Friday, January 30, 2009

Monday, January 26, 2009

Remember when I was so strange and like able...

Bad Seed


New band made up of younger kids from Wilkes Barre, PA. The demo is really good, you can tell that they have a big NYHC influence. They are going to have a 7inch come out soon on 6131 Records and are going to be featured on the Reaper Records comp. Check out their demo on their myspace...

http://www.myspace.com/badseedpa

Sunday, January 25, 2009

United Blood Festival 2009

March 27th & 28th

-bad seed
-bitter end
-ceremony
-cold world
-converge
-convicted
-cro mags
-cruel hand
-foundation
-forfeit
-have heart
-heathens
-mind eraser
-mother of mercy
-naysayer
-reign surpreme
-rise and fall
-strength for a reason
-title fight
-trapped under ice
-trash talk
-war hungry

@ Alleykatz
Richmond VA

Friday, January 23, 2009

Thursday, January 22, 2009

The sleeping eye



new Iron Age song promo

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Let's get lost tonight...

Lost season 5 returned tonight with a vengeance. Two hour premier making things on the show even more crazy. Best show ever!


Descend time and space...

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Dog days


My brother got a bulldog two days ago.
His name is Bruiser. Cool dog.

Charlie wasn't very happy to meet him.
He gets really jealous.

Inauguration Day

-----------------------------------------------

In other news Max Payne came out on DVD today.
I really want to watch this.
.
---------------------------------------------------

Also Trapped Under Ice & Reign Supreme we're awesome last night.


BUST!

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Mercy For None




REAPER RECORDS has a 7" comp coming out Feb. 24th, 2009.
All exclusive tracks with up and coming bands.
featuring:
Naysayer, Bad Seed, Absolute Madness, Unforgiven, Brick, & Alpha Omega.

1970

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Internal Affairs - Evil Egyptians 7" EP



Will be the final release from IA.
It'll be released on Malfunction Records soon.

Boyfriends post

Will Arnett




Terminator - Salvation

Monday, January 12, 2009

Dawn Of A New Apocalypse



Integrity playing in Baltimore
Friday, Jan. 9th 2009

Burning Fight interview

This interview taken from the Double Crossed webzine. Brian Peterson is the guy behind the forthcoming book on Nineties Hardcore. The book is called Burning Fight.



Tell us a bit about yourself and how you got into hardcore. Where and when was this? How would you compare yourself today to the kid that got into hardcore then?

-Okay, well, I'm 32 years old. I'm originally from a small town called Minot, North Dakota, but then I moved to Illinois when I was in high school. Dylan, a childhood friend from Minot who was a skater and all around underground music fan, introduced me to hardcore in junior high, but at the time I was obsessed with hip-hop. I've always been attracted to music with a message and listening to Boogie Down Productions, Public Enemy, Eric B. and Rakim, Big Daddy Kane and others was a pretty eye-opening experience, especially for a kid from a small town in the middle of nowhere. Anyway, I understood the energy of hardcore, but I just wasn't ready for the screaming at first. [laughs] But after listening to a couple mix tapes, some of the bands made an impression on me—especially after I found out what they were screaming about! My family moved to Illinois when I was about 15 and by then I'd already gotten into Nirvana and then more contemporary hardcore or punk influenced bands like Fugazi. From there I got re-introduced to the classic hardcore bands that Dylan introduced me to like Black Flag, Bad Brains, The Misfits, Minor Threat, Youth of Today and so on. It's funny, though, as I didn't even realize there was a thriving hardcore scene happening at the time. I guess I had thought it was all from the past, probably because most rock journalists viewed hardcore or punk as "dead," even though that was really because they weren't truly paying attention to the underground. A friend in Illinois made me a mix tape with some contemporary hardcore bands and soon enough I found myself at shows and not too long after playing in some hardcore bands. My life would never be the same.
As for comparing myself at present to the kid who got into hardcore, I've matured a lot. I was a pretty shy kid, and I didn't feel confident in myself. But hardcore taught me to take my own ideas more seriously. Sure, there are negative sides to the hardcore scene, but I've always found it to be a pretty supportive and encouraging place. I'm now a high school English teacher and if someone would have told me when I was younger that I'd end up in this position now I would have thought they were crazy. [laughs] But that's another thing about hardcore: it taught me that giving back to others – whether it was friends from the scene or strangers on the outside – was important. I could also say being a part of hardcore was like going to college before and while going to a traditional college. I learned as much about life and about myself from my time in hardcore than I did from anything else.

Where did the idea for the book come from, and specifically a book on the 1990's era of hardcore?

-I didn't get directly involved in hardcore until the early-nineties, so that era had a huge impact on my life. As I mentioned earlier, I've always been attracted to music with a message and almost every hardcore band I was exposed to had some sort of message, whether it was political or personal. I also found a lot of the debates and discussions I'd overhear or participate in at shows to be really interesting. While some of the debates – everything from straightedge and animal rights to political and spiritual/philosophical issues – were sometimes taken to absurd levels, I found the ideas to be relevant and important.
Fast forward several years. American Hardcore came out and I thought that book was really amazing. It had such great source material from all those classic bands and it was an entertaining read. But something troubled me. The author insinuated that hardcore died around 1986 and that idea floored me. Sure, that first wave of hardcore moved on around that time, but what about the bands that came after? Nineties hardcore changed my life, as well as the lives of many of my friends. I guess I felt like it was somewhat ignorant to say that hardcore "died," considering that it is still thriving to this day. Along the way, I had written for some zines and magazines, but I grew tired of many places only wanting to run stories on bands with a "buzz"—essentially groups most other publications were covering already. Anyway, an idea occurred to me one day, "No one has documented nineties hardcore in the way the eighties era has been. Maybe I should give it a shot." I started contacting some people for interviews and I found their responses to be really positive and enthusiastic. Everything just snowballed from there.

How have you approached the subject matter? Where do you draw the line, what gets in and stays out? Especially considering the musical definition of "hardcore" is considered by many to have been stretched to its limits if not completely ignored in this decade, defining a "hardcore" band in the 90s seems like it would be difficult for the purpose of a book, no?

-There are so many ways to approach hardcore. The nineties era is no different than any other era in that respect. I'm not trying to "define" what nineties hardcore was on the whole. I've always stated up front that this is just a story about some debates/ideas and some bands told from some people's perspectives. 100 other people would probably write the book 100 different ways. There is no definitive definition of hardcore as I believe that each person has to define it for him/herself. That said, I think one of the most interesting parts of nineties hardcore was the diversity in ideas and sound. Now obviously there are lines that have to be drawn in terms of what hardcore's sound isn't. For instance, I don't see an acoustic jam band fitting the hardcore mold. At the same time, I don't think that hardcore has to necessarily have break downs or traditional sing alongs, as great as those things are. I tried to cover a variety of bands that spoke to a variety of issues and played a variety of styles of hardcore – from the traditional to the experimental. Some will disagree with some of my selections, but I think once people see the book (or even look at the full title of it) it will make sense. I agree, though, that the nineties did stretch the sound of hardcore to its limits, and like I said earlier, to me that's one of the most interesting things about that era. I love traditional sounding hardcore, but I guess what I'm trying to say is that hardcore is just as much about community, ideas, and ethics as it as a specific sound.

What have been the highs and lows of doing the book? If you knew what you were getting yourself into, would you have still started it? What have been some crowning moments or big breakthroughs?

-The highs from the book? Being able to give some attention to these bands, people, zines, and debates that played such an important role in my life. I've felt like a lot of bands from this era have been overlooked for too long, so I hope that what I'm trying to do helps re-focus some attention in this era's direction. It was also really cool to hear so many people's perspective on the issues I'm trying to cover. Lots of really interesting conversations transpired. Lows? Well, I never thought it would take five years to assemble this book. I've spent a pretty outrageous amount of hours interviewing people (I talked to over 150 people over the course of the book) and in some ways I feel like I've had to put other aspects of my life on hold in order to finish it. I've learned more about sacrifice, time management, and multi-tasking then I probably ever wanted to know. [laughs]

Where are you right now in terms of the book, and what happens from here on out?

-We're still wrapping up final edits and layout at this point. Revelation has been extremely supportive and helpful and I'm really excited about the way everything is turning out. Plus, a lot of people from the nineties have been generous enough to donate pictures, flyers, zine covers, etc. Rose Noble, the person doing the layout, is doing a really great job, and I'm stoked to see the finished version! We don't have a definite release date yet, but obviously the Chicago show on May 2nd and 3rd is the date we are shooting for. There is also a California show in the works. Stay tuned for an announcement about that soon at www.burningfightbook.com and www.myspace.com/90shardcore

BURNING FIGHT

May 2nd & 3rd 2009
90'S HARDCORE BOOK RELEASE SHOW

-UNBROKEN
-DISEMBODIED
-TRIAL
-MOUTHPIECE
-KILLINGTIME
-UNDERDOG
-108
-GUILT
-SPLIT LIP
-THREADBARE
-REACH THE SKY
-DAMNATION A.D.
-RINGWORM
-BANE
-HAVE HEART
-BETRAYED
-BLACKLISTED
-SOUL CONTROL
-THE KILLER
-HARMS WAY
-CONVICTED
-THOUGHT CRUSADE

LOCATION:
Metro
3730 N Clark St
Chicago, IL 60613

N.Y.H.C. Documentary

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Piece By Piece



new song / new video

Friday, January 9, 2009

Friendly Neighborhood Spiderman



To celebrate the upcoming inauguration of Barack Obama, Marvel is proud to present an all-new story teaming up one of the world's most recognizable political figures with the world's greatest super hero as President-Elect Obama joins Spider-Man in "Spidey Meets the President!"
Available on January 14th, 2009.



AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #583

Lack Of Interest

See the damage...

So this construction company tore down this building next to my house. It was pretty wild to watch the destruction from my window. I took a couple of pictures.




Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

The party's over...

I took down the christmas tree and the decorations around the house the other day. Also the outside christmas lights. I took the tree down to the train tracks by my house and threw it in the woods. I guess it can decompose back into the earth now. You know like nature intended for it too. Sike!

I found out this week that I love getting hooked up with stuff. I don't even care about getting stuff for free (which is always nice) but I think sometimes I'm even more stoked when I get a huge discount on stuff. Like when you go somewhere and you know somebody and they give you a huge deal on something. Is there anything more satisfying. I go to GNC and get over a $100 worth of workout supplements and get it for under $50. I got my first tattoo done by Carter for $20. I see Terror for free from being on the guest list. I got 6 DVD's from Hollywood video for $30 (shout out to Mark). I got a coffee table from IKEA for $10. It just feels awesome to get something for free or get hooked up by someone for cheap.

In Football news I've been bummed none of my teams have won. UC lost to Virgina Tech in the Orange bowl. Ohio State lost last night to Texas. The Colts lost in the playoffs. You can always count on the Bengals and the Browns to lose and have bad seasons. As far as NFL playoffs the teams left in it that I like are The Giants and Baltimore. Will see what happens.

Hope everyone is well.

PEACE!

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Work

Photo of me at a fire in West Chester this past summer.
I was on Ladder 57 coming from Deerfield.


(I'm the one in the center of the picture)

Friday, January 2, 2009

Tear Down These Walls

It's the right idea

Look What Josh Got For Christmas post

Sorry for the lack of updates, I know this post is a little late...
Hope everyone had a good New Year.
This is the "Look What Josh Got For Christmas" post



UC Bearcats 2008 Big East Conference Champs t-shirt.


LP's - 50Lions, Violation, Carpathian, All Out War, Right Idea, & Ragmen.


7inches - Hatred Surge, Lone Wolf, The Icemen, Alpha Omega, All Out War, Harms Way, Steel Nation, Bitter End.

DVD's - Lost Season 4, The Dark Knight, Batman Begins.


$100 dollars, Hollywood video giftcard, Best Buy giftcard, UDF bucks, and a pocket knife (incase I want to rob the place).