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This Wreckage

Hardcore History w/ Jarrod Shanahan, Dave ToolUsingMammal (Bonus Preview)

This Wreckage

Sean KB and AP Andy

Arts, Music

4.2970 Ratings

🗓️ 23 April 2021

⏱️ 11 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A free-form discussion on the history of hardcore, from its origins in the '77 punk explosion in LA, NY, DC, Boston, and Canada. We talk about our experiences in the scene and the various class backgrounds and political sentiments at play. Discussions include: anti-racism, youth crew, straightedge, veganism, political hardcore, if anarchopunk really exists, the concept of "unity", and why hardcore singers keep saying "all lives matter" at their reunions.

For the full episode support the show at Patreon.com/TheAntifada

Including tracks from: John Joseph, Pg.99, Slapshot, SSD, Gorilla Biscuits, Catharsis, and Twisted Thing

Follow Jarrod's writing at Hard Crackers

And follow Dave on Twitter

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

It's history.

0:01.0

See, I was a foot soldier for the Hari Krishna mob, a member of the Swami organized crime family.

0:08.0

Hardcore history.

0:11.0

You have to let us know that you think they are shit.

0:17.0

The way they're only

0:18.0

my own is real.

0:20.0

Thanks for joining us for the first episode of Hardcore History.

0:24.0

Our guests today are Dave, Tool Using Mammal,

0:28.0

a regular in our Discord and our Twitch conversations.

0:31.0

Thanks for joining us, Dave.

0:33.4

Thank you.

0:33.9

And we have Jared from Hard Crackers.

0:36.6

What's up?

0:38.8

Well, can we come up with a material theory

0:41.5

of why Hardcore emerged when it did and to perform that it did.

0:45.6

I think that there's three distinct forms that we have to talk about that are limited to three different regions and this is my super

0:58.5

local North American United States telling of the story so please jump in and make it more

1:06.8

international but there was there was New York and then there was LA.

1:15.0

And I guess I could throw Boston in there to appease the listeners.

1:20.0

But Boston and DC actually, I think think had a lot in common culturally in terms of the

1:26.6

demographic makeup of the folks who were making that music. And so I mean New York

1:32.2

I think was in a lot of ways this kind of lump and

...

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