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Blanks 77
Blanks 77
American Punk-Rock Band
1
MDC
MDC
American punk rock band
2
U.K. Subs
U.K. Subs
English punk band
3
The Exploited
The Exploited
Scottish punk rock band
4
Goodnight Nurse
Goodnight Nurse
New Zealand pop punk band
5
The Cab
The Cab
American rock band
6
Quiet Riot
Quiet Riot
American heavy metal band
7
Hanoi Rocks
Hanoi Rocks
Finnish rock band
8
The Artist Life
The Artist Life
9
Glass Animals
Glass Animals
English psychedelic pop band
10
The Chills
The Chills
New Zealand band
11
Elastica
Elastica
band
12
NOFX
NOFX
American punk rock band
13
Wipers
Wipers
band that plays punk rock
14
!Action Pact!
!Action Pact!
punk rock band
15
Romeo Void
Romeo Void
American rock band
16
Patent Pending
Patent Pending
An American pop-punk band
17
Minor Threat
Minor Threat
American hardcore punk band
18
The Effigies
The Effigies
19
Gang of Four
Gang of Four
English rock band
20
The King Blues
The King Blues
band
21
SNFU
SNFU
band
22
Hüsker Dü
Hüsker Dü
American rock and punk band, active 1979–88
23
Samhain
Samhain
American rock band
24
Reagan Youth
Reagan Youth
American punk rock band
25
Disorder
Disorder
band
26
The (International) Noise Conspiracy
The (International) Noise Conspiracy
Swedish rock band
27
Dead Kennedys
Dead Kennedys
American hardcore punk band
28
Neck Deep
Neck Deep
Welsh pop punk band from Wrexham
29
Laramie Dean
Laramie Dean
American musician
30
The Damned
The Damned
British rock band
31
Alexisonfire
Alexisonfire
Canadian post-hardcore band
32
The Offspring
The Offspring
punk band from the United States
33
The Pretenders
The Pretenders
English-American rock band
34
Flee the Seen
Flee the Seen
35
The Regrettes
The Regrettes
American punk rock band from Los Angeles
36
Metro Station
Metro Station
American pop rock band
37
Subhumans
Subhumans
British Anarcho-Punk Band
38
Family Force 5
Family Force 5
American crunkcore group
39
SWMRS
SWMRS
American punk rock band
40
Thompson Twins
Thompson Twins
British band
41
Tim McIlrath
Tim McIlrath
American musician
42
Overkill
Overkill
American thrash metal band
43
Suicidal Tendencies
Suicidal Tendencies
American crossover thrash band
44
Anti-Pasti
Anti-Pasti
British band
45
Melvins
Melvins
American rock band
46
Tiger Army
Tiger Army
American pyschobilly band
47
The Tubes
The Tubes
American band
48
The Devil Wears Prada
The Devil Wears Prada
American metalcore band
49
Blessthefall
Blessthefall
American metalcore band
50
I Prevail
I Prevail
American metalcore band from New Baltimore, Michivan
51
Articles of Faith
Articles of Faith
Hardcore punk band
52
Red Rockers
Red Rockers
53
Agent 51
Agent 51
54
Napalm Death
Napalm Death
British grindcore band
55
UK Decay
UK Decay
56
Black Flag
Black Flag
American hardcore punk band
57
Subway Sect
Subway Sect
band
58
Naked Raygun
Naked Raygun
band
59
You, Me, and Everyone We Know
You, Me, and Everyone We Know
American rock band
60
Minutemen
Minutemen
punk rock band from San Pedro, California, USA
61
Jason & the Scorchers
Jason & the Scorchers
alternative country band
62
X
X
punk rock band from the United States
63
The Misfits
The Misfits
American horror punk band
64
Tickle Me Pink
Tickle Me Pink
American rock band
65
Wall of Voodoo
Wall of Voodoo
American band that plays new wave music
66
Horse the Band
Horse the Band
American nintendocore band
RIOT 111
political anarcho-punk band from New Zealand

RIOT 111

Intro
political anarcho-punk band from New Zealand
Music
Golden Showers Gig, 1982

RIOT 111 was a New Zealand political punk band active from 1981 to 1984, often associated with anarcho-punk. The group was formed by two political activists, singer "Void" and drummer "Roger Riot", during the South Africa national rugby union team's infamous 1981 tour of New Zealand. The members of Riot 111 were Brown Squad protesters, who were involved in running battles with the police's Red Squad outside the apartheid South African rugby union games.

Void and Roger Riot recorded with guitarist Nick Swan and bassist Mark Crawford and their first song "1981" was based on the Haka of the All Blacks. It got to No. 18 in the national chart considered the 12th most important song ever written in New Zealand music history by Rocked the Nation 2009 documentary series.

International touring acts asked Riot 111 to support them at New Zealand concerts, and through 1982 they played with The Birthday Party, John Cooper Clark and The Dead Kennedys. Jello Biafra wrote extensively about Void in US punk fanzines as an icon of anti-music imperialism. Riot 111 was one of the first bands to express Oceania indigenous culture through alternative post-punk rebellion.

Riot 111's EP of illuminate was released in 1982. "Songs "Your all waiting for 1984 but we all know it’s here" The bleak reality growing Surveillance State gearing up and turning on its citizens, "Subversive radicals" a collage of the propaganda names activists were being labelled in the press. A music clip had been created to go with one of the EP's tracks, "Writing on the Wall", but it was refused airplay by state television on the only music channel. The band publicly protested the decision, as most local bands were refused airplay, outside Television New Zealand's studio in the Hutt Valley.

Subversive Radicals was followed by a tour of the South Island with a band called The First XV. This resulted in four of the eight tour members being arrested in Christchurch on the first day of arrival. They were also involved in a street battle with police outside The Star and Garter hotel, which caused the closure the hotel for the year and led to more banning of the band.

Void co-produced two nationwide punk rock concerts as alternates to the backward looking hippy music festivals most of the bands are excluded from. Capital Kaos live record was released. Such trouble with the police proved to be one factor that caused the band to fall apart. Other factors included continued violence from skinheads, Maori gangs, selfish girlfriends, the replacement of bassist Mark Crawford with Tim Ord, and a close friendship with Neil Roberts, an anarchist who died bombing a police computer database building.