Thrashcore
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thrashcore is an extremely fast subgenre of hardcore punk and saw its beginnings after the decline of punk rock in the early 1980s, when hardcore punk began to take off in Washington, D.C. and California. Early bands categorized as "thrash," such as many of the New York bands, played fast(er) hardcore punk and considered themselves separate from the other, more traditional bands, such as Black Flag. Some bands incorporated elements of thrash metal into their sound, which came to be known as crossover. Many of the most influential crossover bands began as influential thrashcore bands, such as Dirty Rotten Imbeciles (D.R.I.).
Sound Pollution, 625 Thrashcore, Havoc, Hardcore Holocaust, Ebullition, Crimes Against Humanity, Slap a Ham, and Unfun Records have been known to release thrashcore albums.
[edit] Thrashcore bands
- The Accused
- Behead the Prophet, No Lord Shall Live
- Charles Bronson
- Civilian
- Dirty Rotten Imbeciles (D.R.I.)
- Dropdead
- Guyana Punch Line
- Hellnation
- Korova
- Lärm
- PeeP Show Boys (Ukraine)
- Pinkin X Drink (Ukraine)
- S.O.B.
- Septic Death
- Siege
- Surf Nazis Must Die
- Vivisick
[edit] See also
| Hardcore punk |
|---|
| Christian hardcore - Crust punk - D-beat - Melodic hardcore - Powerviolence - Queercore - Skate punk - Thrashcore - Youth crew Emo - Funkcore - Grindcore - Metalcore - Post-hardcore |
| Regional Scenes |
| Australia - Brazil - Canada - Italy - South Wales - Scandinavia: Umeå - Japan Boston - Chicago - Detroit - Los Angeles - Minneapolis - New Jersey - New York - North Carolina - Phoenix - San Francisco - DC |
| Other topics |
| DIY punk ethic - Hardcore bands - Hardcore dancing - Straight edge |

