1 of 3 available systemwide,
with no current holds.
Location and Availability
|
Burton Barr Central Library
— 0 available
|
| |
Call Number |
Status |
| |
781.6609 R337r
|
Checked Out
- (Due: May 30 2013)
|
|
Palo Verde Library
— 1 of 1 available
|
| |
Call Number |
Status |
| |
781.6609 R337r
|
On Shelf
- (Checked in: Jan 30 2012 )
|
|
Yucca Library
— 0 available
|
| |
Call Number |
Status |
| |
781.6609 R337r
|
Checked Out
- (Due: May 16 2013)
|
Notes:
Originally published: Great Britain : Faber and Faber, 2005.
Includes index.
Contents:
- I: Postpunk
- Public image belongs to me: / John Lydon and PiL
- Autonomy in the U.K. : DIY and the British independent-label movement
- Tribal revival: the pop group and the Slits
- Militant entertainment: Gang of Four: the Mekons, and the Leeds Scene
- Uncontrollable urge: the Industrial Grotesquerie of Pere Ubu and Devo
- Living for the future: Cabaret Voltaire, the Human League, and the Sheffield Scene
- Just step sideways: The Fall, Joy Division, and the Manchester Scene
- Industrial devolution: throbbing Gristle's music from the Death Factory
- Contort yourself: No Wave New York
- Art attack: Talking Heads, Wire, and Mission of Burma
- Messthetics: The London Vanguard
|
- Freak scene: Cabaret Noir and Theater of cruelty in Postpunk San Francisco
- Careering: PiL and Postpunk's Peak and Fall
- II: New pop and new rock
- Ghost dance: 2-tone and the Ska Resurrection
- Sex gang children: Malcolm McLaren, the Pied Piper of Pantomime Pop
- Mutant Disco and Punk Funk: Crosstown Traffic in early eighties New York (and beyond)
- Fun 'n' frenzy: Postcard Records and the Sound of Young Scotland
- Electric dreams: Synthpop
- Play to win: the pioneers of new pop
- New gold dream 81-82-83-84: New Pop's Peak, the Second British Invasion of America, and the Rise of MTV
- Dark things and Glory Boys: the return of Rock with Goth and the New Psychedelia
- Raiding the twentieth century: ZTT, the Art of Noise, and Frankie goes to Hollywood.
|
What is the Rotten Tomatoes Tomatometer?
The Tomatometer measures the percentage of Approved Tomatometer Critics who recommend a certain movie --
or the number of good reviews divided by the total number of reviews.
A good review is denoted by a
FRESH tomato.
A bad review is denoted by a ROTTEN tomato. 
In order for a movie to receive an overall rating of FRESH on Rotten Tomatoes, the reading on the Tomatometer for that movie must be at
least 60%. Otherwise, it is ROTTEN. The ratings and reviews are licensed by the Phoenix Public Library from Rotten Tomatoes. For more information,
please visit the Rotten Tomatoes website at www.rottentomatoes.com