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Newtonheat
Hello! I make music under the name "Avargyűjtő" (Fallen Leaves Collector) in Budapest, Hungary. In addition to Surfrock and Krautrock, I primarily follow the traditions of contemporary Eastern European and Russian Post-Punk. I don't make money with my music, and I don't plan concerts either. I have money, and i don't want to be famous. For me it's just about the Post-Punk, Krautrock and Surfrock legacy, which I'm trying to authentically carry forward. ........................................................... Check to YouTube channel!................. https://m.youtube.com/@Avargyujto Soundcloud..................................... https://m.soundcloud.com/avargyujto Bandcamp...................................... https://avargyujto.bandcamp.com
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Newtonheat
Because there isn't, at the moment. The 80s were the golden age of avant-garde post-punk in Hungary. The socialist system banned such bands, those who did such things had to flee to the West sooner or later. The few who did it were geniuses: Vágtázó Halottkémek, A.E. Bizottság, Európa Kiadó, and Trabant are my roots. Later, after 90, when the communist state collapsed and freedom broke in, great artistic ideas blossomed. Korai Öröm and Másfél are the two instrumental giants of this short era. with freedom, however, the atmosphere that flourished under pressure until then became shallower. Everything has become commercial and shallow.
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Darkwave_Martyr
Do you have any playlists of 80s Hungarian post-punk? I’ve been trying to get to listen to Hungarian post punk but only found very few things, mainly a few bands, Nulladik Változat, FO system and Sexepil. But I haven’t found much else. Thank you very much for all the recommendations I will listen to them now.
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Newtonheat
Around 2000 there was another interesting line. Ahead of their time, bands following the recipe of Buerak and Ploho came out of nowhere. Right-wing primitive punks took up guitars, synthesizers, and drum machines, mixing communist symbols with everyday capitalist problems. With ironic, direct dilettante lyrics and vocals. It was hard to decide what they meant and what they meant as a joke. Such was the Tekintetes Úr/Gecizők, the Csermanek Lakótelep, Büdösök and later Honecker Bosszúja. Today, there are only slavish copies of the doomer wave in abundance, by chance: Távol, Post Analog Disorder, Soviet Monday, Vidal, Utolsó Hullám.
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Darkwave_Martyr
When I was in Hungary I did hear that the punk there was right wing, since the government was socialist. I did not know that it was also the same in Post-punk
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