CORPORATE ROCK SUCKS.

AuthorDoherty, Brian
PositionJim Ruland's "Corporate Rock Sucks: The Rise and Fall of SST Records"

Early punk musicians almost universally relied on entrepreneurs, however seat-of-their-pants and undercapitalized, to manufacture and distribute their recordings. For bands with the kind of uncompromising aesthetic that made big entertainment corporations nervous, fellow travelers willing to run labels were important. In America, none were more important than SST Records, home at times to Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr, the Meat Puppets, and Husker Du.

The story of that label and its founder Greg Ginn, guitarist for the legendary hardcore act Black Flag, is told in Jim Ruland's Corporate Rock Sucks. The lure of corporate cash is hard to resist--even after launching his own SST, Ginn made (and...

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