Autonomy, as a concept, is one of those universally cherished ideas that simultaneously feels as natural as breathing and as elusive as getting a teenager to take out the trash. To be self-governing or independent is, by definition, a fine thing - assuming, of course, you don't plan on governing yourself into the ground. The Buzzcocks song "Autonomy," with its almost hypnotically repeated cry of "I, I want you, autonomy," captures this yearning for freedom in all its punk-rock glory. It's a sentiment that resonates deeply with anyone who's ever wanted to shake free of societal constraints.
The late 1970s punk scene in Manchester, where the song emerged, was a hotbed for this kind of rebellious individualism. Punk wasn't just music; it was a way of throwing two fingers up at the establishment while wearing trousers that didn't quite fit. And "Autonomy," written by guitarist and co-vocalist Steve Diggle, encapsulates this ethos. "I was into krautrock at the time," Diggle recalled to Uncut magazine in 2024. "So I pretended to be a German singing English. I was thinking about the psychological question-and-answer you have within yourself."
Musically, the song took experimental cues from electronic pioneers like Can, with Diggle applying a sort of minimalist philosophy to the guitar. "For the verse, I thought, 'What if I just keep playing chords straight down the neck?'" he remembered. "It was the most simple, obvious thing, but I'd never heard anybody else do that, so it felt avant-garde." The resulting two-note riff made a profound impact, inspiring none other than The Smiths' Johnny Marr, who declared it "the new sound of Manchester."
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