• Home
    • Recent
    • Calendar
    • Register
    • Login
    Iron Heart Forum
    Iron Heart Forum

    Important Information: US Tariff Import Changes

    Soundtrack To Your Life

    General Chat
    29
    104
    24.3k
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • mclaincauseyM
      mclaincausey
      見習いボス
      Joined:

      Ole Alien Junkie… Love all the weird Chicago shit/people... him, Albini, Jesus Lizard, Pigface....  Such dark brilliance out of that scene...

      I don't know when, probably this weekend, but I definitely look forward to sharing here.

      Think it, be it.

      last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • madmondayM
        madmonday
        Raw and Unwashed
        Joined:

        this thread will grow, be easy. would be great to add music clips to it.

        this is my place marker . . .

        head high, middle finger higher

        last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • ecerraticE
          ecerratic
          Joined:

          Growing up I was raised on the classics like Black Sabbath, The Doors, and Pink Floyd. I remember hearing "Supernaut" and "Sweet Leaf" (Not knowing at the time what it was about) and just falling in love with the sound. I used to play Master Of Reality over and over. To this day, it's one of my favorite records. The Doors I was introduced to by my grandpa. "LA Woman" and "The End" are powerful tracks that warped my ten year old mind. Same with The Animals, "House Of The Rising Sun." I used to burn those songs onto a CD and just listen for hours.

          As I got older, I was drawn more into punk and hardcore. My first legitimate hardcore record was Black Flag's My War. It sucked me in like no other album, especially side-b. They had songs that expressed what I couldn't…. there's this claustrophobic anxiety that just permeates from "Nothing Left Inside" and "Scream." And then I fell down the rabbit hole to speak and absorbed everything I could like Minor Threat, Bad Brains, Flipper, and Poison Idea. Black Flag though helped me through some tough times.

          I moved onto more current bands like Haymaker, World Burns To Death, Pulling Teeth, and discovered Integrity which like Black Flag was a revelation. Here was a band that had this strange and mysterious history with killer riffs and gnarly vocals. It took all over a minute into "Mischa" for me to become completely obsessed. Through World Burns To Death, I learned about classic Japanese hardcore like G.I.S.M., Death Side, Forward, Poison (Arts), etc. As well as Japanese hardcore, WB2D introduced me to bands like Anti-Cimex, Wolfbrigade, and that killer d-beat sound. They also got me into record collecting.

          Stepping away from the foreign punk, I was enthralled by Converge's Jane Doe. It was so chaotic and savage yet everything gelled to create this masterpiece. So alongside the classic 80s bands, there was definitely a heavy amount of bands like The Dillinger Escape Plan and Converge. I still remember listening to a mix-CD of Jane Doe and Starkweather's Into The Wire on a road trip to Vermont when I was like fourteen or fifteen.

          That being said I was introduced to my favorite band via Integrity. Gehenna were listed as a 'holy terror' band so I checked them out. I bought their early discography LP, put it on and was just blown away. The sheer brutality in songs like "83%" and "Dead Shell" was unparalleled. I immediately bought everything I could and amassed an insane collection of test presses, odd covers, rare bits and pieces. I sold a majority of them since but still have some of the rarer ones. After getting into contact with the members, I found a ton of great music.... from hip hop rarities to garage rock. I'm proud to say I've seen them a handful of times live and the never disappoint.

          Integrity also made me check out the weirder side of Cleveland punk like The Inmates, Cider, H-100s, and Gordon Solie Motherfuckers!. While punk has pretty much dominated my musical interest, I've always had a love for rap. Perhaps it was watching Baker skateboard videos and late night music videos... I don't know but whenever I'd grow bored, I'd go the solid choices like Three 6 Mafia, Ol' Dirty Bastard, and Wu-Tang Clan.

          In the last couple years, I've really liked bands like High On Fire, Sleep, Doomriders, and Kylesa. Crazy riffs are always appreciated. "Darkness Comes Alive" didn't leave my car stereo for a good two months. Every day I'd jam out to it.

          Yet I still like to switch things up and try different genres. Whether it's an electropop group like Chromatics or classic Johnny Cash, it's all good. But I'm still a hardcore kid at heart.

          Insta - @whiskyforeveryghost

          last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • natehateN
            natehate
            啓蒙家
            Joined:

            the first song i can clearly remember and i HATED IT was canary in a coalmine by the police


            my mother was obsessed with this track and played it over and over again (side note i fucking LOVE the police now including this track
            my first concert ever was glass tiger on the thin red line tour
            i was in grade 3
            so as a kid my grandparents had a trailer at the beach and me and my brother spent all summer there from the age of 4 until 10 i believe
            this place very much shaped us, from my grand mother playing her patsy cline, tom jones and other oldies
            to the older brothers of some of our friends introducing us to stuff

            at the age of seven my favorite albums were gnr's welcome to the jungle, the smiths the queen is dead and ice t's o.g. original gansta
            i remember smoking my first joint at the ripe age of 10 at a beach party while we had the lies album on repeat

            i also remember hear just dont bite it for the first time hahaha
            then came some confusing years of liking whatever was on the radio
            hearing immigrant song for the first time around 12 blew my fucking mind
            i dont think anything was the same after that song

            enter the grunge years and a unrelenting love of cypress hill
            but it wasnt enough, something was missing
            i hit highschool
            i was introduced to slayer, biohazard, sepultura, white zombie and nailbomb
            fuck i loved nailbomb and white zombie

            i was also at this time really starting to get into nine inch nails, marylin manson, ministry, and the revolting cocks
            i remember the crow sound track being super important
            then some friends started getting me into punk rock
            the cramps, misfits, sex pistols and the ramones, fugazi.
            around this time i started getting into some dumb shit and found myself on the wrong side of the law, whoops. 15 and dumb
            being in computer class one day and we were discussing that none of us had ever heard the bad brains only heard of them
            i had been looking for something heavier then punk but with a punk attitude and no bullshit guitar wanking
            i was at the local cd store when i came across this compilation that had one bad brains song and a bunch of shit id never heard of, but it was 5 bucks and there was no highspeed interenet, shit i think we only had midi files anyways then
            that cd was victory style 3
            man my mind imploded
            had i just stumbled across exactly what id been after?
            when track one hit me square in the face the answer was yes

            i quickly proceeded to get a victory catalog and order a shit ton of records
            at this time i spent a fair amount of time in chatrooms discussing hardcore with others
            this lead me to find other bands, poison the well, bane, converge, buried alive
            and of course i started to get into a lot of real emo , the get up kids, braid, and the promise ring

            as most hc kids know you end up with a lot of compilations in your collections, enter hot water music and small brown bike

            after that came a few years of ocd like behavior over bands like saetia, neil perry, the orchid, joshua fit for battle, you and i. all that stuff (yes i still have most of those lp's and 7's and other obscure shit)

            then came a thundering return to loving hardcore, fueled by terror


            now i started to return to those compilations at this time and fell in love with a band called rumbleseat
            i was also super into johnny cash at the time

            so enter my current ocd obsessions with everything chuck ragan and everything lucero

            which obviously got me hooked on jawbreaker again
            shortly after that i got obsessed with knowing where everything came from
            that lead me back to the stiff little finger, bruce springsteen, the velvet underground, desmond dekker, robert johnson and so on
            plus a huge love of "outlaw country"

            and i'll leave you with this gem

            hope you guys enjoyed
            i know im missing some shit
            i may edit

            don't you know there ain't no devil? only god when he's drunk!

            last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • derivative666D
              derivative666
              Joined:

              Bravo Nate, very well done. Looking forward to seeing more.

              "honorable mention to the bearded giant aka derivative666 for being a stand up dude & not changing with the seasons since i've been around these parts" Monday

              last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • joesaintjohnJ
                joesaintjohn
                啓蒙家
                Joined:

                ^^
                Fucking incredible. Thank you for that.

                Fat dudes need good clothes too.

                last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • natehateN
                  natehate
                  啓蒙家
                  Joined:

                  glad you guys enjoyed my little run down memory lane
                  looking forward to yours joe
                  and riffblaster generals
                  and black hearts
                  and wolfbloods

                  FUCK i can not believe i wrote that whole thing and never once mentioned my undying man crush on otis redding
                  fuck
                  in my eyes hands down thee greatest male vocalist ever
                  but thats just me
                  my obsession may have start with the first time i saw top gun
                  but i probably heard dock of the bay threw my grandmother before that
                  who knows

                  don't you know there ain't no devil? only god when he's drunk!

                  last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Madame ButtonflyM
                    Madame Buttonfly
                    IHUK Crew
                    Joined:

                    Phew - amazing contributions here.

                    When I get around to putting my soundtrack together it's going to be very tame by comparison!

                    AKA Mrs G

                    last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • spitfiredealerS
                      spitfiredealer
                      Raw and Unwashed
                      Joined:

                      Great Thread. I'll start putting mine together

                      last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • mclaincauseyM
                        mclaincausey
                        見習いボス
                        Joined:

                        Redding was as good a song writer, arranger, musician, and producer as be was a vocalist. What a loss…

                        I love him, Cooke, Gaye, Hathaway, Mayfield, Charles, Wonder...

                        Think it, be it.

                        last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • derivative666D
                          derivative666
                          Joined:

                          Sam Cooke best voice in the game. Total gem.

                          "honorable mention to the bearded giant aka derivative666 for being a stand up dude & not changing with the seasons since i've been around these parts" Monday

                          last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • mclaincauseyM
                            mclaincausey
                            見習いボス
                            Joined:

                            Almost every goddamn time they die too soon too…

                            Think it, be it.

                            last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • tatmantallT
                              tatmantall
                              Joined:

                              so many good names mentioned above. Natehate's story sounds almost identical to mine, id swear he was a kid from the little click of HC kids I ran with through out my youth.
                              To add a few more I was a huge agnostic front fan for awhile…

                              Now though, as I have gotten older and mellowed out.... If im stranded on an island with nothing but some old vinyl and player, Give me some old motown and a little bebop and ill be one happy man. I can get lost (in a great way) listening to coltrane, parker, or miles just doing what they did so well. And I have never in my life heard a song from the old motown days that didnt put a smile on my face. That age of music, IMO, was the highwater mark, so much goodness..... so so much... 😘

                              "I know to you it may sound strange, but I wish it would rain…"- The Temptations

                              last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • Madame ButtonflyM
                                Madame Buttonfly
                                IHUK Crew
                                Joined:

                                @tatmantall:

                                I have never in my life heard a song from the old motown days that didnt put a smile on my face. That age of music, IMO, was the highwater mark, so much goodness….. so so much... 😘

                                Yes, I feel exactly the same way!

                                AKA Mrs G

                                last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • S
                                  superfuzz
                                  Joined:

                                  Tatman, I feel the same way about Stax/Volt, (Otis Redding, Carla Thomas, Eddie Floyd, etc.) never disappoints.

                                  last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • mclaincauseyM
                                    mclaincausey
                                    見習いボス
                                    Joined:

                                    I am big on Stax and Motown, and I'd add New Orleans soul as well, Eddie Bo, Earl King, Lee Dorsey, Ernie K-Doe, Allen Toussaint, Irma Thomas, and I don't want to get started until I can really get into it with the stride pianists like Professor Longhair and the funk like the Meters….

                                    Think it, be it.

                                    last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • natehateN
                                      natehate
                                      啓蒙家
                                      Joined:

                                      @tatmantall:

                                      so many good names mentioned above. Natehate's story sounds almost identical to mine, id swear he was a kid from the little click of HC kids I ran with through out my youth.
                                      To add a few more I was a huge agnostic front fan for awhile…

                                      Now though, as I have gotten older and mellowed out.... If im stranded on an island with nothing but some old vinyl and player, Give me some old motown and a little bebop and ill be one happy man. I can get lost (in a great way) listening to coltrane, parker, or miles just doing what they did so well. And I have never in my life heard a song from the old motown days that didnt put a smile on my face. That age of music, IMO, was the highwater mark, so much goodness..... so so much... 😘

                                      not trying to be a dick
                                      but can we refer to it as northern soul, not motown, motown was just one label, albeit the biggest and most recognized. its just a pet peeve of mine.
                                      northern soul is technically the proper term for that style of music
                                      i'll shut up now
                                      ocd much?

                                      don't you know there ain't no devil? only god when he's drunk!

                                      last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • tatmantallT
                                        tatmantall
                                        Joined:

                                        always have referred to it as such (as everyone I have ever known has) and doubt it will change, but if you refer to it as northern soul i'll know what your talking about.  🙂

                                        also known as "motown soul", or "motown sound"….

                                        "I know to you it may sound strange, but I wish it would rain…"- The Temptations

                                        last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • S
                                          superfuzz
                                          Joined:

                                          Actually I think the proper term for that music is just soul music. Northern Soul is specific to the scene is northern England. In the US we would just call it Soul Music.

                                          last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • tatmantallT
                                            tatmantall
                                            Joined:

                                            Right , however, Motown is a form of soul in which Barry Gordy played "the hand of god" in crafting a sound that became synonymous with Detroit..

                                            "I know to you it may sound strange, but I wish it would rain…"- The Temptations

                                            last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                            • First post
                                              Last post
                                            Copyright Iron Heart 2025.