
UNDERGROUND’S PICK OF BEST SUBCULTURE MOVIES
From Jubilee (1978) If you are stuck at home (future readers, please note this is the time of the Coronavirus epidemic), then make use of
Researching, exploring and reporting British inspired Subculture and Art past and present. Our subculture blog delves into the roots of Northern Soul and simultaneously reports on the contemporary Northern Soul scene. It interviews emerging new wave bands that themselves are inspired by the original punk bands appearing across another page of the Blog.
It charts the evolution of Subcultures from their emergence in the 60’s and 70’s to a more inclusive and equitable movement today. The underground and subcultures are never fixed in one place or time. They have strong and meaningful reference points but are always evolving.
Always Forward, Never Back.
From Jubilee (1978) If you are stuck at home (future readers, please note this is the time of the Coronavirus epidemic), then make use of
PHOTO CREDS: Frank Marshall Punk attitude lives like an omnipresent force pumping though the veins of many musicians and the multitude of genres they fall
Sometime in the middle of summer 16 – Ace Hotel, Shoreditch – hosted Afropunk’s coming-to-London party. In honour of Afropunk’s plans to come to London
Taking its name from the James Spooner 2003 documentary film of the same name, Afropunk festival first launched in 2005 in Brooklyn. Spooner famously said
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