Episoder
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I thought we needed a palette cleanser after spending over an hour discussing MCR last week, so I'm turning my focus to another seminal New Jersey band, RORSCHACH.
This band holds a level of mystique to me - they're dark and hostile and ugly and there's not too much info about their time, but their legacy stands. The bands they went on to form, and the bands they influenced retroactively crystallise Rorschach as an important hingepoint in the history of hardcore bands.
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Returning champion Andrew Hastings, aka EL PERRO GRANDE, takes over on this episode discussing New Jersey emo-core/horrorpunk/rockstar figureheads, MY CHEMICAL ROMANCE.
Treat this episode as a teaser for the Patreon. In Part 1, we cover Bullets and 3 Cheers, and Part 2, all going to plan, will be on the Patreon soon(ish).
Andrew does NOT come out on this episode.
What if Gerard Way had the same personality as his cousin Joe Rogan?
I confuse Ink & Dagger with You & I again.
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Mangler du episoder?
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BRIDGET HASSED joins the pod to discuss DIY in comedy, the pitfalls of being an "independent artist" and exactly what a pap smear is, in technical terms. Bridget is an MICF Best Newcomer nominee, and for all intents and purposes, the ringbearer at my wedding.
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A deep dive into the story and discography of maybe the best band to have played hardcore music, Philly's BLACKLISTED.
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The first of many solo episodes to come, I recap our first season together, reflecting on the albums we discussed in chronological order, and allowing the dry creek bed that is my brain to occasionally flow with a flash flood of random thoughts. Thanks for coming with me on this journey, thanks for tolerating my choices of albums, thanks for all the high-level autistic fact checking.
4 more years!
Full credit to Jared Driskill for the song BED SHITTER - it's the sound of summer!
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Josh, guitarist from Speed, long-standing Sydney hardcore mover & shaker, Legions frontman, general legend, is in the Dead Ramones studio (my incredibly stepdad-coded office) to talk about Speed's debut album, potentially the defining hardcore record of the year. We talk about having enthusiasm, the globalisation of hardcore, having fun, living your dreams, Kardashians, etc - flute chat is kept to a minimum.
Topics discussed: hardcore.
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Drew Bensley from the esteemed Community Noticeboard podcast returns to discuss last year's best album, Death Is Nothing To Us by the amazing Fiddlehead. We discuss the legacy of Pat Flynn and Have Heart, the place that profundity, poetry and history holds in hardcore, and also in the cultural landscape of 2024, and simply being old in a youth sub-culture. Heavy themes on this one, but don't worry, we say a couple of slurs to break up the funeral dirge. Another great episode, if I do say so myself.
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Part 3 of the COVID series, and very emblematic of that era that I fucked up the year. This is another 2021 album, sorry, but I do believe its effects were seen extensively throughout the following 12 months. I also don't think I can do a podcast series about modern hardcore and not spend an episode talking about the phenomenon that is Turnstile.
Anyway, Shad's back, we talk for too long about Marilyn Manson.
Topics discussed: ribs, removing ribs, what kind of doctor would just remove a person's rib?
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Jamie Kirk from Community Noticeboard rejoins the pod to talk about one of the flagship bands in the metalcore genre and their unexpectedly final record. Lotta drama here, harking back to the messy bitches in Cro-Mags. We talk about the band's legacy, the boring legal drama that capped off a band that util that point had been painfulyl human and chaotic, and the dichotomy of this album being 1) a literary exploration of grassroots political activism and metaphysical, existential transcendence, and 2) a straight up ripper.
Topics discussed: TMNT, inflatable pools, Less Than Jake, Frenzal Rhomb, emo, synth pop, beers.
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We've hit the COVID years, and GULCH represent the start of a new wave of bands taking advantage the internet to continue growing, either through videos of spectacular live sets, meme-able moments & hyped merch. Luckily this album backs up the hype in a real way. It's dark, violent, mysterious and fun all at the same time. Juliet Rae Timmerman, aka the funniest person and no stranger herself to using "weird & offputting" to create excellent entertainment, joins me to go over the mythos of GULCH and their short lived career.
Topics discussed: the lack of imagination in the local comedy scene, why aren't men allowed to be silly?, dogs, Norm.
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Serbian poster boy Aleks Milinkovic joins the pod to discuss the 2019 Knocked Loose record 'A Different Shade Of Blue.' Big episode talking about what seems now like a fork in the road not only for KL, but hardcore more widely. These guys are now playing Coachella and getting nods from Billie Eilish and Dua Lipa - truly one of the biggest heavy bands currently touring, but was that on the cards in 2019? Would it have happened without lockdown? Why do the kids suddenly love extreme music so much?
Topics discussed: girl hardcore, Serbian identity, winter.
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Okay, I do owe Alexei and you all an apology - I scanned through to find the sneezes so I could edit them out, but the episode was already late and I couldn't find them quickly so they stayed in. Sorry. But. Certified Movie Boy Alexei Toliopoulos gives us one of the best episodes yet, talking about Drug Church's amazing 2018 "sell out" record "Cheer." This is interesting in terms of looking at hardcore pre-COVID VS what we have now (the post-Glow On / Speed Supremacy era we're in). Some of the quotes, while totally correct for the time, have not played out to be true. "Selling Out" no longer seems to be an issue for punk and hardcore, and Drug Church are continuing to make exceedingly interesting music and getting paid to do so. I think Cheer was the turning point for these guys - their "JANE DOE" so to speak.
Topics discussed: Birdeater, Dead Hands Dig Deep, The Decline Of Western Civilisation, bank jobs, culture delivered in pill form, stagediving.
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Brisbane's stepson, Ben Hunter, joins the podcast to talk about Long Island figureheads Incendiary. I know everyone loves 'Cost Of Living' but 'Thousand Mile Stare' was really the record that made me turn my head. We talk about how these guys manage to be functioning members of society & living proper adult lives, while still making hardcore music that "means something."
Topics discussed: Crocs, the politics of absurdism, reed diffusers
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Melbourne comic Daisy Webb joins me to discuss the 2016 molotov cocktail that was Trans Day Of Revenge by the band G.L.O.S.S. (Girls Living Outside Society's Shit). The band only existed for about 2 years but in that time did so much to push trans-feminism into the wider consciousness of punk and hardcore, and even mainstream culture. We talk about that era, when both Laura Jane Grace and Caitlyn Jenner came out as spokespeople for the trans community, and the ways in which G.L.O.S.S. both complemented that as well as offered an alternative lexicon to talk about these issues. I really enjoyed this episode - it's not HILARIOUS but we cover a lot of ground - thanks mainly to G.L.O.S.S.
Topics discussed: trains, comedy, being trans.
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Michael Cho joins the pod this week for a sleepy night time episode - this is Dead Ramones After Dark baby, so grab a cognac and settle into your favourite chair. We're talking 2010s straight edge icon Foundation and their final release, the Turncoat EP. In a very distracted, tangential episode, we cover the legacy of Foundation, the shortlived fanfare around them in the early 2010s, as well as the 90s hardcore revival they were at the forefront of.
Topics discussed: the Brisbane comedy scene, hecklers, dead people, NDIS, irony.
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Another red hot episode. Annabelle James is the best, she's so funny, and she dropped in before she heads off to Scotland forever to discuss Bane's final album (although they have been pretty active of late, so we'll see). This record does so much in such a short time, exploring the concepts of grief, both literal and figurative - the weight of 20 years resting on songs that for the most part go for less than 2 minutes. Bane are a very important band to not only the hardcore scene, but the very concept of punk and hardcore universally. They helped define the genre, and it's not often you get to watch a figurehead like this consciously say goodbye.
Topics discussed: Kim Petras, slut eras, driving
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Alice Tovey is a comedian and writer for shows like Gruen and Question Everything. She's also an absolute sweetheart. We psychoanalyse Uncle Hardcore himself, Todd Jones, and get into the virtues of unhinged anger in art. Great album, great episode.
Topics discussed: white guys with dreadlocks, metal as being camp, crunchy noise.
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First episode in Dead Ramones HQ, Hastings is back to deliver his expertise on the state of the Scene (capital S) in 2012. Skinny jeans. Black vans. Grotesque designs on all your band tees. The Ghost Inside. I'm drinking haterade on this episode - I know this band is beloved in certain circles but I really couldn't find any redeeming value in this investigation. But they were a big deal, and I think it's a good snapshot of what the time period looked like.
Topics discussed: skinny jeans, Attack Attack, the various Destroy All Lines club nights around Australia, fingering, chemically straightened hair.
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Sophie, the other half of the genius Basecamp podcast, joins us this week to discuss everybody's favourite album, Shed by Title Fight. I thought Shed was commonly acknowledged as THE TF album, turns out it's actually Floral Green, but I don't like that one as much. I really think Shed did a lot to push the genre forward and it's imprint on the scene can still be felt today. Every new band either sounds like Title Fight or Trapped Under Ice.
Topics discussed: Pilates, Nicola Lombardi, film, Tom Hardy.
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Nic is on the pod! Cohost of the amazing Basecamp podcast, stand up comedian, lawyer - what can't she do!? Nic brings some awesome insights and a good lexicon of influence to discuss Ceremony's third, and arguably best, full length record. A great way to kick off the new decade of hardcore, with an album that in equal parts looks back on it's heritage, and forward to whatever comes next.
Topics discussed: poo, houses, teeth, a billion dollars.
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- Se mer