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- Latino_punk abstract "The angst and protest qualities of punk music and style have had a strong connection to Latino youth in the U.S., and to the people in Latin America. It is impossible to pinpoint the exact location or moment when Latinos began engaging in the punk subculture. However, Latin American rock began showing aspects of punk music during the mid-1960s with the Peruvian band The Saicos (Spanish); this band reflected many aspects of other proto-punk bands such as the Yardbirds. The Saicos were predecessors to some of the most influential proto-punk bands in the U.S. such as; New York Dolls, MC5, and The Stooges. However, punk music did not begin to have a wider variety of artists and audience until the late 1970s and 1980s, both in Latin America and in the U.S. By the mid-1970s, the aesthetics promoted by glam rock in the United Kingdom had created a social gap between the audience and the artist. The punk scene that began to sprout during that era shared more commonalities with the youth audience, while still retaining some attributes from glam rock. Punk music presented itself as the voice for white teenage angst, without the arrogance and verbosity of glam rock. The punk genre rooted itself in a music and style that created by the working class without the intellectual posturing of its previous genres. It was a genre created by the white working class in the United Kingdom and for the working class. During the late 1970s punk's social basis for creating commonalities with its fans, and its integration of style and instruments from reggae allowed for punk bands of different ethnicities to integrate themselves into the social scene in the United Kingdom.".
- Latino_punk wikiPageID "5019702".
- Latino_punk wikiPageLength "9249".
- Latino_punk wikiPageOutDegree "6".
- Latino_punk wikiPageRevisionID "656001844".
- Latino_punk wikiPageWikiLink Category:Latin_American_music.
- Latino_punk wikiPageWikiLink Category:Punk_rock_genres.
- Latino_punk wikiPageWikiLink Latin_America.
- Latino_punk wikiPageWikiLink Punk_music.
- Latino_punk wikiPageWikiLink Punk_rock.
- Latino_punk wikiPageWikiLink The_Plugz.
- Latino_punk wikiPageWikiLink Zapatista_Army_of_National_Liberation.
- Latino_punk wikiPageWikiLink Zapatista_uprising_in_Chiapas,_Mexico.
- Latino_punk wikiPageWikiLinkText "Latino Punk".
- Latino_punk wikiPageWikiLinkText "Latino punk".
- Latino_punk hasPhotoCollection Latino_punk.
- Latino_punk wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Link_language.
- Latino_punk wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Multiple_issues.
- Latino_punk wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Latino_punk subject Category:Latin_American_music.
- Latino_punk subject Category:Punk_rock_genres.
- Latino_punk comment "The angst and protest qualities of punk music and style have had a strong connection to Latino youth in the U.S., and to the people in Latin America. It is impossible to pinpoint the exact location or moment when Latinos began engaging in the punk subculture. However, Latin American rock began showing aspects of punk music during the mid-1960s with the Peruvian band The Saicos (Spanish); this band reflected many aspects of other proto-punk bands such as the Yardbirds.".
- Latino_punk label "Latino punk".
- Latino_punk sameAs m.0vxdxsz.
- Latino_punk sameAs Q16995955.
- Latino_punk sameAs Q16995955.
- Latino_punk wasDerivedFrom Latino_punk?oldid=656001844.
- Latino_punk isPrimaryTopicOf Latino_punk.