• Out of stock
    The Dickies presenting their Album Balderdash: From The Archive . • Seasoned punk rock veterans The Dickies crack open their crusty old sock drawer and unearth a bevy of unreleased musical treasures! • This collection includes both live and studio gems dating all the way back to the band's mid-'80s salad days through the '90s and into the 21st century! • The CD includes tracks from the recently released 7" as well as recut versions of some of the band's best punk rock covers! Tracklist: 1 Out Of Sight, Out Of Mind (Alternative Take, "Stukas" Session 1980) 2 Jim Bowie (Demo Dec. 1985) 3 Cross-Eyed Tammy (Demo Dec. 1985) 4 Monkey See, Monkey Do (Demo Dec. 1985) 5 Monster Island (Demo Dec. 1985) 6 Toxic Avenger (Demo April 1990) 7 Nobody But Me (Live - Coconut Teaszer, Los Angeles, Dec 23rd 1990) 8 I'm On Crack (Demo April 1990) 9 Diamond Mine (Demo April 1990) 10 Pretty Ballerina (Demo April 1990) 11 She's Got The HIV (Demo April 1990) 12 Fan Mail (Live 1990) 13 Toxic Avenger (Live 1990) 14 Monster Mash (Live - UCLA Halloween Show Oct 31st 1986) 15 I'm Leonard (Live - Music Machine, Los Angeles July 16th 1984) 16 Walk On The Wild Side (Live - Country Club, Reseda Feb. 18th 1986) Bonus Tracks 17 Blink 183 (Unreleased Track 2001) 18 Clean Money (Unreleased Track 2001) 19 Banana Splits (The Tra La La Song) (2010 Version) 20 Paranoid (2010 Version) 21 Nights In White Satin (2010 Version) Label: Cleopatra Records Barcode: 0889466336720
  • The Dickies presenting their Album Balderdash: From The Archive . • Seasoned punk rock veterans The Dickies crack open their crusty old sock drawer and unearth a bevy of unreleased musical treasures! • This collection includes both live and studio gems dating all the way back to the band's mid-'80s salad days through the '90s and into the 21st century! A1 Out Of Sight, Out Of Mind (Alternative Take, "Stukas" Session 1980) A2 Jim Bowie (Demo Dec. 1985) A3 Cross-Eyed Tammy (Demo Dec. 1985) A4 Monkey See, Monkey Do (Demo Dec. 1985) A5 Monster Island (Demo Dec. 1985) A6 Toxic Avenger (Demo April 1990) A7 Nobody But Me (Live - Coconut Teaszer, Los Angeles, Dec 23rd 1990) A8 I'm On Crack (Demo April 1990) B1 Diamond Mine (Demo April 1990) B2 Pretty Ballerina (Demo April 1990) B3 She's Got The HIV (Demo April 1990) B4 Fan Mail (Live 1990) B5 Toxic Avenger (Live 1990) B6 Monster Mash (Live - UCLA Halloween Show Oct 31st 1986) B7 I'm Leonard (Live - Music Machine, Los Angeles July 16th 1984) B8 Walk On The Wild Side (Live - Country Club, Reseda Feb. 18th 1986) Label: Cleopatra Records Barcode: 0889466336713
  • Out of stock
    Killer Klowns from Outer Space is an Mini LP by American punk rock band The Dickies. It was released in 1988 by Enigma Records.It contains the song "Killer Klowns," the title song of the 1988 film Killer Klowns from Outer Space. South Californian artist Shag designed and executed the album cover artwork, the first of various collaborations with The Dickies. (Puke N Vomit)
  • Out of stock
    Hyperactive Ramones-influenced cartoon punk rock from Los Angeles, 1979. One debut LP that made the history in the genre. Frantically fast and short versions of Black Sabbath's 'Paranoid', " the Monkees' "She," and Barry McGuire's "Eve of Destruction" along with a few unforgettable hits like 'You Make Me Ape (You Big Gorilla)' and 'Give It Back'. A must for all California Punk completists! Label: Survival Research Records Barcode: 0634438056720  
  • The debut 5 track vinyl release from Istanbul’s Die in Vain, that follows their excellent demo ‘Desperate to Piss’ on General Speech. Die in Vain live and breath the UK82 era where classic singles were released every week. The world was fucked and you played music to kick against the system. 40+ years later nothing has changed. Nothing at all. The band are locked in and tight with the drummer dealing in simplistic thuggery and the vocals spat out with venom and hatred. If Beat the System Records or Riot City Records still existed, Die in Vain would without doubt be snapped up by either label. It’s basic, hard hitting and relentless UK82 punk rock. Label: La Vida Es Un Mus
  • Out of stock
    “Beer City Skateboards and Records is proud to reissue the classic, phenomenal first 7” of the early 80’s hardcore band : DIE KREUZEN — Cows and Beer ! After having been out of print for nearly 30 years the original master tapes from this ground breaking release had finally been restored, remastered and given a proper reissue! “We are doing this because we want to squash the bootleggers,” DIE KREUZEN singer Dan Kubinski explains. “For years they have been putting out inferior-quality bullshit and ripping off our fans. We want to give our fans a very clean, crisp, loud-and-heavy version of Cows and Beer. Billy Cicerelli from WMSE did the initial remastering and then Dave Eik of Lucky Lacquers did further remastering and cut the lacquers -and man, did they do an awesome job! This new version blows the doors and windows off of any other, including the original Version Sound release” Recorded in a few hours on Sept 11 1982 at a recording studio deep in Milwaukee’s south side. The result would be 6 songs that would help redefine the intensity and standard of this newly forming off shot of punk known as hardcore. Some even say this record is the paving way for another offshoot of punk that would rear its head some years latter and become known as thrash! When this record originally came out it was limited to a few short-run pressings. This time it will be released as a special RSD release for 2014 and will come on five different colors of vinyl for a grand total of 5000! (1000 each of red, gold, blue, green & clear vinyl). To make things even more spectacular, this record will feature brand new liner notes by the band as well as the original lyric sheet and then the one from the second pressing!” (Beer City Records)  
  • Out of stock
    Throughout the 80s and into the 90s, Milwaukee’s Die Kreuzen challenged audiences by pushing the boundaries of what a hardcore band could do, experimenting with sounds far removed from the constraints of the genre. The band broke up in 1992, leaving behind four full lengths, a slew of singles and compilation appearances and an incredible amount of influence. For the remainder of the decade, its members went on to pursue other projects, both musical and otherwise. Meanwhile, the band’s legendary status began to quietly grow amongst musicians and music fans alike. Two classic LP on one CD. 1 - 14 October File, LP (1986) recorded at Multi-Track Studios, Detroit, October, '85. 15 - 34 Die Kreuzen, LP (1984) (Touch And Go Records)
  • Out of stock
    By the time Milwaukee’s Die Kreuzen released their second full-length, back in 1986, they had already progressed from the hardcore frenzy that was showcased in the debut EP and self titled LP, moving toward the more tempered alternative rock influence that continued throughout their eleven year career, (and all four of their albums are great in their individual way. No such thing as a bad Die Kreuzen record). October File is like the inbetween album: still essentially a hardcore record, with Dan Kubinski’s vocals mostly remaining in his signature psycho-screamer style, but overall with a less manic tempo, incorporating new musical technique and complexity. Mellow, even, in places. (Touch And Go Records)
  • Out of stock
    This is the classic debut from Milwaukee's DIE KREUZEN originally released in 1984, who seamlessly blended hardcore-punk with darker elements to create a unique sound that nobody has been able to duplicate. A 24 song must have. More then a classic piece of vinyl - A definitive '80s hardcore band. Vinyl includes a digital download card. (Touch And Go Records)
  • DIE KREUZEN | T-shirt

    14.00 incl. tax
    Hand made high quality silk screen print. Gildan Heavy Cotton T-shirt. Ενδέχεται να υπάρχουν ελλείψεις σε κάποια από τα μεγέθη. Σε αυτή την περίπτωση θα σας ενημερώσουμε τηλεφωνικά ή με e-mail για τον χρόνο παράδοσής τους σε εμάς από τον προμηθευτή (συνήθως 3-5 εργάσιμες ημέρες).
  • 6 Kraut klassics broadcast from deep out in the spacelab, where the sun don’t shine and noone can hear you scream... so you beep, whizz and chant monotone commands at the control board while the days turn into eternity and suddenly you can’t tell if it’s Berlin 2020 or West Germany ‘79.. With an enthusiasm and charm that brings to mind the early transmissions of cross border comrades DAF and F242 (I said “early”!) the execution is perfect. This is what languages like French and German were invented for and it’s delivered here ice cold. (Daryl Sulfate / Diät / Clock of Time) Label: Static Age Records
  • I wonder what Die Letzten Ecken did during the past 2 1/2 years since their debut EP. Did they steal Jürgen Engler’s Stahlofon? Did they listen to Nitzer Ebb’s Basic Pain Procedure for the cold minimalistc EBM appeal ? Did they ask Matthias Schuster how to combine this with the psychedelic electronica of the Berlin School like he did on Atemlos? Probably none of that. Find out for yourself but do not forget your Talisman to listen to it on a stroll. There is much more to discover here than whether there are Seen Links or Schlösser Rechts. (Marc Froide) Label: Static Age Records
  • Radiation Roots presents a reissue of Dillinger's Marijuana In My Brain, originally issued in 1977. In the early 1970s, top-ranking toaster Lester Bullock got his start on the El Paso sound system in the mean streets of western Kingston. Initially known as Young Capone, since he was a protégé of the better-established Dennis Alcapone, he was renamed Dillinger by Lee 'Scratch' Perry, the first producer to record a significant number of tracks with the youth. "Dub Organiser" and "Tighten Up Skank" were somewhat popular when released in 1973 and there were individual tracks cut for Phil Pratt, Augustus Pablo, Prince Tony Robinson, and Joe Gibbs, as well as Studio One, who issued his debut LP, Ready Natty Dreadie, in 1975. By then, Dillinger was recording a series of singles for hit-making producer Bunny 'Striker' Lee, particularly on Johnnie Clarke's rhythms, though recordings for Channel One and the CB 200 album were what catapulted him into overseas consciousness in 1976, once the outstanding single, "Cocaine In My Brain," reached the European pop charts. Marijuana In My Brain dates from 1977 and placed the toaster over some of the Striker's hottest rhythms, previously utilized for Clarke scorchers like "Satta" and "Poor Marcus" (along with the odd Ronnie Davis track); Clarke's reading of "Going To A Ball" is here transformed into an ode to the Bouncing Ball, then one of the most popular clubs for black Londoners, and his "African Roots" anthem gets the Dillinger treatment too. Of course, the title track was the biggest hit of the bunch, an ode to the 'wisdom weed' driven by cosmic space synth overdubs. (Radiation Roots)
  • Out of stock

    DILS | dils dils dils | CD

    12.00 incl. tax
    Legendary punk trio the Dils formed in San Diego in southern California and when they moved to San Francisco, bassist Tony Kinman found himself living with the Avengers, but once they hit Los Angeles in 1977 they began recording frantic singles for fledgling independents such as What? Records, Dangerhouse and Rogelleti for more melodic, country-influenced songs, pointing to their further reincarnation as Rank & File. Ace compilation Dils Dils Dils gathers early studio work and live recordings, this edition featuring two bonus tracks, recorded in LA in 1979. Crucial listening for all Dils fans! 1 and 2 from "I Hate The Rich" 7" (1977) 3 and 4 from "198 Seconds Of The Dils" 7" (1977) 5 to 7 from "Made In Canada" 7" (1980) 8 from first demo spring 1977 9 and 10 live, punks against black lung benefit, Mabuhay Gardens, San Francisco, March 20 1978 11 to 24 live, Aito's, Berkley, November 18 1978 25 to 28 live, Los Angeles, 1979 29 live, Temple Beautiful, San Francisco, September 11, 1979 TRACKLIST 1 I Hate The Rich 2 You're Not Blank 3 Class War 4 Mr Big 5 Sound Of The Rain 6 Its Not Worth It 7 Red Rockers 8 Blow Up! 9 Citizen 10 Its Not Worth It 11 Intro 12 National Guard 13 Tell Her I Love Her 14 Gimme A Break 15 Mr Big 16 Love House 17 Wreck Of The Old 97 18 New Kicks 19 Before The Law 20 Tell Me What I Want To Hear 21 Class War 22 Blow Up! 23 I Hate The Rich 24 C-A-R 25 Turgid Tosh 26 Some Things Never Change 27 Poor Poor Girl 28 Only The Lonely 29 You Dont Matter Anymore (Radiation Records)
  • Legendary punk trio the Dils formed in San Diego in southern California and when they moved to San Francisco, bassist Tony Kinman found himself living with the Avengers, but once they hit Los Angeles in 1977 they began recording frantic singles for fledgling independents such as What? Records, Dangerhouse and Rogelleti for more melodic, country-influenced songs, pointing to their further reincarnation as Rank & File. Ace compilation Dils Dils Dils gathers early studio work (all their three 7's) and live recordings, this edition featuring two bonus tracks, recorded in LA in 1979. Crucial listening for all Dils fans! TRACKLIST Studio 1977-1979 1 Blow Up 2 I Hate The Rich 3 You're Not Blank 4 Class War 5 Mr. Big 6 Sound Of The Rain 7 It's Not Worth It 8 Red Rockers 9 Poor, Poor Girl 10 Only The Lonely Live 1978-1979 11 Citizen 12 Love House 13 Before The Law 14 C-A-R 15 Some Things Never Change 16 National Guard 17 New Kicks 18 You Don't Matter Anymore A1 - First demo Spring 1977. A2 & A3 - First single 1977. A4 & A5 - Second single 1977. A6 to A8 - Third single 1980. A9 to A19 - Live in LA 1979 B1 - Recorded live during "Punks against black lung benefit", Mahubay Gardens, San Francisco, March 20 1978. B2 to B4, B6, B7 - Recorded live, Aito's, Berkeley, Nov 18 1978. B5 - Recorded live, Los Angeles 1979. B8 - Recorded live, Temple Beautiful, San Francisco, Sep 11 1979. (Radiation Records)
  • Out of stock

    DIMENSION | demo | Tape

    10.00 incl. tax
    In proper Massachusetts fashion, this demo is a frantic, loud guitar driven chaos machine fully loaded with power chord whips, throbbing distortion, concussive battery and gravel shouts. Over before you know it but leaves a nice scar to remind you just exactly whose dimension you’re in. No filler, no nonsense and no time for lackeys, buffoons or charlatans. Dimension is ripping hardcore punk… the way nature intended. 200 pro-printed red-shelled cassettes housed in a 2-panel J-card inside a clear Norelco box. Recorded, mixed and mastered by Will Killingsworth. Art by Shane Dupuy. Label: Iron Lung
  • Out of stock

    DINOSAUR JR. | bug | LP

    26.00 incl. tax
    Bug is the third and final pearl in the string of albums released by the original formation of Dinosaur Jr. The music here shows the band moving into ever more orderly realms of composition and structure, even as anecdotal evidence suggests that they were coming apart at their physical seams. After the release of Bug, Dinosaur changed their name to Dinosaur Jr, due to the protests of a band of San Francisco ballroom-era leftovers. This seemed incredibly stupid at the time, but now it is possible to see as both a remark (by the hippies) that the band was starting to become known, as well as one by the band that they didn’t give a fuck. It was in this time that people truly began to appreciate the power of the songs that had always lurked inside the band’s sonic cataclysm. Live shows of the period were incredible. They harnessed a very special kind of aggression like no one els,e and the emotional turmoil inside the band frequently erupted into something cathartic and Brobdingnagian. J had moved to New York City, and there was a new sense of disconnect within the band. Lou was doing his own recordings for Homestead, Murph was playing more aggressively than ever, and J was kinda doing his own thing. Without any songwriting input from Barlow, the material for Bug was scripted entirely by Mascis, and when it was time to record the stuff, J had very specific ideas about how everyone’s part should be played. If the band prior to this had been operating in at least a faux-democratic way, that pretense was now shucked. It was, it seemed, J’s band. And this knowledge (both within and without the group) loaded some of their live shows with a particularly furious edge. There might be true havoc on stage, now and then, as J and Lou’s antipathy towards each other increased, but more often this negative gush was channeled into an orgy of magnificent meat music. The trio’s roar – one that had initially seemed impossible to contain or control — began to assume a comprehendible shape in front of an audience that was familiar with the material (from the records) and attuned to its details. Not all their live shows were perfect, but there were lots of great ones, and their first trip to Europe in late ’87, brought them before a group of people who were both delighted and mystified by their utterly American combination of explosions and mopery. The British press fawned over them (in their own tongue-in-ass fashion), but Dinosaur Jr’s true impact was on the audiences, who were absolutely ready for the stylistic shift into post-core non-ironic-rock that the band’s music suggested. Indeed, it is postulated that a whole generation of British “shoegazer” bands sprang up as a reaction to that first visit. Even if this is hyperbole, it is undeniable that Dinosaur Jr were offering a way out of the noise morass for certain group of misfits. Their songs were complex in a way that seemed both simple and intuitive, their lyrics were sad and reflective without appearing obnoxiously introspective. These were graspable creative tenets, so it made sense that they would be aped. And aped they were. The band’s profile on the American scene was growing exponentially at the same time. This had been something in the making for a while, but their popularity was blown wide open by Bug, and its accompanying single, “Freak Scene” — a classic slab by any known yardstick. Robert Pollard (of Guided By Voices) remembers, “I bought their first album when it came out and I couldn’t figure out what the fuck it was. I couldn’t tell if they were nerds or goth heads or what. I thought they looked cool, but I couldn’t figure out what time period they were about. That first album was mesmerizing, but it was so strange. The picture with the sun on the cover just confused me. The music was recorded real lo-fi, but they didn’t fit into anything that was going on. When you listened to it, you might think parts of it were from the late ‘60s or early ‘70s. I mean, what was it? Sort of a dark psych metal but with punk roots. “The band’s whole approach reminded me of something our band was doing a little later, because they were burying strong melodies inside of this total sonic attack. There was almost something sinister underlying everything, but it was beautiful, too. There was always something hidden inside their songs. When I thought my lyrics were corny, we would use tape hiss to cover up the sentiments and fuck things up. It seemed like they were trying to fuck up their music by the craziness of their attack, “And each of their albums just got better and better. They really are one of the few bands that, to this day, I get out all of their early catalogue and listen to them all in a row, all the way through. I still do that every so often. The amazing thing about their songs is that even though they were all sonically heavy, almost every one of them has the ability to give me a chill. The first songs on their albums were always great. Like ‘Forget the Swan.’ That may be my favorite. But they had so many great ones – ‘Little Fury Things, ‘Budge’ – they’re all great. I even like ‘Poledo’! (laughs) That one actually sounded more like the way we were doing things then. But my favorite album is definitely Bug. They were so solid musically by that time, and every song on it is good. “It was also around that time that I saw them play in Cincinnati. I saw them with Murph and Lou one weekend at this club that had all the heavy bands right then, like Big Chief and Nirvana. They were really loud, and J was such a great guitar player — one of the best in the world. I just loved that band.” As they rolled on, there was no lack of people who’d second Pollard’s sentiments. “Freak Scene” became one of the great college rock anthems of ’88. A beautiful blend of confusion, neo-folkie yearning and guitar belligerence, the songs still slays. But there’s so much great stuff on Bug. One of my personal faves is “Don’t,” which is like a perfect post-core version of a track from the Stooges’ Funhouse. Repeat-o sludge riffs up the wazoo, absolutely raunched guitar textures, and bellered vocals (which J, perversely, had Lou sing) that ask a perplexingly simple question, “Why don’t you like me?” What could be better? Well, one thing that could have been better, one presumed, was morale inside the band. They didn’t last all that long after the completion of Bug and the tours to support it. Dinosaur Jr continued in name for a good while, and they released some great records. But there is something totally organic and beautiful about the first three albums. They represent a creative arc that begins with teenage hardcore sput and ends with the dream of guitar heroism. And its an arc that many followed, but one this trio defined. Once and for all. Over and out. Amen. –Byron Coley Deerfield ma 2004 Label: Jagjaguwar Barcode: 656605219813
  • Out of stock
    Radiation Tapes present a cassette reissue of Dinosaur Jr.'s Green Mind, originally released in 1991. Formed in 1984, Dinosaur Jr. carved a singular path through the latter half of the 1980s, issuing three highly influential albums in the process before finding a home with Sire Records, who issued Green Mind in 1991 as the alternative American rock scene the band had long been part of exploded globally. Produced by a stripped-down line-up of the group (in fact, J Mascis himself plays almost everything), the album and Sire's international reach took Dinosaur Jr's reputation to a new level, aided by the singles The Wagon (1990) and Whatever's Cool With Me (1991), a non-album EP of new material and live recordings, all of which are included here alongside a previously unreleased live recording capturing the group at the Hollywood Palladium in June 1991. Critically lauded on release, Green Mind remains one of the band's strongest collections, and a firm fan favorite. Limited edition of 350 on cassette. (Radiation Records)
  • In 1994 punk rock fanzine writer Welly Artcore jumped in the van with legendary British punk band CHAOS U.K. for a two month tour around the U.S. Four years later he did it all again with his own band, FOUR LETTER WORD, this time also travelling across Canada. From the impossible drives, to scrapes with the authorities, and the bands they shared stages and floors with along the way, often with nothing more than the name of a club on a scrap of paper that turned out to be a disused unit in an industrial estate, they somehow made most of the gigs. All the while, he did something so many others don’t, he wrote it all down. 'Directions to the outskirts of town' is a candid and humorous account of life on the road packed into a 6” x 9” paperback with over 300 pages, over 250 unpublished colour photos, flyers and illustrations, and a foreword by Kaos of CHAOS U.K. This great new punk rock tour diary, packed with anecdotes and photos, comes with a poster and bookmark. The first printing of the books are shipping out right now. “Initially I gave Chaos U.K. a five year shelf life. Twenty five years later and I am still screaming” -Kaos of Chaos UK. Format Paperback | 328 pages Dimensions 156 x 234 x 23mm | 617g Publication date 28 Jun 2021 Publisher Earth Island Books Language English While still in high school, after finding out what a fanzine was from the pages of Maximum Rock’n’Roll he began creating his own, Artcore, in late 1985, printing a few dozen copies of the first issue on the high school photocopier in January 1986. He continues to publish Artcore to this day with 40 issues and 16 vinyl fanzines released to date. From 1991 he was in numerous punk bands and has 20 releases and numerous tours under his belt. He also ran two D.I.Y. punk rock record shops/stalls, Damaged Records (2004-2008) and the aptly named Ghost Town Records (2012-2014) in Cardiff, Wales, and was involved in promoting and making flyers for gigs and all-day charity benefits in Cardiff and Newport from the 1980s onwards. After the tours he visited the U.S. numerous times with his family before relocating to Arizona in 2018.
  • Out of stock
    The entire discography of this shortlived but influential early nineties anarcho punk band from Glasgow, Scotland. This is fast-paced and shredding anarcho punk with little excursions into the crust-punk genre here and there. Dual fe/male vocals and alot of (sadly still) lyrical topics of todays society. DISAFFECT releases most their material via NABATE RECORDS from Belgium as well as FLAT EARTH RECORDS from the UK. Both labels were pioneering the nineties DIY punk wave alot with bands like ONE BY ONE, HIATUS, SEDITION, UNHINGED etc etc. DISAFFECT stopped playing in 1994 and members moved on to other projects such as SCATHA and QUARANTINE. In 2019 the band reformed with a new rhythm section to play occassionally the one or the other festival. The DISAFFECT discography includes the "An Injury To One..." 7" EP from 1992, the split 7" with SEDITION from 1993, the "Home Of The Brave" 7"EP from 1993 (reissued 3 times!) and their 1994 released debut LP "Chained To Morality" as well as the ultra rare split 7" with BIZARRE UPROAR also from 1994. As a bonus you will find the best tracks of the 1991 "Demotape" with the missing tracks available as download. Housed in a beatifully crafted Gatefold-sleeve with additional 16 pages booklet including lyrics and linernotes. Label: Ruin nation Records
  • Out of stock
    THIS IS A PRE-ORDER! YOUR RECORD WILL SHIP ON OR AROUND 15.04.23, THANKS! Two anarcho punk bands from the 90s are back with 6 brand new songs each against borders, religion, fascism and bigotry. All the anger etched into red and black 140g vinyl and written in 16 page A4 booklet. Get this while you can. Label: Sanctus Propaganda
  • DISASTER | war cry | LP

    23.00 incl. tax
    Originally released in 1991 War Cry was one of the first purely DISCHARGE influenced bands to span what later become popularly known as D-Beat. Hailing from Halifax, they were part of a new wave of raging UK bands with worshiped "Why" as the finest piece on non-music ever recorded. DISASTER faded into obscurity shortly after releasing their MLP and War Cry became a cult record among raw hardcore fans worldwide counting visionaries as Kawakami from DISCLOSE as one of their biggest fans. Finally reissued on CD in Japan in 2006 with extra live sets and unreleased songs LVEUM decide to bring this record back to life on its original format. It also comes with a 12 pages 11"x11" booklet containing flyers, pictures, interview and other memorabilia. Label: La Vida Es Un Mus
  • DISCHARGE | 1980-1986 | LP

    20.00 incl. tax
    Formed in the northern industrial town of Stoke on Trent in 1977, Discharge changed punk with its distinctive brand of hardcore, making minimalist music with distorted guitar, drone-like bass, shouted anarchist themes and propulsive drumming, known as D-Beat. Originally issued in 1987, this killer compilation charts the best of their early years with Clay Records, from the full-on assault of Realities of War, passing the chart-topping Why?, to the shrieking sounds of Grave New World, which edged further into metal territory. Listen and be awed by the power and the glory of one of the most influential punk and metal bands ever. Includes the following releases: Tracks A1 to A4 - 'Realities Of War' 7" 1980. Tracks A5 to A9 - 'Fight Back' 7" 1980. Tracks A10 to A12 taken from their 'Why' 12" 1981. Tracks A13 to B15 - 'Decontrol' 7" 1980. Tracks B16 & B17 taken from their 'Never Again' 7" 1981. Track B18 taken from their 'State Violence State Control' 7" 1982. Track B19 taken from their 'The Price Of Silence' 7" 1983. Track B20 taken from their 'The More I See' 7" 1984. Track B21 taken from their 'Ignorance' 7" 1985. Track B22 taken from their 'Grave New World' LP 1986. Tracklist: A1 Realities Of War A2 They Declare It A3 But After The Gig A4 Society's Victim A5 Fight Back A6 War's No Fairytale A7 Always Restrictions A8 You Take Part In Creating This System A9 Religion Instigates A10 A Look At Tomorrow A11 Ain't No Feeble Bastard A12 Why (Reprise) A13 It's No T.V. Sketch A14 Tomorrow Belongs To Us B15 Decontrol B16 Never Again B17 Death Dealers B18 State Violence State Control B19 The Price Of Silence B20 The More I See B21 Ignorance B22 Grave New World Label: Radiation Records Barcode: 8055515232646  
  • Out of stock
    Gatefold, white vinyl ltd to 200. Formed in the northern industrial town of Stoke on Trent in 1977, Discharge changed punk with its distinctive brand of hardcore, making minimalist music with distorted guitar, drone-like bass, shouted anarchist themes and propulsive drumming, known as D-Beat. Originally issued in 1987, this killer compilation charts the best of their early years with Clay Records, from the full-on assault of Realities of War, passing the chart-topping Why?, to the shrieking sounds of Grave New World, which edged further into metal territory. Listen and be awed by the power and the glory of one of the most influencial punk and metal bands ever. Includes the following releases: Tracks A1 to A4 - 'Realities Of War' 7" 1980. Tracks A5 to A9 - 'Fight Back' 7" 1980. Tracks A10 to A12 taken from their 'Why' 12" 1981. Tracks A13 to B15 - 'Decontrol' 7" 1980. Tracks B16 & B17 taken from their 'Never Again' 7" 1981. Track B18 taken from their 'State Violence State Control' 7" 1982. Track B19 taken from their 'The Price Of Silence' 7" 1983. Track B20 taken from their 'The More I See' 7" 1984. Track B21 taken from their 'Ignorance' 7" 1985. Track B22 taken from their 'Grave New World' LP 1986. Tracklist: A1 Realities Of War A2 They Declare It A3 But After The Gig A4 Society's Victim A5 Fight Back A6 War's No Fairytale A7 Always Restrictions A8 You Take Part In Creating This System A9 Religion Instigates A10 A Look At Tomorrow A11 Ain't No Feeble Bastard A12 Why (Reprise) A13 It's No T.V. Sketch A14 Tomorrow Belongs To Us B15 Decontrol B16 Never Again B17 Death Dealers B18 State Violence State Control B19 The Price Of Silence B20 The More I See B21 Ignorance B22 Grave New World (Radiation Records)  
  • Out of stock
    LIMITED REISSUE FOR AN ORIGINAL RSD 2018 RADIATION RELEASE, NOW ON RED VINYL
    This is not the same Discharge that we all know and love. Technically it’s the same band, but it sounds completely different. As the title states, this LP is their early demo recordings from March – June, 1977. If you’ve never heard this, and someone played it at a party, you would never guess who it is. No, this is not the raging D-beat hardcore that we’re all accustomed to. The punk on this record is so ’77 that it’s almost ridiculous, very much a product of its time. The music is extremely basic, very simple, very primitive, and completely callow. It doesn’t have the political, anti-war out rage either, instead we have songs with titles like; I Don’t Care, Acne, I love Dead Babies, and Sweet Suburban Dreams. And if the lyrical content wasn’t enough to convince you that this is actually a lost Sex Pistols demo, then the vocal style, which sounds strikingly similar to Johnny Rotten, will. There is no list of members who played on these demos, so I have no idea how many of the members went on to be in the later incarnations of Discharge. The whole record screams of the early days of young, snotty, pissed off punks filled with teen angst. I guess if you’re a huge Discharge completist, you should pick this up, or if your really into the raw, primal ’77 punk sound.
    (Radiation/2020)

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