American Hardcore – Review

American Hardcore, A for fans, B for anyone else.

Thanks to Grayson, I ended up with two tickets to a showing of the punk documentary American Hardcore at the Sundance Film Festival. The film re-lives the eruption of the often brutal underground scene from 1980-1986.

From the start of the film, when the frantic Bad Brains track “Pay to Cum” is blasting away, it was striking. Hearing that music in a movie theater, or anywhere out in public, was a completely novel experience.

American Hardcore follows the growth of the hardcore scene with a spotlight on bands in LA like Black Flag and Washington, DC’s Minor Threat and especially the Bad Brains.

The movie starts brilliantly, contrasting the feeling of the times- the saccharine 80’s, Ronald Reagan as president, skinny ties- with the alienation so easy to feel in such a conformist era. The political similarities to today were amazing, and in fact it’s scary how today it’s so much worse. I remember wearing an anti-Ronald Reagan button around in high school. Today it feels almost illegal to make the same statement against Bush. Maybe that’s just the mood in Utah, but I doubt it.

So they mix all these clips of the fine and dandy 80’s with interviews with Vic Bondi and Keith Harris who have so many great lines about rebelling and the need to be different. The need to scream at the rest of society. It’s a great entrance to the film.

A bunch of other bands are featured as the movie hops from one thought to the next. Bands that quickly appear and vanish include MDC, DOA, Zero Boys, 7 Seconds, Agnostic Front, and a bunch more. At some points, it feels like they’re just cramming people in, as many as they can. And since this film is twenty years late, and there are so many bands worth mentioning, that’s exactly the idea. Not like there will be another in depth movie about 80’s hardcore.

The film doesn’t really explain how amazing the growth of the scene, across the United States, really was. There wasn’t any MySpace for bands to promote themselves and their shows. Hell, there wasn’t any Internet at all, let alone cel phones. Too bad the film didn’t spend more time on fanzines and other people who documented the scene. The only two ways to keep up on things were going to shows and reading cheaply-made fanzines, often xeroxed illicitly at someone’s parent’s business office.

There is one glaring hole in the movie. Almost no mention about San Francisco’s Dead Kennedys. The DKs were a huge band from that time. They put on an amazing show. But the recent history of the band has been very ugly, including a court case where control of the band’s recordings was taken from Jello and given to the other band members. After the film, during a Q&A, the film-makers basically said that Jello wasn’t talking and getting rights to the DK music was way too difficult. So leave it to the DKs to tell their own story. It will never happen.

The cut we saw clocked in at 98 minutes. And after an hour or so it started to drag. There are some segments that just don’t fit. Like, who ever liked the band Flipper and why are they in this movie? The film-makers say they left out the Misfits because they weren’t a real hardcore band. Okay, then take out Flipper. And that horrible Nig Heist segment is just stupid.

A short segment on gangs in the punk scene goes nowhere as well. It comes and goes so quickly that you just get confused.

As the scene klunks along into the mid-80’s, the film claims to record the death of the scene. Their position is that the scene just burned out and was over by 1986. Bad Brains had stopped playing hardcore in favor of reggae. And clips of Black Flag in their awful metal stage seem to offer proof that things were over. But the film misses the point.

I came into the scene around 1985. The fact is that the scene didn’t die. The legendary bands that were going strong in 1983, like Circle Jerks, Black Flag, Dead Kennedys, Minor Threat, and Bad Brains, were all pretty much broken up or past their prime by 1985. They had made their amazing contributions and were done.

Let’s face it, you can’t blame them. How much longer could they go on making no money, touring in broken-down vans, sleeping on the floors of fans. It was a hard life.

But the scene lived on and evolved after these original hardcore bands died out. Bands like RKL, SNFU, Ill Repute, picked up the flag and ran with it. I could name a hundred more. It was crazy how many good bands would play a single show at the Farm, the On Broadway, even Ruthie’s Inn.
The point is, the scene evolved. And it’s easy for it to leave you behind as new kids flood into the scene and write music that comes out of their lives.

Throughout the film, I thought to myself that this is finally the movie that explains how I feel, where I come from. The way these bands were just exploding with energy, how everything was built from the ground up with an amazing passion. That’s how I’ve tried to live and create. But the film encompasses so many bands and so many people that I could hardly claim these feelings as mine alone.

American Hardcore

I’m going to see the film, American Hardcore, tomorrow night at the Sundance Film Festival. I’ll post a review Saturday. The second wave of punk rock was a huge influence on my life that continues to this day. The messages from bands like Justice League, Conflict, 7 Seconds, and a hundred others was about thinking for yourself, being informed, and taking action.
The rest of the country was listening to heavy metal’s lame anthems: “Lick it Up”, “Rock You Like a Hurricane”, “Let’s Put the X in Sex”, and Iron Maiden’s countless songs about Stephen King novels.

The punk scene was never perfect. We were stuck in our own strange non-conformist brand of conformity. We had cliques, and fashion rules. But the do it yourself (DIY) stance always felt right to me. The idea that no one’s better than anyone else. Those are attitudes that live on in my every decision. And when I meet people who were there, no matter where they’re from, we are brothers.

Stories

Writing from along the way

Tour of Hatred

A tour through lands of hatred, intolerance, and death. Bosnia, Kosovo, Poland.

Grand Canyon

A hilarious, historical trip on the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon during a flood.

(temporarily closed for remodeling)

Africa

Let’s criss-cross Africa following the Mormon Prophet, okay?

Intro

Preparations

Getting There

Accra, Ghana

A New Temple in Accra

Last Day in Ghana

Zimbabwe

In the Zanu PF’s House

Johannesburg

Soweto

Cape Town

Into the Townships

Church in Guguletu

Four Months in Utah

Adventures from the summer of 1997.

(temporarily closed for remodeling)

The Globe Diaries

They told me I could not have the job. That was fine; Who wants to live in Utah, anyway?

Site Map

The site is broken down into a few main areas: Photographs (Photojournalism, Punk Rock, and Older Photo Galleries), Multimedia Photo Essays, Stories, and Other Sites I’m On. For an overview of the blog, click here (soon).

55,000 of my photographs, online fully searchable. Use the search box below for a direct search.
My favorites from 2006.
My favorite photographs, 1987-2002.

I started to photograph punk shows at the end of 1985 and amassed a pretty good archive of old school bands. While the archive is primarily 1985-1999, it continues to the present. I have over 2,000 of these photographs online and fully searchable. There are galleries below, or you can use the search box below to search out a specific band or venue.

The Best

A gallery of my favorite shots, from 1986-1999, including:
Adolescents, AFI, All, Asexuals, Avail, Bad Brains, Bad Yodelers, Boy Sets Fire, Clear, Cro-Mags, Crumbsuckers, Dag Nasty, Deftones, Doughboys, Dropkick Murphys, Earth Crisis, fIREHOSE, Frontline, Fugazi, Fury 66, GG Allin, Good Riddance, Goldfinger, GWAR, Hoods, Insted, Isocracy, Leeway, Link 80, Madball, Machine Head, Mannequin Beach, No For An Answer, Ookla the Mok, Operation Ivy, Powerhouse, Rancid, Refused, Riot at the Madball show, Scream, Screw 32, Second Coming, Sick of it All, Snapcase, SNFU, Soulside, Suicide Machines, Uniform Choice, Short Dogs Grow, Unit Pride, Verbal Assault, Voivod, Will Haven, Youth of Today.And if I could find those negs from the NOFX show at Gilman Street in 1988…

1985-1986

featuring: Frontline, Rabid Lassie, Dr. Know, Justice League.

1987

featuring: Adolescents, Mykel Board and Artless, Asexuals, Cringer,Dag Nasty, Can I Say era- one of the best albums everDead Jacksons, Doughboys, Frontline, Hardstance (with Zach from Rage), Hells Kitchen, Hickoids, Insted, Isocracy,A couple shots from the San Ramon Mosh Crew mud football game. Wish I had more.No For An Answer, early version of No Use For a Name, Operation Ivy, Paranoia, RKL, Scream, Social Unrest, Stikky, Subterranean Psychosis, early Unit Pride, Verbal Assault, Visual Discrimination, Youth of Today

1988

featuring: Breakaway- great friends, great times, wish we could do it again.Crumbsuckers show was sold out, we talked our way in with a Provo Daily Herald press pass. Thanks Speedway!Operation Ivy- classic Gilman St. show, horrible high-speed slide film.Raunch Records (RIP). This was SLC Punk, not that horrible movie starring Shaggy.SNFU, always amazing live. First two albums are hall of fame.Short Dogs Grow, Social Unrest, Soulside, Swiz, Unit Pride, Voivod, Youth of Today

1989

featuring: All, Bad Brains, Bad Yodelers at Reptile Records (RIP), Better Way, Boxcar Kids, Cougar Eggs, Cro-Mags, Destructor, Donkey Show, Fist, Fugazi, Insight, Leeway,Mannequin Beach was the funniest show ever. When the bass player came out wearing only a pizza box and started leaping around the crowd cleared out in about five seconds, leaving about three of us to enjoy the show. Afterwards, I remember the owner of Reptile Records (the venue) saying, “He asked me before the show if he could come out wearing a pizza box, but I had no idea that’s all he was gonna wear!”Sick of it All, Slaughterchrist, Stench, Uniform Choice, fIREHOSE.

1990

featuring: Fugazi in Salt Lake City fending off a small group of self-proclaimed Nazi Skinheads.Insight, great old school SLC band.The StenchBad Yodelers at the Pompodour, now a Tibetan Buddhist temple.Slaughterchrist

1991-1995

featuring: Henry Rollins Gap Advert.Great early AFI show, band came out in white shirts and skinny ties a la Reservoir Dogs.Dance Hall Crashers at Sproul Plaza, freezing cold gig.Deftones at Berkeley Square, these early shows before Adrenaline came out were brilliant.Down By Law.Bands in a Blender.GG Allin on TV.GWAR at the Omni in Oakland. My old Nikon still has stains from this show.Lunachicks.Rancid, so disappointed when their tour manager said, “First three songs only, no flash.” This show was amazing, wish the photos had been as well. Blame it on their lame flash rule.Screw 32. Undertow.The crew of Insubordinator Magazine (Pete Hansen and Colby Buzzell under the famous Cal High bridge)Second Coming; always great.Undertow. The Criminals.

1996

featuring: Madball, Bluetip, Snapcase, Kerosene 454, XclearX, Powerhouse, Link 80, Rely, Lower Hand, Second Coming, Earth Crisis, Surly, Godflesh, Die Boy, Voodoo Glow Skulls, AFI, Avail, Triphammer, Holdstrong, Grimlock, Refused, Swingin’ Utters, Suicide Machines

1997

featuring: Deftones, Will Haven, Far, Shelter, Voodoo Glow Skulls, Goldfinger, GWAR, No Use For A Name, Vision of Disorder

1998

featuring: Madball, Zero Bull Shit, Powerhouse, Second Coming, Oppressed Logic, Agnostic Front, Dropkick Murphys, AFI, Earth Crisis, Skarhead, Good Riddance, Fury 66, Swingin’ Utters, Clear, Triphammer, Ookla the Mok, Grimlock, NOFX, All Day, Snuff, Suicide Machines, Dead Bodies Everywhere, Method 5150

1999

featuring: Second Coming, The Hoods, All Out War, Buried Alive, Clear, Lazarus Project, Fury 66, Avail, Dropkick Murphys, Boy Sets Fire

2000-2002

featuring: Snapcase graffiti in bombed-out Sarajevo, Bosnia. Flogging Molly, NOFX, Anti-Flag, Alkaline Trio, No Use For A Name

2003-2005

featuring: Bowling for Soup, Tsunami Bomb, My Chemical Romance, Strung Out, The Ataris, Dispute, Second Coming, Ernie Cortez Memorial Show (OBHC), Dropkick Murphys, Doomsday Device, Fall Out Boy (I know, they ain’t punk), The Starting Line.
SLC-SXE Salt Lake City Straightedge Gallery .

Search

You can also search for a band or venue at my PhotoShelter Archive here:

Older Photo Galleries
In Utah 2002 Portfolio
2001 Portfolio 2000 Portfolio
1999 Portfolio Leica Gallery
Panoramic Photography 1996 Olympics
Co-Workers The Finger
Roadkill Young Guns
Deseret Gym Sports Fans

 

Bigger Buddha

Super-Fan

Spares & Strikes

The Spirit of the River

The Mission

Writing from along the way

Tour of Hatred

A tour through lands of hatred, intolerance, and death. Bosnia, Kosovo, Poland.

Grand Canyon

A hilarious, historical trip on the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon during a flood.

Africa

Let’s criss-cross Africa following the Mormon Prophet, okay?

Four Months in Utah

Adventures from the summer of 1997.

The Globe Diaries

They told me I could not have the job. That was fine; Who wants to live in Utah, anyway?

Other Sites I’m on:
Utah News Photographers Association (UNPA)
Salt Lake Tribune Photography