minchia un bordello di roba hc in piegtra! ma poi guitar gruppi cover di
gruppi difficilissimi da trovare! tipo i wrecthed! hai per caso qualcosa di
caricato dei raw power?
+Ian Victorine I'm trying to comprehend what would cause you to get so angry and post such a mean comment, and I can't. I do not understand. The kid likes the song. You like the song. What is there to be angry about? Do you not think Minor Threat would want to have an enduring impact beyond the one generation they originally played to? In your mind, are they hoping to fizzle out as quickly as possible? Is there not a single band active before you were born that you enjoy? Do you hate movies that came out before 1970? And if there is an old black and white movie that's ever moved you -- do you want some random asshole on the internet cursing you out because of it??
+I BoDdaH god you kids are so fucking ignorant. This song is 35 years old. Which means that most people that listened to this when it came out are 50+ years old. Some of them are lawyers, doctors, teacher, and politicians. Everything wasn't made for you, you little fucking shit.
The first song most of us heard from this unbelievably great band. If you
had ears and a brain (because the lyrics are highly intelligent and spot
on) back then you knew Minor Threat was going to be something very special.
All my musician friends (and not only punk musicians) were in awe of this
band. I'd like to share two quotes from the American Hardcore book by
Steven Blush. Ian MacKaye "The first show we played was a party, then the
Unheard Music Festival, a big show for DC. From the beginning I knew this
band was solid. The feeling was so much more confident than Teen Idles.
There was a big show we did with the Circle Jerks; that band inspired Minor
Threat a lot. The Group Sex album was phenomenal. I remember thinking 'I'm
gonna blow them off the stage.' During soundcheck I was doing "Screaming At
A Wall" ---I hit it so hard that something went snap in my throat. I lost
my voice completely. So I wrote the lyrics on signs and held the signs up
and the whole crowd sung. That was a great show." And here is Ken Inouye
from Marginal Man. "That show was interesting because Ian lost his voice.
They nearly cancelled that gig. When they got on stage Lyle got on the
mic...."Ian has something he wants to say to you" Ian stood up there with
these flash cards I HAVE LOST MY VOICE and with the last bit of
voice he had left, screamed into the mic for "Guilty Of Being White." And
then the crowd went bananas. Everyone had already gotten the demo, so they
knew the words. Here was a band that didn't even have a record out and
everyone was singing along loud enough you could hear it on the P.A."
These are golden moments, the kind that make me so proud to have been
part of the scene back then listening to this wonderful music. .
I don't know why so many people think almost every band in the hardcore era
were anti-religion? Ian mackaye (the guy who wrote this song) has said that
he respects religion. Keith Morris has said he doesn't think religion is
bad he just thinks it's another crutch. Same story for henry rollins. Plus
Ron Reyes is a born again christian! Opinions change I guess.
+JJ Sanchez Well why would anyone need to be a dick, in order to get their point across but that's for acknowledging it. Not many people see it anymore.
No one can make claims either way in regards to the existence of God without faith. The irony is that the nontheists get to claim to be better somehow, even though they have just as little standing as the theists
+Wesley Gaines honestly religion was created through ignorance. Might sound silly but as people ask questions and get facts, not mythical stuff about entities that might not exist, religion begins to deteriorate. And I have seen it in the past years.. These generations don't believe much in religion as older generations. And yes religion did do some horrible things but if it weren't for the people that supported them none of those things would have happened. Forcing your believes down people's throats is wrong. A lot of western religions tend to do that. I'm atheist, but I'm open minded to the idea of a god existing. And I'm open minded to exploring what other people believe in. I don't have set rules of any sort but I tend to think I have morals. In my opinion organized religion is more of a social club than anything really. Anyway I like what you pointed out so cheers man.
I think religion was intended to connect our human minds to forces we don't understand. Not necessarily to control, or brainwash. The problem is that mankind ruined it and turned it into something it wasn't. It's like straight edge, The scene got ruined by a bunch of douchebags.
+Wesley Gaines It's done great! If you could round up all of the heads lopped off by guillotines throughout history, I'm sure they'd say the same thing. Jesus is Lord! Or were the drownings and stonings more humane… That would be venturing into the area of opinion, though, I suppose, so I won't speculate.
+Early Piety All you do is drag people away from friends and family for something as menial as stealing from a store to feed their family or selling drugs trying to make a living to survive and maybe just maybe get shelter!