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30 A New Form of Beauty - Virgin Prunes, Dublin

How Lypton Village Changed a Nation
  • John Robb
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The art of darkness
This chapter is in the book The art of darkness

Abstract

Coming up alongside U2, the Virgin Prunes never achieved the massive success of their contemporaries, but they left a major mark on the city of Dublin. They integrated tribal rhythms, mutoid disco and dissonance with captivating vocals. Benefitting from the explosion of punk, they nevertheless remained apart from it, embracing a contrary artfulness that saw them loved by a few but ridiculed by many more. The band split up in 1986, but their avant-garde stylings were to inspire many followers.

Abstract

Coming up alongside U2, the Virgin Prunes never achieved the massive success of their contemporaries, but they left a major mark on the city of Dublin. They integrated tribal rhythms, mutoid disco and dissonance with captivating vocals. Benefitting from the explosion of punk, they nevertheless remained apart from it, embracing a contrary artfulness that saw them loved by a few but ridiculed by many more. The band split up in 1986, but their avant-garde stylings were to inspire many followers.

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