Saturday, June 4, 2022

The Astrology of the Punk Movement: Saturn in Leo in Closing Square to Uranus in Scorpio (1975 to 1977)


Some Good Punk Advice - Duct Tape Art by Willow
 
Saturn is stationing retrograde today at 25 degrees Aquarius (3:47 p.m. CST) in a loose square aspect to Uranus at 16 degrees Taurus. The transiting Leo Moon (art, creativity, style) activates the Saturn-Uranus square today and tomorrow as it forms squares to Uranus, the North Node of the Moon, and Mercury in Taurus and an opposition to Saturn in Aquarius. 
 
Saturn will now retrograde in a tightening square to Uranus, stationing direct at 18 degrees Aquarius on October 22 in a square to Uranus at 17 degrees Taurus, just one degree off an exact aspect. The Saturn-Uranus square will be most strongly in effect from September equinox to December solstice, indicating a final quarter of 2022 characterized by further structural changes, adjustments, and re-positioning.

The Saturn in Aquarius square to Uranus in Taurus was most strongly in effect throughout 2021 with three exact aspects: February 17, 2021 at 7 degrees; June 14, 2021 at 13 degrees; and December 23, 2021 at 11 degrees. The energy and themes of this square start to intensify once again as we move through the summertime ease and into fall of 2022.

Saturn in Aquarius is currently in a closing square aspect to Uranus in Taurus, kicking off the last 10 years of a larger cycle. The current Saturn-Uranus cycle (1988 to 2032) began with a Saturn-Uranus conjunction in Sagittarius in 1988, and it will come to its natural conclusion with a Saturn-Uranus conjunction in Gemini in 2032.

Saturn square Uranus indicates rebellion (Uranus) from the establishment (Saturn), a desire to break free from the corrupted and stultifying status quo. We've seen these themes in spades in 2021/22 under a "locked down" planet being coerced, manipulated, lied to, and harmed by pyramid scheme power mongers.

In many ways, astrology is the study of natural cycles and patterns. We look to aspects and events from the past to inform us about our present and our future. 

We saw similar themes during the official birth of punk in 1977 under a closing square between Saturn in Leo and Uranus in Scorpio. That closing square aspect was exact five times: October 4, 1975 at 1 degree; October 17, 1975 at 2 degrees; July 1, 1976 at 3 degrees; February 23, 1977 at 11 degrees; and April 22, 1977 at 10 degrees. That closing square series was part of a Saturn-Uranus cycle (1942 to 1988) that began with a Saturn-Uranus conjunction in Taurus in 1942 and ended with a Saturn-Uranus conjunction in Sagittarius in 1988. 

In both cycles, Saturn and Uranus were squaring off in fixed signs, indicating very hard-won progress within difficult circumstances. With the fixed signs, it can be hard to budge things in a new direction, but once progress is made, it has long-term staying power. 

We saw the punk scene flower and intensify at the end of the Saturn-Uranus closing square series in 1977, and this indicates the possibility for more do-it-yourself, screw-the-establishment creative flowering as we come to the end of the current closing square series between Saturn and Uranus in late 2022. 

Under a Leo Moon stirring previous (Moon) creative efforts (Leo), this is a re-post of an article I wrote for Hexagon Astrology Magazine on the astrology of the punk movement. This astrology included the closing square between Saturn in Leo and Uranus in Scorpio. 

Disclaimer: I realize this article is terribly American-centric and that there is an equally strong, maybe even stronger, argument that punk was born out of the intense class struggles of 1970s England. This article is talking about the phenomenon of punk bursting onto the mainstream radar screen, though, and I do believe it was the New York City punk scene that brought punk to that "bigger, bolder, and more famous" platform, for better or for worse. 

 

Astrology of the Punk Movement

by Willow from Willow's Web Astrology

 

The exact date of birth for the punk movement can be debated, but amongst those in the know, there is no doubt about the year punk was officially unleashed on the planet: it was 1977.

There is also no doubt about the location of punk’s birthplace: New York City.

New York City in 1977.

The collective psyche of the United States of America was in tatters at the time in the aftermath of the Vietnam War.

The United States – and much of the world – was left reeling after two decades of mass graves, napalmed children, and American flag-draped serviceman caskets floating in nightmare images across their television screens.

The war waged by the United States against the Vietnamese officially ended in 1975 after two full decades of warfare. Somewhere between 800,000 and three million Vietnamese had been slaughtered, along with hundreds of thousands of Cambodians and Laotians and more than 58,000 U.S. soldiers.

The average age of a U.S. soldier killed in Vietnam was 23 years old.

By 1977, the peace-and-love hippie movement had reached a peak and was dissipating.

The anti-war activists and counter-culturalists were exhausted, strung out.

Disco was on the airwaves, attempting to block disturbing reality with catchy beats, funky dance moves, and shiny costumes.

The time was ripe for a big social reaction. 

And we got that big social reaction with the giant middle finger that was raised to the whole kit and caboodle by the burgeoning New York punk scene.

The first major punk band to hit (or create) the scene was the New York Dolls. Other early mainstays were the Velvet Underground and lead singer Lou Reed, Patti Smith, Siouxsie and the Banshees, Richard Hell, the MC5, Iggy Pop and the Stooges, the Ramones, and the Sex Pistols, among others. These bands shaped the scene, influencing later punk bands like the Dead Kennedys, Black Flag, Bad Religion, Green Day, and the Offspring.

In 1977, transiting Saturn (establishment, structure, rules) was in Leo (art, music, celebrity), rubbing up against a square to Uranus (radical, rebellious, revolutionary) in Scorpio (death, destruction, power).

Saturn square Uranus is a frictional aspect indicating clashes between the establishment (Saturn) and the change agents (Uranus). Under a square of this sort, the way things are being done (Saturn) is coming into contact with the overwhelming need to make a break from the standard ways (Uranus).

With the punk movement, we saw a group of people that held no respect or reverence for the establishment whatsoever. In fact, it wanted to tear the establishment apart at the seams. It wanted to scream in the face of the state, which justified mass murder, torture, injury, poisonings, and any number of deadly and inhumane acts against the people, animals, and plants of this planet.

The punks knew that the mainstream way of doing things and the placid acceptance by the general public were very, very messed up. They just couldn’t hide that fact, the way most did.

Punk music was certainly not your father’s (Saturn) music (Leo). It was Uranian, unlike anything that had come before. It was a Scorpionic catharsis, bringing forth a sound, an ethic, and a style that expressed the suppressed emotion and rage of the lied to, manipulated, and traumatized collective.

The punk scene began with a group of about 100 people playing and seeing shows in New York City in the late 1970s. Punk showed us that the counter-culture does not need to be big in numbers in order to be blazingly powerful and influential for decades to come.

One of the primary characteristics of the punk movement, born under the Saturn in Leo-Uranus in Scorpio square, was the radical break it took from establishment ways, including the music establishment.

Punk channeled the radical independence and self-sovereignty associated with Uranus, and, in Scorpio, it took those things to extremes.

Punk made up its own rules after coming into contact with the failings and creatively-stultifying nature of the rules as they were.

Do-it-yourself (DIY) is a foundation stone of the punk ethic. You didn’t need years of expensive music lessons or university training to play punk music. You didn’t need the most expensive instruments or equipment.

You just needed the rage. You needed the “eff you” attitude. You needed to see beneath the glossy portrayed images of mainstream life, choosing to express suppressed emotion, rage, and disgust as a reaction to the whole thing.

To be a punk rocker, you just needed the drive to get up there and do it, to get up there and say it, to get up there and snarl it into a microphone.

True punk ethic broke down the elitism of the music industry (Saturn in Leo square Uranus in Scorpio). It hit the fast-forward button, propelling singers and musicians onto the stage often before they even really knew how to play their instruments.

Punk music was raw. It was fast. It was socio-political, angry, rough around the edges. It was aggressive and in-your-face, spitting in the face of a hypocritical establishment.

Punk was a Uranus in Scorpio “fuck you” to a music establishment (Saturn in Leo) that churned out socially-acceptable hits and industry-molded artists, never getting too close to reality for the music-consuming public that just wanted things to be happy and “back to normal.”

The punks knew there was no “back to normal.” There was never a normal to begin with. Normal was a government that napalmed babies and sacrificed its own teenage boys, calling its actions righteous and for the greater good.

In 1977, as the punk movement was firing on all cylinders, the North Node of the Moon was in justice-seeking Libra. As the North Node formed a conjunction to Pluto in Libra (October 31, 1977), the limitations and failings of the 1960s peace movement became evident.

Peace and love were not all that were necessary to battle the establishment’s deadly and violent stranglehold on power.

Righteous rage and hate – toward the state’s actions, deceit, and hypocrisy – were also needed in that mix.

And punk was a vehicle for those balancing, battling elements to come more fully into play.

As stated, transformational Pluto was in style and beauty-related Libra at the time that punk was born.

Pluto transited Libra, in part, to transform beauty standards and standards of style.

The punks did that by completely annihilating (Pluto) the usual standards for style and beauty (Libra).

Punk wasn’t about being pretty or cute or freshly scrubbed.

It was about expressing the rebellion on one’s body and face. It was about declaring one’s disgust for hypocritical social mores and standards with a socially-shocking appearance, going very obviously against the grain. It was about declaring the radical break from the socially acceptable in a very visual way, in an immediate way, in a way that startled the senses.

The punk movement channeled the transiting Aries South Node, producing a very recognizable and immediately identifiable look.

The most visible element of the punk scene is the style. Almost anyone, whether able to name a punk band or not, can pick out punk style: the heavy black eyeliner (on males and females), the all-black clothing (often ripped), the colorful mohawk hairdos, the chains, the boots, the safety pin earrings, the piercings.

Just as punk rejected establishment values, rules, and social standards that it saw as dishonest, hypocritical, and stultifying, it rejected social mores around style and physical appearance, too.

The punk identity was aggressive and in-your-face (Aries), channeled through the artistic avenues of the Libra North Node, which softened everything a little by turning it into art.

The early New York City punk music scene was truly Uranian – it was quick and dirty, erratic, a blazing flash of brilliance that lit up the collective scene for a short time only. Its powerful and visceral reaction to a hypocritical establishment set the stage for a punk and anarchist movement that is sustained to this day. Its do-it-yourself, take-matters-into-your-own-hands ethic has inspired many to get out there and just do it, whether it’s making music, making waves with socio-political activism, or making a better world in whatever simple ways we can.

Reference material: Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk by Legs McNeil and Gillian McCain

 

As a Plutonic punk astrologer and writer, I sincerely hope the current Saturn-Uranus closing square series is propelling an even stronger desire in the populace to break free from corrupt, establishment power schemes.

Uranus in Taurus is not as in-your-face as Uranus in Scorpio (especially with the North Node of the Moon transiting Taurus and South Node transiting Scorpio), but it does indicate rebellion (Uranus) that gradually gains momentum over time (Taurus), creating foundational staying power in the material world. Uranus in Taurus indicates an element of inadvertent rebellion that involves living quietly-but-stubbornly by our own values in a world attempting to foist top-down "global values" that have been manufactured against the best interests of most of humanity.

The anti-establishment or punk ethic might not be as publicly visible under current influences, but I do believe it is just as potent as we work for long-term, systemic change that builds on the quick-and-dirty intensity that has propelled punk in the past. Punk-style independence and do-it-yourself ethic are being built right into the foundations of our societies, and this indicates some very nice, slow-burn staying power. 

A Free Humanity or Bust! 

 

7 comments:

Willow said...

For this anarchist astro-reporter, punk has never been primarily about the music a person listens to or the way a person dresses. Punk is a way of life, a world view, a set of guiding principles. It's anti-authoritarian, anti-coercive, and opposes the violence, top-down control, and general shenanigans of the power establishment. Punk is about independence, individuality, a loving community that accepts you, freedom of expression, and a do-it-yourself ethic.

I think many people associate punk with musicians in punk bands who have gotten famous - especially aggressive male hardcore punk. But this is a really limiting idea of what punk is, in my mind.

I like this interview with Exene Cervenka from the punk band X by Ian Harrower on Down the Highway where she describes what the early (1975 - 1980) punk scene was like before hardcore punk bands got big in the media and sort of took over.

"The original punk scene wasn't as sensational as the hardcore scene...It was mostly like an intellectual, artistic, musical, social, revolution, political, anti-corporate culture scene. And it wasn't until the hardcore thing came along, the timing was right because then people had caught up, oh this thing is happening, and the technology had caught up a little bit, more people were drawn in to punk by then than they were because they heard about it and they wanted to cover it, and that was so theatrical. You know, it was always like 300 people onstage jumping off the speakers and riots and really forceful guys just like singing and forceful guys in the audience with their shirts off, and it drew the media's interest where a quiet, more contemplative version of that wouldn't. Not that we weren't all very powerful and very scary and threatening. I know we were. But we did it in a way that wasn't, you know, I don't want to use the word...I don't know what the word is. Just two different worlds, you know?"

Interview with Exene Cervenka: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2YBpie2NuOM

This is the type of punk I understand and live - one where punk is about ethics like:

- anti-authoritarianism and protection from authoritarian harassment, coercion, manipulation, and violence
- no hierarchy
- personal freedom and choice
- the right to be who you are and to live by your own ethics, principles, and conscience, including when this goes against the established order
- the right to either conform or not conform
- do-it-yourself
- using the resources available to you
- creativity and the idea that anyone can be creative
- accepting and appreciating differences
- comradery
- humanity, treating people with dignity and respect

Basically, if you don't fit into the mainstream for some reason, punk is a place where you can possibly find a home and some form of kinship and mutual understanding with other people who don't fit in or who feel as if they don't fit in.

Anonymous said...




"
- anti-authoritarianism and protection from authoritarian harassment, coercion, manipulation, and violence
- no hierarchy
- personal freedom and choice
- the right to be who you are and to live by your own ethics, principles, and conscience, including when this goes against the established order
- the right to either conform or not conform
- do-it-yourself
- using the resources available to you
- creativity and the idea that anyone can be creative
- accepting and appreciating differences
- comradery
- humanity, treating people with dignity and respect"



This was a movement long before it found a name, let's hope and help it go on.

TY J, your words have reach. xx

Willow said...

"This was a movement long before it found a name, let's hope and help it go on."

Yes, it was! And the name 'punk' doesn't even really sum it up. These principles have existed pretty much as long as human civilization has existed. And let's keep them going - agreed!

Thanks for your comment and for the encouragement. :-)

Willow said...

This article explains the divergence in punk that occurred in 1991. One side went more commercial and courted mainstream appeal (especially the uber masculine hardcore punk side of things) while the other side of punk tunneled even further underground, doing its thing while protecting and guarding itself from the spotlight.

As is probably obvious, I'm in the latter camp. I've always felt that the most important thing for me was to keep doing the most honest, the most real, the most effective, and the most necessary work I could do, and the only real way to keep the energy of this enterprise right was to keep it protected and flying below the radar.

How Going Underground Kept Punk From “Breaking” in 1991, by Michael McKee

"From pivotal, iconic venues in New York and California and the ubiquity of the house show, to the dramatic, intentional divorce from the highly lucrative hardcore/metal crossover scene, 1991 saw numerous DIY punk rock groups reinterpret a 14-year-old subculture with new and urgent relevance...

Twenty years on, what do we have to show for the alternative revolution — a disdain of chain wallets, a history of deplorable facial hair, and a previously unimaginable Broadway musical? While one end of underground music culture rushed to the lights, an alternative-to-alternative rock got serious about process. Ironically, it’s this guarded underground whose niche music festivals, earnest zines, flagship labels, handmade aesthetic, and experimentation that might have made a more lasting, if indirect, impression."


https://www.popmatters.com/underground-punk-rock-1991-2495962592.html

Jake Zywek said...

Once Uranus left Scorpio, we got 'new wave' with a much lighter-hearted look at the alternative. We had the 'safety dance' by men without hats; leisure wear and enjoyment comprised the alternative movement. Think of Fun Boy Three's 'Our lips are sealed' video.

Also, 'Hair Metal' with it's adherence to spandex and hedonism replaced the darker heavy metal of the previous incarnation when Uranus was in Scorpio.

Willow said...

Ooh, thanks for those insights! Yes, I can see that now that you describe it.

Willow said...

Just for the sake of astrological research, I have Uranus in Scorpio, and I can't stand new wave. heehee