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West Coast Punk 1977–78 Songlist

A young woman with long, wavy hair is smiling and wearing sunglasses while holding a smartphone, with headphones around her neck. The background features the text 'West Coast Punk 1977-78 - Special' and a colorful logo for 'Counter Culture'.

This Counter Culture special dives into a genre close to my heart — West Coast punk in its first explosive wave. I was 17 or 18 at the time, seeing many of these bands in tiny rooms, basements, and makeshift art spaces. What struck me then, and still does now, is how the West Coast scene managed to embrace and reject the wider punk movement simultaneously.

The sound often echoed the English bands of the era, but the attitude, the humour, the musicianship — and the sheer weirdness — were uniquely Californian. Much of this music came out on the legendary Dangerhouse label, whose compilation Yes L.A. was a cheeky counterpunch to No New York. Other small labels played their part too, but Dangerhouse was the beating heart.

Here’s the first batch — all from 1977–78, all foundational, all brilliant.


1. The Zeros – Wild Weekend

Their best single by far — a blazing Ramones‑inspired rush, but with their own Latin punk swagger. I saw them in September ’78 in a tiny Portland basement. One hour of thunderous rock that rivalled The Who for sheer physical impact. Sweat literally dripped from the walls.


2. The Avengers – Car Crash

I caught them in Portland in late ’78 at The New Arts Center. A great set from a band best known for opening the Sex Pistols’ final show at Winterland. A San Francisco staple who later reformed many times — always worth seeing. The guitar tone on this Dangerhouse single is phenomenal.


3. Black Flag – Nervous Breakdown

Saw them in ’79 at the Hong Kong Café in LA during my first year of engineering school. Keith Morris — later of Circle Jerks and OFF! — was at his absolute peak here. No punk fashion, no posing, just raw South Bay attitude. This SST single (’78) is pure 4/4 punk before speedcore existed. The vocal fade‑out is a killer touch.


4. The Weirdos – Life of Crime

Their first single on Bomp! Records — genius from the start. Bomp! once claimed they were more exciting live than the Pistols. Not quite, but the Denney brothers created something uniquely their own. I saw them at The New Arts Center in early autumn ’78.


5. X – Adult Books

Before the slick Ray Manzarek‑produced debut album (complete with the obligatory Doors cover), X released this quirky, brilliant Dangerhouse single. Off‑kilter intro, tight harmonies, and a beat that snaps into place. I saw them in LA around ’79–80 and many times after, but this first single remains my favourite.


6. The Dils – Class War

Another Dangerhouse classic. My band, The Ziplocs, opened for them in May ’79. This was their second single (’77/’78), with a guitar solo that hangs back half a measure — a perfect punk‑rock tension. They later formed Rank and File, but the early material is where the magic lives.


7. The Deadbeats – Kill the Hippies

A one‑off masterpiece from Geza X Gideon — a true renaissance figure of early LA punk. His “Ask Geza X” column in Slash magazine was legendary. The lyrics here are priceless, and the Dangerhouse production captures the chaos perfectly.


8. The Wipers – Better Off Dead

Portland’s most luminous, luminary band. This single predates their astonishing debut album. I saw their first show and their last with the original lineup two years later. My band opened for them a few times, and Greg Sage once pogoed to one of our sets — something he’d never done before or since. Nirvana later covered “D‑7” and “Return of the Rat,” but this first single is the true beginning.

By Jeff Williams

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Counter Culture on X: A Place for Thoughtful Engagement

Social platforms rarely feel like places for reflection. They reward speed, certainty, and spectacle — the very things Counter Culture has always resisted. And yet there’s value in stepping into the public square, not to shout above the crowd but to offer a different frequency: slower, sharper, more attentive to the textures of culture and the stories that shape us. That’s the spirit behind Counter Culture’s arrival on X, a platform where the project can extend its reach without losing its voice.

A Space for Thoughtful Signals

The new X page introduces Counter Culture with a simple promise: film, TV, books, politics, and everyday life explored with atmospheric insight and clarity. It’s a mission statement that cuts against the grain of the platform’s usual churn. Instead of hot takes, the feed offers fragments of the site’s longer essays — glimpses of reviews, cultural notes, and political reflections that invite readers to slow down rather than scroll past.

This approach matters. In a landscape where cultural commentary is often reduced to outrage or instant reaction, Counter Culture’s presence on X becomes a small act of resistance: a reminder that criticism can be patient, that analysis can be humane, and that curiosity is still a political stance.

Building a Public Archive

Already, the page is beginning to form a kind of living archive. Posts link back to recent pieces — from reflections on Wuthering Heights (2026) to dispatches from Summerhall’s 2026 programme. Each link is a doorway into a larger conversation, a way of threading the site’s essays into the rhythms of daily browsing.

This isn’t about chasing virality. It’s about creating a trail of signals: small, steady markers that guide readers toward deeper engagement. The X page becomes a map of what Counter Culture is paying attention to — and, by extension, what it believes is worth noticing.

A Community in Formation

Every cultural project begins with a handful of readers. The X page currently shows a modest following, but that’s not a weakness — it’s a beginning. Communities built slowly tend to be communities built well. They gather people who are drawn to the work itself rather than the noise around it.

The early posts, the quiet feed, the absence of spectacle: all of this creates space for something more durable. A readership that values nuance. A conversation that doesn’t collapse into slogans. A shared sense that culture is not just entertainment but a way of understanding the world.

Why This Platform, and Why Now?

Counter Culture has always been about more than reviews. It’s about the moral weather of everyday life — the signals that pass between politics, art, and personal experience. X, for all its flaws, remains a place where those signals circulate quickly. Being present there means being part of the cultural bloodstream, not as a passive observer but as an active interpreter.

The platform also offers something practical: visibility. Not the empty visibility of metrics, but the meaningful visibility of connection. A way for readers to encounter the work in their daily routines. A way for the project to grow without diluting its integrity.

What Comes Next

As the page develops, it will become a companion to the main site — a place for previews, reflections, fragments, and provocations. A place where the editorial voice can stretch, experiment, and respond to the cultural moment without losing its grounding.

Counter Culture’s arrival on X isn’t a pivot. It’s an expansion. Another room in the same house. Another signal in the same frequency.

And as the feed grows, so will the conversation.

By Maria Camara

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