1. Ride Your Ride 2. Late Arriving Rock Dudes 3. Stretched Too Thin 4. In the Four Years to Come 5. Every Minutes Sucker* 6. Tornado Season Finale 7. Better Still if They Don't Know* 8. Piss Alley 9. You Will Wish Me Dead 10. Blood Relative
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Hoover broke up after returning from a US tour, at a time when they were probably at the height of their popularity. They split leaving a number of new songs unrecorded and many people disappointed. Ex-Hoover members Fred Erskine and Joe McRedmond continued to play together, and joined by Vin Novara, formed a new band: The Crownhate Ruin. They played their first show barely two months after Hoover's demise. The band's music moved into a darker area, with more challenging arrangements and time-signatures, and while they didn't immediately connect with some of the Hoover fans, The Crownhate Ruin began to develop its own following through touring and the release of a single and later a single album on Dischord in early 1996. After Crownhate Ruin, Erskine moved to Chicago and played in many more projects, including June of 44.
1. Power of Speech 2. Penny for Your Thoughts 3. Radio Silence 4. Transmit Failure 5. An Hour Too Late 6. Motion Sickness 7. Throw Spark 8. Sequence 9. Give Us This Day 10. Line Breaker
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Four Hundred Years were not merely a band, but a phenomenon. A force of emo/hardcore intensity that began in Tucson, Arizona, following the end of Groundwork, they eventually migrated to Richmond, Virginia. Four Hundred Years amassed a large, frenzied, and rabid audience. Intelligent and intricate with a perfect blend of melody and dissonance in all the right places, Four Hundred Years had unparalleled abilities to captivate their listeners and turn them loose on an unsuspecting music world. Alternative Press noted, "Combined with the weight of their political views, the tension of Four Hundred Years' music is simultaneously a catharsis and a call to arms."
Four Hundred Years toured Europe, Japan, and America numerous times and played with such notables as Fugazi, Frodus, Sleepytime Trio, and many more. Upon the completion of recording The New Imperialism, their third full-length, they played four final shows on the east coast and disbanded.
Four Hundred Years was originally Ash (drums), Dave (guitar), Erin (bass), and Daron (guitar). Their second and final line-up was Ash (drums) Dave, Bull (bass, formerly of Policy of Three and Montag), and Daron. Currently, Daron and Ash are working together in a project named Delegate.
01. Vidas [1:19] 02. Nada Cambia [0:55] 03. Doble moral [0:50] 04. Querido dirigente [0:45] 05. Mahdi Television [0:36] 06. Disolvente [0:51] 07. Las barras siempre ganan [0:52] 08. Oswaldo [0:25] 09. De la escuela a la miseria [0:48] 10. Otro dia [0:46] 11. Afiliado [0:56] 12. Ciudadano de segunda [0:42] 13. No tengo dios [1:28]
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Sell Our Souls is really happy to announce the debut release for GULAG, new band from Barcelona, featuring people from E150 and HZERO. After cutting their teeth in previous bands such as E150, HZERO or SHODA, the lost souls in Gulag have taken on the classic legacy of furious, no-nonsense ugly hardcore in the vein of BORN AGAINST or RIPCORD, and given it the beating of it's life, drawing on more contemporary influences such as TALK IS POISON or DEATHREAT. A furious and out of control cocktail, totally devoid of cliché, pretentiousnes, pose, or marketing schemes. Fucking hardcore.
01. In Turn All Fear [4:29] 02. Mancanical [2:09] 03. Profit Sea [2:16] 04. Hear Not [2:22] 05. Crusaders And Zealots [2:59] 06. Blind Walk [3:46] 07. Rhythms Of Sane [1:51] 08. Nothing News [1:42] 09. Over Ruled [1:47] 10. Vision Of Insane Hope [5:05]
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More pummeling material from this ex-Damad unit. Expect a wide array of Victoria's vocals, from those unbelievable growls to cackled midrange sneers, higher shrieks, and eerie singing portions.
There's definitely still an element of that sludgy sort of plodding rhythm sensibility, but a lot of the riffing here is a bit faster and more discordant.