No Choice but Action
Flyover Country? Fly over THIS. This is the story of how postpunk crashed into the Midwest and rewrote the rules.
When most people think postpunk, they picture London or ManchesterâlThe Cure, PiL, Joy Divisionâor the coasts, from Minutemen in California to Bush Tetras in New York. But far from the major labels and media spotlights, a different kind of revolution was taking shape in the American heartland. No Choice but Action uncovers the wildly inventive, fiercely independent postpunk movement that erupted across Kansas between 1978 and 1994âand changed Midwestern music forever.
The Embarrassment. Get Smart!. The Moving Van Goghs. Micronotz. Truck Stop Love. These werenât outliers. They were the beating heart of a vibrant, self-sustaining cultural ecosystem pulsing through Lawrence, Manhattan, Topeka, and Wichita. With no industry infrastructure to lean on, musicians built their own: basements turned into venues, cassette culture fueled DIY distribution, photocopied zines became lifelines, and word-of-mouth grew into a network strong enough to launch bands onto national stages.
With the fervor of lifelong insiders and the rigor of scholars, authors Fran Connor and Darren DeFrain take readers inside this scene with unparalleled access and insight. They capture the personalities, the makeshift platforms, the electrifying shows, and the pure creative urgency that kept the music alive long before email, social media, or streaming. Their chronicle is as kinetic and unpolished as the era itself.
More than a regional history, No Choice but Action argues for Kansas postpunk as a crucial, overlooked chapter in American independent musicâone whose influence can still be felt in todayâs DIY culture. Kansas wasnât a footnote to postpunk. It was a force that helped define the possibilities of American independent music.
Postpunk didnât just happen in the Midwest. It exploded there.
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Flyover Country? Fly over THIS. This is the story of how postpunk crashed into the Midwest and rewrote the rules.
When most people think postpunk, they picture London or ManchesterâlThe Cure, PiL, Joy Divisionâor the coasts, from Minutemen in California to Bush Tetras in New York. But far from the major labels and media spotlights, a different kind of revolution was taking shape in the American heartland. No Choice but Action uncovers the wildly inventive, fiercely independent postpunk movement that erupted across Kansas between 1978 and 1994âand changed Midwestern music forever.
The Embarrassment. Get Smart!. The Moving Van Goghs. Micronotz. Truck Stop Love. These werenât outliers. They were the beating heart of a vibrant, self-sustaining cultural ecosystem pulsing through Lawrence, Manhattan, Topeka, and Wichita. With no industry infrastructure to lean on, musicians built their own: basements turned into venues, cassette culture fueled DIY distribution, photocopied zines became lifelines, and word-of-mouth grew into a network strong enough to launch bands onto national stages.
With the fervor of lifelong insiders and the rigor of scholars, authors Fran Connor and Darren DeFrain take readers inside this scene with unparalleled access and insight. They capture the personalities, the makeshift platforms, the electrifying shows, and the pure creative urgency that kept the music alive long before email, social media, or streaming. Their chronicle is as kinetic and unpolished as the era itself.
More than a regional history, No Choice but Action argues for Kansas postpunk as a crucial, overlooked chapter in American independent musicâone whose influence can still be felt in todayâs DIY culture. Kansas wasnât a footnote to postpunk. It was a force that helped define the possibilities of American independent music.
Postpunk didnât just happen in the Midwest. It exploded there.

