Sanatçının Albümleri
Live: Apocalypse Now Tour June 1981
1994 · albüm
The Best of Chron Gen
1994 · derleme
Live at the Waldorf
1985 · albüm
Too Much Talk
1984 · mini albüm
Chronic Generation
1982 · albüm
This Is the Age
2016 · albüm
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Chaotic Dischord
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One Way System
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Anti-Pasti
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Riot Squad
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Abrasive Wheels
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Angelic Upstarts
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Infa Riot
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Special Duties
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The Lurkers
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Blitz
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The Ejected
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Biyografi
The name an abbreviation of ‘chronic generation’, this early 80s, third-generation UK punk band, ranked only below the Exploited, Vice Squad and Discharge in popularity. More melodic than the vast majority of their peers, Chron Gen earned early comparisons to the Buzzcocks, though they never really justified such heady praise. The band was originally formed as the Condemned in 1977 in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, England. At this time Glynn Baxter (guitar/vocals) and John Johnson (drums) were still at school, and they were joined by bass player Adam in the formative line-up. The early repertoire comprised ramshackle versions of old Sex Pistols and Ramones standards, and Adam was soon replaced by Pete Dimmock, before Jon Thurlow was drafted in on rhythm guitar to complete the band’s enduring line-up. While frontman Baxter’s lyrics were fuelled by a life on the dole, his fellow guitarist Thurlow actually admitted to a job as a civil servant. The band made their debut with the Puppets Of War EP, a spirited four-tracker where the production partially deprived the band of their live punch. Released initially on the group’s own Gargoyle label, the record sold out of its 1, 000 pressing and was picked up for wider distribution by Fresh Records. Following national exposure on the infamous Apocalypse Now tour (with the Exploited, Anti-Pasti, etc.), it rose into the Top 5 of Sounds music paper’s Alternative Chart. Sounds, with its coverage of both the Oi! and new punk movements, remained the band’s only real advocates within the mainstream. Chron Gen then lost many of their new-found supporters with a debut album that was an unfocused, patchy affair. The promise of songs such as ‘Hound Of The Night’ was tempered by the lack of power and studio skill employed elsewhere, and Chron Gen never really recovered from the blow. They soldiered on for a couple of years, but to diminishing rewards.