Minggu, 24 Januari 2010

V.A HOLD YOUR GROUND


Hold Your Ground

01 BRIGHTSIDE - rest in peace
02 WARZONE - as one
03 WARZONE - crazy but not insane
04 STALAG13 - conditioned
05 GOVERNMENT ISSUE - plain to see
06 UNBROKEN - zero hour
07 YOUTH OF TODAY - better than you
08 YOUTH OF TODAY - put it aside
09 URBAN WASTE - ignorant
10 ARTIFICIAL PEACE - u.x.b
11 JUDGE - new york crew
12 DEATH WISH - break the chains
13 ABUSE - no end in sight
14 THE BRUISERS - till the end
15 SIDE BY SIDE - time is now
16 SIDE BY SIDE - dead serious
17 THE F.U`S - rifle
18 IN YOUR FACE - hendecked
19 IN YOUR FACE - the grub
20 RYKER`S - one i believe
21 ALONE IN THE CROWD - is anybody there
22 IGNITE - turn
23 IGNITE - slow
24 CITIZENT ARREST - serve and protect
25 CITIZENT ARREST - i won`t allow
26 RIGHT DIRECTION - don`t forget the struggle
27 WIDEAWAKE - the truth
28 CRIVITS - break through
29 CRIVITS - words
30 INTEGRITY - dead wrong
31 INTEGRITY - live it down
32 SICK OF IT ALL - politics
33 UNITY - straight on view
34 UNITY - positive mental attitude
35 INSIDE OUT - beat life
36 VOID - who are you
37 VIOLENT CHILDREN - new pride
38 VIOLENT CHILDREN - split scene
39 BATTERY - we won`t fall
40 PROJECT X - shut down

download

RYKER`S


First Blood

01. First blood
02. Slowly
03. Strenglehold
04. Ricochet
05. What we Once Said
06. Together

Download
Ryker`s (short story)

TEN YARD FIGHT


The Only Way

01. Glory Bound
02. Actions Speak
03. The proof
04. The Only Way
05. What I Say
06. Don`t Come Back
07. No Place

Sabtu, 23 Januari 2010

SIDE by SIDE

 
You`re Only Young Once

01. Backfire
02. My Life To Live
03.  living A Lie
04. Look Back
05. You`re Only Young Once
06. Friends
07. Side by Side
08. Dead Serious
09. The Time Is Now
10. Living A Lie
11. Side by Side
12. Violence To Fade
13. You`re Only Young Once
14. My Life To Live
15. Dead Serious
16. So Fucking Blind
17. Violence To Fade
18. So Fucking Blind
19. Fuck Your Attitude (live)
20. Good Clean Fun (live)
21. Sick Of Things The Way They Are (live)
22.Sice By Side (live)

Side by Side



Side by Side was an American hardcore punk band on Revelation Records.
They were a band from New York that belonged to the youth crew scene. The singer Jules Massey went on to form Alone in a Crowd. Side by Side also consisted of Sammy Siegler on drums, Eric Fink on lead guitar (also in Gorilla Biscuits), Brian Clark on bass and Alex Brown on rhythm guitar. Sammy went on to be in bands such as Youth of Today, Project X, Judge, CIV and others and plays today for a band called Rival Schools. Alex also put out Schizm, a notable magazine, and was in Project X as well before also joining Gorilla Biscuits. Recorded output was limited to a single 7-track 7”, You’re Only Young Once… (1988), which was re-issued featuring 22 tracks in 1997. This 7” was the fifth record Revelation Records released. Although the band was short-lived, their influence has survived until today, as they are a lot of youth crew kids’ favorite band.

visit: wikipedia, lastfm

Ryker's



Ryker's is a hardcore band from Kassel, which was founded in 1992 and disbanded in 2000.
2008, there was a reunion and a corresponding Reunion Tour. The band was one of the most successful European hardcore bands of the 1990s. They were significantly influenced by bands such as the Front Cro-Mags and Agnostic.

visit: wikipedia (German), myspace

H2O


H2O
01. 5 Year Plan
02. Scene Repor
03. Spirit Of 84
04. I Know Why
05. Gen Eric
06. Sorrounded
07. Here Today, Gone Tomorrow
08. Family Tree
09. Hilo
10. My Curse
11. My Love Is Real
12. Go!
13. Mask

VISION OF DISORDER


Element

PUNK O RAMA


VOL. 6


GUTTERMOUTH . Can I Borrow Some Ambition?
DEVIATES . Come With Me
NOFX . Bath of Least Resistance
MILLENCOLIN . Blackeye
HOT WATER MUSIC . Jack of All Trades
THE BOUNCING SOULS . True Believers
PENNYWISE w/EXENE . We`re Desperate
OSKER . Strangeled
RANCID . It`s quite Alright
DEATH BY STEREO . Holding 60 Dollers On A Burning Bridge
DROPKICK MURPHYS . The Gauntlet
DESCENDENTS . Original Me
PULLEY . Runaway
ALL . She Broke My Dick
RAISED FIST . Different But The Same
DOWNSET . Pure Trauma
BEATSTEAKS . Let Me In
UNION 13 . Innocence
BAD RELIGION . I Wnat The Qonguer The World
T(I)NC . Only Lover Left Alive
VOODOO GLOW SKULLS . Say Goodnight
BOMBSHELL ROCKS . Tonight I`m Burning
THE BUSSINES . Takers And Users

Doawnload

Kamis, 21 Januari 2010

SLPSHOT


Digital Warfare

01. Coaches Speech
02. Old Tyme  Hardcore
03. Silence
04. Pennies From Heaven
05. What`s On Your Mind
06. In My Head
07. Lip Service
08. Get It Away
09. If You Had
10. I Knew I`d Lose

Slapshot


 
Slapshot
Origin Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Genres Punk rock, hardcore
Years active 1985–present
Labels I Scream Records
Associated acts Negative FX, Anal Cunt, Stars & Stripes, Last Rights
Website Official website
Slapshot is a straight edge hardcore band from Boston, Massachusetts formed in 1985 by Steve Risteen and Mark McKay, formerly of Terminally Ill; Jack "Choke" Kelly, formerly of Negative FX and Last Rights; and Jonathan Anastas, formerly of Decadence and DYS.
Diverging from their counterparts in the Boston hardcore scene, Slapshot decided to make the first album a 24 track recording as opposed to the usual 8 or 16-track hardcore album. To reduce costs, they recorded at night and completed the album in four sessions. Back On The Map was released by Taang! Records in 1986.




Slapshot played a show at Anchors Up in Haverhill, Massachusetts on November 8th, 2008 with Ten Yard Fight, Step Forward, and Word For Word. This show was a warm up for the 2008 Winter Tour which brought the return of long time guitarist Mike Bowser and reformed the classic Olde Tyme Hardcore/16 Vale Hate line-up.


Upon returning from the tour Slapshot played as part of the "2008 Hometown Throwdown" in Boston on December 28 at the Middle East with The Mighty Mighty Bosstones. One highlight of the show was Choke joining the Bosstones on stage during their cover of the Slapshot song "What’s at Stake".


April 24th, 2009 finally brought the world premiere of the long awaited Slapshot documentary film "Chip On My Shoulder: The Cautionary Tale of Slapshot". It premiered at the Brattle Theatre in Cambridge, MA to a sold out audience as part of the Boston Independent Film Festival. Following its premiere the film was screened as part of a hardcore festival in Toronto Canada which also featured performances by Negative Approach and Supertouch. The film will also be screened at the Salt Lake City Film Festival in August of 2009. The film was directed and produced by Ian McFarland (Blood for Blood) and Anthony "Wrench" Moreschi (Ten Yard Fight) of Killswitch Productions and will be released on DVD by Taang! Records later in 2009.


After another line-up change Slapshot is heading back to Europe for 10 shows in August 2009 with the support of Frigate which features Chris Lauria of Slapshot, Linda Bean of Stars & Stripes and John Bean formerly of Bitter.


wikipedia
 External links

Rabu, 20 Januari 2010

25 TA LIFE


Hellbound Misery Torment

01. Abort
02. Belive in Me
03. Heavenly Sleep
04. Question Your Self
05. Lady Luck
06. You Can Count On Me
07. Crucified
08. I Don`t Care About You
09. Haterz Be Damned
10. Promise Keeper
11. Drown In Your Own Blood

Download
25 Ta Life (short story)

25 Ta Life




25 ta Life
Origin
Queens, N.Y.
Genres
Hardcore punk
Metallic hardcore
Metalcore
Years active
1991–present
Labels
SFT, Good Life, Triple Crown, Back ta Basics
Associated acts
Agnostic Front, Comin Correct
Website
Official MySpace

25 ta Life is an American hardcore punk band from New York City, originally formed in Queens, N.Y. in Mid 1991.

The band was started by Frank Smarra (Bass) and Harry Minas (Drums) in Astoria, Queens, N.Y., they were soon joined by Fred Mesk(Guitar) and together wrote most of the material that would be on their early releases. in early 1992 they recruited former Agnostic Front roadie Rick Healy (AKA Rick Ta Life) who added the lyrics to all the songs. They adopted the name after it was suggested by Freddie Madball. Madball also helped the band by giving them guest appearances at the end of their sets. 25 ta Life played their first full show at Studio 1 in New Jersey on May 10, 1993 supporting Obituary. After a few failed attempts to add a second guitar player, Beto (formally of D'mize & Madball) joined the band in late 1993. In January 1994 Bassist and Co-founding member Frank Smarra left the band due to family commitments and was replaced by Warren Lee. The Band continued to play massive amounts of shows in the tri-state area and all along the East Coast. In early 1996 25 ta Life traveled to Europe for the first time playing in Italy, Germany, Austria, Belgium and Poland. By late 1997 Co- Founding member Harry Minas left the band and was replaced by Seth from one for one.

visit: metal legions,Wikipedia, myspace


MURPHY`S LAW


Murphy`s Law


Murphy's Law



Murphy's Law
Origin
New York, USA
Genres
Hardcore
Associated acts
Danzig, The Bouncing Souls, Skinnerbox, Agnostic Front
Website
Official site

Murphy's Law is an American hardcore band from New York City, New York


While vocalist Jimmy Gestapo remains the only founding member of the band, the constantly changing line-up has consisted of former and future members of bands such as Skinnerbox, Danzig, The Bouncing Souls, Mucky Pup, Dog Eat Dog, Hanoi Rocks, Agnostic Front, and D Generation. Their 1991 album, The Best of Times, featured appearances and production by members of the band Fishbone. Jimmy Gestapo is also a principal in the Lower East Side’s, New York Hardcore Tattoos. In 2002, the band appeared in Matthew Barney's film, Cremaster 3 along with Agnostic Front. One of their songs is also featured in Rockstars' top-selling game Grand Theft Auto IV.

visit: Wikipedia, myspace, official site

BLOOD for BLOOD



Outlaw Anthems

Selasa, 19 Januari 2010

D.O.A.



Background information
Origin
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Genres
Punk rock, hardcore punk
Years active
1978–Present
Labels
Sudden Death


D.O.A. is a hardcore punk band from Vancouver, BC. They are often referred to as the "founders" of hardcore punk, along with Black Flag, Bad Brains, and Minor Threat.

Their second album Hardcore '81 was thought by many, to have been the first actual reference to the second wave of the American punk sound as hardcore. Singer/guitarist Joey "Shithead" Keithley is the only founding member to have stayed in the band throughout its entire history. However, original bassist Randy Rampage has been active in the band in recent years and has played on two of the band's last three albums, although he is not in the current lineup. D.O.A. has often released music on Jello Biafra's Alternative Tentacles Records, and they have released an album with Jello Biafra titled Last Scream of the Missing Neighbors.


D.O.A. has always maintained an uncompromising anarchist populist political stance. The band is known for its outspoken political opinions and has a history of performing for many causes and benefits. Its slogan is "Talk minus Action equals Zero." The band has been active on many issues, including Anti-racism, anti-globalization, freedom of speech, and the environment.

Founder Joe Keithley now spends a great deal of time working with his record company Sudden Death Records which has branched off into many areas of music.

visit: Wikipedia and eksternal links

NO INNOCENT VICTIM




Flesh And Blood


No Innocent Victim


No Innocent Victim
Origin
San Diego, California
Genres
Hardcore punk
Metalcore
Years active
1992-Present
Labels
Facedown Records
Starting off in 1992, No Innocent Victim took their hometown of San Diego by surprise by importing the sounds of old school East Coast hardcore to the shores of South Beach California.

Under the influences of Youth of Today, Agnostic Front and Sick of it All, NIV also add their own touch of metallic, chugga-chugga guitar mix and an extra inspiration from the big guy upstairs. With being one of the few Christian hardcore bands sucking up all the attention from those who saw the light and non-believers, their 1995 debut "Strength" was released by Rescue Records followed by "No Compromise" two years later. Several tours of North America later and a deal with Victory Records, "Flesh And Blood" came out in 1999 making No Innocent Victim the only other Victory band from California band (aside from Strife of course).


visit: wikipedia, eksternal links

IN MY EYES


The Difference Between

JUDGE



Bringin' it down

BAD BRAINS


Bad Brains 1982

PROJECT X


straight edge revenge


AGNOSTIC FRONT


Live at CBGB

7 SECONDS



The Crew

BOLD


Wide Awake


Wide Awake was a straight-edge hardcore band from Connecticut, active from 1986-1988. In 1998 the “25 songs discography” CD was released on Smorgasboard Records, and includes all of their studio and live recordings.

Senin, 18 Januari 2010

Raybeez


"Don't forget the streets"
"Don't forget Raybeez"
Quote taken off of victory records'website which was shut down the weekend of Ray's death to pay its respect.

Raymond James Barbieri was the vocalist in Warzone, in addition to playing drums on the 1984 Agnostic Front United Blood EP.
Beginning with that EP, Ray made a dramatic impact on the hardcore scene and is credited for keeping it and the original english skinhead movement alive. He inspired a lot of people all over the world, especially street kids, and especially in New York City, where he often played and booked other bands at CBGB's. Ray also helped compile Revelation Records' New York Hardcore CD.
Ray's lyrics, always from the heart, were his most memorable accomplishment. When Warzone played, he used the stage as little as possible, hoping that just by looking you in the face when he sang you'd take in what he had to say.


His favorite message? A shout for unity, spreading the word that racism and separation of any kind was a load of shit, including the divisions between punks, straight edgers and skins. He also handed out and included in album inserts free literature for runaway hotline numbers, child abuse centers, and GED information. It's a shame that some kids had the nerve to say that Ray onstage was just an act and a sell out, and a lot of newer hardcore/straight edge bands are too busy worrying about how hard kids can dance to their songs rather than getting positive message across. It is sad that we have forgotten who influenced a lot of the bands still around today. Chances are it was Ray or one of his close friends ­ guy like Jimmy " Gestapo " Dresher from Murphy's Law, Lou Koeler and Craig Setari from Sick Of It All, Toby from H2O, Roger Miret and Vinny Stigma from Agnostic Front, all the guys from Madball, and Harley Flanagan and John Joshofs from Cro Mags.


In spite of rumors that Ray may have died from AIDS or a heroin overdose, the actual cause of death was viral pneumonia. Warzone was in Chicago recording the new album and Ray started having a hard time doing his vocals, complaining he was having difficulty breathing. He tried hard to rehearse with Warzone again but couldn't, so he went to the doctor and was immediately hospitalized. He kept in touch with Vinny, Todd and J-Sin and was sure that he was to be released in a few days. Vinny spoke to him the morning of his death, and Ray reassured him that he was going to be okay ; It would be just like him to know he wasn't going to be okay but not want anybody to dwell on it those that really knew Ray are surprised he lived this long. The important thing to remember is not how he died or whatever bad things he got caught up in that may have caused his death. The important thing to remember is he probably would have thrown down his life for anyone other than himself.


Warzone was able to finish recording its last album, which Victory will release as soon as possible. Agnostic Front played a show in Boston the Friday after Ray's death, and for the first time Roger didn't have set list ; he spent most of the time talking about his friendship with Ray and actually played a bunch of Warzone's songs. There is a huge tribute show being held at CBGB's on october 12th. Agnostic Front, Sick Of It All, Murphy's Law, H2O and Downlow are among the bands scheduled to perform.

From Skratch zine issue 20, october 1997

Death Before Dishonor


Death Before Dishonor
Origin
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Genres
Hardcore punk
Metalcore
Years active
2000-present
Labels
Bridge 9 (2004-present)
Spook City (2002-2004)
Associated acts
Blood For Blood
Website
http://www.deathb4dishonor.com/

Death Before Dishonor is an American hardcore band from Boston, Massachusetts. They are a part of the F.S.U (Friends Stand United). They are featured in the movie (boston beatdown volume 2) (2004).

Death Before Dishonor has spent close to half a decade proving that a once unnoticed group from south of Boston could become a force in the hardcore, punk and metal worlds. Those who chose to doubt Death Before Dishonor have had no choice but to notice and acknowledge their diehard work ethic, relentless touring and unwavering belief in their band. Playing an average of 250 shows per year since 2005, and 2008 looking to be their busiest and best year, it’s inescapable-Death Before Dishonor is staking their claim in an elite group of bands in the history of hardcore.


Death Before Dishonor’s humble beginnings started to rise with the release of Friends Family Forever, a seven song EP and their first release on Bridge Nine Records. Soon after, they supported it with non-stop international touring with Agnostic Front, Champion, Full Blown Chaos, and Terror. Making believers one show at a time, DBD logged almost a year and a half straight on the road before Bridge Nine was forced to release an expanded edition of Friends Family Forever as a full-length just so the band could have something new to sell.

In 2007, the release of Count Me In established Death Before Dishonor on a whole new level. Their penchant for diverse songwriting in a genre often pegged for repitition, Count Me In was praised-often by press who admittedly didn’t expect it, with Punknews saying “it's impossible to not get caught up in their level of intensity.” If that wasn’t enough, by debuting on Billboard’s Heatseekers, Independent Albums & Top New Artists charts and staying there for four weeks, DBD proved that the kids are listening. Their video for “Break Through It All” was in rotation on MTV2’s Headbanger’s Ball for over three months, and yet, people were still passing by Death Before Dishonor. DBD headlined tours nationwide and ended 2007 on the coveted Persistence Tour in Europe-headlined by Hatebreed, Agnostic Front & Ignite, and they haven’t stopped.

2008 has shown DBD supporting Count Me In all over the world including Australia, Europe, Great Britain, Mexico and Canada as well as the United States. This year proves to be the busiest for DBD and they show no sign of stopping anytime soon.



Blood for Blood


Blood for Blood
Origin
Charlestown, Massachusetts, U.S.
Genres
Hardcore
Years active
19952004 (hiatus)
Labels
Victory Records
Thorp Records
I Scream Records
Associated acts
Ramallah
Death Before Dishonor

If the ghost of Johnny Cash was to unexpectedly rise out of its tomb and supernaturally resurrect its musical soul in the form of a hardcore band, the result would be an anthemic, outlaw punch not unlike Boston's favorite white trash hardcore hooligans, BLOOD FOR BLOOD.

While Cash grew up as a restless farm boy who longed for fast cars and fast women, the boys in BLOOD FOR BLOOD were reared in the projects and their outlaw spirit reflects the callous surroundings from which they were rendered. Blood For Blood are from outside. They stand on the threshold of society with all but a few toes tangling off the edge with a maniacal desperation, longing for sanity. Theirs is a journey from one end of alienation to the other - only to be flung violently back to the hole from which they crawled out of. "I been held down my whole life. This band is my opportunity to spit in society's face..." says guitar player Rob Lind.


Inspired by bands such as Sheer Terror, Breakdown, Carnivore and Raw Deal, Blood For Blood formed as a reaction to the existing heavy music scene in Boston back in 1995. "We couldn't relate to anything that was going on in Boston at the time," says vocalist Erick Medina, "We wanted to hear music about the shit we saw and faced everyday. The scene at the time was a fashion show." Blood For Blood make no mistake about what their talents are - and what talents they lack. They don't sing. They don't rap. They don't dance. They don't act. And they definitely ain't too pretty. They are white trash hardcore rock and roll. And they have just begun their invasion of today's hair-and-nails conscious heavy music scene.

Blood For Blood have cultivated a large, and dangerously loyal, fanbase since their inception almost a decade ago. Having toured with such acts as DROPKICK MURPHYS, TERROR, and SICK OF IT ALL, exposing their venom to the nation, the band has left an indelible and hungry mark on the scene. The band has successfully put five recordings under the belt, with four of them having been released through VICTORY RECORDS and having had received countless praise in the press worldwide. Blood For Blood has always garnered real, genuine admiration among their fans as well - fans who have been known to willingly bruise, bleed, and become scarred for them at their notoriously 'high risk' live shows. With the momentum clearly in their favor, Blood For Blood are ready to throw their gloves in for one more round with their upcoming THORP RECORDS debut MCD.

Musically, few bands can touch the viscously aggressive hardcore/punk rock sound of Blood For Blood which is served up like a platter full of Sheer Terror, Madball, and The Bruisers.

Lyrically, Blood For Blood combines the depravity and pain of the world they see outside their door every day with the experiences of their own dead end lives in an outlaw-poetry style that truly affects its listeners in a deep way. "We get letters from dudes in prisons in New York, Boston, Detroit and even Alabama, telling us that our shit (music) gets them through and helps 'em face another day," says guitarist Rob Lind. Like Cash playing his outlaw songs to the inmates decades ago, today's redemption-seeking inmates are turning to the choruses of BLOOD FOR BLOOD for solace in hard times.

If you've plowed through all your dead ends and need to find friendship in a cold hard world...If loneliness and solitude is all you've know and you long to find family when you had none...If rock bottom has ever left you praying under cold street lights...If in your neighborhood, you've seen one too many stolen cars drive by, well, then it's time you raise your fist in the air and join in the outlaw anthems of Blood For Blood.

visit: Wikipedia, myspace

Converge


Background information
Origin
Salem, Massachusetts, United States
Genres
Metalcore, mathcore, hardcore punk
Years active
1990–present
Labels
Epitaph, Deathwish Inc., Hydra Head, Relapse, Equal Vision
Associated acts
Old Man Gloom, Doomriders, Cave In, Supermachiner, Bane, United Nations, The Huguenots, Acid Tiger
Website
www.convergecult.com

Converge (American metalcore) is a band from Salem, Massachusetts. Playing a blend of hardcore punk and extreme metal since 1990, Converge has helped to define many of the rudiments of the metalcore genre.

Converge was formed in the winter of 1990 by Jacob Bannon and Kurt Ballou. They started by playing covers of hardcore punk, punk rock and heavy metal songs, being self-confessed "hardcore kids with leftover Slayer riffs". The band soon graduated to playing live performances in 1991, after recording some demos on a 4-track recorder and eventually releasing full lengths including When Forever Comes Crashing and splits with bands like Agoraphobic Nosebleed.


In recent years, Converge have enjoyed relatively high levels of popularity, despite the esoteric nature of their music and the lack of media attention. Their popularity began to rise with the release of their breakthrough album, Jane Doe. During the recording of Jane Doe, long time member Aaron Dalbec who was also handling his then-side project Bane, was asked to leave the group. This resulted in a four man line-up that is still intact today. Aaron Burgess of Revolver locates Jane Doe as marking a break in the group's style:

Their records have gradually become more expensively and extensively produced, having moved from the independent label Equal Vision Records to the much larger and more mainstream (yet still independent) punk label Epitaph Records while handling special releases on Jacob's record label, Deathwish Inc. with their latest albums You Fail Me and No Heroes.

Converge released Axe to Fall on October 20, 2009. It was leaked on the internet prior to its planned release; Shaun Hand of Metal Sucks has been identified as the source of the leak, which occurred on October 4, 2009.
The album received several positive reviews prior to its release, including 10/10 from Decibel Magazine, and was hailed as the band's best work since Jane Doe. Pitchfork Media writer Cosmo Lee gave the album a rating of 8.5/10 and hailed Converge as "this generation's Black Flag."


Boston hardcore


Boston hardcore is the hardcore punk scene of Boston, Massachusetts. (Not to be confused with Boston metalcore aka metallic hardcore; itself an offshoot of Boston hardcore.)

Boston hardcore music history

The colleges and universities of Greater Boston offered a favorable venue for non-commercial music to be played. Several schools have their own radio stations, such as WBRS, WMFO, WUMB, WAVM, WMBR, WUML, WERS, and WTBU. The colleges also supplied young patrons for the local nightclubs and bars where local hardcore bands had gigs.

First-generation Boston hardcore bands as documented in American Hardcore included SS Decontrol, Gang Green, Jerry's Kids, The F.U.'s, Negative FX, D.Y.S. and Uncalled 4.
Hardcore quickly usurped the existing "alternative" punk scene, which included bands such as Mission of Burma. This created a generation gap-type conflict that could be seen at such events as Mission of Burma's "final show," where members of many leading hardcore bands created a near-riot when, due to the slam dancing supposedly ruining Burma's swan song, Negative FX's sound was shut down.This militant straight edge group, (consisting of many member from DYS, Negative FX and SSD) was known as the "Boston Crew". Their hard-line attitude became a defining characteristic for later bands such as Slapshot, Eye for an Eye, Ten Yard Fight, and Crossface.

Record labels and famous records

Independent record labels like Taang!, X-Claim Records, Modern Method, Bridge 9, Rodent Popsicle, Welfare, Hydra Head, Big Wheel, Rock Vegas, and Deathwish Inc. help to fuel the punk culture in Boston . A highlight of the early New England hardcore era was the This Is Boston, Not L.A. LP, which was a compilation of local artists. It includes the song of the same name performed by The Freeze, who advised: "if you look the same and you act the same, there's nothing new and you're to blame".

Boston hardcore was based more on Washington D.C. hardcore (Bad Brains, Minor Threat, Teen Idles, Government Issue) than it was on Los Angeles hardcore, (i.e. such bands as Black Flag, Bad Religion, the Circle Jerks, and the Germs).

This may be the reason why few L.A. bands played Boston in the early 80s, with the exception of a Black Flag show at The Paradise on Halloween 1981, which was attended by 12 people, including John Belushi, who had driven up from Martha's Vineyard just to attend.

visit: wikipedia, Strange Reaction

Boston Belongs To Me (A Tribute To Boston's Hardcore Scene)



Minggu, 17 Januari 2010

EARTH CRISIS & FIRST BLOOD Japan Tour 2010

EARTH CRISIS and FIRST BLOOD



GORILLA BISCUITS



Gorilla Biscuits

SICK OF IT ALL



Built To Last

Sabtu, 16 Januari 2010

Skinhead



 A skinhead is a member of a subculture that originated among working class youths in the United Kingdom in the 1960s, and then spread to other parts of the world. Named for their close-cropped or shaven heads, the first skinheads were greatly influenced by West Indian (specifically Jamaican) rude boys and British mods, in terms of fashion, music and lifestyle. Originally, the skinhead subculture was primarily based on those elements, not politics or race.Since then, however, attitudes toward race and politics have become factors in which some skinheads align themselves. The political spectrum within the skinhead scene ranges from the far right to the far left, although many skinheads are apolitical. Fashion-wise, skinheads range from a clean-cut 1960s mod-influenced style to less-strict punk- and hardcore-influenced styles.

In the late 1950s, the United Kingdom's entrenched class system limited most working class people's educational, housing, and economic opportunities. However, Britain's post-war economic boom led to an increase in disposable income among many young people. Some of those youths spent that income on new fashions popularised by American soul groups, British R&B bands, certain movie actors, and Carnaby Street clothing merchants.

These youths became known as the mods, a youth subculture noted for its consumerism—and devotion to fashion, music, and scooters. Mods of lesser means made do with practical styles that suited their lifestyle and employment circumstances: steel-toe boots, straight-leg jeans or Sta-Prest trousers, button-down shirts, and braces (called suspenders in the USA). When possible, these working-class mods spent their money on suits and other sharp outfits to wear at dancehalls, where they enjoyed soul, ska, bluebeat and rocksteady music.

Around 1965, a schism developed between the peacock mods (also known as smooth mods), who were less violent and always wore the latest expensive clothes, and the hard mods (also known as gang mods), who were identified by their shorter hair and more working-class image. Also known as lemonheads and peanuts, these hard mods became commonly known as skinheads by about 1968.Their shorter hair may have come about for practical reasons, since long hair can be a liability in industrial jobs and a disadvantage in streetfights. Skinheads may also have cut their hair short in defiance of the more middle class hippie culture popular at the time.

In addition to retaining many mod influences, early skinheads were very interested in Jamaican rude boy styles and culture, especially the music: ska, rocksteady, and early reggae (before the tempo slowed down and lyrics became focused on topics like black nationalism and the Rastafari movement).Skinhead culture became so popular by 1969 that even the rock band Slade temporarily adopted the look, as a marketing strategy.The subculture gained wider notice because of a series of violent and sexually explicit novels by Richard Allen, notably Skinhead and Skinhead Escapes.Due to largescale British migration to Perth, Western Australia, many British youths in that city joined skinhead/sharpies gangs in the 1960s and formed their own Australian style.

By the 1970s, the skinhead subculture started to fade from popular culture, and some of the original skins dropped into new categories, such as the suedeheads (defined by the ability to manipulate one's hair with a comb), smoothies (often with shoulder-length hairstyles), and bootboys (with mod-length hair; associated with gangs and football hooliganism).Some fashion trends returned to mod roots, reintroducing brogues, loafers, suits, and the slacks-and-sweater look.

In 1977, the skinhead subculture was revived to a notable extent after the introduction of punk rock. Most of these revival skinheads were a reaction to the commercialism of punk and adopted a sharp, smart look in line with the original look of the 1969 skinheads and included Gary Hodges and Hoxton Tom McCourt (both later of the band the 4-Skins) and Suggs, later of the band Madness.

From 1979 onwards, skinheads with even shorter hair and less emphasis on traditional styles grew in numbers and grabbed media attention, mostly as a result of their involvement with football hooliganism. These skinheads wore punk-influenced styles, like higher boots than before (14-20 eyelets) and tighter jeans (sometimes splattered with bleach). However, there was still a group of skinheads who preferred the original mod-inspired styles. Eventually different interpretations of the skinhead subculture expanded beyond the UK and Europe. One major example is that in the United States, certain segments of the hardcore punk scene embraced skinhead style and developed their own version of the subculture.

Style and clothing


In addition to short hair, skinheads are identified by their specific clothing styles. Skinhead fashions have evolved somewhat since the formation of the subculture in the 1960s, and certain clothing styles have been more prevalent in specific geographic locations and time periods. There are several different types of skinheads in terms of style. Some skinheads do not fit into any of these categories, and many display characteristics of more than one category. The usefulness of these terms is to explain the dominant skinhead styles. There are no reliable statistics documenting how many skinheads have belonged to each category.

Traditional skinheads, also known as trads or Trojan skinheads, identify with the original 1960s skinhead subculture in terms of music, style and culture. Oi! skinheads appeared after the development of punk rock in the 1970s. They often have shorter hair and more tattoos than 1960s skinheads, and wear items that differ from those of their traditionalist counterparts, such as: higher boots, tighter jeans, T-shirts and flight jackets. Hardcore skinheads originated in the United States hardcore punk scene in the early 1980s (with bands such as Iron Cross, Agnostic Front, Cro-mags, Sheer Terror, Warzone, and Murphy's Law). Their style is also less strict than that of the traditional skinheads.

In the early days of the skinhead subculture, some skinheads chose boot lace colours based on the football team they supported. Later, some skinheads (particularly highly political ones) began to attach significance to the colour of laces to indicate beliefs or affiliations. In a few cases, the colour of braces (also called suspenders), and (less commonly) flight jackets may also signify affiliations. The particular colours used have varied regionally, and have had totally different meanings in different areas and time periods. Only skinheads from the same area and time period are likely to interpret the colour significations accurately. The "braces and laces game" has largely fallen into disuse, particularly among traditionalist skinheads, who are more likely to choose their colours for fashion purposes than for expressing views.

The following list includes many of the clothing articles that have been worn by skinheads.
Hair:


* Men: Originally, between a 2 and 3 grade clip-guard (short, but not bald); beginning in the late 1970s, typically shaved closer, with no greater than a number 2 guard. Now some skinheads clip their hair with no guard, and some even shave it with a razor. This started with the introduction of the Oi! scene. Some skinheads sport sideburns of various styles, usually neatly trimmed.
* Women: In the 1960s, many female skinheads had mod-style haircuts. During the 1980s skinhead revival, many female skinheads had feathercuts (known as a Chelsea in North America). A feathercut is short on the crown, with fringes at the front, back and sides. Some female skinheads have a shorter punk-style version of the hairstyle; almost entirely shaved, leaving only bangs and fringes at the front.

Shirts:

* Long-sleeve or short-sleeve button-up shirts or polo shirts by brands such as Ben Sherman, Fred Perry, Brutus or Jaytex; Lonsdale or Everlast shirts or sweatshirts; collarless grandad shirts; V-neck sweaters; sleeveless sweaters; cardigan sweaters; T-shirts (plain or with text and/or images related to the skinhead subculture). Some Oi! and hardcore-oriented skinheads wear plain white tank top undershirts, especially in North America.

Coats, jackets and suits:

* Fitted blazers; MA-1 type flight jackets (popular brands: Alpha and Warrior), usually black or green; denim jackets (often blue); Harrington jackets; donkey jackets; monkey jackets; Crombie-style overcoats; short macs; sheepskin 3/4-length coats; parkas. Traditional skinheads sometimes wear suits, often made out of two-tone tonic fabric (shiny mohair-like material that changes colour in different light and angles), or in a Prince of Wales or houndstooth check pattern.

* Women: Same as men, with addition of dress suits—composed of a ¾-length jacket and matching short skirt.

Trousers:

* Sta-Prest flat-fronted slacks and other dress trousers; Jeans (normally Levi's, Lee or Wrangler), parallel leg, hemmed or with rolled cuffs (turn-ups); combat trousers (plain or camouflage). Jeans and slacks are worn deliberately short to show off boots, or to show off socks when wearing loafers or brogues. Jeans are usually blue, sometimes splattered with bleach to resemble camouflage trousers (popular among Oi! skinheads).


* Women: Same jeans and trousers as men, or skirts and stockings. Some skingirls wear fishnet stockings and mini-skirts, a style introduced during the punk-influenced skinhead revival.

Footwear:

* Boots, originally army surplus boots or generic workboots, then Dr. Martens boots and shoes; brogues; loafers. During the 1960s, steel-toe boots were called bovver boots. Suedeheads sometimes wore coloured socks, such as in red, orange or green. In recent years, other brands of boots, such as Solovair, have become popular among skinheads, partly because Dr. Martens and Grinders are no longer made in England. Football-style athletic shoes, by brands such as Adidas, have become popular with some skinheads.

* Women: Same as men, with the addition of monkey boots.

Hats:

* Trilby hats; pork pie hats; flat caps (Scally caps or driver caps),winter woolen hats (without a bobble). Less common have been bowler hats (mostly among suedeheads and those influenced by the film A Clockwork Orange).

Braces (Suspenders):

* Braces (known in North America as suspenders), various colours, usually no more than 1 inch in width, clipped to trouser waistband. In some areas, braces much wider than that may identify a skinhead as either unfashionable or as a white power skinhead. Traditionally, braces are worn up in an X or Y shape at the back, but some Oi!-oriented skinheads wear their braces hanging down.

Handkerchiefs:

* Silk handkerchiefs in the breast pocket of the Crombie-style overcoat or tonic suit jacket, in some cases fastened with an ornate stud. Later, pocket flashes became popular. These were pieces of silk in contrasting colours, mounted on a piece of cardboard and designed to look like an elaborately folded handkerchief. It was common to choose the colours based on one's favourite football club.

Badges and scarves:

* Button badges or sewn-on fabric patches with text and/or images related to the skinhead subculture in general, bands, affiliations or beliefs. Woollen or printed rayon scarves in football club colours, worn knotted at the neck, wrist, or hanging from a belt loop at the waist.

Umbrellas

* Some suedeheads carried closed umbrellas with sharpened tips, or a handle with a pull-out blade. This led to the nickname brollie boys.

Tattoos

* Tattoos have been popular among many skinheads since at least the 1970s revival. In 1980s Britain, some skinheads had tattoos on their faces or foreheads, although the practice has since fallen out of favour. Some skinheads get tattoos with images or text related to the skinhead subculture in general, bands, affiliations or their beliefs.

Music

The skinhead subculture was originally associated with music genres such as soul, ska, rocksteady and early reggae.The link between skinheads and Jamaican music led to the development of the skinhead reggae genre; performed by artists such as Desmond Dekker, Derrick Morgan, Laurel Aitken, Symarip and The Pioneers. In the early 1970s, some Suedeheads also listened to British glam rock bands such as The Sweet, Slade and Mott the Hoople. During this time, some reggae lyrics featured themes of black liberation and awareness, something that white skinheads could not relate to. This shift in reggae's lyrical themes created some tension between black and white skinheads, who otherwise got along fairly well.

The most popular music style for late-1970s skinheads was 2 Tone which was a musical fusion of ska, rocksteady, reggae, pop and punk rock. The 2 Tone genre was named after a Coventry, England record label that featured bands such as The Specials, Madness and The Selecter. The record label scored many top 20 hits, and eventually a number one.


Some late 1970s skinheads also liked certain punk rock bands, such as Sham 69 and Menace; and by the late 1970s, the Oi! subgenre was embraced by many skinheads and punks. Musically, Oi! combines elements of punk, football chants, pub rock and British glam rock. The Oi! scene was partly a response to a sense that many participants in the early punk scene were, in the words of The Business guitarist Steve Kent, "trendy university people using long words, trying to be artistic...and losing touch". Some forefathers of Oi! were Sham 69, Cock Sparrer, and Menace. The term Oi! as a musical genre is said to come from the band Cockney Rejects and journalist Garry Bushell, who championed the genre in Sounds magazine. Notable Oi! bands of the late 1970s and early 1980s include Angelic Upstarts, Blitz, The Business, Last Resort, The Burial, Combat 84 and The 4-Skins. Not exclusively a skinhead genre, many Oi! bands included skins, punks and people who fit into neither category (sometimes called herberts).

American Oi! began in the 1980s with bands such as The Press, Iron Cross, The Bruisers,Anti-Heros and Forced Reality. American skinheads created a link between their subculture and hardcore punk music, with bands such as Warzone, Agnostic Front, and Cro-Mags. The Oi! style has also spread to other parts of the world, and remains popular with many skinheads. Many later Oi! bands have combined influences from early American hardcore and 1970s British streetpunk.

Although many white power skinheads listened to Oi! music, they also developed a separate genre known as Rock Against Communism (RAC). The most notable RAC band was Skrewdriver, which started out as a non-political punk band but evolved into a neo-Nazi band after the first lineup broke up and a new lineup was formed. RAC started out musically similar to Oi! and punk rock, and has adopted some elements from heavy metal and other types of rock music.

There are a few National Socialist Black Metal bands with members who are white power skinheads, many of whom are Polish and are associated with the band Graveland.Varg Vikernes of the black metal band Burzum was a skinhead at one point during his incarceration. Revenge and Blasphemy are self-described non-racist black metal skinhead bands

Racism, anti-racism and politics



In the late 1960s, some skinheads (including black skinheads) had engaged in violence against random Pakistanis and other South Asian immigrants (an act known as Paki bashing in common slang)Although these early skinheads were not part of an organized nationalist or racist movement, by the early 1970s, there were skinheads who aligned themselves with the white nationalist National Front.However, there had also been anti-racist and leftist skinheads from the beginning, especially in areas such as Scotland and northern England.As the 1970s progressed, the racially-motivated skinhead violence in the UK became more partisan, and groups such as the National Front and the British Movement saw a rise in skinheads among their ranks. Although many skinheads rejected political labels being applied to their subculture, some working class skinheads blamed non-white immigrants for economic and social problems, and agreed with far right organizations' positions against blacks and Asians. By the late 1970s, some openly neo-Nazi groups were largely composed of skinheads, and by this point, the mass media, and subsequently the general public, had largely come to view skinheads exclusively as a subculture promoting white power. Two groups associated with white power skinheads are Hammerskins and Blood and Honour. The mainstream media started using the term skinhead in reports of racist violence (regardless of whether the perpetrator was actually a skinhead), and has played a large role in skewing public perceptions about the subculture.However, during the late 1970s and early 1980s, many skinheads, suedeheads, ex-skinheads and football casuals in the UK rejected the dogma of both the left and right. This anti-extremist attitude was musically typified by Oi! bands such as Cockney Rejects, The 4-Skins and The Business (who were part of a concert billed as Oi! Against Racism and Extremism But Still Against The System). The motto of Oi! Records, which was printed on most of their records, was "Oi=a working class protest. nothing more-nothing less."Two notable groups of skinheads who spoke out against neo-Nazism and political extremism, and in support of traditional skinhead culture were the Glasgow Spy Kids in Scotland (who coined the phrase Spirit of 69), and the publishers of the Hard As Nails zine in England. Other skinheads countered the neo-Nazi stereotype by forming anti-racist organizations, such as The Minneapolis Baldies, who started in 1986; Skinheads Against Racial Prejudice (SHARP), which was founded in New York City in 1987 and spread to several other countries; and Anti-Racist Action (ARA), which was founded in the late 1980s by members of the Minneapolis Baldies and other activists. SHARPS are a SHARPS are aggressively opposed to neo-Nazism and racism, although they are not always political in terms of other issues. The label SHARP is sometimes used to describe all anti-racist skinheads, even if they are not members of a SHARP organization.they are not alway The label SHARP is sometimes used to describe all anti-racist skinheads, even ifthey are not members of a SHARP organization.

Redskins and anarchist skinheads are left wing skinheads who take a militant anti-fascist and pro-working class stance.

The most well-known skinhead organization in this category is Red and Anarchist Skinheads.
In the UK, some anti-fascist skinheads have been involved with Anti-Fascist Action or Red Action.
Conservatism has been common in the United States skinhead scene, with many non-racist skinheads expressing right-wing and anti-communist views, glorifying American military actions and voicing opposition to modern liberalism

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