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Boston hardcore

The Boston hardcore scene is an influential hardcore punk scene. It evolved in large part due to the city's working class tradition, large college presence, independent record labels and a revolt against the conservative values the city was founded on.


Contents

Boston hardcore music history

The environment of conservative Boston and the radical nature of the largest college populations per capita and several art schools created a mix for hardcore to rise out of. The colleges and universities in the city offered a unique venue for non-commercial music to be played. Several have the own campus radio stations, such as WUMB, WMBR and WERS. The colleges also feed the local clubs and bar scene, where local hardcore bands get gigs.

First generation Boston hardcore bands included SS Decontrol, Gang Green, Jerry's Kids, The F.U.'s, Last Rites, D.Y.S. and Impact Unit. Mission of Burma were not hardcore, but rather an alternative band that had a great influence on the early emerging punk scene. A group affiliated with the band SS Decontrol called The Boston Crew was a militant straight edge group pioneered by SSD guitarist Al Barile. Its hard-line attitude became a defining characteristic for later bands such as PTL Klub, Slapshot, Wrecking Crew, Eye For An Eye, Ten Yard Fight, Crossface, and Blood for Blood.

The Boston hardcore scene was at one point overrun by neo-Nazis, so a group of Boston hardcore fans created a group called FSU — who have been credited for getting rid of them. Their methods were aggressive, and they would attack Nazis at concerts. They also went after the drunken jocks who would pour into the bars and clubs on Lansdowne Street just opposite of Fenway Park. They were reported to have attacked kids for drinking alcohol or doing drugs, because that went against their straight edge beliefs. FSU has since spread to other cities.

The Boston hardcore scene has beeen relatively quiet in the 2000s, although bands like Mongrel, 26 Beers, and Rejected Society keep it going, with concerts at Reflections, Artspace, and Hutch's Basement.

A constant for 16 years in Boston is the Freedom Rally. These free concerts occur onBoston Common, where hardcore is played alongside reggae and rock music — and the smell of marijuana is often in the air. In 2005, 34 people where arrested, but for the most part the Boston Police keep their distance.

Record labels and famous records

Independent record labels like Taang! Records, Bridge 9 Records, Rodent Popsicle Records, Hydra Head Records, Big Wheel Records and Deathwish Inc. help to fuel the punk culture in Boston . The highlight of the early New England hardcore era was the This Is Boston, Not L.A. LP, which was a compilation of local artists.

Scenes

Kenmore Square

As a result of the defunct club The Rathskeller, an inexpensive pizza parlor, and a few used record stores in Kenmore Square, Kenmore became a hangout for skate punks and members of the hardcore scene.

During the summer, after Red Sox games it was common to see fights break out amongst the punks and the more conservative suburban Boston Red Sox fans. Mr. Butch was a fixture in this scene, and could often be seen playing air guitar with his dreadlocks swinging. He was a legendary character in Boston hardcore culture.

This neighborhood has changed quite a bit, and the building that held the Rathskeller, Planet Records and The Pizza Joint was demolished to make room for a new hotel. With the Rathskeller gone, the scene moved closer to Lansdowne Street, which is a street of clubs and bars on one side, and Fenway Park on the other.

Other scenes

Boston hardcore bands

  • Last Rights
  • Maelstrom
  • Jerry's Kids
  • Mental
  • Milo's Syndicate
  • Mongrel
  • Negative FX
  • The Palantine Campaign
  • The Profit
  • The Proletariat
  • Ramallah
  • Reach The Sky
  • Rejected Society
  • Righteous Jams

Venues

The following Boston venues have hosted hardcore concerts:

See also

Categories


Boston culture | Hardcore punk | Punk

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