As millions of Americans lined up at polls to select the country's next president last week eclectic digital music-label Grindcore Karaoke released its 300th album, Never Work, a harsh and aggressive ...
To call Wormrot’s killer debut, Abuse, a splash of cold water to the face in the midst of a growingly samey genre wouldn’t be giving it enough credit: it’s like being woken from a nap by a beating ...
It eschewed working toilets to host crust punks, hunt saboteurs and some of the fastest, loudest music in the UK. The Mermaid in Sparkhill is finally having its history acknowledged In the mid 1980s, ...
Since the late ’90s, Fuck the Facts has been a force to be reckoned with in the worlds of both grindcore and metal. The French Canadian crossover band has undergone a few lineup changes, hiatuses, and ...
If Live Dissection was a testament to today's youth putting their stamp on grindcore and gore metal, then the second act, ...
Grindcore made its first splash outside its insular bubble with Napalm Death’s 1987 debut, Scum, which includes the one-and-a-fraction-second song “You Suffer,” a favorite of iconic BBC DJ John Peel.
Ah, grindcore: death metal’s hyperactive little brother. Combining the most abrasive and vicious elements of metal, punk, and noise, grindcore is a whirlwind of ...
The self-titled debut by No One Knows What The Dead Think is the grindcore album of the year for one simple reason: it brings Jon Chang and Rob Marton -- respective vocalist and guitarist for ...
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