yosupbro
Throbbing Member
Posts: 3,425 Join Date: Oct 14, 2017 Likes: 7,224
|
Post by yosupbro on Jul 25, 2024 2:22:55 GMT -5
Thanks mark gonna check it out
|
|
xMOOKAIx
Turgid Member
Strroking my ball's
Posts: 1,770 Join Date: May 21, 2022
Likes: 8,157
|
Post by xMOOKAIx on Jul 25, 2024 4:31:36 GMT -5
can you post the playlist it'll save the rest of us the time of doing the same thing Yep. It has other shit I've added from 2024 in there, not just from the article. that awol record is sick
|
|
|
Post by โญ Bob Loblaw โญ on Jul 25, 2024 12:36:13 GMT -5
Night Fever kinda sounds like Bane trying to do nwobhm
|
|
MODULOK
Turgid Member
TRโญHC
Posts: 1,245 Join Date: Feb 17, 2020
Likes: 1,469
|
Post by MODULOK on Jul 25, 2024 12:39:54 GMT -5
despite the "heavy metal from the 80's" artwork i really like their new stuff.
|
|
killedbyboard
Pulsating Member
Posts: 8,533 Join Date: Jun 30, 2018
Likes: 16,657
|
Post by killedbyboard on Jul 25, 2024 16:50:46 GMT -5
Night Fever kinda sounds like Bane trying to do nwobhmย Too accurate lol
|
|
juju
Hard Member
Posts: 229 Join Date: Jul 1, 2018
Likes: 307
|
Post by juju on Jul 26, 2024 5:11:48 GMT -5
New Rixe song is online
Edit : not sure about this new sound...
|
|
Yung Nick
Pulsating Member
troubled yoot
I'm at da store what do u need???
Posts: 25,912 Join Date: Jun 27, 2018
Likes: 40,346
|
Post by Yung Nick on Jul 26, 2024 5:13:01 GMT -5
|
|
animalnitrate
Turgid Member
Posts: 667 Join Date: Oct 4, 2018
Likes: 1,001
|
Post by animalnitrate on Jul 26, 2024 6:38:12 GMT -5
Loved what they're doing on the new song, kind of felt like it was doing a Marked Men thing musically
|
|
throwdemgunz
Pulsating Member
Posts: 5,392 Join Date: Jul 12, 2018
Likes: 15,798
|
Post by throwdemgunz on Jul 26, 2024 6:53:10 GMT -5
I think it rocks, I dig Maximes vocals
|
|
youthofwhodey
Engorged Member
Posts: 2,318 Join Date: Jan 17, 2024
Likes: 6,962
|
Post by youthofwhodey on Jul 26, 2024 7:55:23 GMT -5
New Cincinnati hc feat homies
|
|
antipasto
Pulsating Member
Posts: 6,549 Join Date: Jun 27, 2018
Likes: 22,294
|
Post by antipasto on Jul 26, 2024 9:17:31 GMT -5
Love that new Rixe track
|
|
|
Post by Marco Ducatti on Jul 26, 2024 9:29:19 GMT -5
I think it rocks, I dig Maximes vocals banger
|
|
Remain Sedate
Turgid Member
Sitting here like a loaded gun, I'm waiting to go off. I've got nothing to do but shoot my mouth off
Posts: 1,595 Join Date: Sep 27, 2020
Likes: 2,414
|
Post by Remain Sedate on Jul 26, 2024 10:54:31 GMT -5
Attn all academic punks - why is hardcore punk enjoying a renaissance? www.theguardian.com/music/article/2024/jul/26/hardcore-punk-outbreak-festival-plastics-have-heart-harms-way-incendiary-soccer-mommyGo hard or go home: why is hardcore punk enjoying a renaissance?
The success of Manchesterโs Outbreak festival shows the appetite for the genre isnโt just healthy, itโs on the rise. Its organisers discuss the sceneโs evolution, its fragility, and its (very loud) future Emma Garland Fri 26 Jul 2024 09.00 EDT At the end of June this year thousands of people โ from Scotland to Bulgaria, Chile to Singapore โ gathered in an industrial estate in Manchester to boot each other in the head. That wasnโt the express purpose, of course, but a common side-effect of attending Outbreak, the hardcore punk festival that has become a flagship event for a genre experiencing an unprecedented moment of mainstream visibility. Bursting out of the American suburbs in the late 1970s, hardcore was a response to the punk and new wave invasion that had dominated the years prior. Early bands such as Black Flag, Bad Brains and Dead Kennedys distilled the rawness of punk and pushed it to extremes, pioneering a do-it-yourself ethos, and a fast, frantic sound that became the definitive sonic kickback to a decade of Reaganomics and rising conservatism. Though the sound of hardcore has evolved over the decades, spawning various subgenres (screamo, queercore, powerviolence) and acting as the jumping-off point for many of the pop-punk and emo bands that defined the 2000s, that grassroots philosophy has been unwavering. Itโs there in the origins of Outbreak, too. Founded in 2011 by two guys in their mid-teens, purely because they were too young to get into local shows at 18+ venues, Outbreak began as a local DIY event for UK-based hardcore bands. โI didnโt have a clue what I was doing,โ shrugs one of the organisers, who, in the spirit of collectivism that underpins the festival, asks not to be named. โI just really wanted to see these bands. So I thought: if I bring them all together in an all-ages venue, then Iโll get to see them. It was as simple as that.โ The inaugural Outbreak was an all-dayer held at a recreational hall in Sheffield. Since then, it has grown slowly and organically into a full weekend with an international bill and enough demand to fill Manchesterโs 10,000 capacity Depot Mayfield โ which it did in 2023. This year the festival returned to its 2022 home of Bowlers Exhibition Centre in Manchester, debuting an outdoor stage and a lineup that cast a wide but discerning net across the alternative music landscape. Alongside the traditional hardcore bands that have been in rotation since the festivalโs formative years (Have Heart, Harmโs Way, Incendiary) and the newer homegrown acts that have followed in their stead (at least seven of whom are from Glasgow), youโll find everything from experimental hip-hop (16mm filmstock) to midwest emo (American Football) and indie rock (Soccer Mommy), most of which is accompanied by a lot of stage-diving. In many ways, Outbreak is evolving in line with hardcore itself, which is undergoing an intense period of change. In 2022, the New York Times declared an American hardcore โrenaissanceโ, citing a slew of bands such as Gulch, Drain and Drug Church, who are made up of hardcore lifers but driving new excitement in the scene. Since then, things have continued to snowball. In 2023, Baltimore hybridists Turnstile received three Grammy nominations. In May, Kentucky hardcore-metal fusionists Knocked Loose overtook Taylor Swift on Spotifyโs Viral 50 chart, which measures how frequently songs are shared. The same month, Torrance, California punks Joyce Manor โ who swamped Outbreakโs main stage on Sunday โ were a musical guest on John Mulaneyโs live Netflix show Everybodyโs in LA, performing between St Vincent and Warren G. Perhaps one reason why hardcore is experiencing a particularly enthusiastic resurgence is the growing diversity of the scene. Hardcore has always been inclusive, but its aggressive nature has sometimes attracted unwanted attention. In the mid-80s, there was a serious problem of white supremacists storming shows. The more neo-Nazis turned up, the more anti-fascists turned up to fight back, and a scene founded on social awareness and โpositive mental attitude (PMA)โ โ a phrase popularised by Bad Brains, an all-Black band โ spiralled into violence. A streak of genre purism has also gatekept hardcore by dictating who can express themselves and to what degree, which gave the subculture an overwhelmingly white image. However, a true history of hardcore is one that has always belonged to everyone, whether itโs dub and reggae underpinning punk in the 70s, to the influence of Muslim fusion groups such as Fun-Da-Mental in the 90s, to a more genreless 2010s landscape that saw hip-hop collective Odd Future link up with hardcore act Trash Talk. Today, hardcore has never been more diverse, both sonically and in the makeup of its participants. Bands including Soul Glo, Zulu and Scowl are splicing in elements of other genres such as blues, funk, jazz, powerpop and soul. The frontman of rising Sydney band Speed plays the flute on stage. There are multiple groups that sing in Arabic. As the definition of what hardcore โisโ becomes less rigid, the sound expands, and that creates more points of entry. This yearโs Outbreak lineup boasted an eclectic range of artists, from Moroccan โHarami punkโ (Taqbir) and Egyptian death metal (Scarab) to jazz-rap (redveil). This bill, in turn, drew a crowd that evaded easy categorisation but had a clearly united front. Gen Z kids in clown makeup (fans of California โgoth jestersโ the Garden) were queueing for pizza with dads sporting Apple watches and jorts. A wheelchair user crowdsurfed during a set by Bristol chain-punks Perp Walk. Almost every artist called for the liberation of Palestine (the singer of Show Me the Body wen't one step further and offered anyone who disagreed outside for a fight). Whether on stage or in the crowd, these are ultimately people who all share the same DNA of DIY ethics, social justice and musical physicality. Thatโs hardcore. The sound, then, has increasingly less to do with it. โI donโt call it a hardcore festival any more. I donโt really know how to describe it,โ one of the organisers says. One of the challenges an event like Outbreak now faces is preserving the foundations of hardcore with increasing demand for it. Ultimately, itโs a type of music born from and desighned for small spaces and sweaty crowds, with no separation between audience and artist. That means no bouncers. No barriers. The stage, if there is one, belongs to everyone: anyone can climb on it and dive into the crowd. Maintaining those values in a large venue with thousands of people requires a lot of paperwork. The same goes for communicating with parts of the music industry that wouldnโt necessarily be involved with a DIY event, from health and safety teams to venue staff and security. โAs the festival has grown, itโs really been about welcoming those people into our team and teaching them what [hardcore] is, how people interact with each other, and why itโs safe even though it looks like chaos.โ Understandably, the ballooning interest in hardcore has made some dyed-in-the-wool fans nervous. The more commercially viable a subculture becomes, the more things get lost in translation. That can have an impact on a scene that most people involved donโt view as entertainment, or something to do after work โ but as a way of life. At the same time, the barrier to entry is still, realistically, too high for hardcore to go the way of previous underground subculture turned mainstream phenomena, such as Green Day-era pop-punk or My Chemical Romance-era emo. A few bands, like Turnstile, might go the way of red carpets and Top 40 radio, but weโre not likely to hear Knocked Loose frontman Bryan Garris dog-barking at Wembley stadium any time soon. For Outbreak, the future lies in preserving whatโs already been built. โIt realistically canโt get any bigger than it is now, and truthfully I donโt think it ever needs to be,โ an organiser says, adding that it should, above all else, be a space for people to freely express themselves. โThatโs the main goal: for people to find their place, feel as if they belong somewhere, and connect with people that are like-minded. As long as the festival is still doing that, I donโt see any reason for it to stop.โ The same applies to hardcore at large. Itโs been more than 40 years since Bad Brains and Black Flag first kicked down the doors, and their legacy is as moral as it is musical. As long as there are people who feel angry and alienated, there will be a hardcore scene โ visible to dozens of people or millions โ to mop them up.
|
|
|
Post by Osama Vinladen Jimรฉnez Lรณpez on Jul 26, 2024 10:56:50 GMT -5
i was always more partial to Condor but i gotta listen to Rixe more on the reg
|
|
jaredfromsubway
Pulsating Member
Posts: 6,868 Join Date: Jun 27, 2018
Likes: 13,595
|
Post by jaredfromsubway on Jul 26, 2024 11:00:44 GMT -5
i was always more partial to Condor but i gotta listen to Rixe more on the reg New track sounds more like Condor
|
|
throwdemgunz
Pulsating Member
Posts: 5,392 Join Date: Jul 12, 2018
Likes: 15,798
|
Post by throwdemgunz on Jul 26, 2024 11:05:39 GMT -5
Egyptian death metal (Scarab)
|
|
|
Post by Osama Vinladen Jimรฉnez Lรณpez on Jul 26, 2024 11:21:15 GMT -5
i was always more partial to Condor but i gotta listen to Rixe more on the reg New track sounds more like Condor lol ya thatโs why i brought it up. the sounds appear to be merging
|
|
mouthofinfinity
Pulsating Member
Posts: 5,147 Join Date: Jun 27, 2018
Likes: 11,830
|
Post by mouthofinfinity on Jul 26, 2024 11:29:04 GMT -5
I havenโt seen a link to listen to it anywhere, but Grave Mistake has the new Muro record and you know I ordered it.
|
|
NUKE THE INTERNET
Throbbing Member
train guy choo choo
Protesting at the hospital against the chip company.
Posts: 4,104 Join Date: Dec 2, 2020
Likes: 11,225
|
Post by NUKE THE INTERNET on Jul 26, 2024 11:37:46 GMT -5
Potentially stupid question, but do Rixe have a drummer? No shade if not, as a drum machine in punk would be very French.
|
|
|
Post by Marco Ducatti on Jul 26, 2024 11:43:25 GMT -5
I havenโt seen a link to listen to it anywhere, but Grave Mistake has the new Muro record and you know I ordered it. oh fugg. pleaseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee let muro come back to the us, they had to scrap like their last two tours over the past decade
|
|
jaredfromsubway
Pulsating Member
Posts: 6,868 Join Date: Jun 27, 2018
Likes: 13,595
|
Post by jaredfromsubway on Jul 26, 2024 11:52:29 GMT -5
Potentially stupid question, but do Rixe have a drummer? No shade if not, as a drum machine in punk would be very French. Maxime usually plays drums for them, but the music video shows him singing and playing guitar
|
|
|
Post by ๐๐ผ๐๐๐ฝ๐โโ๐๐๐โ on Jul 26, 2024 12:16:47 GMT -5
fucking with that rixe song a lot rn
|
|
youthofwhodey
Engorged Member
Posts: 2,318 Join Date: Jan 17, 2024
Likes: 6,962
|
Post by youthofwhodey on Jul 26, 2024 22:34:23 GMT -5
I'm eternally salty the time two of my friends wen't and saw Rixe and didnt extend an invite to me.
|
|
jimmyspudboy
Throbbing Member
nice
Posts: 3,629 Join Date: Jul 3, 2018
Likes: 12,925
|
Post by jimmyspudboy on Jul 26, 2024 22:37:54 GMT -5
Some friends. Rixe rocks! Played a show with them in El Paso years ago.
|
|
throwdemgunz
Pulsating Member
Posts: 5,392 Join Date: Jul 12, 2018
Likes: 15,798
|
Post by throwdemgunz on Jul 26, 2024 23:07:30 GMT -5
Theyโre playing near me in like 6 weeks but Iโll have a newborn so it may not be in the cards but Iโm def going to try to swing it.
|
|
xMOOKAIx
Turgid Member
Strroking my ball's
Posts: 1,770 Join Date: May 21, 2022
Likes: 8,157
|
Post by xMOOKAIx on Jul 26, 2024 23:11:18 GMT -5
Theyโre playing near me in like 6 weeks but Iโll have a newborn so it may not be in the cards but Iโm def going to try to swing it. you'll get to see the kid every day for 18 years you cant see rixie every day for 18 years i think the choice is obvious
|
|
throwdemgunz
Pulsating Member
Posts: 5,392 Join Date: Jul 12, 2018
Likes: 15,798
|
Post by throwdemgunz on Jul 26, 2024 23:16:09 GMT -5
Theyโre playing near me in like 6 weeks but Iโll have a newborn so it may not be in the cards but Iโm def going to try to swing it. you'll get to see the kid every day for 18 years you cant see rixie every day for 18 years i think the choice is obvious Tell that to my wife pal!
|
|
xMOOKAIx
Turgid Member
Strroking my ball's
Posts: 1,770 Join Date: May 21, 2022
Likes: 8,157
|
Post by xMOOKAIx on Jul 26, 2024 23:17:00 GMT -5
when i see her tonight i will
|
|
xMOOKAIx
Turgid Member
Strroking my ball's
Posts: 1,770 Join Date: May 21, 2022
Likes: 8,157
|
Post by xMOOKAIx on Jul 26, 2024 23:17:22 GMT -5
if she can even here me over the sound of my penis that is
|
|
Ass Dan
Pulsating Member
lacks jaynaysaykwa
Posts: 12,299 Join Date: Jun 27, 2018 Likes: 16,251
|
Post by Ass Dan on Jul 26, 2024 23:17:27 GMT -5
Put ear muffs on the kid and bring em. Take some selfies with it with #firstshow.
|
|