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#teenidles — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #teenidles, aggregated by home.social.

  1. 45 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  2. 45 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  3. 45 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  4. 45 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  5. 45 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  6. Self-Titled Summer | Minor Threat (1984, US)

    Our next spotlight on a Fedi-recommended self-titled album is on number 609 on The List, submitted by markwyner. This album - a compilation of two 7"s and a couple other songs - is essentially an iconic piece of history. It not only strongly influenced the underground hardcore scene in Washington D.C. and beyond and gave the straight edge scene both its name and creed, but it also solidified Ian MacKaye and Jeff Nelson's Dischord Records as an indie label that could actually make its DIY, no bullshit ideals work.

    Want to read more? See the full spotlight on the Fediverse at @1001otheralbums.com or on the blog: 1001otheralbums.com/2025/08/30

    Want to skip straight to the music? Here's the Bandcamp: minorthreat.bandcamp.com/album

    Happy listening!

    #MinorThreat #IanMacKaye #JeffNelson #TeenIdles #HardcorePunk #hardcore #StraightEdge #DischordRecords #1980s #selftitled #music #1001OtherAlbums

  7. Self-Titled Summer | Minor Threat (1984, US)

    Our next spotlight on a Fedi-recommended self-titled album is on number 609 on The List, submitted by markwyner. This album - a compilation of two 7"s and a couple other songs - is essentially an iconic piece of history. It not only strongly influenced the underground hardcore scene in Washington D.C. and beyond and gave the straight edge scene both its name and creed, but it also solidified Ian MacKaye and Jeff Nelson's Dischord Records as an indie label that could actually make its DIY, no bullshit ideals work.

    Want to read more? See the full spotlight on the Fediverse at @1001otheralbums.com or on the blog: 1001otheralbums.com/2025/08/30

    Want to skip straight to the music? Here's the Bandcamp: minorthreat.bandcamp.com/album

    Happy listening!

    #MinorThreat #IanMacKaye #JeffNelson #TeenIdles #HardcorePunk #hardcore #StraightEdge #DischordRecords #1980s #selftitled #music #1001OtherAlbums

  8. Self-Titled Summer | Minor Threat (1984, US)

    Our next spotlight on a Fedi-recommended self-titled album is on number 609 on The List, submitted by markwyner. This album - a compilation of two 7"s and a couple other songs - is essentially an iconic piece of history. It not only strongly influenced the underground hardcore scene in Washington D.C. and beyond and gave the straight edge scene both its name and creed, but it also solidified Ian MacKaye and Jeff Nelson's Dischord Records as an indie label that could actually make its DIY, no bullshit ideals work.

    Want to read more? See the full spotlight on the Fediverse at @1001otheralbums.com or on the blog: 1001otheralbums.com/2025/08/30

    Want to skip straight to the music? Here's the Bandcamp: minorthreat.bandcamp.com/album

    Happy listening!

    #MinorThreat #IanMacKaye #JeffNelson #TeenIdles #HardcorePunk #hardcore #StraightEdge #DischordRecords #1980s #selftitled #music #1001OtherAlbums

  9. Self-Titled Summer | Minor Threat (1984, US)

    Our next spotlight on a Fedi-recommended self-titled album is on number 609 on The List, submitted by markwyner. This album - a compilation of two 7"s and a couple other songs - is essentially an iconic piece of history. It not only strongly influenced the underground hardcore scene in Washington D.C. and beyond and gave the straight edge scene both its name and creed, but it also solidified Ian MacKaye and Jeff Nelson's Dischord Records as an indie label that could actually make its DIY, no bullshit ideals work.

    Want to read more? See the full spotlight on the Fediverse at @1001otheralbums.com or on the blog: 1001otheralbums.com/2025/08/30

    Want to skip straight to the music? Here's the Bandcamp: minorthreat.bandcamp.com/album

    Happy listening!

    #MinorThreat #IanMacKaye #JeffNelson #TeenIdles #HardcorePunk #hardcore #StraightEdge #DischordRecords #1980s #selftitled #music #1001OtherAlbums

  10. Self-Titled Summer | Minor Threat (1984, US)

    Our next Self-Titled Summer spotlight is on number 609 on The List, submitted by @markwyner. I was meaning to get back to keeping these STS posts brief, but a Fedizen specifically noted they’d like to read more about this rather iconic band so *takes deepest breath possible*:

    • Point of origin(s): Minor Threat was formed in Washington D.C. in 1980 by Ian MacKaye and Jeff Nelson, following the demise of their high school hardcore punk band the Teen Idles (originally called The Slinkees, formed in 1979). MacKaye had been the bassist and main lyricist, Nelson the drummer; in their new band, Nelson continued as the drummer and MacKaye continued as lyricist but switched from bass to vocals, and Brian Baker and Lyle Preslar rounded out the original lineup on bass and guitar, respectively. The first Minor Threat show would be one month after Teen Idles broke up, in December 1980, to all of 50 people (you were there, right?), opening for local bands Bad Brains and S.O.A. (State Of Alert), i.e., the band of former Teen Idles’ roadie (and lifetime bff of MacKaye) Henry Garfield aka Henry Rollins.
      At about the same time as their band change, together MacKaye and Nelson started Dischord Records with the $600 that Teen Idles had earned in its existence, initially just in order to put out that band’s only release, the Minor Disturbance EP (1980).[1] The EP made enough for the label to continue, and so next they put out the sole release from S.O.A., No Policy EP (1981), followed by Minor Threat’s debut s/t EP (also referred to as 1st 7″) and soon after their second EP, In My Eyes (both 1981). The album we look at here is a compilation of those 7″s (hence also referred to as First Two 7″s), released after the band broke up.
    • Tasting notes: Hardcore punk, none of your bullshit
    • Standout track: My favourites are “I Don’t Want to Hear It”, “Minor Threat”, and “In My Eyes”. And then, for its historical importance, “Straight Edge”. Keen eyes may have noted the X-marked hands on the cover of the Teen Idles’ EP that would come to be a symbol used in the locally-grown straight edge scene/movement/subculture. However, at the time of that band, those drawn-on Xs initially simply indicated that those hands belonged to concert attendees who were underage, and was a way to allow younger fans into venues that weren’t all-ages. The link between Minor Threat’s song “Straight Edge” and the scene though was absolutely direct, as the scene’s name and manifesto was taken straight out of MacKaye’s lyrics. “Out of Step” also provides another version of the lifestyle guidelines that at least some who considered themselves straight edge followed, including MacKaye himself.
    • Where are they now?: Following the release of their 2nd EP, Minor Threat briefly split up and then reformed a few months later (thanks to H.R. of Bad Brains) with Steve Hansgen (briefly) joining as bassist and Baker switching to second guitar. The group then put out (via Dischord Records, of course) a 12″ EP in 1983, Out of Step (with a new version of the title track)…and then (partially due to the existence of U2, lol) broke up. Each of the band members would go on to do tons of cool shit, e.g., Fugazi (and a handful of other awesome bands) was founded by MacKaye, Baker has been a member of Bad Religion since 1994, Hansgren co-produced Tool’s Opiate EP, and Dischord Records – still co-owned by MacKaye and Nelson – remains one of the best record labels on the planet.
    • Websites: Bandcamp, Wikipedia, Band profile on Dischord Records’ website

    Happy listening!

    1. The tracks had been recorded earlier that year with Don Zientara at his Inner Ear studio at the request of Skip Groff (record producer, radio DJ, and owner of the Yesterday & Today record store in Rockville, Maryland), but then shelved. ↩︎

    #1980s #DischordRecords #hardcore #hardcorePunk #IanMacKaye #JeffNelson #MinorThreat #music #musicDiscovery #selftitled #straightEdge #TeenIdles #WashingtonDC

  11. Self-Titled Summer | Minor Threat (1984, US)

    Our next Self-Titled Summer spotlight is on number 609 on The List, submitted by @markwyner. I was meaning to get back to keeping these STS posts brief, but a Fedizen specifically noted they’d like to read more about this rather iconic band so *takes deepest breath possible*:

    • Point of origin(s): Minor Threat was formed in Washington D.C. in 1980 by Ian MacKaye and Jeff Nelson, following the demise of their high school hardcore punk band the Teen Idles (originally called The Slinkees, formed in 1979). MacKaye had been the bassist and main lyricist, Nelson the drummer; in their new band, Nelson continued as the drummer and MacKaye continued as lyricist but switched from bass to vocals, and Brian Baker and Lyle Preslar rounded out the original lineup on bass and guitar, respectively. The first Minor Threat show would be one month after Teen Idles broke up, in December 1980, to all of 50 people (you were there, right?), opening for local bands Bad Brains and S.O.A. (State Of Alert), i.e., the band of former Teen Idles’ roadie (and lifetime bff of MacKaye) Henry Garfield aka Henry Rollins.
      At about the same time as their band change, together MacKaye and Nelson started Dischord Records with the $600 that Teen Idles had earned in its existence, initially just in order to put out that band’s only release, the Minor Disturbance EP (1980).[1] The EP made enough for the label to continue, and so next they put out the sole release from S.O.A., No Policy EP (1981), followed by Minor Threat’s debut s/t EP (also referred to as 1st 7″) and soon after their second EP, In My Eyes (both 1981). The album we look at here is a compilation of those 7″s (hence also referred to as First Two 7″s), released after the band broke up.
    • Tasting notes: Hardcore punk, none of your bullshit
    • Standout track: My favourites are “I Don’t Want to Hear It”, “Minor Threat”, and “In My Eyes”. And then, for its historical importance, “Straight Edge”. Keen eyes may have noted the X-marked hands on the cover of the Teen Idles’ EP that would come to be a symbol used in the locally-grown straight edge scene/movement/subculture. However, at the time of that band, those drawn-on Xs initially simply indicated that those hands belonged to concert attendees who were underage, and was a way to allow younger fans into venues that weren’t all-ages. The link between Minor Threat’s song “Straight Edge” and the scene though was absolutely direct, as the scene’s name and manifesto was taken straight out of MacKaye’s lyrics. “Out of Step” also provides another version of the lifestyle guidelines that at least some who considered themselves straight edge followed, including MacKaye himself.
    • Where are they now?: Following the release of their 2nd EP, Minor Threat briefly split up and then reformed a few months later (thanks to H.R. of Bad Brains) with Steve Hansgen (briefly) joining as bassist and Baker switching to second guitar. The group then put out (via Dischord Records, of course) a 12″ EP in 1983, Out of Step (with a new version of the title track)…and then (partially due to the existence of U2, lol) broke up. Each of the band members would go on to do tons of cool shit, e.g., Fugazi (and a handful of other awesome bands) was founded by MacKaye, Baker has been a member of Bad Religion since 1994, Hansgren co-produced Tool’s Opiate EP, and Dischord Records – still co-owned by MacKaye and Nelson – remains one of the best record labels on the planet.
    • Websites: Bandcamp, Wikipedia, Band profile on Dischord Records’ website

    Happy listening!

    1. The tracks had been recorded earlier that year with Don Zientara at his Inner Ear studio at the request of Skip Groff (record producer, radio DJ, and owner of the Yesterday & Today record store in Rockville, Maryland), but then shelved. ↩︎

    #1980s #DischordRecords #hardcore #hardcorePunk #IanMacKaye #JeffNelson #MinorThreat #music #musicDiscovery #selftitled #straightEdge #TeenIdles #WashingtonDC

  12. Self-Titled Summer | Minor Threat (1984, US)

    Our next Self-Titled Summer spotlight is on number 609 on The List, submitted by @markwyner. I was meaning to get back to keeping these STS posts brief, but a Fedizen specifically noted they’d like to read more about this rather iconic band so *takes deepest breath possible*:

    • Point of origin(s): Minor Threat was formed in Washington D.C. in 1980 by Ian MacKaye and Jeff Nelson, following the demise of their high school hardcore punk band the Teen Idles (originally called The Slinkees, formed in 1979). MacKaye had been the bassist and main lyricist, Nelson the drummer; in their new band, Nelson continued as the drummer and MacKaye continued as lyricist but switched from bass to vocals, and Brian Baker and Lyle Preslar rounded out the original lineup on bass and guitar, respectively. The first Minor Threat show would be one month after Teen Idles broke up, in December 1980, to all of 50 people (you were there, right?), opening for local bands Bad Brains and S.O.A. (State Of Alert), i.e., the band of former Teen Idles’ roadie (and lifetime bff of MacKaye) Henry Garfield aka Henry Rollins.
      At about the same time as their band change, together MacKaye and Nelson started Dischord Records with the $600 that Teen Idles had earned in its existence, initially just in order to put out that band’s only release, the Minor Disturbance EP (1980).[1] The EP made enough for the label to continue, and so next they put out the sole release from S.O.A., No Policy EP (1981), followed by Minor Threat’s debut s/t EP (also referred to as 1st 7″) and soon after their second EP, In My Eyes (both 1981). The album we look at here is a compilation of those 7″s (hence also referred to as First Two 7″s), released after the band broke up.
    • Tasting notes: Hardcore punk, none of your bullshit
    • Standout track: My favourites are “I Don’t Want to Hear It”, “Minor Threat”, and “In My Eyes”. And then, for its historical importance, “Straight Edge”. Keen eyes may have noted the X-marked hands on the cover of the Teen Idles’ EP that would come to be a symbol used in the locally-grown straight edge scene/movement/subculture. However, at the time of that band, those drawn-on Xs initially simply indicated that those hands belonged to concert attendees who were underage, and was a way to allow younger fans into venues that weren’t all-ages. The link between Minor Threat’s song “Straight Edge” and the scene though was absolutely direct, as the scene’s name and manifesto was taken straight out of MacKaye’s lyrics. “Out of Step” also provides another version of the lifestyle guidelines that at least some who considered themselves straight edge followed, including MacKaye himself.
    • Where are they now?: Following the release of their 2nd EP, Minor Threat briefly split up and then reformed a few months later (thanks to H.R. of Bad Brains) with Steve Hansgen (briefly) joining as bassist and Baker switching to second guitar. The group then put out (via Dischord Records, of course) a 12″ EP in 1983, Out of Step (with a new version of the title track)…and then (partially due to the existence of U2, lol) broke up. Each of the band members would go on to do tons of cool shit, e.g., Fugazi (and a handful of other awesome bands) was founded by MacKaye, Baker has been a member of Bad Religion since 1994, Hansgren co-produced Tool’s Opiate EP, and Dischord Records – still co-owned by MacKaye and Nelson – remains one of the best record labels on the planet.
    • Websites: Bandcamp, Wikipedia, Band profile on Dischord Records’ website

    Happy listening!

    1. The tracks had been recorded earlier that year with Don Zientara at his Inner Ear studio at the request of Skip Groff (record producer, radio DJ, and owner of the Yesterday & Today record store in Rockville, Maryland), but then shelved. ↩︎

    #1980s #DischordRecords #hardcore #hardcorePunk #IanMacKaye #JeffNelson #MinorThreat #music #musicDiscovery #selftitled #straightEdge #TeenIdles #WashingtonDC

  13. Self-Titled Summer | Minor Threat (1984, US)

    Our next Self-Titled Summer spotlight is on number 609 on The List, submitted by @markwyner. I was meaning to get back to keeping these STS posts brief, but a Fedizen specifically noted they’d like to read more about this rather iconic band so *takes deepest breath possible*:

    • Point of origin(s): Minor Threat was formed in Washington D.C. in 1980 by Ian MacKaye and Jeff Nelson, following the demise of their high school hardcore punk band the Teen Idles (originally called The Slinkees, formed in 1979). MacKaye had been the bassist and main lyricist, Nelson the drummer; in their new band, Nelson continued as the drummer and MacKaye continued as lyricist but switched from bass to vocals, and Brian Baker and Lyle Preslar rounded out the original lineup on bass and guitar, respectively. The first Minor Threat show would be one month after Teen Idles broke up, in December 1980, to all of 50 people (you were there, right?), opening for local bands Bad Brains and S.O.A. (State Of Alert), i.e., the band of former Teen Idles’ roadie (and lifetime bff of MacKaye) Henry Garfield aka Henry Rollins.
      At about the same time as their band change, together MacKaye and Nelson started Dischord Records with the $600 that Teen Idles had earned in its existence, initially just in order to put out that band’s only release, the Minor Disturbance EP (1980).[1] The EP made enough for the label to continue, and so next they put out the sole release from S.O.A., No Policy EP (1981), followed by Minor Threat’s debut s/t EP (also referred to as 1st 7″) and soon after their second EP, In My Eyes (both 1981). The album we look at here is a compilation of those 7″s (hence also referred to as First Two 7″s), released after the band broke up.
    • Tasting notes: Hardcore punk, none of your bullshit
    • Standout track: My favourites are “I Don’t Want to Hear It”, “Minor Threat”, and “In My Eyes”. And then, for its historical importance, “Straight Edge”. Keen eyes may have noted the X-marked hands on the cover of the Teen Idles’ EP that would come to be a symbol used in the locally-grown straight edge scene/movement/subculture. However, at the time of that band, those drawn-on Xs initially simply indicated that those hands belonged to concert attendees who were underage, and was a way to allow younger fans into venues that weren’t all-ages. The link between Minor Threat’s song “Straight Edge” and the scene though was absolutely direct, as the scene’s name and manifesto was taken straight out of MacKaye’s lyrics. “Out of Step” also provides another version of the lifestyle guidelines that at least some who considered themselves straight edge followed, including MacKaye himself.
    • Where are they now?: Following the release of their 2nd EP, Minor Threat briefly split up and then reformed a few months later (thanks to H.R. of Bad Brains) with Steve Hansgen (briefly) joining as bassist and Baker switching to second guitar. The group then put out (via Dischord Records, of course) a 12″ EP in 1983, Out of Step (with a new version of the title track)…and then (partially due to the existence of U2, lol) broke up. Each of the band members would go on to do tons of cool shit, e.g., Fugazi (and a handful of other awesome bands) was founded by MacKaye, Baker has been a member of Bad Religion since 1994, Hansgren co-produced Tool’s Opiate EP, and Dischord Records – still co-owned by MacKaye and Nelson – remains one of the best record labels on the planet.
    • Websites: Bandcamp, Wikipedia, Band profile on Dischord Records’ website

    Happy listening!

    1. The tracks had been recorded earlier that year with Don Zientara at his Inner Ear studio at the request of Skip Groff (record producer, radio DJ, and owner of the Yesterday & Today record store in Rockville, Maryland), but then shelved. ↩︎

    #1980s #DischordRecords #hardcore #hardcorePunk #IanMacKaye #JeffNelson #MinorThreat #music #musicDiscovery #selftitled #straightEdge #TeenIdles #WashingtonDC

  14. Self-Titled Summer | Minor Threat (1984, US)

    Our next Self-Titled Summer spotlight is on number 609 on The List, submitted by @markwyner. I was meaning to get back to keeping these STS posts brief, but a Fedizen specifically noted they’d like to read more about this rather iconic band so *takes deepest breath possible*:

    • Point of origin(s): Minor Threat was formed in Washington D.C. in 1980 by Ian MacKaye and Jeff Nelson, following the demise of their high school hardcore punk band the Teen Idles (originally called The Slinkees, formed in 1979). MacKaye had been the bassist and main lyricist, Nelson the drummer; in their new band, Nelson continued as the drummer and MacKaye continued as lyricist but switched from bass to vocals, and Brian Baker and Lyle Preslar rounded out the original lineup on bass and guitar, respectively. The first Minor Threat show would be one month after Teen Idles broke up, in December 1980, to all of 50 people (you were there, right?), opening for local bands Bad Brains and S.O.A. (State Of Alert), i.e., the band of former Teen Idles’ roadie (and lifetime bff of MacKaye) Henry Garfield aka Henry Rollins.
      At about the same time as their band change, together MacKaye and Nelson started Dischord Records with the $600 that Teen Idles had earned in its existence, initially just in order to put out that band’s only release, the Minor Disturbance EP (1980).[1] The EP made enough for the label to continue, and so next they put out the sole release from S.O.A., No Policy EP (1981), followed by Minor Threat’s debut s/t EP (also referred to as 1st 7″) and soon after their second EP, In My Eyes (both 1981). The album we look at here is a compilation of those 7″s (hence also referred to as First Two 7″s), released after the band broke up.
    • Tasting notes: Hardcore punk, none of your bullshit
    • Standout track: My favourites are “I Don’t Want to Hear It”, “Minor Threat”, and “In My Eyes”. And then, for its historical importance, “Straight Edge”. Keen eyes may have noted the X-marked hands on the cover of the Teen Idles’ EP that would come to be a symbol used in the locally-grown straight edge scene/movement/subculture. However, at the time of that band, those drawn-on Xs initially simply indicated that those hands belonged to concert attendees who were underage, and was a way to allow younger fans into venues that weren’t all-ages. The link between Minor Threat’s song “Straight Edge” and the scene though was absolutely direct, as the scene’s name and manifesto was taken straight out of MacKaye’s lyrics. “Out of Step” also provides another version of the lifestyle guidelines that at least some who considered themselves straight edge followed, including MacKaye himself.
    • Where are they now?: Following the release of their 2nd EP, Minor Threat briefly split up and then reformed a few months later (thanks to H.R. of Bad Brains) with Steve Hansgen (briefly) joining as bassist and Baker switching to second guitar. The group then put out (via Dischord Records, of course) a 12″ EP in 1983, Out of Step (with a new version of the title track)…and then (partially due to the existence of U2, lol) broke up. Each of the band members would go on to do tons of cool shit, e.g., Fugazi (and a handful of other awesome bands) was founded by MacKaye, Baker has been a member of Bad Religion since 1994, Hansgren co-produced Tool’s Opiate EP, and Dischord Records – still co-owned by MacKaye and Nelson – remains one of the best record labels on the planet.
    • Websites: Bandcamp, Wikipedia, Band profile on Dischord Records’ website

    Happy listening!

    1. The tracks had been recorded earlier that year with Don Zientara at his Inner Ear studio at the request of Skip Groff (record producer, radio DJ, and owner of the Yesterday & Today record store in Rockville, Maryland), but then shelved. ↩︎

    #1980s #DischordRecords #hardcore #hardcorePunk #IanMacKaye #JeffNelson #MinorThreat #music #musicDiscovery #selftitled #straightEdge #TeenIdles #WashingtonDC

  15. 45 years ago today
    Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, Washington DC, January 25, 1980

    Pic by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #IanMacKaye #jeffnelson #history #punkrockhistory #otd

  16. 45 years ago today
    Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, Washington DC, January 25, 1980

    Pic by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #IanMacKaye #jeffnelson #history #punkrockhistory #otd

  17. 45 years ago today
    Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, Washington DC, January 25, 1980

    Pic by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #IanMacKaye #jeffnelson #history #punkrockhistory #otd

  18. 45 years ago today
    Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, Washington DC, January 25, 1980

    Pic by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #IanMacKaye #jeffnelson #history #punkrockhistory #otd

  19. 45 years ago today
    Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, Washington DC, January 25, 1980

    Pic by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #IanMacKaye #jeffnelson #history #punkrockhistory #otd

  20. 44 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  21. 44 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  22. 44 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  23. 44 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  24. 44 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  25. The #punkrockmuseum in #lasvegas was awesome. Really well put together collection of #punk and #hardcore ephemera, a cool jam room (I got to play one of Joan Jett’s guitars), nice bar and more. Great people too. Recommended spot if any interest in #punkrock. #poisonidea #rkl #teenidles #nomeansno #rhythmpigs

  26. The #punkrockmuseum in #lasvegas was awesome. Really well put together collection of #punk and #hardcore ephemera, a cool jam room (I got to play one of Joan Jett’s guitars), nice bar and more. Great people too. Recommended spot if any interest in #punkrock. #poisonidea #rkl #teenidles #nomeansno #rhythmpigs

  27. The #punkrockmuseum in #lasvegas was awesome. Really well put together collection of #punk and #hardcore ephemera, a cool jam room (I got to play one of Joan Jett’s guitars), nice bar and more. Great people too. Recommended spot if any interest in #punkrock. #poisonidea #rkl #teenidles #nomeansno #rhythmpigs

  28. The #punkrockmuseum in #lasvegas was awesome. Really well put together collection of #punk and #hardcore ephemera, a cool jam room (I got to play one of Joan Jett’s guitars), nice bar and more. Great people too. Recommended spot if any interest in #punkrock. #poisonidea #rkl #teenidles #nomeansno #rhythmpigs

  29. The #punkrockmuseum in #lasvegas was awesome. Really well put together collection of #punk and #hardcore ephemera, a cool jam room (I got to play one of Joan Jett’s guitars), nice bar and more. Great people too. Recommended spot if any interest in #punkrock. #poisonidea #rkl #teenidles #nomeansno #rhythmpigs

  30. 44 years ago today
    Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, Washington DC, January 25, 1980.

    Pic by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #IanMacKaye #jeffnelson #history #punkrockhistory #otd

  31. 44 years ago today
    Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, Washington DC, January 25, 1980.

    Pic by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #IanMacKaye #jeffnelson #history #punkrockhistory #otd

  32. 44 years ago today
    Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, Washington DC, January 25, 1980.

    Pic by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #IanMacKaye #jeffnelson #history #punkrockhistory #otd

  33. 44 years ago today
    Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, Washington DC, January 25, 1980.

    Pic by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #IanMacKaye #jeffnelson #history #punkrockhistory #otd

  34. 44 years ago today
    Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, Washington DC, January 25, 1980.

    Pic by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #IanMacKaye #jeffnelson #history #punkrockhistory #otd

  35. 43 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  36. 43 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  37. 43 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  38. 43 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  39. 43 years ago
    Minor Disturbance is the debut EP by the American hardcore punk band the Teen Idles, released in December 1980 as the first release by Dischord Records.

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #straightedge #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  40. Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, January 1980. Photo by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  41. Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, January 1980. Photo by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  42. Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, January 1980. Photo by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  43. Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, January 1980. Photo by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory

  44. Nathan Strejcek, Jeff Nelson, Ian MacKaye, and Geordie Grindle of the Teen Idles, 18th Street, Adams Morgan, January 1980. Photo by Lucian Perkins

    #punk #punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #teenidles #history #punkrockhistory