Hardcore Started Heavy Metal: Social Distortion, Sick of It All, Dillinger Escape Plan & More

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  • Опубликовано: 11 июл 2024
  • American hardcore's emotional impact on the history of heavy music is even more significant than its sonic signature. Artists including Mike Ness of Social Distortion, Lou Koller of Sick of It All, Ben Weinman of Dillinger Escape Plan, Jesse Leach of Killswitch Engage, Jess Pimentel, Brian Fair of Shadows Fall and Tommy Buckley / Kirk Windstein of Crowbar reflect on "the blues" of our time. Subscribe on RUclips: bit.ly/30kEKLG
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Комментарии • 19

  • @VincentCola-fb8pn
    @VincentCola-fb8pn 3 года назад +1

    Outstanding overview of the Hard Core scene over the years. As always Christina, you rock and Rule!

  • @refuzed74
    @refuzed74 3 года назад

    Metal is always my 1st love, but when I discovered Hardcore it was this who I am and my family grew worldwide.

  • @BigDemz
    @BigDemz 3 года назад

    I got to interview and chill with Tommy Buckley, he is a super chill dude. NOLA through and through! Also an amazing drummer!

  • @netrioter
    @netrioter 3 года назад +5

    Nobody likes to admit it but S.O.D. and Billy Milano were important to the NYHC scene.

    • @NotAlrightSpider
      @NotAlrightSpider 3 года назад

      net-rioter Absolutely.

    • @AGC173
      @AGC173 3 года назад

      SOD was thrash that low key racists loved. Use to go to atleast one hxc show every week for years and never saw one sod shirt 🤣

  • @ObsidianContraption
    @ObsidianContraption 3 года назад

    I think biohazard and LOA were important bringing hardcore into the video era on the HBB.

  • @ErikIversen
    @ErikIversen 3 года назад +1

    I had to laugh at Mike Ness' comments. It's so true that many "punks" are the most conservative people when it comes to music and fashion. To me punk is an attitude of integrity and inclusiveness. Yes, we need hardcore and heavy music now more than ever. Thank you for another well thought out video!

    • @DapperHesher
      @DapperHesher 3 года назад

      Infuckingdeed. It's really about the attitude. That's the REAL punk part of it. The aesthetics were always bullshit. As a metal dork, I never got too much into punk/hardcore that wasn't fully "crossover" stuff (Biohazard, Suicidal, etc.), but honestly, the most punk thing I still listen to on the regular is Warrior Soul, who other than a few songs, never really sounded all that punk... they never really got on board with metal either (they bordered more on hard rock, especially at the time), but Kory Clarke's lyrics and attitude were so on point. That shit was real, empathic, angry, sociopolitical, and reflective of the times we live in.
      I agree that that's lacking. It's lacking everywhere. (Popular) hip hop REALLY don't have much to say about the actual holistic state of things right now. It's hollow. We live in fucked up times. I don't want distracting songs. I want some catharsis. Some semblance that other people are fucking pissed too. We need to bring it back. I don't care what genre it's in.

  • @madness97able
    @madness97able 3 года назад

    I love S.O.D., Prong, and Nuclear Assault. I saw Sheer Terror at Firehouse 13 in Providence, Rhode Island. Agnostic Front and Madball kick ass too! I think D.R.I. was a huge influence on this whole sound! What a cool episode! Christina, you're gorgeous!

  • @vonslagle
    @vonslagle 3 года назад +1

    Misfits “Earth AD” and Battalion of Saints “Second Coming” were amazing Crossover albums not mentioned

    • @TheVoidwithChristina
      @TheVoidwithChristina  3 года назад +1

      Sick, we should make a comments-based playlist of those not mentioned! This is basically just me putting together conversation threads that aligned that I had in my archives :)

    • @harryradley
      @harryradley 3 года назад

      Aw Second Coming. No one ever mentions Battalion of Saints. Lost that album somewhere along the way, really need to get it back, that was killer.

  • @AGC173
    @AGC173 3 года назад

    Real hardcore is a family that accepts in the broken and the black sheep. Sick of it all, Madball, Discharge, Terror, H2O, Blood for Blood...

  • @ricardorodriguez6456
    @ricardorodriguez6456 3 года назад

    This is OBVIOUS

  • @ianhastings3711
    @ianhastings3711 3 года назад +1

    It the other way around. Metal came first.

    • @TheVoidwithChristina
      @TheVoidwithChristina  3 года назад +1

      Definitely came first timeline-wise if you're tracing it back to Sabbath, but these artists just saying that hardcore played an enormous role in their work, attitude and approach despite them being technically heavy metal artists.

    • @ianhastings3711
      @ianhastings3711 3 года назад

      @@TheVoidwithChristina yeah hardcore and metal have always had that symbiotic relationship. I've always loved how everything started crossing over in the 80s it made everything that much more interesting.