Old school american punk rock thread. Looking for more stuff in the vain of Dead Kennedys and Reagan Youth. Recs would be appreciated! Otherwise lets just share and discuss.
American Punk
check out the Child Bite album from last year Negative Noise
Haven't listened to those bands OP but The Exploding Hearts are really underrated
You havent listened to the Dead Kennedys? They're the Beatles of punk
gas bait
Also this
Minor Threat, Bad Religion, Millions of Dead Cops (MDC), Black Flag before Rollins, Gorilla Biscuits, T.S.O.L's first EP, Faith/Void, Dr. Know, literally anything out of the hardcore punk era really.
You only looking for American bands?
Because you will probably like subhumans (U.K)
can anyone reccomend me any recent punk albums.
see
Brutalism-IDLES
Expire - With Regret
No Turning Back - No Time to Waste
AYS - Worlds Unknown
More like emo revival, but if you're into that shit Basement - Promise Everything
Free Throw - Those Days are Gone
Fine example of The Ramones meets The Stooges meets early Cheap Trick.
Guitar player introduced the world to Soul Asylum and The Replacements after band broke up and he started Twin Tone records.
If you think Jello Biafra is a good vocalist then you'll LOVE his singing style!
Gimmie some punk as fuck music to compliment my counter-culture of right wing red pilling of the regressive left.
Help me out here guys what was the better album?
Inflammable material imo.
Inflammable Material but both of those are British bands
Jason Aldean
>88
Wanna hear a band with some interesting history?
Fight For Freedom (FFF) hailed from California, taking their name from the Nazi Punk street gang from San Fernando Valley / North Hollywood. All members on this demo were purportedly affiliated with the gang, and the original vocalist Richard Yapelli, Jr. was the group's spokesman and founder. He didn't perform on this demo, but several songs featured here, including "March of '42," were performed live. Their glory days came to an end in 1985 when a 15-year-old FFF associate named Mark Miller was fatally shot outside of a Van Nuys nightclub.
Despite FFF's avowed Nazism, the gang formed ties with Chicano groups. In fact, Yapelli started his gangsta days with Sol Trese and became the first non-Hispanic to be successfully initiated into the gang.
The music here is quite like their peers, complete with melodic riffs that still pack quite a bunch:
youtube.com
youtube.com
Fun fact: one of the gangs in Lost Angels was based on Fight For Freedom.
More info:
dirtcitychronicles.blogspot.com
Bump
God bless this old punk soul