One huge pleasure which I had in 2017 was great interview with Mike Gitter. Here is the print version. I will have the audio up at one point. Also i made a Spotify PLAYLIST I did not make it of the anthems necessarily. I rocked the songs that rep the era of the book 1983 - 1988. Plus i like to choose the not obvious songs. Enjoy!
Buy at Bridge Nine
Wednesday, January 31, 2018
EHPC Best of 2017 Hardcore
EHPC Best of 2017: Hardcore. *(Metal sub genres and punk and Oi! and hip hop to follow)
Here is SPOTIFY list including much more than what is here
Instead of a pure "Best Of" or "Top 25" etc... Here are a bunch of great records that came and me (us - Mark Leighton ( @Mark_Spots_The_X on IG ) in 2017. Killer shit. Audio discussion - what the kids call a podcast will be up soon on emptyhandspodcast
No Particular order. I'm not straining over should Incendiary be 4 or 6 over Forced Order. Do that yourselves.
HARDCORE:
Backtrack Bad to My
World Bridge 9
Ricky and the boys return with ill NYHC. Check my interview
Break Away Cross my
Heart React! RVA SXE simple and sweet
Forced Order Last
Crusade Triple B metallic chug that sears
Incendiary Thousand
Mile Stare Closed Casket Activities check my interview
No Turning Back No
Time to Waste Take Control Records Euro stalwarts come back again!
Firewalker 12” Pop Wig Boston hardcore, low tuned and evil. Heavy and dark. Short fast loud
Sect No Cure for Death
Southern Lord Records ... Scott Crouse and Chris Colohan team up for dirty crust 'core. My review at New Noise
Wolfbrigade Run With
the Hunted Southern Lord D-Beat Swedes deliver again
All Pigs Must Die Hostage
Animal Southern Lord phenomenal record by these chaps - grit. variety.
Kohti Tuhoa Hajota ja
hallitse Southern Lord Finnish punky D-Beat on Southern Lord – CVLT Nation did a
bit on them here. I had gotten the promo and dug instantly.
Open City s/t LP +
City of Ash 7” self released / new Dan Yemin, female vox; noisey, chaotic fast,
good bass-lines, guitars and dope time changes.
HON MEN HC LPs:
Walk the Plank Cemetery Vacation Say-10 fast passionate - uncanny Paint It Black worship My review at New Noise;
Western Addiction Tremulous Fat Wreck Chords - their first LP was cool, but i stay away from Fat Wreck Chords. Nine Years later these dudes pack a punch. This is smart and intense and confrontational; catchy but dirty.
Park Sparrows s/t self ...fast and sullen; RVA punk bandcamp for $1
Brick By Brick Thin the Herd Fast Break! - Ray Chaos' 2nd LP with this Upstate NY beatdown band. Tough as nails.
HC EPs: * i bought every one on here. I love 2017!
Free Ex
Tenebris Triple B - We loved when it came out…Vocalist Pat Flynn (have Heart) and 3 more Have heart and a criss-cross of members from Clear, Fiddleheads, NYC Headhunters, Give, Line Of Sight, Mindset, Sweet Jesus, Verse. They have created something honest and intense, quite different. Review here
But actually
Triple B could get a spotlight for this year:
Terror The Walls Will Fall,
Freedom Never Had A Choice,
Abuse of Power When Then Becomes Now,
These above three all make the list. But Triple B also did:
No Warning cassette, Foreseen EP before LP, Buried Alive
demos LP, Unified Right EP, Violence to Fade EP, the mentioned Forced Order LP, and Faze and Candy too.
Miracle Drug How Much
Is Enough War - Again very different and cool with 90s style. Smart songwriting from older dudes with a a love for DC. my interview here
Fireburn Don’t Stop
the Youth Closed Casket Activities - Flawless record. Bad Barins love from an ex-Brain and Todd fucking Youth; plus Knife Fight drummer and Todd Jones. Damn.
Rat Cage Caged Like
Rats La Vida Es Un Mus ugly and nasty fastcore.
Combatant 7” Sick Plot
not like you - angry, old school '82 love.
Drug Control Stabbed New
Age Records from DC and they play that. Crazed fast core.
DC Disorder Naive to a World Youngblood Records killer youth crew from a legendary label.
Aggression Pact Instant
Execution 7” - Boston banger. chaotic ugly and fast
Memory Loss Exile
Vinyl Conflict (cassette; bandcamp) - crusty dirty angry
Exit Unit 7” Deep Six Records – Ex-INFEST and Lack of
Interest
Faithless HC cassette *its great even though it was recorded in
2008/2014
Primal Rite Sensory
Link to Pain Revelation - heavy but still wicked hardcore + ex-scalped. Not the dive bombs. Heavy, metallic, frantic
HON MEN EPs:
Insist Here and Now - Manchester UK SXE, old school, heavy Youth Crew. 4 tracks on React!;
Unjust Transparency QCHC killer angry sxe 7”;
DEMOS:
Undone (NWOBHC), Innocent boston d-beat,
Imposter demo - Quality Control bandcamp. Low tuned. heavy UK82 hardcore
Screw demo - DC Core - like 86 Mentality,
Stand Point demo QCHQ – cassette; loves Uniform Choice;
Payday Second To None QCHQ (2nd demo; Clevo love – London SXE);
Tetro Pugnale – incredible Italian Oi hardcore (Blitz/86 Mentality – LP in 2018!!!) all cassettes
MISC Demos/EPs:
Powerage demo 2017 – i saw on youtube. Dirty bass! Grimy thrashy hardcore. Heavy. French powerviolence
if you miss '90s metallic SXE hardcore – which I love – a la Earth Crisis, One King Down, Morning Again and Culture… or all that Euro stuff – check out:
xElegyx demo - 4 songs of metallic sxe hc with Female vocals;
Inclination demo Straight and Alert - Midwest Straight Edge. Metallic 90's love. dark.
Inclination demo Straight and Alert - Midwest Straight Edge. Metallic 90's love. dark.
xServitudex Path to Amnesty – killer. This is more metal, low vocals with the djent screech tempo – very Seventh Dagger roster ish, violent;
Ecostrike Time is now CTW - This is the best of these. The best produced and written. Good '90s feel without being too metal. Ecostrike has way better writing; very OKD
*(Carry the Weight also has put out Blind Authority, New Morality, Secterian Violence, Poison Planet, Red Death (CASS) good eps; also Culture, Coke Bust, and Race Traitor re-issues)
Harms Way Post Human Review
Harms Way
Post Human
Metal Blade
February 6, 2018
Review by hutch
Harms Way offer Post
Human on February 6th to redefine themselves yet again, this
time on Metal Blade Records. Having only heard friends praise this band
throughout the years, I was surprised to hear that some hardcore fans deride them
due to some asinine adherence to strict definitions of hardcore. Really? 2018?
Regardless, I am a fan and have been since day one. Harm’s Way began in 2007.
2008’s Imprisoned was comprised of
short (:30 - :60) powerviolence tracks. Harms Way spent the next decade,
pumping out a few EPs and 3 LPs on Organized Crime, Closed Casket Activities,
and Deathwish Inc. Thought line up changes have ebbed and flowed; Bo Lueders on
guitar, Chris Mills on drums, and James Pligge on vocals, have solidified Harms
Way’s focus. Ten years witnessed these Chicago malcontents produce unique,
aggressive music.
The first song on Post Human, “Human Carrying Capacity”, was
released early as a single, on websites and Spotify. This is a familiar Harms Way
track (read: sick as hell, heavy as fuck); bad ass breakdown hardcore with a
drum machine in the background. After another bruiser, “Last Man”, we arrive at
track three, “Temptation”. This is where we began to hear some variation. This
is no Ceremony L Shaped Man (a killer
record as well) direction; but the slower, quieter atmosphere adds tension and
ambience as the bass line pushes the track into a chilling space. The distant
vocals and dissonant guitar notes extract an unsettling uncertainty in the listener.
The second half of the track returns to expected elements (thick riffs) and damages
eardrums. Following “Temptation” is “Become a Machine” – the fastest track on
the album and somehow the most robotic in the chorus. This tracks consists of sharp
guitar squeals, which pan in the headphones to add momentum and energy. The 4/4
beat is a great hardcore rhythm for the verse before Harms Way enters a bridge
that is double bass driven, more plotted.
The second single, “Call My Name”, allows us to see into
this interpretation of using outside electronic elements. The beginning of the
track uses bass drops and tonal fog before a repetitive groove takes over.
Again, Harms Way utilizes these non-traditional hardcore instrumentations to
set mood; to alleviate some of the intensity in between monster tracks and segments.
“Unreality” has an undeniable groove. This is where maybe a Sepultura or VOD
guitar sound manifests. Adding samples here doesn’t change the music, just
varies its approach. While I would bet the band resents any slim genre classification,
this is still angry hardcore to me.
With the electronics, Harms Way is not “experimenting” but
confident in its growth. The time changes and dissection of guitars and drums to
use certain instruments in sparse places, aids to the music. Like negative
space in a photograph. The result is bulking up its power, guaranteeing impact.
(This isn’t Fear Factory or Front 242. (I’m old).) As the albums winds down, “The
Gift”, the penultimate song, is the only pure electronic track. Pulses and
hisses and programmed drums linger while vocalist, Pligge, bellows. No guitars.
It’s a cool track. To finish, “Dead Space” boasts a pounding, searing pace as
Harms Way chugga chugga again and propel their enmity toward the finish line.
I still call Harms Way a hardcore band; albeit ‘metallic’ or
whatever. Do they utilize a drum machine? Yep. But, I wouldn’t call them an industrial
band by any stretch. This is brutal hardcore. The sound is designed to vent, to
exorcise aggression and frustration. As Throwdown did in the late 90s; or Down
My Throat and Arkangel did as well. Later, in the mid-2000s, we had Since the
Flood, On Broken Wings, Black My Heart, Thick As Blood, etc. These bands lived
to watch pit monsters decimate dance floors. Harms Way take those bands’ succinct
breakdown formula and lace it with atmospheric extras. The variety is why Harms
Way can be on stage before Soulfly, Every Time I Die, At The Gates, or Converge
(as they have) and fucking slay crowds. Will Putney, a producer known for Stray
From The Path, For Today, Vision Of Disorder, Thy Art Is Murder, Suburban Scum,
Body Count, Acacia Strain, and others, grabbed the reigns here. Putney
collaborated on some writing and extracted a dope record that guitarist, Bo
Lueders, describes as a mix between previous releases, Rust and Isolation.
Lueders’ guitar work is on point; tight riffing (check “Sink”)
and galloping riffs motivate the direcction. One would erroneously assume that
utilizing a drum machine would make for simpler drum patterns. Not so. Drummer,
Mills, remains the thunderous, pulsating foundation of this band’s sound. His
vitality and pure power dictates the emotion and motion of the songs. And the
dancefloor.
Expect Post Human to grab you with its dirge; that filthy,
low tuned guitar tone. The grand, heavy drums balanced with chiming cymbal
tweaks – and the drum machine pipe clangs! - add depth. Props to Putney for his clean
production. Equipped with rumbling bass and riding bass drums, the music lays a
foundation for Pligge’s growling vocals. Add 808 drops and Post Human is akin
to Loyal To The Grave, Sand, Nasty. But here we have a thinking man’s beatdown
band. Pligge’s lyrics – with a title like Post
Human – and a bigger platform like Metal Blade – delve into existentialism,
technocracies, and self-realization. Pligge is wrestling with understanding
pain’s placement in human existence. Crank this to ten and meditate while
picking up change.
RIYL: Ledge, Godflesh, Xibalba, Killing Joke, Voivod, Full
Of Hell, Weekend Nachos, Downpresser
Labels:
2018,
album,
Chicago,
hardore,
harms way,
lp,
metal,
metal blade,
post human,
review,
straight edge,
sxe
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