Foundation Vinyl Newsletter
Welcome
Welcome to this week’s Foundation Vinyl Newsletter! And there is plenty to get stuck into…
- Featured New Arrivals from Faim, Incendiary, and Miss Espana
- Heretical Distortions
- One You May Have Missed: Matador by Burning Flag
- Shows and Tours, including Savageheads and Sial hitting London over the next week
- Coming Soon
Featured New Arrivals
On this their second full-length, Denver’s Faim continue their mission to reanimate 2000s melodic hardcore, revitalising and rejuvenating it with a raging vitality.
Blending the burning emotional catharsis of Verse and Have Heart, and the melodic dissonance of The Effort, with a stripped back raw clarity that recalls New Lexicon-era Paint It Black, this is an impressively dynamic collection. Lyrically, the band continue to forcefully challenge entrenched privilege, but there is also a more personally reflective tone in evidence, with the writings of Sylvia Plath providing a rich seam of inspiration. This is expected to be Faim’s final release, and they are bowing out on a stirring high. Touring the UK in July – one not to be missed.
Four LPs in, Incendiary are not a band who deal in musical revolution. Rather they are in the business of incremental refinement and the progressive sharpening of a trademark sound. And with results like this, who can argue?
Venomous vocals spat rhythmically in unison with slabs of metallic guitar fury, while the rhythm section lends a swaggering suppleness to the onslaught. Call backs to the rich heritage of 1990s’ (and 1990s influenced) metallic hardcore – from Endeavor to Trial, Indecision to Foundation – are honed in support of their singular vision. As with all great metallic hardcore, the burly musical delivery is partnered with lyrical themes to engage, ranging from the repressive treatment of refugees to political polarisation to distorted notions of patriotism. Prepare to be pulverised.
We also have Incendiary’s second and third albums, Cost of Living and Thousand Mile Stare respectively, in stock. For the uninitiated, a great opportunity to introduce yourself to classic tracks such as Primitive Rage and The Product is You.
And check out our recollections of Incendiary’s memorable first London shows, ‘Chandeliers and Rattlesnakes’, in our newsletter of 9th May 2023:
Miss Espana’s debut LP is an infectious exploration of bass-propelled, darkly melodic synth punk.
Featuring Violeta from Rata Negra, it comes as no surprise that her richly potent Spanish-language vocals take centre stage. But this intriguing LP is anything but one dimensional. The bass work is thrilling, resonant and lithesome to the point that at times you have to remind yourself that there are no guitars. The drumming is sprightly and powerful, while the skeletal synths inject discordantly melodic flourishes. Miss Espana share a distinctly melancholic inclination with Rata Negra, but the overall effect is rawer, more strident.
Heretical Distortions
In his recently published book Tonight It’s A World We Bury, Bill Peel undertakes an intriguing study of the characteristics that have made black metal susceptible to far-right politics, while asking whether those same characteristics can also nurture radical, left-wing politics? We, of course, already know the answer to this question from the musical endeavours of left-wing and anarchist black metal bands such as Ancst, Dawn Ray’d, and Ragana. The interest lies more in how Peel marshals political and anthropological theory to examine exactly what those characteristics are and how they interact with musical expression.
Rather than the review the book, I thought it might be more interesting to unpack some of the central tenets of its arguments to see how relevant they are to hardcore punk. I must admit most of the bands that the book examines are pretty alien to me (and some for very good reason), but there is a certain universality that emerges in Peel’s thesis that I feel can be applied more widely to understanding the dynamics of hardcore punk. I will focus on three specific characteristics identified by Peel.
‘Aggressive, oppositional music is the best tool to express compassion and empathy, because it’s not the language of our culture’ (Dan Yemin, Paint It Black)
The first characteristic is that of ‘Distortion’. Now Peel isn’t just talking about the sound of distortion, but also of the social impact that distortion achieves, the friction that it introduces. It is here that he calls upon the political theory of Ernest Laclau and Chantal Mouffe who argue for the importance of conflict and antagonism in our lives – how a politics devoid of conflict allows hegemonies to form and to constrain society through enforced consensus. As such distortion serves both as a barrier to those who will not engage with it, but also as a home for those who will. The aim should not be to create a defensive community, but rather one that continually regenerates itself by constructing difference through creativity.
‘To show that things can be different, to take things that are familiar and make them unfamiliar’ (Brian D, Catharsis)
The second characteristic of ‘Heresy’ then comes into focus. Peel examines the concept in terms of both religion and capitalism, and I think it is helpful to think of it in its broadest possible terms – ideas that are at variance with the established orthodoxy. Distortion creates space for a musical community to engage in exploring its own heresies that challenge the structural social, economic, and political inequalities that define people’s lived experience. By doing so, common understanding can be established.
‘The struggle is not over, it assumes new forms’ (War by Other Means, Trial)
The third characteristic is the importance of avoiding the grasp of ‘Death Fetishism’. This represents Peel’s deliberately macabre reworking of the notion of ‘Left Melancholy’, a concept first delineated by the political theorist Wendy Brown. She explored Stuart Hall’s writings on the failure of the left to understand and challenge Thatcherism in the UK by examining how feelings and sentiments can sustain attachment to specific ideas and analyses in a way that is both conservative and self-destructive, rendering them ineffective to challenging the new reality. In other words, hardcore punk cannot simply be angry at social injustice, yearn to start over again; it must continually strive to explore new ideas and understand shifting political contours.
‘The greatest power the capitalist class have over our lives, is convincing us that betraying each other is the only way to survive’ (Inferno, Dawn Ray’d)
Here in the UK, we live in a country that has been governed by a socio-economic orthodoxy that has disparaged the collective, atomised communities, and valorised the private sector above all else for four decades. The results in respect of levels of poverty, inequality, and degraded public infrastructure are evident for all to see.
Hardcore punk songs will not change this, have not changed this. But they do serve an important role in creating the means for people to recognise that this is happening, to forge common cause, and to articulate that alternative futures are possible. And that is a very valuable starting point.
Tonight It’s A World We Bury by Bill Peel is published by Repeater.
The quotes from Brian D and Dan Yemin are taken from Gerfried Ambrosch’s books ‘The Poetry of Punk: The Meaning Behind Punk Rock and Hardcore Lyrics’ (Routledge) and ‘Punk Matters: Interviews with Punk Artists and Activists’ (Active Distribution). Both well worth checking out.
One You May Have Missed: Matador by Burning Flag
Halifax’s Burning Flag return to crushingly groove-laden effect with a venomous new vocalist for their third-full length ‘Matador’. Dark crust punk that carries with it a decidedly metallic edge, marrying a hardcore urgency with mid-paced riffs of brutal intensity. Down-tuned guitars and industrial hues call back to early 1990’s Earache bands and are refashioned into Burning Flag’s more groove-orientated expressions. Lyrical themes span the UK’s cultivation of overseas oligarchs, societal misogyny, abortion rights, and the Government incompetence that blighted the UK’s Covid response. They are delivered with a passionate punch.
Show and Tours
This section lays no claims to being a definitive listing! It is simply gigs coming up in London that catch my eye and that I think people who read this newsletter might be interested in. I will always try and highlight where a show forms part of a wider UK tour.
9th June Savageheads, Rat Cage, Subdued (New River Studios)
11thJune Snuff Acoustic Matinee (The Lexington)
14th June Sial, Morreadoras, Turbo (New River Studios)
14th June Terror and Going Off (New Cross Inn)
16th June Physique, Circle None, Skitter plus more (New Cross Inn)
17th June Keno, Nation Unrest, Can Kicker plus more (The George Tavern)
24th June Ribbon Stage, Ex-Void, R.Aggs (The Lexington)
9th July End It, Spy, Combust, Initiate plus more (New Cross Inn)
10th July Fuse, Dregs, Stingray, Antagonizm plus more (New River Studios)
18th July Doldrey, Harrowed plus more (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)
18th July Powerplant plus support (Moth Club / UK Tour)
19th July Diploid, Casing plus more (New River Studios / UK Tour)
20th July Iron Deficiency, Sentient plus more (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)
21st July Jotnarr, Wreathe, Cady (Bird’s Nest)
22nd July Kohti Tuhoa, T.S. Warspite, Antagonizm plus more (New River Studios)
24th July Faim, No Man, Dying For It plus more (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)
26th July Current Affairs plus support (The Lexington / UK Tour)
4th August Gag, Plastics, TS Warspite, Unjust plus more (New Cross Inn)
5th August Knuckledust, Nine Bar, Fifty Caliber plus more (New Cross Inn)
8th August Sacred Reich plus support (The Underworld)
14th August Chat Pile, Petbrick, Dawn Ray’d (The Dome)
18th August Cloud Rat, Bad Breeding, Golpe (Studio 9294)
9th September Big Brave, Dawn Ray’d, Ragana, Jessica Moss (Bush Hall)
15th September Cinder Well plus support (Moth Club)
Coming Soon
Belgrado ‘Intra Apogeum’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus Discos)
Blow Your Brains Out ‘The Big Escape’ 12-inch (Quality Control HQ)
Drill Sergeant ‘Grim New War’ 7-inch (Refuse Records)
Isolant ‘Oblivion’ 12-inch (Social Napalm)
Savageheads ‘Service to Your Country’ 12-inch (Social Napalm)