17 Facts About Hardcore punk

1.

Hardcore punk is a punk rock music genre and subculture that originated in the late 1970s.

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2.

Hardcore punk has spawned the straight edge movement and its associated sub-movements, hardline and youth crew.

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3.

Hardcore punk was heavily involved in the rise of the independent record labels in the 1980s and with the DIY ethics in underground music scenes.

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4.

Hardcore punk additionally broke with original punk rock song patterns and visuals, favoring lower key aesthetics.

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5.

Hardcore punk was a reaction to the "cosmopolitan art-school" style of new wave music.

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6.

Hardcore punk "eschew[ed] nuance, technique, [and] the avant-garde", and instead emphasized "speed and rhythmic intensity" using unpredictable song forms and abrupt tempo changes.

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7.

Hardcore punk lyrics expressed the "frustration and political disillusionment" of youth who were against 1980s-era affluence, consumerism, greed, Reagan politics and authority.

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8.

Hardcore punk drumming, with the drummer hitting them aggressively, has been called the "engine" and most essential element of the genre's aggressive sound of "unrelenting anger".

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9.

Early 1980s hardcore punk scene developed slam dancing, a style of dance in which participants push or slam into each other, and stage diving.

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10.

The term mosh came into use in the early 1980s American hardcore scene in Washington, D C A performance by Fear on the 1981 Halloween episode of Saturday Night Live was cut short when moshers, including John Belushi and members of a few hardcore punk bands, invaded the stage, damaged studio equipment and used profanity.

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11.

Many North American hardcore punk fans adopted a dressed-down style of T-shirts, jeans or work chinos, combat boots or sneakers, and crewcut-style haircuts.

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12.

Certain hardcore punk bands have conveyed messages sometimes deemed "politically incorrect" by placing offensive content in their lyrics and relying on stage antics to shock listeners and people in their audience.

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13.

Portland, Oregon hardcore punk bands included Poison Idea and Final Warning, while north of there, Washington state included the Accused, Melvins, the Fartz, and 10 Minute Warning.

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14.

The subsequent Post-Hardcore punk music genre, spearheaded by bands like Fugazi, is an evolution of hardcore which was created by participants of the Revolution Summer movement.

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15.

Hardcore punk has spawned a number of subgenres, fusion genres and derivative forms.

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16.

D-beat is a hardcore punk subgenre, developed in the early 1980s by imitators of the band Discharge, after whom the genre is named, as well as a drum beat characteristic of this subgenre.

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17.

Just as hardcore punk groups distinguished themselves from their punk rock predecessors by their greater intensity and aggression, thrashcore groups sought to play at breakneck tempos that would radicalize the innovations of hardcore.

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