The beginning of punk in the Netherlands (1977-1979) A seminal event for punk in the Netherlands was the
Sex Pistols' concert on January 6, 1977, at the Amsterdam
Paradiso.
The Sex Pistols played three shows in the Netherlands on that tour, along with
the Heartbreakers and the
Vibrators. On May 1, 1977,
the Damned gave a concert in the Paradiso. On May 11, 1977,
the Ramones and
Talking Heads gave a concert in the Rasa in the Pauwstraat in
Utrecht. In October 1977,
Iggy Pop performed on the popular television show
TopPop with
Ad Visser. On November 19, 1977,
Blondie played at the Amsterdam Paradiso. At the end of 1977, the
VARA television program Wonderland also highlighted punk in a theme broadcast including performances by
the Stranglers in the
Paradiso in Amsterdam and
the Sex Pistols in Maasbree. These concerts and performances by bands from the UK and USA led to an explosion of interest in punk in the Netherlands in 1977. Dutch punk bands and fanzines were rapidly established. In the audience of the Ramones' Utrecht concert were Rob and Erik de Jong, who formed the band Blitzkrieg, sometimes hailed as the first punk band in the Netherlands (Blitzkrieg quickly changed their name to
The Duds). Two rock bands that predated punk, Ivy Green (formed in
Hazerswoude-Dorp in 1975) and Flyin’ Spiderz (formed in Eindhoven in 1976), shifted to playing punk rock; these bands are often also discussed the first punk bands in the Netherlands. The lead singer for the Flyin' Spiderz, Guus Boers, had not heard punk before a concert of the Vibrators in early 1977 at the
Technical University of Eindhoven. In August 1977, the popular fanzine
KoeCrand was founded, inspired by the UK fanzine ''
Sniffin' Glue. A second early Dutch fanzine Raket
, associated with the Rotterdam punk scene and featuring the cult comic Red Rat'', soon began being published, initially as a
wall newspaper. The first punk single released by a Dutch band was the song "Van Agt Casanova," released by Paul Tornado on the record label 1000 Idioten in 1977. This single was frequently played on the radio by the VPRO. This song references the Dutch Catholic politician
Dries van Agt, who in 1977 required that pornographic films only be shown in cinemas with less than 50 seats, as a way to limit who could see such films. The first Dutch punk LP released was the self-titled album of the Flyin’ Spiderz, who opened for the Damned at their May 1977 show. Dutch punk bands from this period that were well known in the scene include
the Speedtwins,
Soviet Sex,
Ivy Green,
Jesus and the Gospelfuckers,
Neo Punkz,
Helmettes,
the Filth,
Tedje en de Flikkers,
the Ex,
The Suzannes,
the Rondos,
Panic, Subway, The Boobs, and Two Two 79. The first Dutch punks gathered around record labels and clubs. One of these was Rotterdam's Huize Schoonderloo. The record label Plurex Records, founded by Wally van Middendorp (of the band the Tits, and later
Minny Pops) in 1977, was also a hub of the early punk scene. A third important Dutch punk record label, Torso Records, was also founded in this period by Dick Polak, Hans Joustra, and Peter Dispa.
1980s During this period the slogan "no future" (also discussed as
doomdenken in Dutch) came to be used broadly in the Dutch punk scene, reflecting the economic and social situation of the times, including the high youth unemployment rate and the housing crisis. Punk music began to focus more on political and social issues, as reflected in song lyrics of the times. These issues often included ideas central to the squatters' movement as well as the anarchist movement. Frustrations boiled over, resulting in the
coronation riots on April 30, 1980. The slogan
geen wooning, geen kroning ("no home, no coronation") was chanted by many involved in the riot. The coronation riots marked the beginning of the greatest period of social unrest since WWII. Squatters' riots became more frequent and more violent. More than a year after the coronation riots, the anti-nuclear weapons demonstration of November 21, 1981 took place in Amsterdam. Although peaceful, the demonstration was massive: more than 400,000 people participated. In 1981 two more compilation albums of Dutch punk were released. The first one was
Onutrechtse Toestanden, which featured the
Miami Beach Girls, and ''Dangerous Pyama's''. The second one was the so-called "7,50 LP", which featured bands from several different Dutch cities: the Lullabies, the Bison Kidz, Zero-Zero, Neo-Pogos, the Rapers, and The Nixe. Other punk bands active in the Utrecht scene were the Clits (later Cold War Embryos),
Coitus Int.,
De Megafoons, Pitfall, and Disorder, and a few years later The Avengers and
Kikkerspuug. In 1981 the split album "Wielingen Walgt" was released with live recordings by
The Nitwitz and
Götterflies, recorded in the Amsterdam squat De Wielingen. A lively punk scene also emerged in the West Frisian town of
Hoorn, where bands such as The Vernon Walters and
Indirekt were active throughout the mid-1980s. From Heemskerk in North Holland, the hardcore band Union Morbide was active beginning in the mid-1980s. From the Groningen punk scene came bands like:
Bloedbad, Jetset, Massagraf, Fahrenheit 451, and
Vacuüm. In the first half of the 1980s, youth centers were gradually becoming the center of the punk scene in the Netherlands. This included: Babylon in Woerden, Kaasee in Rotterdam, Simplon in Groningen, Stokvishal and the autonomous punk squat de Goudvishal in Arnhem, Doornroosje in Nijmegen, Chi Chi Club in Winterswijk, De Buze in Steenwijk, Bauplatz in Venlo, Tivoli in Utrecht, and Parkhof in Almaar. Parkhof was associated with the release of the compilation album
Parkhof 11-4-81 which featured the Nixe, Rakketax, Bizkids, and others. The hardcore band
Pandemonium, active during the period 1981-1987, was associated with the Bauplatz in Venlo. In the second half of the 1980s the Amersfoortse Grachtkerk (Kippenhok 1) and the Goudvishal in Arnhem became important hubs of the punk scene. The straight edge movement grew in the Netherlands in the late 1980s and early 1990s and included bands like
Lärm (later Seein Red), Profound (later
Manliftingbanner), Betray, Crivits,
Vitamin X, and Feeding The Fire. Elsewhere in the Netherlands, the
ultra movement, a Dutch post-punk and art-punk scene, emerged in the early 1980s. Dutch bands playing in this genre include:
Mekanik Kommando,
Minny Pops,
Nasmak, The Young Lions, and Fahrenheit 451.
1990s By 1991, the well-known saying "punk is dead" had already become fashionable. Ironically, throughout the 90s, more diverse genres of punk became popular in the Netherlands, including pop punk, fun punk, skate punk, emocore, and melodic hardcore. This led to a fragmentation and loss of cohesion of the punk scene. Significant Dutch bands founded or active during this period include: Kankerwelvaart, Misselijk,
ASO (from Horst, 1996-1997),
Roggel,
Die Nakse Bananen,
Heideroosjes,
Travoltas,
Antidote, Disturbance,
I Against I,
De Hardheid,
the Hufters, Vitamin X, and
Antillectual. and
Bits of Noise 2. In the 1990s, a Dutch
crust punk culture emerged as a reaction to the melodic and more pop-oriented punk bands that the Netherlands had at the time. Dutch crustie bands such as Fleas and Lice and Boycott toured Europe and the United States. In the early 1990s, the punk band
Human Alert was founded in Amsterdam, with illustrator Roel Smit as band member, among others. In 1996 a compilation CD was released with the first generation of punk bands (1977-1982) under the title: "I'm Sure We're Gonna Make It". In 1997, the Rotterdam record label
Tocado Records (closed in 2010) was founded, and became known for its series of punk compilation cds named
Heel Erg Punk. The first volume of this series featured bands like Debiele Eenheid, The Fuzzbrats, GuidingLine, and No-men. In 1998, the German label Vitaminepillen Records released the double album
Groetjes uit Holland with, among others:
Heideroosjes,
Bambix, Uit De Sloot, De Gatbent,
Brezhnev,
Rat Patrol,
N.R.A. (Niet Reëel Aanbod), and Jabberwocky. In 1999, the Red Ear Label released a Dutch Punk compilation "Schorremorrie - Nederpunk Compilatie 1" that included songs from, among others: Uit De Sloot, De Gatbent, The Outcasted Teens, Leedvermaak, and the Utrecht crust band Mihoen!.
2000s Around the year 2000, in the UK punk scene, a so-called post-punk revival occurred in the form of UK bands like
The Libertines,
Ikara Colt,
Art Brut and
McLusky. Also in the Netherlands, a few bands pursued a harder variant of indie rock, including
Pfaff, Voicst, Avec Aisance (aka Avec-A, founded by
Yuri Landman), Blues Brother Castro. In addition, pop punk bands achieved greater commercial success, including
The Undeclinables,
Bambix,
Travoltas, and
Human Alert. In the hardcore scene, the bands Gewapend Beton and the Bakfietsboys were founded and wrote music with Dutch lyrics. Hardcore band
All For Nothing (active 2004-2017), in contrast, wrote music with English song titles and lyrics. The Rotterdam record label
Stardumb Records, associated with the punk scene, was founded in 2000. In 2000, Out Of Step Records put out the Dutch punk compilation "Rats 'N Dikes" which included bands like Jabberwocky,
Absconded, Rat Patrol, Crivits, and many others.
2010s and 2020s Beginning in 2010, the Amsterdam publishing house Lebowski began publishing a series of titles related to punk in the 1970s and 1980s. This series included works on music as well as punk culture, and biographies as well as archival work. In 2012, an exhibition entitled "God Save the Queen" about the period 1977-1984 was presented in the Centraal Museum in Utrecht, and described in a publication written with De Groene Amsterdammer. In 2016 the
Melkweg also had an expo on Dutch punk. Punk and hardcore punk continue to be active musical scenes in the Netherlands. In 2018, Vitamin X toured North America. In 2020 the Heideroosjes released a new album with a single about the covid pandemic; in 2022 they toured the Netherlands. New Dutch punk bands founded in this period include:
Rites (active since 2017),
Hang Youth (active since 2015), Hometown Crew (active since 2016),
March (formed in 2013, first album 2016), Deathtrap (active since 2016), Voidcrawler (active since 2019),
St. Plaster (active since 2019),
T.Gondii (active since 2021), and
Arne S (active since 2022). ==Documentaries==