#HardcorePunk

berlin.askapunk.derelay@berlin.askapunk.de
2026-02-05

LIQUID SUPERCHARGE + NIKKI LAUDA FIREFIGHTERS + MISSCONDUCT

ask a punk, Monday, March 16 at 08:00 PM GMT+1

One of the first shows of the upcoming season!

đŸ’„đŸ’„đŸ’„đŸ’„đŸ’„đŸ’„đŸ’„đŸ’„đŸ’„

We are excited to welcome:

LIQUID SUPERCHARGE -- Speedrock, Croatia

https://liquidsupercharge.bandcamp.com/

đŸ’„

NIKKI LAUDA FIREFIGHTERS -- High Octane Hardcore, Berlin

https://nikilaudafirefighters.bandcamp.com/album/niki-lauda-firefighters

đŸ’„

MISSCONDUCT -- Punk R'n'R, Berlin

https://missconduct13.bandcamp.com/album/blackout

đŸ’„

Poster by Doomsday Graphics

https://www.instagram.com/doomsday_graphics/?hl=en

DOORS -- 8

NOISE -- 9

đŸ’„đŸ’„đŸ’„đŸ’„đŸ’„đŸ’„đŸ’„đŸ’„đŸ’„

berlin.askapunk.de/event/liqui

LIQUID SUPERCHARGE + NIKKI LAUDA FIREFIGHTERS + MISSCONDUCT
Mario aka GaffaMariogaffa
2026-02-05

Updates!

      #fluchtversuch Moin! Auf diesem Blog findet ihr jetzt 2 neue Seiten: einmal GIGS und eine kleine Info-Seite ĂŒber unsere neue Band QUO VADIS. Wenn ihr aus Hamm kommt dann haltet die Augen offen.Wir spielen noch im Februar einen spontanen kleinen Auftritt irgendwo in der Stadt.

computerstaat.wordpress.com/20

PUNK irratiapunkirratia
2026-02-05

KALASHNIKOV

Kalashnikov es un grupo de punk melĂłdico, anarquista y DIY nacido en 1996 en una casa ocupada de MilĂĄn, Italia

Kalashnikov naciĂł en 1996 en el sucio suelo de una casa ocupada en MilĂĄn, para dar rienda suelta a la inquietud adolescente de tres chicos con los oĂ­dos taponados por Wretched, Bad Religion y Clash...

Info: punkirratia.net/talde/kalashni


@punk@a.gup.pe @punk@fedigroups.social

Ben ZoulkBenZoulk
2026-02-05

RUNDERGROUND - 20260204

Sunn 0))) - Dream Canyon

High on Fire - Lighting Beard
Melvins - King of Rome

Tombs - Glass Eyes / Ghoul
Corrections House - Drapes Hung by Jesus

EarthBall - And Music Shall Untune The Sky

Bronson Arm - Vestigial Tail
Bacon Wagon - Weapon Of Choice

Sex Dwarf - Illusion, Slicka, War // Peace, Makt, Krig, SvÀlt, Död

The Otolith - Ekpyrotic

mixcloud.com/Runderground/rund

2026-02-05

44 years ago today
Bad Brains is the debut studio album by the American hardcore punk band Bad Brains, recorded in 1981 and released on the cassette-only label ROIR on this day in 1982

#punk #punks #punkrock #badbrains #hardcorepunk #history #punkrockhistory #otd

Geisterstadtgeisterstadt_oi
2026-02-04

Nadja + Wright Valley

13.02.2026
Einlass: 20:00
Dreikönigskeller, Frankfurt am Main

geisterstadt.eu/concerts/nadja

Flyer for Nadja + Wright Valley

Poison Ruin Announce New Album; Share New Single And Video “Eidolon”

Photo by Kat Bean

Poison Ruin’s Hymns from the Hills ambitiously rewrites the very rules of what punk is capable of achieving, pushing their sound into expansive new terrains without sacrificing an ounce of the bleak symbolism and uncompromising aggression that first established them as an urgent new voice in the world of extreme music.

The Philadelphia punks have expanded their signature approach to grim mythmaking and scythe-swinging aggression in bold new directions, offering up a new body of songs that strike one as equal parts natural, undeniably of this world, and phantasmal. 

On Hymns from the Hills, Poison Ruin’s previous stories of toil and dispossession are revealed to be but one chapter etched upon a bleaker tapestry- One populated by spirits traversing sunless deserts and wilted hillsides, demonic torture objects limning the edges of the psyche, bodies transfigured into Luciferian snakes, Sadean prisoners bound to the screaming silence of abandoned castle towers. 

Poison Ruin’s signature form of raw, anthemic aggression pummels on lead single â€œEidolon”, released today alongside its video. Frontman, lyricist and guitarist Mac Kennedy states, â€œâ€˜Eidolon’ is about being stuck in a broken reality, a cog in a fate-machine doomed to play out the same cursed loop until it fully breaks down. The ones who had the power to affect change have abandoned the scene. Their phantoms loom down in quiet disapproval of the disaster that slowly plays out beneath– Grim reminders of what could have, but will not be.”

https://youtu.be/VzQAPQT3kF4?si=FIh4QXSVsDsbXogN

The record is at once a forceful restatement of Poison Ruin’s trademark sound and a departure from it. The crackling, cassette-dubbed darkness and crushing rhythms listeners have become accustomed to are buttressed by a carefully sculpted mosaic of new textures, from flourishes of Killing Joke hacksaw primitivism and blast-beats worthy of the Relapse catalogue number to crisp analog synth lines and ambient serenades reminiscent of Scott Walker and The Durutti Column. Like a serpent moving ever outward with spiraling circularity, Hymns from the Hills expands Poison Ruin’s sonic landscape in imaginative new directions while maintaining its center of gravity firmly in the band’s already established mythos.

Hymns from the Hills is meticulously composed. Much like the rest of their work, this LP was self-recorded without the use of professional studio equipment. To meet the greater sonic demands of Hymns from the Hills, however, Poison Ruin lyricist and guitarist Mac Kennedy relocated to a private practice space, retiring from his previous routine of squeezing in tracking sessions around the rare moments that the band’s shared practice space happened to be vacant. To best serve the record’s grander ambitions, the band enlisted the mixing prowess of Jonah Falco (F*cked Up, Career Suicide) and the mastering of Arthur Rizk (Power Trip, Blood Incantation, Cavalera), who helped to elevate the record’s teeming variety of sounds to new heights of self-assured fidelity. Kennedy lent a second hand to the mixing process, splicing in grittier tape recorded segments in order to maintain a certain tonal continuity with the band’s previous work, creating a rich structure of unconventional frictions, crystalline flashes of polish ripping through abysses of hissing low end only to shatter against the whipping sting of rusted chains moments later.

Poison Ruin’s mythic sensibilities grip at new poetic heights. Lyrically, Hymns from the Hills extends both the cynicism and the defiant bravado of their established fantasy aesthetics. While the record continues Poison Ruin’s tradition of employing medieval-inflected fantasy imagery, Kennedy does not intend for these figures to be read as historically accurate. â€œI’m not very interested in conveying the historical facts of medieval culture. If we are to make sense of the present, we need to employ a more mythic mode of language and symbol to reach beyond the spiritual malaise that envelopes us. A mythic truth resonates within any time, but its echoes call from outside of time. Medieval and fantasy imagery are simply effective personal starting points for tapping into that mode of communication.”

Hymns from the Hills sees its release April 3 via Relapse Records on vinyl, CD and digital platforms. For more information on physical variants and to pre-order, go here.

#HARDCORE #HARDCOREPUNK #MUSIC #NEWS #POISONRUIN #POSTPUNK #PUNKROCK #RELAPSERECORDS
Poison Ruin

ÎŁÎ±Îœ ÏƒÎźÎŒÎ”ÏÎ± πρÎčΜ 41 χρόΜÎčα ÎșυÎșÎ»ÎżÏ†ÏŒÏÎ·ÏƒÎ” Ï„ÎżÏÏ„Îż Ï„Îż crossover Î­Ï€ÎżÏ‚.

Onslaught - Power From Hell (1985, Children Of The Revolution Records)

https://backonblack.bandcamp.com/album/power-from-hell

#ThrashMetal #HardcorePunk

V/A – Current Affairs CD (Subunderground C.A.)

When you think about the DNA of the underground, it’s rarely about a single band or a single city. It’s about the connective tissue, the fanzines, the tape trades, and most importantly, the compilations that bridge the gap between different scenes. Freshly landed on the desk is Current Affairs, a massive 17-track collection released just last month, and if you have any interest in anything that comes from the UK or Dutch punk scenes, this is essentially your new textbook. What we have here is a curated blast of energy from ten bands that refuse to let the DIY spirit become a museum piece. It’s raw, it’s diverse, and it’s mastered by Patrick Delabie at Studio 195, which is basically a seal of quality for anyone who likes their punk with a certain punchy, analog grit. It’s a cross-section of where the underground stands right now, and man, the heart rate is high. The record kicks off with Old Age Spies, and “Wake Up Song” is exactly what it says on the tin. They occupy that sweet spot between classic punk rock and garage-infused sound. It is a timeless sound, and it could have come out in 1977 or 2026, and it would still make you want to spill your beer and start a pit. But just as you’re settling into that garage groove, Mouser hits you with “¡No Pasarán!”. This is the real deal, high-octane, eighties-inspired hardcore punk that doesn’t mess around. Mouser represents that elite tier of Dutch punk that understands the power of a driving bassline and a vocal delivery that sounds like someone yelling through a chain-link fence. It’s fast, it’s focused, and it’s one of the strongest arguments for why the eighties sound still feels so dangerous in the right hands.

Then the compilation takes a slight turn toward the British Isles with Geezapunx. Their tracks, “Catch 22” and “Holler,” are absolute standouts because they merge traditional punk rock with that specific, stompy urgency of early eighties British Oi!. It’s that blend of melody and street-level aggression that makes you want to sing along while looking over your shoulder. Following that up is Scoundrels, featuring Kev Ellis on “Asteroids.” This is straightforward, no-nonsense punk rock at its finest. It doesn’t need gimmicks; it just needs a solid riff and a sense of purpose, both of which are present in spades. It provides a perfect bridge into one of the most violent segments of the CD: Abrazos. If you’ve got a short attention span, Abrazos is your new favorite band. “We Pretend To Work Because They Pretend To Pay Us” clocks in at under a minute of pure, unadulterated old-school hardcore punk. It’s a sonic middle finger that hits with the force of a sledgehammer and leaves before you can even process the damage. As the CD “rips and burns” its way through the tracklist, we encounter Krust Worthy. Their sound is a fascinating mixture of Oi! sensibilities and the darker, more aggressive edge of UK82. It’s that driving, “boot-on-pavement” rhythm that keeps the compilation from ever sagging. But just when you think you’ve got the record figured out, Brioche enters the room to stir the pot. “Are Aliens Real?” and “Strange” are probably the most “open-minded” tracks here, combining synth basslines with alternative and punk rock textures. It’s a refreshing palette cleanser that proves this compilation isn’t just about speed, but also about creativity. It reminds me of the way bands like Die Kreuzen used to throw a curveball just when you thought you knew what was coming next.

For those who like it a bit more modern and heavy, Stresssysteem delivers an impressive blend of crusty, grindy hardcore punk. With tracks like “Ondergang” and “De Wereld Op Z’n Kop,” they utilize a dual-vocal attack that shines in the limelight, creating a chaotic, suffocating atmosphere that feels incredibly aggressive. It’s dark, heavy, and it provides a perfect contrast to the melodic fuzz that follows. And speaking of fuzz, we have to talk about Ford’s Fuzz Inferno. Hans F. Ford is a legend in the Dutch scene for a reason, and “Why Are We Here And Who Are You?” is a prime example of his signature move, fuzzy, melodic punk rock that wraps around your listening apparatus and refuses to let go long after this song ends. It’s catchy as hell but retains that grime that only a true DIY veteran can conjure. Then you have Waste, who carry that torch of energetic sound blending noise and melodics. “Ups and Downs” is a powerful, catchy punk rock anthem that stays in your head long after the laser stops spinning. It’s a track that balances power and hooks so effortlessly that you wonder why it isn’t being played in every dive bar across Europe. By the time the compilation circles back to Old Age Spies and “Zombie Zombie,” you realize you’ve just been given a 17-track tour of the most vital corners of the current scene.

What ties all these bands together isn’t just a geographical proximity or a shared mastering engineer, but that profound DIY mentality mentioned in the credits. There is a passion here that you just don’t get from over-produced, label-sanctioned releases. This is music made by people who have to make it, people who are scouring archives, scouring record bins, and keeping the flame alive because they don’t know any other way to live. Current Affairs is a mandatory listen for anyone who calls themselves a punk enthusiast. It twists, it turns, and it offers something for every flavor of the underground, from the street-punk veteran to the noise-rock nerd. It’s a diverse, entertaining, and inspiring collection that proves the underground isn’t just surviving in 2026, but it feels more alive than ever. If you want to know what’s happening in the basements and squats from England to the Netherlands, this is your map. Grab a copy, turn it up, and let the neighbors know that punk rock is still very much their problem.

#ANARCHOPUNK #CRUSTPUNK #GRINDCORE #HARDCOREPUNK #METAL #MUSIC #OI #PUNKROCK #STREETPUNK #UK82
V/A - Current Affairs CD - Subunderground C.A.
2026-02-04

Dropkick Murphys haben ja mit Haywire617 nen alten Song umgedichtet. Gar nicht mitgekriegt. Wunderbar.

youtu.be/0k_O5w9kpHo?si=uQTbR_

#hardcorepunk #SongOfTheDay

2026-02-04

Trust-Fanzine has done a review of our 10" "AnthropozÀn" in their recent issue.

#punk
#hardcorepunk
#fanzine

Review of "AnthropozÀn" in trust fanzine, issue winter/spring 2026
2026-02-04

A great vintage! 😉

Happy birthday to the Roberts twins, Tony "Bones" Roberts and Terry "Tezz" Roberts of Discharge and Broken Bones, born on this day in 1962

#punks #punkrock #hardcorepunk #discharge #brokenbones #history #punkrockhistory #otd

Jake in the desertjake4480@c.im
2026-02-03

“Don’t Say Please: The Oral History Of Die Kreuzen” by Sahan Jayasuriya (Feral House)

Let’s be honest, if you grew up in the eighties or nineties worshiping at the altar of the independent underground, the name Die Kreuzen carries a weight that most hall of fame acts couldn’t dream of. They were the ultimate musician’s band, a group of four guys from Milwaukee who didn’t just participate in the American hardcore scene, but they essentially broke its spine and rebuilt it into something unrecognizable. For years, their story was scattered across old zines, liner notes, and the hazy memories of people who were lucky enough to be in the front row at the Starship, but with Don’t Say Please: The Oral History of die Kreuzen, Sahan Jayasuriya has finally given this band the definitive, brick-heavy monument they deserve. It’s a long-overdue archaeological dig into the Rust Belt shadows where the future of alternative music was actually forged. To understand why this book is so important, you have to understand the sheer anomaly of Die Kreuzen. Emerging from an industrial Milwaukee that felt light-years away from the hype of the coasts, Dan Kubinski, Keith Brammer, Brian Egeness, and Erik Tunison formed a unit that was almost terrifyingly proficient. Jayasuriya, a veteran Milwaukee music scribe who clearly has the DNA of the city’s scene under his fingernails, approaches the subject with the perfect balance of a fan’s obsession and a journalist’s precision. He spent a decade on this thing, and it’s vividly hearable on every page. The story drops you right into the disaffection of the Midwest, where the wreckage of punk was being fused with a strange, metallic haste and the kind of atmospheric dread you’d usually find on so many underground records.

The beauty of the oral history format, when done correctly as it is here, lies in its lack of a filter. Jayasuriya lets the band members speak for themselves, and the chemistry and occasional friction are more than notable. You get the sense that Die Kreuzen didn’t really care about being punk in the stylistic sense. They were punk in the philosophical sense, meaning they were completely bored by rules. The book tracks their evolution from the self-titled LP, which remains one of the fastest, most precise documents of hardcore ever pressed to wax, through the psychedelic, dark-pop explorations of October File and Century Days. It’s a fascinating look at a band that refused to stand still, even when standing still might have actually made them some money. When you’re reading reflections from the likes of Steve Albini, Thurston Moore, and Butch Vig, you realize that Die Kreuzen wasn’t just a blip on the radar, but the radar itself. These are the architects of the nineties alternative boom, admitting that they were taking notes while watching Die Kreuzen play to thirty people in a basement. Hearing Neko Case or Lou Barlow talk about the band’s tremendous impact adds another layer that you don’t usually get in rock docs. It’s one thing for a fan to say a band is great and another thing entirely for the producers of Nevermind and the leaders of Sonic Youth to explain how this specific Milwaukee band changed the way they thought about melody and aggression.

Jayasuriya’s writing, or rather, his curation, captures the relentless grind of the 1980s touring circuit. There’s a certain nerve to the stories of traveling in cramped vans, playing for gas money, and dealing with audiences that didn’t always know what to make of Brian Egeness’s increasingly complex guitar work or Dan Kubinski’s otherworldly vocals. The book doesn’t shy away from the reality that the band called it quits just as the mainstream was finally beginning to catch up to the alternative sound they helped invent. There’s a bittersweet quality to the final chapters, a sense of what if, but it’s tempered by the band’s total lack of regret for their uncompromising stance. They did exactly what they wanted, and they did it better than almost anyone else. Visually, the book is a feast. For the true fans, the inclusion of rare photos, flyers, and lost ephemera acts as a visual timeline of a scene that was often too fast and too loud to be properly documented. You can see the transition in their eyes and their gear, moving from the raw energy of the early eighties into the more sophisticated, brooding presence they occupied by the turn of the decade. Jayasuriya has scoured the archives with a level of dedication that borders on the religious, unearthing photos that feel like they should have been on the walls of a museum long ago.

What I appreciate most about Jayasuriya’s approach is that he doesn’t treat Die Kreuzen as a museum piece. He treats them as a living influence. He understands that their sound, that jagged, beautiful, heavy, and melodic mess, is still echoing in the music of today. Whether it’s in the DNA of modern post-hardcore or the way heavy bands now feel comfortable embracing noise-pop, the fingerprints of Die Kreuzen are everywhere. Don’t Say Please is the definitive map to finding those prints. It’s a semi-casual yet deeply knowledgeable examination of a brutal and visionary career. If you’re a Die Kreuzen fan, you probably already have ordered this one. If you’re a student of underground history, you need it to understand how the dots connect. Sahan Jayasuriya wrote a love letter to the idea that being unclassifiable is the highest compliment a musician can receive. Die Kreuzen never asked for permission to change the world, and they certainly didn’t say please. This book is the loud, proud, and perfectly executed proof of their genius.

#ALTERNATIVE #DIEKREUZEN #FERALHOUSE #GRUNGE #HARDCOREPUNK #MUSIC #REVIEWS

"Don’t Say Please: The Oral History Of Die Kreuzen" by Sahan Jayasuriya - Feral House
PUNK irratiapunkirratia
2026-02-03

CIRCLE JERKS

The Circle Jerks are an American punk rock band formed in 1979 by vocalist Keith Morris and guitarist Greg Hetson.

The Circle Jerks are an American punk rock band formed in 1979 by vocalist Keith Morris and guitarist Greg Hetson. Morris had previously been a vocalist for Black Flag and Hetson had been a guitarist...

Info: punkirratia.net/talde/circle-j


@punk@a.gup.pe @punk@fedigroups.social

El Pregoner del Metallpregonermetall
2026-02-03
2026-02-02
Next weekend: Hannover on Friday and Berlin on Saturday. See you there! [Sorry if the video does not display properly on your device. Not our fault
 blame the software. ] #punk #diypunk #punks-how #punkconcerts #hardcorepunk
Mario aka GaffaMariogaffa
2026-02-02

Das OX erwÀhnt uns. Teil 2

#fluchtversuch Vor etwas ĂŒber einer Woche erwĂ€hnte uns das OX , immerhin das auflagenstĂ€rkste Punk-Fanzine Deutschlands, unsere neue Band im Newsletter. In der neuen Printausgabe ( Nummer 184) nun auf den News-Seiten. Es sind nur kurze Meldungen, nichts besonderes eigentlich. Schließlich sind wir nicht SLIME, NO FX, WIZO


computerstaat.wordpress.com/20

2026-02-02

"Und da ist auch schon unsere neue Videoplaylist! Neue Videos von A Wilhelm Scream, Fornhorst, Uli Sailor Punkrock Piano, Frenzee, Remote Bondage, Death By Stereo, Damasco und vielen mehr!
bierschinken.net/news/1250-mus "

f.freinetz.ch/display/f7fcf48f

@punk #Punk #Hardcore #HardcorePunk #AnarchoPunk #DeutschPunk #Skapunk #Skacore #Screamo #77Punk #GaragePunk #PunkRock #Rock #PostPunk #SynthPunk #IndiePunk #AlternativePunk #PostHardcore

PHILLY ASK A PUNKrelay@philly.askapunk.net
2026-02-02

DIMENSION (MA)/COMMITMENT/DYSTROPHY/CRANIAL ELONGATION

hall pass, Thursday, February 26 at 07:00 PM EST

COMMITMENT

https://commitmentphl.bandcamp.com

DIMENSION (MA)

https://dimensionpunk.bandcamp.com/album/demo

CRANIAL ELONGATION

https://m.soundcloud.com/cranial-elongation/sets/switch-heel

DYSTROPHY

https://dystrophypv.bandcamp.com/album/no-cure-demo

HALL PASS @VOX

$12-15

MUSIC AT 7

philly.askapunk.net/event/dime

DIMENSION (MA)/COMMITMENT/DYSTROPHY/CRANIAL ELONGATION

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