Songs Beyond Hardcore

Anything about MUSIC but doesn't fit into the forums above.
Post Reply New Topic
RELATED
PRODUCTS

Post

Muff Wiggler wrote:you guys have cool moms

my mom is cool too, but really she's waaaay too old for any of this kinda crap. Benny Goodman is 'that new fangled youth music' to her ears, and she thinks the sound of bebop means the world is about to end
Actually, Muff, I have been lying.

My mom really likes Benny Goodman though.

The Beatles on the other hand......

Post

I guess i ended up with a funkier mom than i had any right to then. I'm sorry guys.

Post

Immortal
Satyricon
Darkthrone
Carpathian Forest
Emperor
Mayhem

Post

I have been using my mum's car for the last few days, great car (loads better than mine!!), anyway I left all my CDs in my car which had to go to the garage for a while (£271 - :shock: of work!), but didn't think anything of it til I was driving to work the first morning and realised I didn't have anything to listen to, so I checked out my mum's CD collection -

Barry White

Abba

Celeyn Dion

Neil Diamond

Some free crap CD from the daily Mail

- It was a terrifying experience for me :cry: until I remembered to grab some CDs from home - one of which was dubnobasswithmyheadman - underworld, sounded bloody fantastic (she has a wicked system in her car). haven't listened to any of the other CDs all the time I have had the car - 6 days - I didn't want to give the car back :cry:


But I have now! :D

I plan to speak to Mother when she returns from Thailand - best get her some KvR CDs together and teach her a thing or two!!!
:hihi: :hihi:

Post

Oh, and back on topic, I just remembered that Faith No More song called "Jizz Lobber"

Heavy, heavy stuff that.

Post

Mr. Bungle's Love is a Fist

Post

Prosthetic c**t-Fuckin' Your Daughter with a Frozen Vomit f**k Stick

Post

Sicklecell666 wrote:Mr. Bungle's Love is a Fist
Mr. Bungle is one of my all time favorite bands.

In fact, I am listening to Disco Volante as I write this.

Post

respirator wrote:Waht about Einsturzende Neubauten? Even now as old guys they rock (going to a concert en a few weeks to get blood out of my ears...)
Ooo, I forgot to list 'em! :dog:
Armenia is hard to beat.
Sicklecell666 wrote:Mr. Bungle's Love is a Fist
Ah...the first Patton/Zorn collaboration. Delicious! But for the sheer lo-fi garageband death metal factor, nothing beats Bungle Grind, from their 1986 debut, Raging Wrath of the Easter Bunny. I always wished that some major death metal/grindcore band would cover it, so I could hear it on something other than a poorly recorded *th generation tape copy.

Edit: I was talking about it in the Arvo Pärt thread, but just realized it would also be one for this thread: Krzysztof Penderecki's Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima (for 52 strings). That's one of the most brutal, powerful, and emotional bits of music ever written. Everyone has to hear that at least once in their life.

Post

Ultimate in pain-threshold music would have to be the William Bennett-mixed side of 'The 150 Murderous Passions'. Not the crappy reprocessed-from-vinyl-with-extra-reverb version that PWC/World Serpent released, but either the original LP or the remaster on the "Anthology One" collection from Susan Lawly. At high volume it'll cut through pretty much any soundproofing and it'll put anyone into a rotten mood within the first half-minute. Even at low volume it can induce migraines.

Post

dystonia_ek wrote:Ultimate in pain-threshold music would have to be the William Bennett-mixed side of 'The 150 Murderous Passions'. Not the crappy reprocessed-from-vinyl-with-extra-reverb version that PWC/World Serpent released, but either the original LP or the remaster on the "Anthology One" collection from Susan Lawly. At high volume it'll cut through pretty much any soundproofing and it'll put anyone into a rotten mood within the first half-minute. Even at low volume it can induce migraines.
Especially whilst reading the 150 murderous passions in 120 days of sodom :shock: :shock:
Phil

"The fool who persists in his folly will become wise" - William Blake
*No more band for me* | **My Host**

Post

Free Jazz by Ornette Coleman?

Full-on 37 min freakout played by two quartets - one in each stereo channel - Brilliant
Phil

"The fool who persists in his folly will become wise" - William Blake
*No more band for me* | **My Host**

Post

VoidoidSurrealist wrote:
respirator wrote:Waht about Einsturzende Neubauten? Even now as old guys they rock (going to a concert en a few weeks to get blood out of my ears...)
Ooo, I forgot to list 'em! :dog:
Armenia is hard to beat.
Sicklecell666 wrote:Mr. Bungle's Love is a Fist
Ah...the first Patton/Zorn collaboration. Delicious! But for the sheer lo-fi garageband death metal factor, nothing beats Bungle Grind, from their 1986 debut, Raging Wrath of the Easter Bunny. I always wished that some major death metal/grindcore band would cover it, so I could hear it on something other than a poorly recorded *th generation tape copy.

Edit: I was talking about it in the Arvo Pärt thread, but just realized it would also be one for this thread: Krzysztof Penderecki's Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima (for 52 strings). That's one of the most brutal, powerful, and emotional bits of music ever written. Everyone has to hear that at least once in their life.
I saw Mr Bungle on the first LP's tour. To this day, I can't imagine anything I've ever seen that was even remotely as heavy as they were live..They did the Slipknot thing at least 10 years before Slipknot doing the set wearing masks; Mike patton wore a leather S & M mask & I just couldn't believe how he pulled it off..When they did 'Travolta..it was like a f**king nuclear meltdown, I was slackjawed..They also did this dirging Godflesh style song that just blew me away..I had no idea what it was till the end, when he sang the last lines to Billy Squire's The Stroke..

They did a sludgecore version of The Stroke back in like '91..f**king unreal..



:scared:

Post

deggy wrote:Kenny Gee
"Gabba up you asssssssssssssssssssss!!!"
Phil

"The fool who persists in his folly will become wise" - William Blake
*No more band for me* | **My Host**

Post

Sicklecell666 wrote:
VoidoidSurrealist wrote:
respirator wrote:Waht about Einsturzende Neubauten? Even now as old guys they rock (going to a concert en a few weeks to get blood out of my ears...)
Ooo, I forgot to list 'em! :dog:
Armenia is hard to beat.
Sicklecell666 wrote:Mr. Bungle's Love is a Fist
Ah...the first Patton/Zorn collaboration. Delicious! But for the sheer lo-fi garageband death metal factor, nothing beats Bungle Grind, from their 1986 debut, Raging Wrath of the Easter Bunny. I always wished that some major death metal/grindcore band would cover it, so I could hear it on something other than a poorly recorded *th generation tape copy.

Edit: I was talking about it in the Arvo Pärt thread, but just realized it would also be one for this thread: Krzysztof Penderecki's Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima (for 52 strings). That's one of the most brutal, powerful, and emotional bits of music ever written. Everyone has to hear that at least once in their life.
I saw Mr Bungle on the first LP's tour. To this day, I can't imagine anything I've ever seen that was even remotely as heavy as they were live..They did the Slipknot thing at least 10 years before Slipknot doing the set wearing masks; Mike patton wore a leather S & M mask & I just couldn't believe how he pulled it off..When they did 'Travolta..it was like a f**king nuclear meltdown, I was slackjawed..They also did this dirging Godflesh style song that just blew me away..I had no idea what it was till the end, when he sang the last lines to Billy Squire's The Stroke..

They did a sludgecore version of The Stroke back in like '91..f**king unreal..



:scared:
I went to high school with their horn player, Bear.
Good kid, nice family.

Post Reply

Return to “Everything Else (Music related)”