10 Songs To Get You Into Post-Hardcore
(Originally published on The Odyssey at https://www.theodysseyonline.com/10-songs-get-you-into-post-hardcore?utm_expid=.cZCE7oX8QCubI-ziFLsOXg.0&utm_referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theodysseyonline.com%2Fuser%2F%40mal-andintheway)
Post-hardcore is a rather vague genre label,
initially referring to bands that took the hardcore punk framework and twisted
it into strange new shapes, now just a bracket for bands too heavy to be pop
punk and not aggro enough to be metalcore. However it is a genre that’s
produced many brilliant records and many brilliant bands, and I’d like to give
ye all a brief wee overview with ten songs to show you just what this little
subgenre can do at its best.
1: Big Black: Bad Penny
Steve Albini is notable for having produced a
number of brilliant albums, In Utero needing
no introduction. Before that however, he was a member of Chicago’s Big Black, a
band that took the anger of hardcore, the invention of post-punk and created
some of the most evil, confrontational music in existence. Albini’s sneering,
malevolent vocals, the slicing, razor sharp guitars and a pummelling drum
machine set out an early, embryonic form of post-hardcore that few bands have
ever come close to topping, or even imitating.
2: Fugazi: Waiting Room
Ian MacKaye was already notorious for his
role in shortlived but essential hardcore band Minor Threat, but he’d go on to
make some more interesting music with Fugazi. They took hardcore and injected
it with the fluidity of dub, stop-start dynamics and strange, interlocking
guitarwork. “Waiting Room” is the most straightforward example of this, with
huge singalong parts and a truly monstrous groove. They’re a legendary,
influential band with a wide and varied discography well worth delving into.
3: Drive Like Jehu: Here Come The Rome Plows
Somehow being signed to a major label due to
their members being in the more commercially viable Rocket From The Crypt,
Drive Like Jehu’s flame burned short, but it burned oh so brighty. They’re
probably the proggiest of the early post-hardcore bands, with intricate
structures and wild, vicious performances, going on to influence the likes of
the screamo scene, the math rock bands soon to come and any number of other
acts.
4: Refused: New Noise
Sweden’s finest, Refused hit their artistic
peak with 1998’s The Shape Of Punk To
Come, and I’ve picked this single off it to show you just how good this
band is. There’s the dynamic shifts and builds, the weird techno bit before we
get that riff, oh my what a riff. They’re a band who knew exactly what they
wanted to do, smash as many musical boundaries as possible, produce something
that just bleeds passion and intensity, and with this song and that album they
most certainly did.
5: Thursday: Understanding In A Car Crash
Thursday came from the underground scream
scene in New Jersey, combining the emotional catharsis with the melancholy end
of post punk to help push emo and post hardcore further into the public
consciousness. The swirling guitars and moody ambience owe much to The Cure yet
the tortured screams and thunderous conclusion show they are very much a
hardcore band.
6: Glassjaw: Tip Your Bartender
Glassjaw came from the New York hardcore
scene, but rather than macho NYHC posturing, they brought experimentalism with
rhythm and texture and one of the finest vocalists in this genre with Daryl
Palumbo. His voice can shift effortlessly from gut wrenching screams to soulful
croons, every syllable drenched in emotion, every musical note the band produce
almost on the verge of collapsing yet staying rock solid. What a band.
7: Saosin: Translating The Name
Saosin took the sky crushing yet crystalline
riffs of Deftones, welded that to the trail blazed by Thursday, yet their ace
in the hole at this point in their career was Anthony Green. The high pitched,
femmine crooning we now associate with this genre, crudely imitated by the
likes of Vic Fuentes? We have Anthony to thank for that, he’s the best to ever
do that style. The riff here is also absolutely massive.
8: Funeral For A Friend: Roses For The Dead
I’ve spoken a lot here about the experimental
and odd nature of a lot of the post-hardcore genre, but what about if you just
want a really good, emotional banger? Wales’ Funeral For A Friend have you
covered with this cut off their second album, Hours. A driving yet melodic riff, the melancholy of Thursday
hanging over the track and some absolutely heart-breaking lyrics, Funeral For A
Friend were truly something special.
9: Thrice: Stare At The Sun
Thrice were always a musician’s band,
throwing out odd time signatures, odd riffs and with an experimental spirit
that wouldn’t compromise the quality of the songs. “Stare At The Sun” is a
great example of this, with it’s odd bassline, spacy chorus riff and huge vocal
hooks. They would embrace a lot more of an indie flavour later on in their
career, but their status as post-hardcore legends is firmly crystallized with
this song, and its corresponding album, The
Artist In The Ambulance.
10: At The Drive In: One Armed Scissor
Texas’ At The Drive In were perhaps
the post-hardcore band best loved by the indie crowd and “serious” music
critics. With their wild guitarwork, abrupt shifts in pace and the dense,
abstract lyricism it’s not hard to see why. The wild prog members would go onto
to do in more depth with The Mars Volta had its grounding in hardcore however,
an important grounding factor ensuring this song has maximum impact, the album
it’s off, Relationship Of Command is
also a stone cold classic.
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