998
    @satanonicuspsychoticus3998 4 місяці тому +1

    many consider this to be the first hardcore punk album...its hard to disagree and its a beautiful thing

  • @Truckngirl
    @Truckngirl 4 роки тому +3

    Without a doubt, the fastest, nicest good guys to ever come out of the OC.

  • @chetrok1
    @chetrok1 10 років тому +4

    This album changed my life..thank you

  • @CoalMiningPolak
    @CoalMiningPolak Рік тому +3

    “Situations” is a fantastic piece of early post-punk.

  • @poseursm0shpunksslam852
    @poseursm0shpunksslam852 8 років тому +8

    Fastest music played at this time. These guys beat them all, amazing HC band in 78

    • @rocknroll_jezus9233
      @rocknroll_jezus9233 3 роки тому

      Beat em all except Black Flag

    • @ShadowOfNexxus
      @ShadowOfNexxus 3 роки тому +3

      @@rocknroll_jezus9233 they beat BF to the punch...

    • @Anthonybchannel
      @Anthonybchannel Рік тому +1

      ​@rocknroll_jezus9 this came out in 78. BF hadnt put out anything yet

  • @earthcitizen3939
    @earthcitizen3939 Рік тому +3

    Out of Vogue, fast as hell, I like it. Minor Threat probably played faster but this one is really good.

  • @jamesturner2182
    @jamesturner2182 7 років тому +2

    Legendary track, a punk masterpiece. one minute well spent.

  • @runtt01
    @runtt01 11 років тому +2

    The beginning of thrash and hardcore punk. If you know this band, then you know Frontier Records released a compilation LP of everything they recorded. This single is included in the package.

  • @Bacchus1983
    @Bacchus1983 11 років тому +5

    Their was an interview in flipside magazine back in..81/82 with HR and he talks about how they were inspired to play hardcore, not once does he say "btw we invented hardcore" No one started saying that till the 90s when they released that comeback album on madonnas label. As a punk back in the 80s in Miami, bad brains was never cited as starting anything, just that they were unique for mixing reggae rasta stuff with hardcore and that they were black.

  • @MCBlockNation
    @MCBlockNation 10 років тому +7

    Rest In Peace Mike Atta.

  • @vmonroe1741
    @vmonroe1741 Рік тому +1

    These songs are 🔥🔥🔥 I forgot how good!!!

  • @screenfixer1936
    @screenfixer1936 7 років тому

    letteralmente un E.P. incredibile per i tempi
    litterally an incredible E.P. so ahead for the times

  • @paullozano9457
    @paullozano9457 4 роки тому +5

    Legendario el primer material de hard core punk de la historia

  • @willieluncheonette
    @willieluncheonette 8 років тому +3

    Second of the bands in our little survey in contention to be the first to release a hardcore record is Middle Class. Like Black Flag, they also got together in 1977 in Santa Ana, California, practicing in a public storage unit turned practice room.
    Middle Class consisted of Jeff Atta vocals, Mike Atta guitar, Mike Patton bass and Bruce Atta drums. Their debut e.p. Out Of Vogue with it's iconic Diane Arbus (I think) photograph on the front cover was released in 1978 on Joke Records. At the outset the band ranged in age between 15 and 21.
    Here's what Lou Barlow of Deep Wound and Dinosaur Jr. had to say---"The Middle Class 7"---I'm convinced that is the first hardcore record. I got it before I heard Minor Threat. I got the first Meat Puppets 7" too--a whole other side. It resonates deeply to me because it's fierce yet melodic--a real sense of melody and soul. There were so many weird, cool bands for a while. It was people craving noise."
    But Jack Rabid, drummer in Even Worse and editor of the long running Big Takeover magazine had a different view---:"Anyone who heard Pay To Cum by the Bad Brains had to have a copy. There was nothing like it. Then I heard Out Of Vogue by Middle Class and around the same time Rhino 39's Dangerhouse single came out. But those groups weren't nearly as good. Out Of Vogue may have predated Pay To Come but it's not all that good---a historical piece, the first of its kind, but it had no impact. Without question the Germs album impacted the most. The DC scene owes its entire raison d'etre to Pay To Come."
    Both the above quotes are from American Hardcore book. BTW I agree there was nothing like the obliterating power of Bad Brains' Pay To Cum, but that 7" single was released on June 23, 1980.
    1. Out of vogue (1:07)
    2. You belong (1:13)
    3. Situations (1:49)
    4. Insurgence (1:07)

    • @marcoamedrano
      @marcoamedrano 7 років тому +2

      That's right. The issue here is the dates -- not quality, influence, or staying power. Bad Brains is outstanding, brash and experimental, but Middle Class's little EP was the first hardcore committed to vinyl, and that means a lot.

    • @willieluncheonette
      @willieluncheonette 7 років тому +1

      Black Flag's Nervous Breakdown would be the first recorded hardcore record in January 1978 but it was not released until February 1979.The other contender was the Germs Lexicon Devil e.p released in May 1978.

    • @chuy8356
      @chuy8356 6 років тому

      RF7 was early hardcore as well.

  • @Druffmaul
    @Druffmaul 14 років тому +1

    @edshipsey The fact is, this pre-dates hardcore. Hardcore didn't exist yet when this was recorded. This helped to create hardcore.

  • @adastrapgh
    @adastrapgh Рік тому +1

    when i was 9 years old, i went to a record store with my dad, and they had a blue vinyl reissue of this EP
    and for whatever reason, i insisted to my dad that we buy this. i didn't even know what it was at the time
    guess it really worked out

  • @kentkretz5151
    @kentkretz5151 12 років тому +15

    My point is how many hardcore bands were around at that time that never got any of the material recorded.

  • @thepeacetimebookclub3029
    @thepeacetimebookclub3029 6 років тому +1

    First time listening to Middle Class. A refreshing take on the hardcore/punk sound.

  • @hellaradusername
    @hellaradusername 2 місяці тому +4

    RIP Jeff Atta

  • @darrenenders698
    @darrenenders698 4 місяці тому +1

    That was when hardcore and punk was born I think it was like late 1979 it came around I had a little brief of rock and roll influence

  • @michellecasada5553
    @michellecasada5553 10 років тому +27

    gracias wikipedia

  • @gmcg923
    @gmcg923 16 років тому +1

    Hardcore. This is my shit. 1978 this is where it all began.

  • @kurt52073
    @kurt52073 14 років тому

    I've been a hardcore fan for 20+ years and I've been looking for this forever. Thanks for posting this. Pioneers!

  • @skinheadyouth66
    @skinheadyouth66 12 років тому +45

    nothing was this fast in 1978 - nothing - this was the first

  • @wali82
    @wali82 16 років тому +1

    this is pure orange county hardcore. the first. one of the best.

  • @endlesshyenas
    @endlesshyenas 15 років тому

    there was no internet..it all happend with a mouth, a radio, and a flyer. Information was scarce and valuable, now there is a disgusting excess of it. I'm glad I got to see them dudes play live up here in SF Bay Area. Word.

  • @andrewjackson7758
    @andrewjackson7758 Рік тому +1

    I was 7 in 1978, but I had heard ELO and Queen by then. It's a conspiracy, because what children dislike the punk rock, especially Ramones and faster stuff like this GOAT shit? Give punk to elementary school kids. They'll love it.

  • @danermanerkider
    @danermanerkider 7 років тому +2

    This is surprisingly hard for 1978. I can hear how it must have really influenced hardcore punk's prominence around 81.

  • @Scotty-P
    @Scotty-P 14 років тому

    One of my FAVES! I'm always in vogue though...and so is this!

  • @yourgayassdrinkspiss
    @yourgayassdrinkspiss 14 років тому +1

    Along with other tunes...19 & Nowhere, Pee, Beep Beep, and Hated...the band played perhaps the first punk show in OC; a lunchtime show at Fullerton High School in Fall '77. Amongst the student body audience, a 10th grade Mike Ness, who later confessed to stealing the band's distortion pedal.

  • @rottenparts
    @rottenparts 12 років тому +1

    First time hearing this. Definitely hardcore. These guys might have been the only ones in the UK doing this in '78

    • @PritchDringle
      @PritchDringle 3 роки тому +5

      This is a California based band.

  • @heavycheck57
    @heavycheck57 2 роки тому

    Sometime around 1984 I got a vinyl records for sale catalog from Bomp Records. It had this EP for sale. They were a dollar each. Seriously. A buck apiece.
    I called the phone number on the catalog. "I'll take 'em all."
    The guy on the other end asked me "Really?" We've got about 10 copies left and no one seems to want them."

  • @daoisth.7049
    @daoisth.7049 9 років тому +8

    Friend and I had this on vinyl back in the mid-90s, and for some reason I always thought that it was Circle Jerks. Don't have the record or the friend (heroin overdose) around these days to check my memory, but can anyone corroborate? There was either a split with Middle Class/Circle Jerks, or Circle Jerks covered "Out of Vogue." Or my brain just ain't what it used to be.

    • @DeanWesterfield
      @DeanWesterfield 5 років тому

      Not that I know of. I double checked discogs too

  • @chetrok1
    @chetrok1 9 років тому +5

    Punk is punk there is no definition who cares its just superior music I cant explain it myself

  • @poseursm0shpunksslam852
    @poseursm0shpunksslam852 8 років тому +82

    As A MATTER FACT Black Flag didn't even play this fast, especially the vocals.

    • @danielscissorhands
      @danielscissorhands 8 років тому +11

      No, Siree, they did not.

    • @Brewzerr
      @Brewzerr 6 років тому +34

      Two different styles. BF was never about speed. It was about raw fucking power. I love both bands, and credit them both for helping to birth hardcore. Middle Class broke the speed barrier, and Black Flag was like getting punched in the gut by a punk rock Hulk.

    • @ericks9979
      @ericks9979 5 років тому +16

      Germs were nastier than both. That being said i love em all.

    • @J4060
      @J4060 5 років тому +3

      @@ericks9979, well said.

    • @soyelgatokun
      @soyelgatokun 5 років тому +8

      Who cares? Punk is punk fast or not. Peace.

  • @Dementia1680
    @Dementia1680 11 років тому

    Gonna go see them this Friday!!!

  • @chetrok1
    @chetrok1 12 років тому +3

    I think they're underrated..fucking bad ass shit so hardcore..good post

  • @dodgers88
    @dodgers88 12 років тому +2

    Bruce Atta is a philosophy professor at CSULA. Had the privilege of taking his course. He seems very silent about his band days though.

  • @raybeez55
    @raybeez55 5 років тому +1

    i listened to a Jack Grisham podcast he requested this song and i do dig it.......

  • @amnm12
    @amnm12 12 років тому

    So simple, I wish I could have thought of something so awesome.

  • @antidisestablishmentariani8119
    @antidisestablishmentariani8119 11 років тому +1

    Holy shit. This is really good.

  • @ViajanteB4
    @ViajanteB4 13 років тому +2

    Hardcore en 1978!!!

  • @scuzz___
    @scuzz___ 5 років тому +2

    Light-years ahead of their time.

    • @dang2443
      @dang2443 5 років тому

      a comment you can read all over UA-cam. Apparently EVERYONE was "way ahead of their time"

  • @johnnyblack8497
    @johnnyblack8497 9 років тому +5

    Yes, this is indeed how it should be done.

  • @mauriziomarcialis7726
    @mauriziomarcialis7726 5 років тому +3

    In my opinion this song is the first hardcore punk example with fast rhythms and accelerations!

    • @DumPhuc
      @DumPhuc 3 роки тому +1

      Nope,theres earlier..Blast Damned Flame-Majestic..recorded in 1973,check it out!

    • @sir.public
      @sir.public 2 роки тому

      @@DumPhuc I'd also add Zakary Thaks Bad Girl from 1966, Man on The Dune by The Outsiders from 1968 and SS - Coca Cola and Mr. Twist from 1978

    • @DisciplineOfSteel2
      @DisciplineOfSteel2 Рік тому +1

      @@DumPhuc Still wouldn’t call it Hardcore Punk. This EP is considered by many as the first true Hardcore sound.

  • @hinodecho69
    @hinodecho69 16 років тому

    Tell Mike hi, and remind him that his show at the Hong Kong with X and the Bags was one of the all time classic LA performances, making more than a few converts... :O)

  • @FerminPP
    @FerminPP 3 роки тому +1

    amazing

  • @brandonrandomcruz
    @brandonrandomcruz 10 років тому +23

    rip mike.

  • @jjo4145
    @jjo4145 Рік тому +1

    Wasnt' this released in early 1979? I just read an old Slash magazine from March 1979 (The Cramps are on the cover) where this EP is advertised as the Middle Class' debut. It also has a small review of this EP in the record review sections of the same issue. Either way, there's no doubt that these guys were way ahead of their time in terms of Hardcore.

    • @randypaul5427
      @randypaul5427 2 місяці тому

      It was released January of 1979 but was recorded at the end of 1978.

  • @nymetsrock
    @nymetsrock 11 років тому

    Yes they were. They were playing Jazz Fusion before 77 under a different band name, they formed bad brains after listening to the ramones, and the song bad brain. By the end of 77 they were using their fusion technique to play punk faster than anyone else.

  • @andook
    @andook 12 років тому +12

    The start of hardcore: This song

    • @DumPhuc
      @DumPhuc 3 роки тому +1

      There's earlier hardcore..check out Blast Damned Flame-majestic..its hardcore and it's from 1973

    • @jumpfart666
      @jumpfart666 10 місяців тому

      I heard thats fake ​@@DumPhuc

  • @TehGav
    @TehGav 12 років тому +2

    Yes, Flipper were hardcore.
    True story: A few years ago I did a total, top-to-bottom rewrite on the Wikipedia page for Flipper. Naturally, it got blown to shit as time passed. But one of the first commenters on the article was Bruce Loose, who wrote something like, "YES!! You totally got what we were trying to do!"
    Whatever that proves, it's still difficult to say WHY Flipper was a hardcore band -- and why Negative Trend definitely wasn't.
    I'm not saying I know the answer.

  • @irkedd
    @irkedd 16 років тому

    wow.
    4 songs in 5 minutes 25 seconds.
    just raw spontainios expression from some bored suburban kids.
    the vintage punk was the real stuff because they were not trying to sound like anybody else, it wasnt an established style yet so it was far more real.
    great stuff.
    i like the real stuff like this.

  • @presidentraygunn
    @presidentraygunn 10 років тому +5

    Rest In Peace Mike

  • @brandonhendrix7223
    @brandonhendrix7223 7 років тому +56

    My two cents on the "who invented hardcore" debate. It really comes down to this: when you think of hardcore punk what comes to mind? Likely LA, DC, and NY. And the two bands who are often cited as the biggest influences on those scenes? Black Flag and Bad Brains (BB mostly East Coast though). Ergo, they get the "first/invented" hardcore tag due to their influence and impact. Like it or not. This Middle Class EP, while undeniably predating the Bad Brains and faster than Black Flag and it was ahead of it's time, how truly influential was it? I mean, how many outside of California 1978-1980 even knew of it's existence? In fact the only old school band I've heard cite the Middle Class as an influence were the Adolescents. So basically while it came out before, the fact is few knew about it, or were influenced by it, but tons of the first "hardcore" bands always cite Black Flag and the Bad Brains as the bands that inspired them, so for all intents and purposes they were the first hardcore bands. So while Out of Vogue clearly is the first true "hardcore" slab, that doesn't diminish the fact that BF and BB are the bands that truly kickstarted it. (Yes, I'll concede the Bad Brains are a tad overrated, but the proofs in the pudding. The entire DC scene (and the early nyhc scene) was pretty much a Bad Brains soundalike competition.) For the record, the Bad Brains were inspired to play fast by The Dickies, so does that make The Dickies hardcore pioneers?
    And in the end, who cares? It's all punk rock. Wasn't the whole point of it to avoid this type of analytical elitism?

    • @Brewzerr
      @Brewzerr 6 років тому +4

      Well stated. And yes, who really cares about debating this? No one was debating it back in the early 80’s when hardcore was peaking, that’s for sure. We were just getting off on the raw energy and living in the moment. Everyone’s so analytical these days. For my money, the Stooges invented hardcore in 1972 when they recorded “I Got a Right”... but I refuse to waste my time debating that with people.

    • @happyfarm7997
      @happyfarm7997 6 років тому +13

      TL;DR This is the first hardcore record whether you like it or not, first means first

    • @ericks9979
      @ericks9979 5 років тому +3

      Why are The Germs almost never brought in these types of conversations?

    • @happyfarm7997
      @happyfarm7997 5 років тому +3

      Erick Salazar The germs were way after this, this is a whole ass year before GI

    • @ericks9979
      @ericks9979 5 років тому +3

      @@happyfarm7997 lexicon devil ep 1978 Circle One and No God just as maybe even nastier than anything at the time.

  • @sonetlumiere12345678
    @sonetlumiere12345678 12 років тому

    I figured it was released during the 80's. Great record.

  • @TehGav
    @TehGav 12 років тому +6

    "'Out Of Vogue' In the UK it was released on an ep on the Fast Records label. John Peel also played it a lot on his radio show."
    Really? The Gang of 4's label? [checking] Oh, they were on Earcom 3, the double 7" comp.
    I didn't know that.
    So wait. This was 1979, right? It was on John Peel's show?
    How would you set the odds that a certain band in Stoke-on-Trent heard it and was incited to, you know, speed up? 'Realities of War' was released in Feb. 1980.

    • @JMarinelli
      @JMarinelli 3 роки тому

      I think that it’s quite possible.

  • @spartakick300
    @spartakick300 16 років тому +2

    "We dont need your magazines
    We dont need you fashion show
    We dont need your tv
    We dont want to know
    We dont need we get our fill
    Its esoteric overkill
    Its a shiny new aesthetic
    Get us out of vogue

  • @paulfigueroalozano8769
    @paulfigueroalozano8769 4 роки тому +4

    This Is the first álbum of hard core