7 comments

  • musicale3 minutes ago
    They&#x27;re played every day on the radio as well as tons of streaming services.<p>Billions of streams on spotify etc.
  • deeg36 minutes ago
    If the Ramones put their name on all sorts of merchandise does that make them sellouts?<p>I joke, of course, and I&#x27;m a big Ramones fan. I&#x27;ve had numerous iterations of that shirt over the years. I often use them as an example when discussing &quot;what is good art?&quot; They are one of the most influential bands of all time and yet they were terrible musicians.
    • belZaah19 minutes ago
      Terrible in which way? Did not use counterpoint sufficiently elegantly? It’s punk, mate. Try to do a set downpicking like Johnny.
  • FerretFred3 days ago
    Fascinating! Always love these backstories. The Ramones were brilliant - I don&#x27;t have a favourite album but my most-watched DVD is The Ramones Story
  • joey197821 minutes ago
    How does it haunt them when they are dead?
    • musicale6 minutes ago
      The Ramones are haunting us all.
  • jimt123454 minutes ago
    Seems like The Ramones were way ahead of their time, whether they knew it or not. Before the digital age, most bands made the bulk of their their money from record sales. Concert tours were just promotional events for the latest album. That model has since been flipped to what The Ramones were doing 50 years ago - &quot;music sales&quot; earns little compared to concerts and merchandising. Now that&#x27;s punk rock! LOL
  • mediumsmart3 days ago
    Made my day. Thank you
  • TMWNN58 minutes ago
    Isn&#x27;t it normal and typical for musical acts to make more money from concert tours and merchandise sales than the music itself?
    • hvs33 minutes ago
      It&#x27;s not that they made more money from merchandise, it&#x27;s that they sold more t-shirts than albums. Implying that more people were interested in the &quot;image&quot; of punk rock than the music.
    • brigandish46 minutes ago
      Not in the past. When that change flipped from music sales to merchandise and tours, I couldn’t be sure but I’d reckon the early 2000s.