Sonntag, 12. Februar 2012

HANGIN' TOUGH new shirts

And here they are with another ltd. run of shirts. Zeltinger knows! BE QUICK!



Available in S, M, L 12 € each.

And there are a few of the following shirts left in size S for only 5 €




And to top it all off this rager is still available in XXL which actually fits more like a XL and its also only 5 € !! What are you waiting for???



HIT THE HANGIN' TOUGH STORE!! NOW!!!

NEW BREED '89 Tape -> 2011 Vinyl



Here we go with some copied texts concerning the Vinyl release of 1989's NEW BREED Tape compilation:

The Endless Quest had this to say:

Today's entry is an old New York hardcore compilation which (for those of you who don't know) was originally released way back in 1989 when Chaka Malik (singer of BURN) and some other dude released a TAPE compilation of some up & coming New York hardcore bands. The comp was called 'The New Breed', a name that was to hint that these bands represented a new generation of kids set to take over the scene. Apparently 700 of thee tapes were sold, and ever since this comp has always been regarded as a classic, even despite having never been released on a 'proper' format (at least that's how I see it - tapes just don't count in my book). Well anyway, fast forward 22 years and these dudes have decided to finally release it on a proper format. Oh yeah, and they've also put it out on CD too for some weird reason.


Follow the link above for pictures and a little more info on the release.




Here are the liner notes from the New Breed blog:



 At its best, music can perfectly capture a moment in time, a location, or the life and surroundings of its creators. In this way, the New Breed tape compilation was completely successful. Like many classic recordings before it which captured the essence of their time, place, and the feeling of the conditions under which they were created, the New Breed compilation captured the New York City of the late 1980s.

   New Breed was released on Urban Style Records, a name that perfectly reflected the music and the environment in which it existed. Created in a Do-It-Yourself cut-and-paste style and heavily influenced by graffiti art, the look of the compilation was a far cry from the increasingly commercial “product” that was being churned out by bigger record labels looking to find a “next big thing". This was not a compilation made by and for middle-class white suburban teenagers; it was an expression of the lives and experiences and surroundings of young people from all of NYC’s boroughs, of many different socioeconomic backgrounds, ethnic groups, and viewpoints. This was a new generation that had grown up in NYC’s unique melting pot, with all of its cultural achievements and all of its social maladies. This was a generation who had grown up as witnesses to rampant homelessness, the plague of AIDS, the crack-fueled crime explosion, simmering racial tension, gentrification, and unprecedented Wall Street greed, all set against a backdrop of later-Cold War America.

   National politics had become less heated with the far less charismatic and controversial George Bush replacing Ronald Reagan, and global politics seemed to be heading in a more positive direction with an end to the Cold War in sight after the Soviet Union adopted a less oppressive stance under the policies of “glasnost” and “perestroika” adopted by Mikhail Gorbachev, leading to the collapse of the Eastern Bloc in Europe in 1989 and the demolition of the Berlin Wall. With Cold War tensions decreasing, people’s worries turned toward their more immediate surroundings.

   With the increased de-institutionalization of mental patients in the late 1970s, many mental patients (some of whom had been subjected to such brutal treatments as lobotomies and electro-convulsive therapy) ended up living on the streets of large cities like NYC, often alongside Vietnam veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. The crack cocaine explosion of the mid-1980s had drastically increased the problem, leading to unprecedented numbers of street people and the resultant crime associated with that problem, with some of the homeless resorting to crime, while many other homeless people frequently became the victims of violent crime.

  The increasing amount of homelessness and crime led to city government (in cahoots with landlords and land developers) to increasingly gentrify NYC. While few would argue that NYC didn’t need cleaning up, the way gentrification was used, with no regard to the inhabitants of the city and with the obvious cynicism of using it simply as a tool to make profits for a small group of people, led to increasing resentment and protests, eventually culminating in the Tompkins Square Park Riot in the summer of 1988.

  Racial tension was always lurking beneath NYC life, often rearing its ugly head in violent ways and even receiving national attention with the Bernhard Goetz subway shooting in 1984, the Howard Beach racial attack in 1986, the Tawana Brawley rape accusations in 1987 that launched the controversial Al Sharpton into the national spotlight, and in 1989, the racially-charged Central Park Jogger case and the shooting of Yusef Hawkins in Bensonhurst. 

   As is common in all cultures, music reflected these times. But much of the New York hardcore scene, which had existed for a decade already, was not adequately doing its part anymore. Many of the older New York hardcore bands had broken up, become side-tracked by drugs, or had fallen under the influence of would-be music business svengalis and their dreams of attempting to cash-in on the then-lucrative heavy metal scene. 

   With some of the older bands losing touch with the younger members of the scene, that void had been filled by the straight edge “youth crew” sub-genre of bands. Armed with a philosophy of sobriety and clear-thinking, their message was undeniably powerful and impossible to ignore. But despite being well-meaning and promoting a positive message of unity, their message was often misunderstood or came off as excessively self-righteous and judgmental to many, in some ways having the exact opposite effect of its intent and leading to a lack of unity, as many viewed them as exclusionary. When members of prominent youth crew bands began embracing Krishna Consciousness, it brought about an even larger split. 

   Skinheads, always a significant part of the New York hardcore scene, were being marginalized by society due to the behavior of some of that community’s most extreme members. But despite the negative image of skinheads (spread primarily due to the Nazi skinhead brawl on the Geraldo Rivera Show in late 1988) which had turned them into a new societal boogeyman, NYC skinheads were just as likely to be Latino as white, and were made up of all races.

   Amid this, a new generation of bands emerged and were documented on the New Breed compilation. Despite their youth, they had experienced the rapid cultural changes of NYC in the 1980s and their music reflected this. Bonded together by friendship, common experiences, and a desire to express themselves musically, they unknowingly created music that would collectively capture the essence of late 1980s NYC. Their lack of self-consciousness in what they were creating, combined with the unique set of societal, cultural, and musical influences they had grown up with is what enabled them to create such a powerful document of a time and place. More than two decades later, the New Breed still resonates with all the power and energy of its time, and all that NYC was, is, and will be.

-Brian DeMoa, 2011

You can buy the double LP here. They still advertise this as a pre-order which I think it's not anymore as the photo below from Flanders Fury proves. But the following info is still valid:

Bands on the compilation: ABSOLUTION, OUTBURST, LIFE'S BLOOD, BREAKDOWN, BEYOND, RAW DEAL plus 15 other rocking NYHC bands from that golden era.



GIVE GIVE GIVE GIVE GIVE & GIVE

Give are one of the best current bands in hardcore. If you already have any of their vinyl releases and want to listen to those songs on your iPod you should follow the link to their bandcamp. The band was so kind to include free downloads with all their releases. And if you want to fill those holes in your collection they even point you in the right direction for that. Now download and buy that crucial shit.

GIVE GIVE GIVE
GIVE GIVE GIVE
GIVE GIVE GIVE

Go Straight Edge! This pig might help.

Here's something that might help you go Straight Edge. Put every cent you would usually spend on smokes, dope, alcohol or whatever other bullshit you intoxicate your body with in this piggy bank and do the math. haha.


What a positive change indeed.

Neurosis represses

Neurosis are a totally awesome sonic and visual experience. So accordingly the latest re-issues of the "Souls at zero" and " Enemy of the sun" LP's on Relapse seem to be another visual and aural treat.


If you didn't already you can order them directly from the label. Or probably get it from your favorite local record store.

Also the Sovereign EP which was the first release on the bands own Neurot Recordings was overhauled.



The artwork got updated by Aaron Turner and the band added a previously unreleased fifth track. Unfortunately the re-issue is only available on CD.
But you can pick that one up along with the Relapse Vinyl Re-issues from the bands own webstore.

the PELICAN is going to fly again

According to Southern Lord a new Pelican 12" will be released soon. All I can extract from the labels website is the name of the record: Ataraxia / Taraxis. So your guess is as good as mine. If you have more info feel free to share in a comment.

Also they are going to tour europe again:


Apr 6, 2012Dunk!festivalBE, Zottegem
Apr 7, 2012The GarageUk, London
Apr 8, 2012VuduUk, Birmingham
Apr 9, 2012Brudenell Social ClubUk, Leeds
Apr 10, 2012StereoUk, Glasgow
Apr 11, 2012Ruby LoungeUk, Manchester
Apr 12, 2012The HauntUk, Brighton
Apr 13, 2012The CoolerUk, Bristol
Apr 14, 2012Roadburn FestivalNl, Tilburg
Apr 15, 2012La MaroquinerieFR, Paris
Apr 16, 2012JubezDE, Karlsruhe
Apr 17, 2012Bad BonnCH, Dudingen
Apr 18, 2012MagnoliaIT, Milan
Apr 19, 2012FeierwerkDE, Munich
Apr 20, 2012CassiopeiaDE, Berlin
Apr 21, 2012NosturiFIN, Helsinki

my LOVE for them is still BURNING

One of my favorite bands shared some news a while back so here I am updating all you people that are even more behind than I am. haha.

Burning Love finished recording their follow up LP Rotten Thing To Say and it's due out in May on Southern Lord (UK), Daymare (Japan), Resist (Australia)
Seems like I have to put in more than one order.
Also because they announced a new 7" Karla b/w Love's my only crime (Laughing Hyenas) scheduled to be out this spring on High Anxiety who also had Burning Love featured on their latest compilation LP City Limits.

US Americans and Canadians might get lucky in april when they play a few shows with Loma Prieta & Get Some on the Converge tour:
04.03.12 Syracuse NY @ the lost horizon
04.04.12 Ottawa ON @ ritual
04.05.12 Montreal QC @ la tulipe
04.05.12 Toronta ON @ mod club

You can see the orig. BL post here.

Inherit xxx Straight Edge on tour

Yo everybody,
things have been crazy over here and they still are. I needed some downtime next to working a lot and the past holidays so I watched way too much tv series. Dexter, Boardwalk Empire, American Horror Story, Six Feet Under, The Walking Dead and currently Sons Of Anarchy. All quality series if you're into that kinda stuff but now let's get back to business as uge.

Here is the link to the Facebook event page for Inherit's Show with Get It Done! tomorrow. Unfortunately I'll be busy with work again but you should really go there. Support two awesome bands and a crucial dude who put that show together.

If you for some reason cannot see the event page or are to lazy to hit the link here's the info on the location:
Bunker in Sterkrade (Los Brujos), Eugen-zur-Nieden-Ring, Oberhausen, Germany doors are supposed to be at 7:30pm

For a sound sample and more info on their tour that started yesterday and is stationed in Hasselt today hit this. You don't wanna miss!!