"A lyric from 'History Lesson, Part II'- 'Our band could be your life'- was used as the title of Michael Azerrad's book chronicling the careers of seminal indie acts. The Minutemen continue to be an important band as much for their way of looking at the world as for their music. They were three guys, very intensely into their own things, who got together and made it happen. Their message, spoken as often as not, was that you didn't have to be _____ to be in a band (or write a book). You just had to be yourself.
Punk rock has always been reactionary. The initial wave of punk came at a time when thickly produced dreck was clotting the airwaves. Real people didn't play in bands- rock music, or whatever it had turned into, was for rock stars, another breed entirely. When punk happened, it dawned on thousands of kids, Watt and Boon included, that music didn't have an elite ruling class. They could play however they wanted.
Within years of the Ramones, Sex Pistols, and The Clash, though, punk was stripped down, sped up. The transition was made from punk to hardcore, and suddenly, kids who listened to music reacted to it differently. Hardcore codified punk. When the minutemen started, they saw punk as a genuine outlet for expression. "I can't imagine us doing anything that we did without the punk movement happening," Watt says. "What happened to us even back then- 'You guys don't sound like a punk band.' Well, I thought that was the idea! Punk wasn't a style of music, it was a state of mind, and the style of music was up to each band doing it."
Lance Hahn, the singer/guitarist of J Church, says that "History Lesson" "sums up the Minutemen's antihero status in punk while at the same time using reverse psychology to mythologize themselves...It was really one of those epiphanies where I also started to realize that a punk band could also have a hard hitting impact while playing slow.
In an attempt to document the roots of the Minutemen, Watt...told the band's story, starting with their origins as 'fucking corndogs' in their working class hometown. They mentioned the musicians that had influenced them: Richard Hell of the Voidoids, Joe Strummer of the Clash, X's John Doe, and Blue Oyster Cult's Eric Bloom....
The name checks were, and are, amazing. Information wasn't widely available in the days before the internet. Trying to find like-minded music in the early punk days wasn't easy, especially if you happened to be a kid living someplace remote. Often times, it came down to scouring an album's liner notes for unfamiliar bands that were thanked. The Minutemen take things a step further and say, "Here are the people who influenced us." D.Boon mentions that "real names be proof," then provides a list of influences. The implication is that, as he says, our band could be your life. It's a call to action. Start your own band, paint a picture, write a book, build a sculpture, whatever- and plug in the real names from your life. Take your own mix of unique influences, whether they're obscure or common, and do it."