Bolt


"One thing I´d like to see though is kids being less styleoriented, you know.. spend more money on records and less on nike sneakers. But when comparing now and then, the early days definately had their moments, ´cause everything was so new and raw and everything had to be done ourselves. That was cool."

Your latest record, Behind Obstacles Lies Truth, has been around for some time and I gotta say it’s really powerful stuff. I still love your debut album, but the new record is simply the best you’ve ever done. What are your feelings about it? What has been the response so far?
L: Thanks! We really feel that this album is by far the best record we've done so far. The response to it has been really good. A lot of people who knew our older stuff but also new people, both seem to like the record.

T: Yes, thanks! This one is a record that we´re happy with ourselves. I guess it turned out the way we wanted it to, or maybe even better? The response has been good and we´re thankful for that.

What do you think makes this album different from the other previous work that you have done?
L: I think the record is so much more whole than all of our older stuff. There are a lot more harmony and progress in the songs. And the structures of the songs are more thought out than before.

T: I guess we tried to learn from the mistakes we´d made with our previous releases. Also, we´ve all probably matured musically since our first releases and hear things a bit differently now (otherwise, we´re still the same “kids” as a decade ago. Never grow up, young ´til we die, haha!).

How was it recording the new album? How do you guys work through the process?
L: All our songs come around by jamming at practice. I think we had few of the songs floating around already a little after the Self-Made 7” came out. More seriously we started molding the material for this album in the beginning of 2008. The songs that made it to this record were picked out of 12 that we had done. The whole recording process took from the demo stages to the finished record a lot of hours. First we did the drum recordings in a real recording studio during one day. After the drums all the other instruments and the vocals were recorded at our rehearsal room in different sessions whenever we had the time for it. Our good friend Antti Malinen from Down My Throat recorded the album with us and was a great help.

T: It´s usually always a lot of work. Personally, for me, recording the vocals was at times fun and natural, then during other times it felt like shit. Try to get in the right mood and try to feel what you´re singing in your lyrics when you have a closet size room full of unneeded guys telling you what you need to do, when you know exactly what you need to do yourself and the only person you need in there is the one doing the recording. Then someone decides to bring a 3-year old daughter along to play while you´re screaming you´re lungs out(it was all done in the same room, we didn´t have a recording booth). That´s when it stops being fun and that´s when I lost my nerve. After that things started going smoothly and we got through the process without killing each other.

Your music is often described as heavily NYHC influenced. Is that a fair statement? What are some of the bands that have the biggest impact on your song writing?
T: That´s a fair statement. We take that as a compliment. I mean, we ain´t trying to be nobody else but ourselves, but it´s about the style of music. It´s hard to name certain bands, ´cause there´s so many hardcore and other bands that have influenced us. But we do have alot of respect for the roots, for the originators of this whole thing. A lot of bands today come and go and styles and trends change but “The Age Of Quarrel” and The Cro-Mags never grow old so to speak. It´s still the most relevant hardcore record to date. It worked for me more than twenty years ago, and it will still work after more than twenty years have passed from now. It´s timeless.

L: I guess it's fair to say we're influeced by NYHC. When we started out as a band that was where the main influences came from musically. As for writing songs I think it's more of a combination of all the music we listen to that influence our writing.

What tracks on this album alone have the most meaning to you lyrically?
T: Number 1 for me, without a doubt is definately “Truly Blessed”. It has maybe the most personal lyrics I´ve ever written. It´s about my son and how he came close of dying at birth. That experience changed a lot of things in my life and having a son changed the perspective I used to have on life in general. He´s three years old now and a really cool person. Anyone who has children of their own, can relate to that song. Another one is “Tapia” ´cause it´s a true life story of a boxer Johnny Tapia. He´s experienced more drama in his lifetime than anyone else pretty much. It´s all facts, no fiction. If you´re into survival stories of everyday drama, then check out his book, it´s entitled “Mi vida loca” The crazy life of Johnny Tapia. Then, “Forever Dedicated” means a lot too. It´s our way of thanking the originators of this music that changed our lives and also all the new faces who keep that fire burning.

L: To me I guess it could be two songs. Either the opening track “Always Outnumbered” or the last track “Forever Dedicated”. Because they both reflect very straight forward on everyday life and the music that we love. Which are the core elements of the existence of this band.

As far as I know this is your first album to be released on a vinyl. What does it mean to you? Are you vinyl collectors yourself and if yes what are some of the most important records in your collection?
L: It means a lot to us that we were able to release this record on vinyl. None of us are very fanatic collectors but all of us share the common opinion that vinyl is the best format for a true classic record. Because it gives so much more value to the artwork on the covers and insides not alone because of it's size. It just looks and sounds a lot better than a cd. All of my records are important to me, too hard to pick one.

T: That´s true, vinyl is better in every way. The sound, the graphics, the timelessness. I grew up listening to hardcore from vinyls and cassette tapes, cd´s came later on. So, it means a lot to me that we were able to release this record in vinyl too. I used to be a vinyl collector as a kid but nowadays when I´m an older kid I just buy vinyl every now and then. Some of the gems in my collection could be: Project X 7”(Not the bootleg!), Integrity: In contrast of sin 7”(piss yellow vinyl), A Generation Of Hope –Comp. 7”, Turning Point 7”, Rebuilding –Comp. 7”, Murders (Among Us)–Comp. 7”, Madball: Ball Of Destruction 7”, Cro-Mags: Age Of Quarrel 10” ...to name a few. And of course, not forgetting the Fury of V: Convicted and Condemned 7”, ´cause it´s da shit yo!

Speaking about it, how do you see the future of music distribution, especially when it comes to hardcore? It seems like less and less people are interested in buying cds, the vinyl freaks are still here but the majority of kids are only about downloading music for free. What are your thoughts about it?
L: I think it's a shame that kids don't see that they're belittling the efforts of making records by their actions. I mean it's cool that you can check out a lot of new stuff via internet but people forget too easily that there's much more to Hardcore music than how it sounds.

T: It´s cool that now vinyl sales are up and cd sales down. It seems that atleast some kids have understood the value of vinyl. Downloading hardcore sucks, ´cause hardcore bands really need the support. There´s no big labels backing up hardcore bands. Most bands have to pay releases out of their own pockets. If you want to check out bands, then it´s ok to download if you go and buy the record later on. But you´ve got myspace for that purpose anyway. A hardcore record is about the whole package.

I read a quote from your MySpace profile saying “they are the last band left of their ”era”, the era that has molded Helsinki hardcore into what it is today”. Can you expand on that further?
L: We're the only band from the Helsinki Hardcore scene that started out in the late 90's that's still around and active.

T: The diehards... never conform!

Another quote I found interesting is “the record reflects everything that has taken place in the lives of the individuals, and the maturing scene of their hometown of Helsinki, Finland.” How do you think the scene changed since you first started and how does it affect your music?
L: It's gotten bigger and in someways better. There are a lot more bands and people. And the people are keeping it alive and active for the scene.

T: It´s not just that there´s more people involved. It seems that alot of kids are in this music for the right reasons and not just because it´s cool or the trendy thing of the moment. Kids seem to know the roots and actually seem to listen to the same bands I grew up listening! To me, that´s rewarding to see. One thing I´d like to see though is kids being less styleoriented, you know.. spend more money on records and less on nike sneakers. But when comparing now and then, the early days definately had their moments, ´cause everything was so new and raw and everything had to be done ourselves. That was cool. Then again, there was moments too when we were ready to fold and felt like “is there anyone out there who understand what we´re trying to do and say”. Now it feels like “hell yes these kids know what´s up!”. We just keep trying to do our own thing.

You have been around as a band for about 10 years now; do you still find yourself being influenced by people and bands coming up in the scene?
L: Most definately. As I said before there are more people now. And the new generation that's already doing things on their own, are doing things for the right reasons. Some of the new bands coming up are really inspiring to us too. We wrote the lyrics to the song Forever Dedicated partly for the new generation.

T: If I wouldn´t be influenced by new bands and people, I wouldn´t probably be doing this anymore. It´s really cool sometimes to notice getting the same feelings from something new or old as I did when I was a kid.

If you had everybody in hardcore listening to you, what would you want to tell them?
T: You gotta know where you came from before you go anywhere. Keep doing you´re thing, be honest and be for real.
L: Be real and don't forget your roots!

For somebody just getting into the Finnish hardcore, what 5 classic albums would you tell them to go get?
L: Wow this is a tuff one. Five isn't enough... These are a few of my favourites. Lama: ...Ja mikään ei muuttunut (this is more punk than Hardcore but it's a true classic) Down My Throat: Real heroes die Security Threat: The order On a solid rock: Steal it back St.Hood: For the dead (brand new but bound to be a classic)

T: Yeah, sure it´s hard, but to me all these represent some sort of turning points in Finnish Hardcore.
Pelle Miljoona & N.U.S. s/t (This is Finnish pioneer punk from the year ´77)
Down my throat: Real heroes die
Cold Inside: The Things I Failed To Tell You
St.Hood: Sanctified
Security Threat: The order

You are guys with regular jobs and families so it must be hard sometimes to commit to the band and at the same time live a normal life. Was there ever a time when you thought, “Damn, this sucks, it just takes my time and gives nothing back”? What kept you going on?
L: I've never thought that the band would only take otherwise I wouldn't have kept doing this for so long. The shows and all the good people I've met through this is just amazing.

T: To be honest, there has been times when I´ve felt that way. During those moments all it really takes is one single person coming up to you when you least expect it, and say something like “this one song of yours really helped me out when I was going through some tough times” or that someone can relate to something we´ve done. That´s it, that makes everything worth it. Or then, during those times I´ve just been writing lyrics and making songs for my own personal therapy. It helps.

Any plans for the European tour in the near future?
L: We hope we get the chance play some shows in europe but we don't have anything lined up.

T: Yeah, like you said, we´ve got families to be with and regular jobs to go to. Sometimes that makes things a bit difficult. Sometimes we have to send like 50 SMS messages back and forth just to get 1 practise organized. So, we´d love to tour Europe but if we don´t get a chance to do a big tour, we´ll just try to organize long weekend tours to be able to play all over Europe.

Thanks for the interview. Anything else you would like to add?
L: If you haven't checked us out, go visit our myspace(www.myspace.com/boltstyle). Thanks a lot for the interview! Stay true!

T: Thanks for the interest in us and thanks for the interesting questions. See y´all when we get there. Hardcore lives 0-9!

Check out BOLT at Myspace


Mauricio "Shogun" Rua trains for the Belt UFC 104


Consequences

Band’s name: Consequences

Location: New London, CT. USA
Active since: September 08'

How do you define your overall style?
Beatdown hardcore with a slightly darker sound.

What’s your goal with this band?
We aim to play as many shows as we can, have a much fun as possible and make music kids can dance and fight their asses off to.

What do you have recorded so far?
We're recorded a four track demo that can be heard out on our myspace. We have plans to head into the studio with Eric Arena over at Stadium Sound in Agawam, MA within the next couple months to crank out a solid official release EP. Depending on our funding situation we might do a few more tracks and just do a nine or ten track full length. Check our page for updates and shit about that.

What has the response been like to your music in Connecticut?
I'd say we get an awesome response. You can usually tell by how hard the kids are dancing. Not to say that we haven't played any dud shows but its usually a great response.


How is the scene over there? What is the most popular style of hardcore over there?
The scene in ct was dead for a while but all of us out here are working really hard to bring it back and its becoming a really close knit type of scene, where some shows are almost more like a party than a show, everyones your friends and its just a good time. the most popular style of hardcore? thats tough dude, because everyone's different, the best way to put it would be to say that everyone here fucking loves hardcore, whether it be tough guy, beatdown, straight hxc, or even other stuff like deathcore or grind, its all about the mentality and having fun. if the kids see you having fun playing your music they're more likely to have fun.

So your demo is out and everyone can check it out. What would you say to all the lazy bastards over there who have not done it yet? Why is it worth a listen?
We would just want people to listen to it and take it with a grain of salt, it is a demo after all. its our earlier stuff so its a little less refined and we've matured a lot with our writing now so its going to be pretty different from what you hear at a show or on recordings to come. its worth a listen if you're into really heavy stuff, wanna bang your fucking head or support the unsigned scene.


What's your pick for best hardcore release of 2009 so far?
We might call it a toss up between Relentless by For The Fallen Dreams, Deceiver by xThe Miles Betweenx and Constellations by August Burns Red but who knows what the rest of the year has to offer. i can tell you right now that we're fucking stoked on the new Evergreen Terrace album, Almost Home, and a few of us are straight hating on the new garbage Emmure shit out in august. some of us think musically it's not all that bad. felony could be an awesome album with different production and tones used on guitar.

Is there anything within hardcore scene that sickens you?
Kids who come to a scene from somewhere else and just hatemosh. it's one thing to dance and hatemosh when you're local but when you show up outta nowhere and disrespect a scene it's just uncalled for.

Who are some of the bands from Connecticut people should give a listen?
Spit Your Game, End All Suffering, Black Water Blessing, Jackie Steele, Walk Away, Letters From Kenny, Bella Lagosse

Whats playing on your stereo the most at the moment?
Will: Sleepwalkers by Dead Swans and The Peoples Fallacy by Betrayal.
Ryan: Depths by Oceano, The Peoples Fallacy by Betrayal, The Ills of Modern Man by Despised Icon
Dylan: Relentless by For The Fallen Dreams and Heavy Lies The Crown by Full Blown Chaos. Kevin: Portals by Arsonists Get All The Girls, and Deceiver by xThe Miles Betweenx.
Steve: Jazmynes Lullaby by 7 Angels 7 Plagues, and Decimate The Weak by Winds Of Plague


Since the emo pleague seems to be defeated and is slowly dying out, what do you think are the future dangers hardcore scene will have to face?
Bands like bring me the horizon, new bury your dead, and emmure just trying to make a quick a buck and alienating fans of real hardcore.

Thanx for taking your time. Any last shouts out before we end this ?
We'll just tell all you people to check out our demo, and again check out Spit Your Game, Jackie Steele, And All Was Silent and our boys in AOS (Archaic of Styles). Also thank all y'all at Old School Hate for givin a couple schmucks from ct the chance to talk about how it is. peace!

Consequences at Myspace

Death To False Straight Edge tee by Dave Quiggle


Seventh Dagget in collaboration with Dave Quiggle brings you Death To False Straight Edge t-shirt to satisfy all your militant needs. Click here if you like the design.

Brand new 50 Lions shirts from Six Feet Under Recs



Click here to get to their webstore.

Limited Halloween tee from Seventh Dagger



This is 2009 limited edition HALLOWEEN box. Each box is hand screen printed and numbered to a limited count of 50. Each box comes with one HALLOWEEN SEVENTH DAGGER shirt and contains one surprise CD and 7 inch record. It's first come first serve. Click here to order.

My First Failure - s/t

This is my first experience with this band so I’m not gonna compare this album to their previous work. To me it’s like a band that comes out of nowhere and the only thing I knew about the album before I pushed play is that it had a cool album cover. Well, the music itself is interesting and kind of different from your average hardcore band.


The most enjoyable thing about this album is how they fuse hardcore beats with some rock tunes. I know it’s just being me closed minded, but there are many bands that overuse rock tunes in their music and it can dampen the overall energy of the album. Thankfully, My First Failure successfully use these elements to enhance their music. The compositions are quite busy, combining solid musicianship and creative songwriting frequently embellished with complementary melodies and heavier breakdowns. The foundation of their style is crossover between hardcore and metal, but many other genres are also represented. Of course, there’s nothing perfect and throughout the album there are numerous times when they get too carried away with it which results in songs losing all the punch. I like to hear something I can remember the song by and with tracks like Until Today this does not work well to say the least. Sometimes the band just don’t quite gets it right but these moments are luckily few and far between. My First Failure is way more cooler when they decide to go heavy and that’s when things start to get exciting. The best song on the album is About Hearts with a powerful breakdown in the middle. There is a solid chemistry between the musicians on this track and the band tears it up with some chugging riffs and nice melodies. The mosh part in this one is just the best moment on the whole CD and they should stick more with this type of sound in the future. I mean, I like their willingness to experiment but they need to work on finding a better balance between clean melodies and heaviness.

The overall feeling of the album is rather dark and sometimes even nostalgic, but somehow it’s not that pessimistic as I expected it to. The lyrics are very personal and I think most kids can connect with them. Most of the songs deal with hardcore as a way of life, music, scene, friends and just doing something constructive with your life. Alexa is doing a great job with a solid and powerful vocal delivery. Her style of singing reminds me much of All For Nothing’s Cindy which is not a minus in my book at all. Actually, if I said this album is All For Nothing playing Poison The Well songs minus weak ass clean singing I wouldn’t be that far from the truth. Anyway, the band shows a lot of potential and even if they need to work a little bit more on improving their compositions it’s a compelling and interesting record with a great sound and songs to back it up.


Author: Dloogi

Label: Demons Run Amok
Year: 2009

My First Failure at Myspace




Animal Instinct

"I also think that this is what makes HC so different and unique compared to any other scene I know ... there was never a blueprint for the core. No set of rules to belong to. HC is what YOU make of it!"

First of all, what is it about the NYC hardcore scene that had such an impact on you and the music you play?
I don´t really know... I think it might be the raw energy and heaviness that somehow comes across stronger in the typical NYC sound than in the sound of most other scenes. Plus, they wrote some really good songs that stood the test of time. Some of the bands also played their instruments damn well and came up with recordings that even to this day sound very good. ( Cro-Mags, Leeway, Killing Time) but by the way, each one of us also listens to a ton of other stuff... :-)

What is your favorite NYHC band?
oh man, impossible to answer! Of course, everyone in the band likes the cro-mags, killing time, breakdown, ect... For me personally I might be the Cro-Mags. But I think youth of today had the biggest influence on my life!

Your debut 7” is out now and I gotta say that from what I’ve heard it’s some really powerful stuff. To the people who don't know you, how would you describe the style and sound of your songs?
Thank you! We really wanted to capture that raw feeling of bands like breakdown and killing time! We didn´t start AI to come up with a new sound. We just wanted to play
hard and simple hardcore the way we like it and the way only few bands play nowadays. We wanted to show everyone that there´s nothing wrong with being a traditional hardcore band. If you do it well and with heart, people will appreciate it.

You've called your band Animal Instinct. What does that mean to you? How do you think it’s reflected in the music you create?
It reflects the raw feeling that I mentioned before! We just thought it fits really well to the way we see the band and the music we want to play. There´s no deep meaning behind that name. I think it´s just a good name for a hardcore band. That´s it.

When you're writing new songs, where do you get your inspiration from?
We get our inspirations from other hardcore bands! I’ve been listening to hardcore for many years now. And it still gets me pumped. I listen to a song and might think that I want to write songs just as good as that one. So I sit down and try it. I really can´t see myself playing any other kind of music right now.

What would you say is the main message you try to send through your music?
We are not really a "massage band". We all have our own ways to go through life. But if there is one common thing we try to say, than it would be "be yourself, don´t fake anything" that´s basically it. We didn´t start AI to change the world or make big promises we can´t keep. Focus on your own life and live it as good as you can.

How and when did you guys decided to form a band? Which bands influenced you when you first got together?
Roman, Raphael and myself already played in solid ground together and know each other for many, many years. So when we decided to break up with solid ground (we didn´t have enough time to keep touring, and our other guitar player, David, is now a dad) it was clear that we still wanted to do a band together. So we started AI and asked André to sing. He´s also been going to shows since the early nineties and we already knew that he is an awesome singer. To complete the line up, we asked our friend TC from VALE TUDO to play bass. Basically the initial idea to start AI was in summer ´08. Roman and I were listening to breakdowns "sick people" at my place and we thought that it is about time to start a new band with that same feeling and the same kind of sound like breakdown ca. ´87. I think we did a good job:-)!

What aspect of hardcore makes the scene attractive for you and is the reason you are still involved in it?
I always try to focus on the good side of hardcore. That means, I just try to stay away from all that kindergarden crap on the internet, the message boards, and all that. I don´t really care about the latest trends and which band is the latest hype. I try to ignore all the rumors and just hang out with my friends and listen to that bands I like.

What are your thoughts on hardcore scene nowadays - do you think it’s moving in the right direction? Are there any things that you’d like to change about it?
To be honest. I really don´t care much about it. I know what HC means to me. but I see so many different "sounds" and "lifestyles" that are considered HC that I really lost sight and interest to care about what you might consider HC or what some guy in Germany or in the states might considers HC. I also think that this is what makes HC so different and unique compared to any other scene I know ... there was never a blueprint for the core. No set of rules to belong to. HC is what YOU make of it!

What about the scene in Switzerland? What are some good bands from there that we should know?
The scene over here has always been pretty small but decent. I really like that it is all mixed up and never just metal kids, punk kids, or core kids! You see pretty much the same kind of people at every show. So that´s cool. For example, the last SOLID GROUND show was together with our friends in CATARACT. some bands you might want to check out are : VALE TUDO, FALL APART, DEADVERSE, LIFERIDE, PLAY TO DESTROY, BEGGERS AND GENTRY, SEED OF PAIN, CATARACT, LIFE AS WAR, ECT... they all sound totally different but you should definitely check them out!

How would you describe the hardcore community over there? What style of hardcore is most popular?
I think I just answered this one! There is no typical sound that everyone plays... and that´s good!

Do you remember the first hardcore song you ever heard? If so what was it?
Hmmm ... I’m not quite sure. It might have been the Cro-Mags "alpha omega" record when it just came out. Around ´92 or so. I remember roman and I were still into metal. To this day, it is one of my favorite records!

Nowadays kids seem to want bands to expand the boundaries of the genre more and more and sometimes it feels like nobody can appreciate the good, simple and straight in your face hardcore song. How do you feel about it? What's more important in hardcore to you: musical skills or feel?
It´s all about the feeling man! 100% ! But I totally don´t mind bands that like to experiment a little more than we do:-)! I mean, it´s not that I just listen to BREAKDOWN every day, all day! We all listened to all kind of music and styles. If you start a band, you should just play whatever you like. If it is HC, cool! But if it has a different approach to it, cool too!

What's next for the band? Are there any tours in works or plans for a full length?
Well, we just released our debut ep called "stick like glue". It is out now on TAKE IT BACK records. It´s a new label a good friend of mine and myself are running. Now we just play some shows and see how it goes. I don´t think that we have the time to tour. Since we all have full time jobs, other bands, and stuff. But we´ll see... we already wrote some new songs the we plan to record sometime next winter / spring 2010. But I think it´s going to be another 7" ep.

Than for the interview. Anything you would like to add?
Thank you for your support! Check out some of the other stuff I’m involved in: http://www.myspace.com/takeitbackrec and http://www.myspace.com/liferidehc. LIFERIDE is a brand new band and we will release our debut 12" this winter on our own label, TAKE IT BACK RECORDS. We will have some songs up on our MySpace site soon! It´s Roman (Animal Instinct, Solid Ground) on drums, and Emile (State Of Mind) on vocals ... and ohh yeah. While talking about STATE OF MIND. You should check them out. They are sooooo good!

Check out Animal Instinct at Myspace.

Four hardcore tracks you need to listen

There's so much going on it the world of hardcore nowadays that sometimes it's hard to keep up with all the good music coming out. That's why I've chosen few new tracks from the bands that still don't get as much recognition as they should. I will be trying to post stuff like that from time to time so if you're in a band and are interested in getting some more plays, get in touch. For those that like their hardcore served raw.


Out Of Breath - Has It Come To This



Hailing from the city of Lahti in Finland, Out Of Breath has been making its name recognizable for the fans of heavy hardcore since 2003. As they said it: "The idea of the band was just to play heavy hardcore and have fun, but at the same time to bring something new and fresh to this scene." It's hard to pin down their sound. It's definitely metallic and heavy, but at the same time some faster parts show that they know how do get the pit running in circles. Here's the new, yet unreleased track called Has It Come To This:




Kill For Peace - Eat Some Kilometers


Kill For Peace (France) has been putting feat in emo kids hearts since 2005 with their slick combination of NYHC and heavy breakdowns. The band is going to hit the road September 2010 playing in various places in France, Belgium, Italy, Spain among others. Here's the news track called Eat Some Kilometers:




For My Enemy - My Music, My Weapon


Based in Germanyy, For My Enemy reps DSA crew with their brutal assault of neck slappin beatdown hardcore. Here's one track of their debut album, Welcome To The Dirt. Fasten your seat belt, here comes My Music, My Weapon:




Witchunt - Hominid


Witchunt seems to be highly influenced by Holy Terror bands but they say bands like Black Sabbath or His Hero Is Gone also had an impact on their songwriting. Here's the track called Hominid and it sounds pretty dope if you ask me:


New A389 merch: Day Of Mourning (!), Pulling Teeth, Slumlords...





Reposted from A389:
Crime Scene will be doing A389 merch. They're fast, reliable and have had a long relationship with the label as well as all of the bands I've ever been in. In short, they rule. So with that being said. Check out Series One: Day of Mourning; Oak; Pala; Rot In Hell; Pulling Teeth and Slumlords. Click here to enter the webstore.

Wolf City


Name: Wolf City! (Bryant)

Location: Teno, NV

Active since: January, 2009

How do you define your overall style?
Straight up, fast paced, in your face hardcore.

Whats your goal with this band?
To take it as far as it can. If the kids are into it and the name gets bigger then I will take this band as far as possible.

What do you have recorded so far?
We have a 5 song demo right now (on our page) but were making plans to record a new ep.

“Hardcore is a brotherhood. Straightedge is a brotherhood” - what exactly that means to you and how kids reading this interview can perhaps apply it to themselves?
There's too much drama in the scenes around the country. When I got into hardcore it wasn't the cool place to go but it WAS a place to get away from all of the middle school, high school bullshit. No judgement, who cares what your wearing, where you grew up. It didn't matter. Straightedge is a worldwide movement and its up to the kids involved to keep it going and not destroy it. Its not about going to a show and fighting other straightedge kids. Its about straightedge kids being there for each other.

"10,000 kids, one heart, same blood" -unconquered

So how did the band came about?
Everyone was just kind of fed up with afb and its stress. Not anything else to say really.

Since most of you were also involved in xAFBx, when writing tracks for Wolf City do you feel any pressure to satisfy the xAFBx fans or you see it as a new start and just go on doing your thing?
No pressure at all. To me wolf city is a brand new band. We wanted almost no ties to afb what so ever.

There’s a lot of controversy surrounding straight edge nowadays, especially with the bands promoting it in the so called ‘militant’ way. What do people get most commonly miss-construed about it?
Like every movement there are different lifestyles and beliefs. People get straightedge kids so misconstrued, when in reality 95% of these people are just like everyone else minus being sober. You got the violent, the anti violent and many more different lifestyles inside the straightedge movement. But were all brought together through a common belief.

There’s a lot of home pride in your band. How much of an influence was the city you live in, on your music?
Our name is based off of this town. Our local college football team is the nevada wolf pack. So we figure why not have a band with as much city pride as possible. Its all about having pride in your city. Wherever it is.

What is it about Reno in your opinion that it’s a home to such a strong SxE scene?
The kids here are awesome. As of lately we've been trying to build up the scene so every single kid can come to a show and release some aggression and have some fun. Its not about how hard you are, or how many tattoos you have. And once every kid in this town knows that they are welcome, then we will have an unbeatable scene.

Who are some of the band from Reno people should give a listen?
I don't know links that well but here's some local bands that everyone shouls check out.
Out of reach
Contend
xbarcadiax
The farley overdose
Citizens
Beyond the pit
The airplane game (not hardcore but good stuff)
Crimetime

What are the future plans for the band?
To take it as far as we can. If the kids are into it then we will do whatever is possible with the band.

Anything else you would like to add?
Not really. To anyone reading, thanks for the support and keep the movement alive.

Wolf City at Myspace

CDC - Burn

This time PA’s pride CDC teamed with FWH records to deliver another blast of hardcore brutality. If you’re a fan of metallic hardcore, I’m sure you’ve heard about ‘em so let’s keep the introduction to the minimum and get down the business.


I’m just gonna come right out and say it: Burn is one of the best albums of the year. Vocals drive the album. Brooke occasionally changes his style, he likes to throw in some typical hardcore shouting as well as some rap influenced patterns. Concept wise and lyrically Burn is quite dark, with songs like Ten Amerikan Days or Let It Burn dealing with the socio-political topics, but there are also tracks like Ghost Writer which leave some room for interpretation. The rest of the band pick up the slack and each song is delivered with the sort of maniac aggression, yet there still is a good amount of variety. Burn is complex and destructive and the band throws in a lot of breakdowns as well as moments of melody and fast parts to get the pit moving. They keep it even brutal and aggressive all the way but also vary styles and tempos which make this CD very enjoyable from start to finish. The instruments sound clear and punchy and the guitar riffs are aggressive, yet very catchy. My only problem with this CD is that it’s so damn short and. Sure, it offers a lot of bang for your buck, but still they could have come up with few more songs.

I love every song on this short album, and I have a different favorite daily. It’s engaging and pure nonstop awesomeness. If you look at it as a beatdown album, it could be the genre’s strongest statement of the year. But labels are just labels cause the band has succeeded to create its own identity. Anyway, no matter what you call it, it’s still one of the dopest moments in hardcore this year.

Author: Dloogi

Label: FWH Recs.
Year: 2009

CDC at Myspace




The Modern Age Slavery webstore


This succesful Italian death metal/hardcore act got the webstore up. Click here to check it out!

Few links every hardcore kid should check out




Folks from Seventh Dagger records launched their own blog where you can find some interesting stuff like interviews with Blackout Rage, xUnbreakablex and more... - seventhdagger.blogspot.com

Punk Gang History at Greaserama - Part 1 | Part 2

Straight Edge is no sex, no drugs, just rock and roll - an article on Straight Edge in Metro magazine - Metro.co.uk

Crank Call Fanzine #1 posted at xStuck In The Pastx blog - xstuckinthepastx.blogspot.com

Oi! – The Truth by Garry Bushell - www.garry-bushell.co.uk

Punk Rock Fight Club: Inside the bloody brotherhood of FSU, where violence rules and wearing the wrong T-shirt just might get you killed - Rolling Stone

Racist Rock: Do the right thing [they got it really twisted with Breakdown and Hard Skin] - www.sandiegoreader.com

Toothpaste For Dinner straight edge cartoon


"Free cover-ups when you turn 21."

Check out more of Toothpaste For Dinner cartoons here.

Brooksite


Band’s name: Brooksite

Location: Long Island New York

Active since: Spring 2008

How do you define your overall style?
Beatdown Hardstyle

What’s your goal with this band?
To do something people will remember and of course to keep hardcore alive

What do you have recorded so far?
A 2 song sample in 2008 and the 5 track Reclaim Ep in early 2009, a one new track in early spring 09

I just want to get a little history on the Brooksite. How did you guys come together?
Who is who in the band? Victor and Nick wanted to started a new heavy band, they were both previously in a melodic hardcore/rock band called Galilei, which was pretty successful on long island. Victor plays guitar, Nick plays bass, Lumpy plays guitar, Colin is the vocalist and Corey is the drummer

It’s not hard to notice that metallic hardcore is on the rise nowadays. How do think your band fits into the scene? Why people should give it a listen?
We fit into the scene because were just a bunch of friends in a hardcore band just trying to have a good time and have a true understanding for what hardcore really is, hence why people should listen to us.



Can you tell me about The Reclaim Ep. How would you describe these songs?
Its pretty solid, but we don't really enjoy it too much, Our new shit is fucking HEAVYYY

What has been the response so far?
People like it but they have no idea whats coming

For someone who hasn't experienced you all live, what's to be expected?
Lots of hate mosh hahaha

Who are the main influences on the band - in terms of music, film, politics etc?
Basically bands like Hatebreed, Shattered Realm, Buried Alive, Six Ft Ditch, Earth Crisis and Swear To God

How familiar are you with the European scene? Do you have any favourite bands from over here?
Yeah, that scene rules...Special Move, Cold Hard Truth, Crawlspace, Nasty, Six Ft Ditch, Providence, Redound all great bands

Favourite horror movie?
What do you think about the new Halloween movie from Rob Zombie? I personally love the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre and the original Halloween, i dont know how i feel about rob zombies remake, probably gonna see it soon

Favourite porn star?
Gianna Micheals, Julia Bond, Peter North ;-)

What are the next plans for the band?
Make all new material, put out a split with our friends in King Nine (myspace.com/kingninehardcore)

Any last words?
Would just like to shout out some of our friends bands
KING NINE http://www.myspace.com/kingninehardcore
STRENGTH THROUGH SUFFERING http://www.myspace.com/strengththroughsuffering
SOWN IN TEARS http://www.myspace.com/sownintears
TWO WILL WITNESS http://www.myspace.com/twowillwitness
WOLVERINE http://www.myspace.com/wolverinelihc
WITHOUT REMORSE http://www.myspace.com/withoutremorse
ENEMY MIND http://www.myspace.com/enemymind82
LINE OF SCRIMMAGE http://www.myspace.com/lineofscrimmagebk
thats about it man, thanks for the interview!

Brooksite at myspace.

xLost In Hatex

xLost In Hatex is a straight edge band from Brazil formed in 2007. They just got the Disciplina E Honra Ep out and you should give it a try if you dig bands like Earth Crisis, Obituary, Biohazard and Confronto. The band is working hard to get their name out in international hardcore community and they definitely deserve some more attention.

First of all, how was 2k9 for xLost In Hatex so far? You guys have released a new Ep so I guess there’s no reason to complain?
Wellington: This year was spectacular; we already started launching our EP in January, that's amazing for us. Recording in our city is a very hard work. And we did our t-shirts merch with our own money, this is other big step for us.

Your new Ep “Disciplina e Honra” just came out. What people should expect from this stuff?
Wellington: An album which was done with much respect and dedication, true and real lyrics, this album comes from the streets to the streets.

You guys had the chance to test the new songs live. How was the response so far?
Wellington: The shows are a time of great tension, now after lunching our EP, we play our songs and people sing with us, moshing and representing what hardcore is about. It is very rewarding

Lyrically what kind of themes do you explore in your music?
Wellington: The pride of the path we have chosen to follow and we try to show the distraction that drugs cause to our generation. And in our country we have other big problems as poverty of population associated with alcohol and drugs. We hope kids listening to our songs will stop and think about it.

What bands have been biggest influences on your music and lyrics?
Wellington: Out there is basically xMaroonx, Heaven Shall Burn, Have Heart and here in Brazil we have great bands like Confronto, Condolência and Point Of No Return.

So what it is about straight edge that makes it a lifestyle for you? What was the main reason why you said no to drugs and alcohol and smokes?
Wellington: Yes, SxE is a lifestyle for us, I think the mains reason for all of us was the idea "I can’t only want the change, we have to be it" make the difference, we don’t want to be one more person on the streets with life destroyed by drugs and alcohol.

What would you say about the Brazilian hardcore scene nowadays? It seems to be very metal influenced with a lot of kids following the SxE lifestyle. Would you agree with that?
Wellington: Not much, the Brazilian hardcore still keeps fairly traditional compared to the North American scene for example, but there is the influence of metal bands like Obituary, Slyer and others. But hardcore still on the streets and still have people working for the scene! Here hardcore is not music, it’s a lifestyle.

Any good, upcoming Brazilian bands everybody should check out?
Wellington: Confronto and Fim do Silêncio. You need to hear it!

Big business and hardcore? As a band that chooses to release their first recordings DIY, do you feel hardcore scene can benefit from big labels and media hype?
Wellington: I'll be quite honest, I think bands should benefit from all it can, I do not see problems in a hardcore band joining a major label if you’re still consistent and true to yourself and your fans.

What are your plans for the future with this band?
Wellington: Next month we will be entering the studio and recording another EP, as yet we’re unable to record a full CD. We want to get a record label, and some support outside of Brazil, and if possible play gigs in other countries, it is our dream!

Thanks for the interview, anything you would like to add?
Wellington: I would like very much to thank the opportunity that the -Old School Hate- gave to us, thank you reader who was willing to know us!

xLost In Hatex at Myspace.

Alley Gods - Alley Gods

Just when you thought the whole world gone metal, you discover a band like Alley Gods which kind of give you some hope.


It’s fast and angry but very danceable at the same time. They made sure they packed their songs with the quickest tempos and meanest dance parts. Naturally, the ep has a fantastic old school feel. These guys obviously learned their licks from the early pioneers like SSD, Agnostic Front, Warzone and Minor Threat. The music is heavily rooted in what has been done in the past, yet when you think of it, most of the old school bands nowadays wanna sound like Have Heart and there are few bands who actually deliver that pissed off style of hardcore. The A-side of this Ep contains 4 tracks from 2007, while B-side is taken from the September 2008 recording session and while there is no big difference in style between them, the newer material display the progress the band is making. While still staying true to the concept of fast old school hardcore, their songs got more complex with more hooklines and better delivery. I don’t have a lyrics sheet but with song titles like Food For The Guns or Beers & Queers it seems like off-the-wall jokes and attempts to get under everybody’s skin. Which is nice.

What I like about what Alley Gods are doing is that they are really holding it up for the true pissed off hardcore sound. No bullshit, just a high-energy slap of hardcore.

Author: Dloogi

Label: Poolside Records
Year: 2009

Alley Gods at Myspace


Mobsters and Kiss Your Ass Goodbye tees from Pound For Pound



I've just came acrosss a merch store of Pound For Pound (which happens to be one of my favourite bands) only to discover they've got some nice tees in stock. Click here and check it out by yourself.

Embrace Destruction - Reptilian


Providence - Far Beyond Our Depth

The raw energy and brutal heaviness of the Providence' debut full length made it pretty easy for me to get into them. If you’re feeling beatdown hardcore is getting too generic and predictable, I suggest you give those French moshers a try.


I didn’t pay much attention to their demo recordings but I’ve heard a lot of people telling me good things about them so when I popped the Far Beyond Our Depth CD in, my expectations were high. The album opens with Introblivion, a short and forceful blast of meaty guitar work, pounding drums and double bass action soon joined by insane vocals. When the galloping riffs and drums make way for a neck breaking groove part, you know this shit is for real. Providence is ferocious and brutal as any good beatdown hardcore band should sound, but it has the right groove which puts them ahead of the curve for a lot of bands that follow the same path. It’s laced with that raw hardcore with lashings of heavy breakdowns as well as some slick fast parts for circle pit action. The compositions are quite busy and the music is more detailed and richer than the average. The album is well produced with the guitar, bass and drums all blending flawlessly.

Let me also take a time to appreciate the artwork. The illustrations are done by Brice Besson and are one of the best work I’ve witnessed in hardcore recently. Totally out of the box but staying in line with the title of the album.

There are no fillers on this CD the whole package is tight from the music to the production to the artwork. If you are into this heavy heavy stuff, it is a must.

Author: Dloogi

Label: Rucktion
Year: 2009
Providence at Myspace




No Man Is Just A Number



Number 6: [referring to the chess game] Why do you use people?
Chessmaster: Some psychiatrists say it satisfies the desire for power. 'the only opportunity one gets here.
Number 6: That depends what side you're on.
Chessmaster: [quickly] I'm on my side.
Number 6: [quickly] Aren't we all.
Chessmaster: You must be new here. In time, most of us join the enemy - against ourselves.

Smash Your Enemies - No Turning Back


New Merch: Thick As Blood, Rhinoceros, Kingdom


Also available in long sleeve and pullover hoodie. Click here to place your order.

Down To This



Name: Down To This

Location: 252 North Carolina

Active since: Sept. 08

How do you define your overall style?
Bare bones hardcore ha ha !

What’s your goal with this band?
Keep it real and inspire kids to be real

What do you have recorded so far?
A 6 song e.p. On Faction Zero out this October

You guys are in the process of putting out your first ep or it might even be out already. What’s the deal with that and what people should expect from this stuff?
It's pretty much the top 6 songs from our early setlist. It's kinda diverse from rocking 2 step shit to brutal mosh without being metal.

How would you describe the ep when it comes to the lyrics? What was your main inspiration for them?
It's kind of a mix of us venting about stuff that's happened to us and the state of the fucked up "underground scene" and also there are some anthems about brotherhood and how important sincerity is in a time of trendiness and passing phases in hardcore.

How did you guys meet in the first place?
Me and the drummer and bassist were in a shitty death metal band with nothing going for it and we all kinda looked at each other and knew we wanted to do something more sincere and honest. Our bassist had been jamming with Alan in another project and they wanted to do stripped down, beatdown hardcore and since me, John and Josh wanted out of the band we were in we kinda began writing with Alan and it came together super quick.

Who or what do you feel has motivated you to start this band?
Being sick of all the flavor of the month shit going on in our scene and wanting to take it back to basics.

Is getting your music released by a record label something you'd try to achieve with down to this or you plan stick with the diy approach in the future?
We definitely want to work with a legit label that understands hardcore and also understands that we want to get rewarded for what we put into this. There is nothing wrong with taking this shit as far as possible while staying true to where it all came from. We want to expose all the kids to the way we rock ha ha. But seriously we want to go as far as possible or until we kill each other.

What do you feel the biggest events for hardcore scene were in 2009 so far and which albums do you think really stood out from the rest?
I think the $10 for $10 tour was a huge success in getting real bands out there on tour together and reppin' the real shit to a bunch of kids that may not have ever witnessed anything like that. The new Trapped Under Ice album is very unique and brutal in its own way. The new Death Before Dishonor shows a real sense of individuality and trueness to self in that it mixes punk with oi and metal in a seamless way that just keeps moving forward.

How do you feel about the hardcore music coming from the North Carolina? What are other bands from this area everybody should check out?
The hardcore scene still a very tight knit, underground kinda network that seems to refuse to let the mainstream infiltrate it. There is a huge metal legacy in this state that has reluctantly embraced hardcore so it exists but is still not getting the love it needs. Bitter peace, struck out and conquer me are a few NC bands keepin hardcore alive.


What's your opinion on the European and Asian hardcore scene?
Oh my god I fucking love the London scene! Knuckledust, TRC, and No Turning Back are sick! Any European BFL band owns! Also my boy Hiro's band Loyal To The Grave rep hardcore so hard in Japan. I feel that Europe and Asia support it way better than the states ever will. Also those dudes don't fuck around. They are very protective of the culture form what I've seen.

Thank you for the interview! Any last words?
You are very welcome. It's very flattering that you guys are even interested in a shitty band like down to this ha ha. On a final note I wanna say that this thuggish violence has got to stop at the shows. We should be fighting the bouncers, cops, drug dealers and asshole thugs and not each other. Hardcore kids need to team up to keep it going not kill it by making people afraid to go to shows.

Down To This at Myspace

Matinee: Photographs from CBGB's 1983-1985



"Photographer and film maker Drew Carolan returns to the scene of a series of photographs he made of the CBGB hardcore matinee's from 1983-1985 on the Bowery in New York city."

[Un] titled



UN TITLED is a photography book put together by 6 amateur diy photographers from European scene: Sheep, Marian Magdolen, Monika Chilmon, Jan Urant, Patrycja Gagan and Roman Laris. It should be out this winter and from you can see at their MySpace profile, it’s gonna be some top quality stuff. It will be limited to 500 copies only so don’t sleep on it. Watch for updates on their MySpace profile. It’s a shame that with some many good photographers around there are so few initiatives like this one. Let’s hope that the idea will catch on enough that we'll see some more of such goodness being released in the future.

And All Was Silent

"We remember when Hardcore wasn't a fashion show and bands weren't trying to get famous playing it. For us it isn't and never will be about any of that. We just want to play as many shows as possible and have fun and meet some cool people while we're doing it."

Introduce your band to our readers and tell us where your bands from.
Yo we're And All Was Silent, from Woonsocket Rhode Island. Victor (vocals), Jimmy (Bass), Brandon (guitar), Brian (drums).

How did the band start?
(Brandon) In 2005 Brian originally played guitar, I sang, and we had another drummer. We started out playing high school battle of the bands, and breaking shit.

Can you tell us why No Turning Back is worth a listen, and what should kids expect from it?
(Brian) I think its not your average cookie cutter hardcore cd, its a straight up beatdown record, with mad breakdowns, and sexy 2 step parts.
(Jimmy) Its a good album and after you listen to it your gonna wanna come out to a live show.

With song titles like "Put this in your mouth" and "Better off dead" it seems you're not beating around the bush when it comes to writing lyrics. How would you describe the lyrical content of the cd and where do you find your inspiration?
(Victor) The content is simple and straight to the point, my inspiration comes from everyday occurances and situations. I hate people who talk shit but cant back it up, thats what "Put this in your mouth" is about, and "Better off Dead" is about people who were served a silver spoon and have never changed there mentallity, thinking they are better than everyone else.

So what is your label situation and where can kids buy your EP?
(Brandon) Our EP is self released on our own label, Hit The Deck Records. Its available at andallwassilent.bigcartel.com, interpunk.com, and off our myspace myspace.com/andallwassilentri . Were looking for label support and distro in europe, and as well as a label for our next record which is ready to be recorded early 2010.

You guys are working with japan based Retribution Network, how did this collaboration come about?
(Jimmy) We started selling our EP on ebay, labeling it for fans of Boston Hardcore, a few people in Japan bought it. Shortly after Retribution contacted us requesting a bunch of merch, because kids in japan were asking for it.

"We remeber when hardcore wasnt a fashion show and bands werent trying to get famous playing it" is a quote off your myspace page. So how do you feel about the hardcore scene today? Do you think that media recognition helped to spark a revival of the genre or rather made it just another trend?
(Brian) I think the recognition of hardcore bands is good for a few reasons to bring new kids to shows, theres nothing wrong with that, but in my opinion the genre of hardcore is over used and not understood. Im sick of all these shitty little kids wearing chicks pants, crying into the microphone, having a shaggy haircut, and playing breakdowns and thinking there a hardcore band. Real hardcore isnt about how many people can see your nuts in the pants your wearing, and real hardcore isnt just about breakdowns, which most kids dont understand.

What is the hardcore scene like in Rhode Island?
(Brandon) All the venues got shut down, so now its hard to even have shows. When there is all ages venues shows go well theres a decent amount of kids who still care.

What are the bands plans for the future?
(Victor) Keep doing what were doing, play as many shows as possible, and record a new full length cd. Also we want to play outside the USA, and get fucked up!

Anything else you would like to add?
(All) Check out our stuff on myspace if you like it buy it help us out, we would also like to thank Dloogi for hooking us up with this interview. Shout outs to our boys in RI, MA, and All in Crew in CT.


Boxcutter -The Ill Testament

Polite, sensitive, mature, gentle ...Boxcutter is none of these things and less. The band is known for the hip hop tinges to its music and this is what separates them from your regular hardcore band. To kick things off the CD opens up with Kingz Of Thugz, which is purely rap joint with violin-filled beat where the band is flexing their lyrical skills to give you idea how it is in their world and what type of topics you’re about to experience on the rest of the material.


Things haven’t changed that much since their last album and their delivery is still rugged and raw meaning that they didn’t try to change their attitude to fit the scene. With all the rap going on, the band has struck a fine balance so there’s enough hardcore breaks here to get you moshing. And when they get heavy, they’re at the top of their game! The biggest banger must be Crown Of Righteousness, one of those songs that you'll listen to several times, before you proceed with the rest of the album. James Ismean’s son features on a joint and he kills it! It’s rude and outrageous and packs a lot of adrenaline. I also must mention BLF Soldier and Get Up as songs that seriously get my blood pumping. What I like are the references they make both in hardcore and rap tracks to the classic hip hop acts like Mobb Deep, Biggie, Run DMC, Slick Rick among others.

The Ill Testament is best when it goes in hardcore direction musically, while the hip hop tracks don’t appeal to me that much. It’s peaks are very high, but the rap joints on the album seem to be filler to some degree. That’s the problem, there are some great hardcore tracks here where the band’s delivery is fat and forceful but they are broken up by rap tracks that are formulaic and occasionally boring, very often begging for a faster, more dynamic flow. To my surprise, the hip hop track I’ve found most entertaining is The Recipe, which blends club beats with some gangsta swag and while I’m not much into this type of stuff usually, this song is ain’t that bad at all. I guess it’s because compared to the rest of the hip hop material it’s rather up-tempo and fast. Still, I don’t want these criticism detract from the truly impressive work that this album is. It has it flaws but it doesnt take away from the fact that The Ill Testament is a solid effort.


Author: Dloogi

Label: Goodlife/Screaming Crow
Year: 2009

Boxcutter at Myspace
Screaming Crow
Goodlife


Bad 2 The Bone II documentary





Australian graffiti documentary from the mid 80's. Interesting watch if you're into this stuff. It covers both graffiti artists as well as police officers trying to bust em.

Strength For A Reason/No Turning Back - Split 7"

You can’t go wrong picking up two of the best hardcore bands from USA and Europe on a single piece of wax. And hell yeah, this is some real shit!


Strength For A Reason takesa side A with two songs lifted from their latest full length. Both of them kick ass and what you can expect is that the band gets right to the heart of what hardcore is. There’s really something fucked up with the world today and those guys are seriously pissed off about it. Next comes No Turning Back which probably is the most known European band nowadays. All I can say is that they totally deserve all the attention they’re getting. Not only because they worked hard for it, but just for the fact that when it comes down to it, they know how hardcore should be played. The musicianship is top notch and the compositions are full of aggression and intensity without losing a sense of melody. The lyrics are honest and something every kid can relate to.

Both bands represent everything that epitomizes what hardcore is about. Dope lyrics, powerful music and somehow positive vibe despite the aggressive delivery - everything a hardcore kid could ask for. And if you are a record collector you will surely appreciate the superb artwork of this picture disk.

Author: Dloogi

Label: Filled With Hate
Year: 2009

No Turning Back at Myspace
Worth The Pain at Myspace
Filled With Hate Records at Myspace


"The King of Fighters" is being made into a movie

If you love cheesy kung fu flicks with really bad acting and outdated special effects, you might get stoked that 'The King Of Fighters' game is being turned into a movie. Looking behind the scenes, there's gonna be some real B-rated action extravaganza!


Skarhead - D.F.F.