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Tag Archives: T.S.O.L.

Jack Delauge

Jack port Delauge is among some titles utilized by singer Jack port Grisham as some sort of multipurpose masquerade during his years using the Western Coast grindcore music group T.S.O.L. In 1981, Grisham was Alex Morgan around the T.S.O.L. premiere launch, and he also performed under other titles, including Jack …

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Alex Morgan

The countless socially disruptive activities of Jack Grisham have already been pretty well documented, which range from singing in grindcore and punk rock bands to working for governor of California in 2004. A far more obscure but non-etheless compelling facet of his devious character involves what is apparently nothing significantly …

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Eat Skull

Using a maxed-out and skuzzy lo-fi sound that could qualify them within the arbitrarily named “shitgaze” genre — along with likeminded bands Times New Viking and Psychedelic Horseshit — Eat Skull incorporated more of a hardcore method of the sound formula than their contemporaries if they began in 2006, founded …

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The Bulemics

Although punk is definitely known because of its in-your-face attitude, not absolutely all punk bands want in fighting the energy. Punk has already established its sociopolitical agitators — the Sex Pistols, the Clash, as well as the Deceased Kennedys had been among early punk’s even more famous protest rings — …

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Adolescents

Among Southern California’s best-loved hardcore rings, the Children helped establish the blueprint for Orange State punk, along with Agent Orange and Public Distortion. Although their music was the many standard-issue from the three, the Children’ blazing energy and quintessential teenage snottiness provided them an instantaneous reference to their market, and …

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45 Grave

.45 Grave was a Los Angeles-based death-rock band whose macabre, morose and sometimes amusing music helped to obtain the goth-rock genre off to its shambling life. In 1985, after getting a fair offer of interest via gloom-ridden gigs and many depressing produces, the band split, with Paul B. Cutler and …

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Books Lie

Brooklyn’s Books Lay troll through the grimy underside from the hardcore scene, fusing the venom of T.S.O.L. using the strength of Gravity Information rings. The sound is usually eager but relentless, just like a derailed subway car careening toward the finish of the collection. Created in 2000 by four children …

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Bl’ast!

Originally formed beneath the moniker M.A.D. (Mutually Guaranteed Destruction, that’s), Bl’ast! hailed from Santa Cruz, California, and would become labelmates with the music group they were set alongside the many: Dark Flag. M.A.D., shaped in 1982 by Clifford Dinsmore on vocals, Steve Stevenson on electric guitar, Dave Cooper on bass, …

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Helstar

Helstar was among America’s better kept rock secrets through the entire 1980s, composing a string of consummate LPs that earned the music group many critical accolades, but didn’t sell off in large amounts. Probably, the band’s continuous dealings with unreliable unbiased labels, coupled with incessant workers turnover, were the principle …

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Good Riddance

Great Riddance is really a straight-edge hardcore punk music group from Santa Cruz, CA. Led by vocalist Russ Rankin, the band’s longtime lineup included guitarist Luke Pabich, bassist Chuck Platt, and drummer Sean “SC” Retailers. Though it was shaped in 1986 by ex-Fury 66 member Rankin being a tone of …

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