Rolling Stone's 40 Greatest Punk Albums of All Time (Gay Division)

Rolling Stone posted their list of the 40 greatest punk albums of all time and while there are some questionable choices throughout, we can absolutely get behind the queer punks who made the cut. 

We won't say being gay automatically makes you punk, but it certainly reframes how you look at things. 

The Germs:

http://www.occultpunkshirts.com/shirts.html

Sleater Kinney:

"Get Up" from the 1999 Sleater-Kinney album, The Hot Rock Sub Pop Mega Mart https://megamart.subpop.com/artists/sleater_kinney iTunes www.itunes.com/sleater-kinney Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Sleater-Kinney/e/B000AQ19DG/works/ref=ep_artist_tab_w Watch more videos from Sleater-Kinney: http://goo.gl/DkjH0L Sleater-Kinney http://www.sleater-kinney.com/ https://www.subpop.com/artists/sleater_kinney Sub Pop Records http://www.subpop.com Twitter https://twitter.com/subpop Facebook https://www.facebook.com/subpoprecords SoundCloud http://soundcloud.com/subpop MegaMart https://megamart.subpop.com/ Subscribe To Sub Pop's YouTube Channel http://www.youtube.com/user/subpoprecords

Hüsker Dü 

Promo from the album Flip Your Wig.

The Buzzcocks:

Buzzcocks

(and sort of) The Stooges:

The Stooges at the Cincinnati Pop Festival

 

The Full List:
40. Dead Kennedys, ‘Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables’ (1980)
39. Devo, ‘Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!’ (1978)
38. White Lung, ‘Deep Fantasy’ (2014)
37. Blink-182, ‘Enema of the State’ (1999)
36. Crass, ‘Penis Envy’ (1981)
35. Fugazi, ’13 Songs’ (1989)
34. Joy Division, ‘Unknown Pleasures’ (1979)
33. The Slits, ‘Cut’ (1979)
32. The Misfits, ‘Walk Among Us’ (1982)
31. Yeah Yeah Yeahs, ‘Fever to Tell’ (2003)
30. Sonic Youth, ‘Evol’ (1986)
29. The Replacements, ‘Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out the Trash’ (1981)
28. The Germs, ‘(GI)’ (1979)
27. Minor Threat, ‘Complete Discography’ (1989)
26. Flipper, ‘Generic’ (1982)
25. Mission of Burma, ‘Vs.’ (1982)
24. The Jam, ‘All Mod Cons’ (1978)
23. Pere Ubu, ‘Terminal Tower’ (1985)
22. Bikini Kill, ‘The Singles’ (1998)
21. Richard Hell and the Voidoids, ‘Blank Generation’ (1977)
20. X-Ray Spex, ‘Germfree Adolescents’ (1978)
19. Bad Brains, ‘Bad Brains’ (1982)
18. Green Day, ‘Dookie’ (1994)
17. Television, ‘Marquee Moon’ (1977)
16. Descendents, ‘Milo Goes to College’ (1982)
15. New York Dolls, ‘New York Dolls’ (1973)
14. Sleater-Kinney, ‘Dig Me Out’ (1997)
13. Hüsker Dü, ‘Zen Arcade’ (1984)
12. Patti Smith, ‘Horses’ (1975)
11. The Buzzcocks, ‘Singles Going Steady’ (1979)
10. Nirvana, ‘Nevermind’ (1991)
9. X, ‘Los Angeles’ (1980)
8. Black Flag, ‘Damaged’ (1981)
7. Minutemen, ‘Double Nickels on the Dime’ (1984)
6. Wire, ‘Pink Flag’ (1977)
5. Gang of Four, ‘Entertainment!’ (1979)
4. The Stooges, ‘Funhouse’ (1970)
3. The Sex Pistols, ‘Never Mind the Bollocks Here’s the Sex Pistols’ (1977)
2. The Clash, ‘The Clash’ (1977)
1. Ramones, ‘Ramones’ (1976)

Read More: Rolling Stone lists the 40 greatest punk albums of all time 

Top to Bottom: Phillip Basone

Top to Bottom is quick-fire interview series where we show off our cutest friends in the world of food.

basone

For this week’s installment of Top to Bottom, we find ourselves sharing a delicious slice of homemade pound cake in New York City’s West Village. The charming third floor apartment off of Bleeker Street is home to 24-year-old heartbreaker Phillip Basone, the Executive Chef of Jonathan Waxman’s famed restaurant Barbuto. We sat down with Phillip to learn about his passion for food and how Emeril changed his life.

basone2

Interview by Alexander Lawrence

For more Top to Bottom features:

Hes Carvalho

Gus Reckle

Jon Fancey

Lets start at the beginning, growing up in Connecticut with your family. Did your mother or father cook?

My parents never cooked. My father doesn’t touch a pot and my mom only cooked derivatives of ground beef, which is so funny because my grandmother was incredible in the kitchen.  I am very lucky with the parents I was given, but how many times can you eat Bertucci’s and Chinese food in one week?

Very True. When did you start cooking?

I didn’t have very many friends growing up, I was a loner who hated school. I would come home everyday and I would watch the Food Network. I would always watch Emeril Live. This was when I began to cook. After every episode I would go and remake whatever Emeril had just made, once I started cooking more and more I began to realize that I was actually quite good.

Eventually my parents picked up on my interests and gave me their support to peruse a career in the kitchen. I transferred out of my AP classes and began to work closely with the foods teacher; she really helped build my confidence through her support and mentorship. I wasn’t out in high school and didn’t really care for my classmates, so having someone around that was willing to dedicate their time to my passion was really amazing.

Did you attend culinary school?

After high school I immediately moved to the city to attend the French Culinary Institute, I knew I had to be in New York if I was going to continue on this path. I started interning at Barbuto while I was a student.

How did you get connected with Barbuto?

Well the chef and owner Jonathan Waxman is a hero of mine, I had his cookbook when I was growing up. When I realized he had a restaurant in New York I looked it up, at that time restaurants would post the chefs email on their websites. I took the chance and sent a very long email to then Executive Chef Roel Alcudia, and I was invited for a tour. That was my first night as part of Barbuto, I was immediately placed on the line and a member of the team. I worked for free as an unpaid intern for 8 months; I was willing to do what ever they wanted if it meant getting in that kitchen.

 After eight months, were you offered a position?

I was offered a position for that upcoming summer, but I couldn’t wait. I had a chance meeting with restauranteur Mark Vetri when he dined at Barbuto one evening, my coworkers let me cook the entire meal for him and he loved it. He offered me a job a few days later at Amis in Philadelphia, so I took the job and moved. After a very short time I realized that I had not made the right decision moving, so I packed up and went back to Connecticut to regroup and figure things out. I got really lucky, my first day back home I received a call from Roel at Barbuto who invited me to work under him again. I would eventually follow him to Left Bank where I was helping to revamp the their Dessert program, I came in and showed the staff some new techniques and recipes. I left there after the owner asked me to “make a brownie sundae”, I don’t work at Chili’s.

I would move to another restaurant for a year before branching out into culinary publications. I went and worked at Saveur Magazine as a recipe tester and at Good Housekeeping where I would test kitchen appliances. That was a really interesting experience for me; I worked with 80-year-old women who were shocked when I would come in, in my Rick Owens.

 How long did you stay there?

Three years, it was so weird. I am not a morning person; the 9 to 5 thing doesn’t work for me. I then went back to Barbuto where I would become the Sous chef and then eventually become the Executive chef.

Your relationship with Jonathan is still strong after all this time?

Yes. He is amazing. Barbuto is my family. I can truly say that I owe that place my career. He teaches you how to be a thinker, a lesson that I have carried with me since day one.

Where do you see the restaurant industry going in the next few years, what is the next big thing?

I honestly hate fads, I don’t even really eat out. I love a good box of chicken fingers with ranch over a dinner out any day. I am however very interested in the American perception of good food, I think that as a country we really need to evaluate how we define what it means for food to be innovative, healthy, eco friendly, and most importantly delicious.  

Where do you see yourself in the future? Where do you want your career to take you?

I want to own my own restaurant in New York City. It is really as simple as that. I can’t imagine myself doing anything else. 

Top to Bottom: Van Kuch

Top to Bottom is quick-fire interview series where we show off our cutest friends in the world of food.

Van Kuch

Van Kuch

For the second installment of Top to Bottom we are traveling to Brooklyn to eat some homemade hotpot with the ever so charming dessert chef Vanarin Kuch. Van is currently the head of the dessert programs at Chef Jesse Schenker’s restaurant’s The Gander and Recette, where he is using his skills in the kitchen to create one of a kind desserts. 

Van Kuch

Van Kuch

Interview and text by Alexander Lawrence

For more Top to Bottom features:

Phillip Basone

Hes Carvalho

Gus Reckle

Jon Fancey

 

So you were born in Texas? 

Yes, I was born in Houston. My parents are Cambodian and came here as refugees.

Did your parents cook?

All the time, my mom is the most amazing cook. One of my favorite things about living and visiting Houston is my family’s garden; my aunts are growing things that you cannot find anywhere. My family also owned a doughnut and fried chicken shop in Houston, the Cambodian dream at the time. 

That’s amazing! Did you work there?

I did. I would work there during the summers when it was slow and fry doughnuts.

How did you get involved in food, the Doughnut Shop?

In middle school and high school I was a gymnast and a cheerleader, I had the Olympic dream and everything. During my freshman year at University of Houston though I realized I didn’t know what I wanted, so I took a 10-month hiatus to figure things out. 

How did you maneuver into desserts?

I was opening a hotel, and I always hung around the pastry chef who would eventually hire me to work under her. I moved to the restaurant Tiny Box Woods for a year and half where I was the pastry chef up until I left Houston. This was also when I got involved with Top Chef Desserts.

When and why did you make the move to New York?

I am a self-taught pastry chef, everything I know about cooking is from trying to make it myself. That drive combined with dissatisfaction with where I was working pushed me to sell my stuff and head east to New York. 

So we obviously have to talk about Top Chef, what was that like?

Of course! So when I was working in Houston I was profiled in Star Chef, which is an industry oriented online publication. I guess Star Chef sent my profile to Top Chef and they really liked my energy and asked me to be part of the show. It was a really amazing experience; I knew if I didn’t do it I would regret it forever. 

So after Top Chef and the move to New York what kitchen did you end up in?

I actually didn’t have a job, I just moved in with my sister. I have a great relationship with Star Chef; they were really helpful and they steered me towards a job at Alfred Portale’s Gotham Bar and Grill. Gotham has to be one of my top New York kitchen experiences; it was a really great first gig. After Gotham I moved to a few other places throughout the city, I was trying to find a kitchen that I really vibed with.

How did you end up at The Gander?

A friend introduced me to the team and I was brought on. I have completely revamped the program there as well as Recette, which Jesse Schenker also owns. 

How do you approach desserts? 

What I love to do with desserts is take two really familiar dishes and make a love child out of them. Right now we are doing this crazy mix between hot coco and a chocolate German cake, we call it “The Hot German”. I love it. For me when you make desserts you have to remember that it’s optional, you have to make them want it. I want it to be familiar enough that you can taste it in your head. 

What’s your favorite restaurant in the city right now?

Uncle Boons! It is the best restaurant in the city, hands down! I also really love eating in Korea-town.

If you weren’t a dessert chef, what would you be doing?

An interior designer! I am constantly redoing and rearranging my apartment. 

Where do you see yourself in the future? 

I want to own my own place. I have a very strong view about what a dining experience should be, and I really want to show that to people.