- Pink Flag · 1977
- Pink Flag · 1977
- Pink Flag · 1977
- Pink Flag · 1977
- The Ideal Copy · 1987
- Chairs Missing · 1978
- Pink Flag · 1977
- Pink Flag · 1977
- Pink Flag · 1977
- Pink Flag · 1977
- 154 (2006 Remastered Version) · 1979
- 154 (2006 Remastered Version) · 1979
- Pink Flag · 1977
Essential Albums
- The definitive post-punk record that would come to epitomize a genre, Pink Flag snuck onto the scene when the Sex Pistols and the Clash were playing to their safety-pinned, Mohawk’d crowds. Three of the four members of Wire came from an art-school background, enabling them to take the basic punk esthetic (simplicity and brashness) and mold it into a completely different and more sophisticated form. Enhancing that punk core with white space, meticulously controlled repetition, and pop hooks camouflaged under an abrasive sheen, the songs on Pink Flag threaten to burst apart: sometimes short and explosive, other times rumbling with a slow fuse, they impact the listener with visceral force. Wire’s debut has more than withstood the test of time, especially with tunes like “Three Girl Rhumba,” “Ex Lion Tamer” and “1 2 X U” becoming two-and three-chord cult wonders, covered by blossoming punkers everywhere. Pink Flag is an astounding document of musical evolution that imparts utter timelessness in its perfection.
Artist Playlists
- Stripping away the excess with the post-punk pioneers.
- Just where would indie music be without this U.K. post-punk band?
- Artfully scuffed jitter-punks test the sonic structure of pop.
Compilations
About Wire
Few acts have so steadily dismantled what punk means as Wire has. Formed in London in late 1976, the band captured the new genre’s trademark combustibility on its 1977 debut album Pink Flag. Most of the record’s flinty 21 songs last just a minute or two and went on to influence the blurted dynamism of American hardcore. Singer/guitarist Colin Newman’s acidic snideness was equally persuasive, though Wire were already flirting with pop hooks and synth textures on 1978’s Chairs Missing. Subsequent albums grew increasingly askew and minimalistic, confirming their status in the post-punk firmament. By the 1990s, indie rockers Guided By Voices and Spoon were citing Wire as a key influence, with dance-punk outfits Futureheads and Franz Ferdinand following suit in the 2000s. Not content to remain a static cornerstone, the band has continued to evolve and even incorporate shades of industrial and metal.
- FROM
- City of London, London, England
- FORMED
- 1976
- GENRE
- Rock