City Gardens Playlist

City Gardens Playlist
Punk/Rock Curated — A book about a momentous New Jersey nightclub, 'No Slam Dancing: City Gardens' gives some the best memories of living music legends a worthy forever after. Here is some footage of the prime contributors off the page and on the stage, doing their thing.

City Gardens on 1701 Calhoun Street, Trenton, New Jersey is where the party was at. The fifteen years of New Wave, punk, reggae, hip hop, hardcore and alternative rock that went down there is something music journalists, Amy Yates Wuelfing and Steven DiLodovico, don’t want you to forget.

Having been there – live, kicking, tripping off the insider stories they got – the twosome have set that slice of head bopping history in typographic stone.

No Slam Dancing, No Stage Diving, No Spikes: An Oral History of the Legendary City Gardens is a collage of vox populi that goes some way to piecing the scene back together. It’s a little book of big stories from the prodigal underdogs and iconic acts who played the makeshift venue – may it rest in peace. HUCK trawled the web to find some golden nuggets of live action from that influential era.

Straight Edge: Minor Threat
Despite existing together for just three years , Ian MacKaye’s band Minor Threat overhauled both the style and ethics of the hardcore punk scene in the early ’80s. Beyond introducing Do It Yourself music distribution and concert promotion, they went against the mainstream screaming But I’ve got better things to do/Than sit around and fuck my head/Hang out with the living dead/Snort white shit up my nose/Pass out at the shows in their Straight Edge EP. No doubt the lyrics kick started a fresh movement that called for a stance of alcohol and drug abstinence in the industry. This fan-made tape is of an intimate gig and the band rocking out to the start of the record.
)

Liar: Rollins Band
This video’s brazen peeling back of the human consciousness to reveal barefaced untrustworthiness at the core, combined with deep-throated post-punk lyrical throws of ‘I’M A LIAR!’, were disturbing enough to get Henry Rollins and his band, Rollins Band, significant airtime on MTV in the dawn of the ’90s. Watch the spectacle-clad American frontman mutate into a muscular brute to the beat of the music, and have your soul well and truly shaken.
)

Blue Monday: New Order
People struggle to cope when a friend takes their own life, but it’s practically unheard of for a band to make it when their lead singer commits suicide due to depression brought on by a failing marriage and a diagnosis of epilepsy. But ’70s English rock group Joy Division did just that when Ian Curtis ended his suffering. Taking the remaining members and adding synth musician Gillian Gilbert, they reformed themselves as New Order. The new line up positioned them as more of a techno – and cut throat – collective that sported minimalism on their album sleeves and played encore-less performances. This is one of their genre merging New Wave and electronic dance tracks, aired on the BBC in 1984.
)

Read more about City Gardens in Huck 43 – Street Photography with Boogie.

Latest on Huck

An unnerving portrait of the USA’s fractured society
Photography

An unnerving portrait of the USA’s fractured society

A new photobook explores America’s increasing inequality, division and toxic culture wars in a historic election year.

Written by: Isaac Muk

“Music can save you for a day”: Touché Amoré on social media and subcultures
Music

“Music can save you for a day”: Touché Amoré on social media and subcultures

To celebrate a new album and reflect on a decade and a half of being themselves, frontman Jeremy Bolm chats about opening up via lyrics, subcultures in the internet age, and the hardcore re-revival.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Meet the Paratriathlete who cheated death twice
Outdoors

Meet the Paratriathlete who cheated death twice

A near fatal training crash ruined British Paralympian George Peasgood’s Paris 2024 plans. As he recovers, his life and outlook are changing – will LA 2028 be part of his future?

Written by: Sheridan Wilbur

A glimpse of life for women in Afghanistan under Taliban rule
Photography

A glimpse of life for women in Afghanistan under Taliban rule

‘NO WOMAN’S LAND’ has been awarded the prestigious 14th Carmignac Photojournalism Award and will be exhibited at the Réfectoire des Cordelieres in Paris this autumn.

Written by: Isaac Muk

In Photos: A decade growing up in pre-gentrification Lower East Side
Photography

In Photos: A decade growing up in pre-gentrification Lower East Side

A new photobook provides an up-close-and-personal look at the life of a Puerto Rican family, documenting them growing up as the world changed around them.

Written by: Isaac Muk

This summer taught us everything is... marketing
Culture

This summer taught us everything is... marketing

Months of historic political violence, memes, auras, and, of course, ‘brat’ has newsletter columnist Emma Garland asking if anything is real anymore?

Written by: Emma Garland

Sign up to our newsletter

Issue 81: The more than a game issue

Buy it now