- Thrashcore
Infobox Music genre
name = Thrashcore
bgcolor = crimson
color = white
stylistic_origins =Hardcore punk ,D-beat
cultural_origins = Early 1980s,United States
instruments = Vocals -Electric guitar -Bass guitar - Drums
popularity = Underground
derivatives =Crossover thrash Grindcore Powerviolence
subgenres =
fusiongenres =
other_topics =Skate punk Thrashcore (also known as fastcoreInterview with Max Ward, "Maximum Rock'n'Roll" [http://www.625thrash.com/interviews.shtml] Access date: June 19, 2008] ) is a fast tempo subgenre of
hardcore punk that emerged in the early 1980s.Felix von Havoc, "Maximum Rock'n'Roll" #219 [http://www.havocrex.com/press/article/1/52] Access date: June 19, 2008] Thrashcore is essentially sped-uphardcore punk , with bands often usingblast beat s.Interview with Max Ward, "Maximum Rock'n'Roll" [http://www.625thrash.com/interviews.shtml] Access date: June 19, 2008] Songs can be very brief, and thrashcore is in many ways a less dissonant, less metallic forerunner ofgrindcore . Like hardcore groups, thrashcore lyrics typically emphasize youthful rebellion orantimilitarism . The genre is in some ways aligned with skateboarder culture.Interview with Max Ward, "Maximum Rock'n'Roll" [http://www.625thrash.com/interviews.shtml] Access date: June 19, 2008]Terminological ambiguity
Thrashcore is often confused with
crossover thrash and sometimesthrash metal .Felix von Havoc, "Maximum Rock'n'Roll" #198 [http://www.havocrex.com/press/article/1/20] Access date: June 20, 2008] "Powerviolence: The Dysfunctional Family of Bllleeeeaaauuurrrgghhh!!". "Terrorizer" no. 172. July 2008. p. 36-37.] Further confusion is added by the fact that many crossover bands, such as D.R.I., began as influential thrashcore bands.Felix von Havoc, "Maximum Rock'n'Roll" #198 [http://www.havocrex.com/press/article/1/20] Access date: June 20, 2008] The term thrashcore is of recent vintage but dates from at least 1993. [As Max Ward writes, "625 started in 1993 in order to help out the local Bay Area thrashcore scene." cite web | author=Ward, Max | year= 2000| title="About 625" | work=625 Thrashcore | url=http://www.625thrash.com/about.shtml | accessdate=June 5| accessyear=2008 ] Throughout the '80s, the term "thrash" was in use as a synonym forhardcore punk (as in the "New York Thrash " compilation of 1982). It eventually came to be used for the faster, more intense style pioneered by D.R.I., just before their crossover period. [D.R.I. Fan Page, http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendID=110060206 Access Date: June 13, 2008] The "-core" suffix is necessary to distinguish it from the thrash metal scene, which is also referred to as "thrash" by fans. Still more confusingly, the term "thrashcore" is occasionally used by the music press to refer to thrash metal-inflectedmetalcore . [Stewart Voegtlin, "Soulfly Cranks Up the Thrash and Triggers a Debacle", Village Voice, July 29, 2008. [http://www.villagevoice.com/2008-07-29/music/soulfly-cranks-up-the-thrash-and-triggers-a-debacle/] Access date: July 31, 2008.]History
Origins
Just as
hardcore punk groups distinguished themselves from theirpunk rock predecessors by their greater intensity and aggression, thrashcore groups (often identified simply as "thrash") sought to play at breakneck tempos that would radicalize the innovations of hardcore. Thrash groups evolved in parallel with, and sometimes borrowed from, developments in Britishstreet punk , particularlyD-beat . Early American thrashcore groups includedCryptic Slaughter (Santa Monica), Dirty Rotten Imbeciles (D.R.I.) (Houston),Septic Death (Boise) and Siege (Weymouth, Massachusetts). The BritishElectro Hippies , DutchLärm , Italian Raw Power, and Japanese S.O.B. also practiced important examples of the style. Some ofNegative Approach 's later work was influential on the scene.Powerviolence
The powerviolence scene grew out of thrashcore as an American (Bay Area, California) counterpart to the British
grindcore scene, which had emerged fromcrust punk . Powerviolence groups saw themselves as distinct fromgrindcore because of the increasing proximity of grindcore groups to thedeath metal being performed in Florida, Sweden, and Brazil. [Bartkewicz, Anthony (July 2007). [http://www.decibelmagazine.com/features/jul2007/powerviolence.aspx Screwdriver in the Urethra of Hardcore] ". "Decibel Magazine". Retrieved onJuly 29 2007 .] Powerviolence groups wished to avoid the association withheavy metal music and culture thatcrossover thrash ,thrash metal , and grindcore had made. As well as from thrashcore, powerviolence groups also took inspiration fromcrust punk , from some aspects of earlyyouth crew , and eventually fromnoise music .Thrashcore revival
The '90s saw a revival of the thrashcore style, as groups that had previously been associated with
power violence orgrindcore began to explore their debt to this earlier form of extreme rock music. This was sometimes referred to as "bandanna thrash", in reference to the headgear preferred by many of the performers. Prominent '90s thrashcore groups includedCode 13 ,Guyana Punch Line ,R.A.M.B.O. ,Vitamin X ,Vivisick , Voorhees, andWhat Happens Next? . These groups sometimes felt a greater association with other elements of '80s hardcore punk, such asstraight edge ,anarcho-punk ,youth crew , orcrust punk , than the initial thrashcore groups did.Contemporary thrashcore
Prominent thrashcore groups of the 21st century include
Limp Wrist , who are associated withqueercore ; Birmingham, Alabama's Korova (who coined the term "generic anti core" to describe themselves); and the Dutch-American groupDas Oath .Record Labels
*
Slap-a-Ham Records
*Sound Pollution
*625 Thrashcore
*Havoc Records
*Ebullition Records Notes
Bibliography
*Blush, Steven (2001). "American Hardcore: A Tribal History". Feral House. ISBN-10: 0922915717
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