Washington, D.C. hardcore

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Washington, D.C. had one of the first and one of the most influential hardcore punk scenes in the United States during the 1980s.

Among the earliest DC punk bands were the Bad Brains, Teen Idles, Minor Threat, S.O.A., Void, The Faith, DC Youth Brigade, Government Issue, Untouchables, Red C, Marginal Man, Scream, Black Market Baby and United Mutation. In the mid 80's came bands like Gray Matter, Embrace, Rites of Spring, Phlegm, Soulside,Three, Ignition and Rain during a time period quoted by some as "Revolution Summer." Other important DC hardcore bands from this time period are Dag Nasty, Second Wind, and no-wave influenced bands like No Trend.

Dischord Records, owned and run by Jeff Nelson, drummer for Minor Threat and Ian MacKaye, the frontman for Minor Threat, and later Embrace, Fugazi and the Evens put out records by many of these bands. Some other important record labels of the 1980s in D.C. include Fountain of Youth and DSI. Due to Dischord's popularity and influence, very few D.C. based bands who were not on Dischord have received much attention from outside of the DC Metro area.

Hardcore in D.C also grew a large following in the late '80's to mid-'90s with bands like Swiz, Touchdown, Device, Far Cry, World's Collide, Initial Reaction, Fury, Battery, Ashes, Gauge, and Damnation A.D., with a majority of these bands releasing albums on Jade Tree Records, THD, and Sammich.

Today, the surrounding scene (pretty much including anything within the Capital Beltway is "D.C.") is still quite popular locally, having produced such past and present bands as Better Than A Thousand, Clutch, For the Living, Striking Distance, No Justice, Desperate Measures, Barfight, Worn Thin, Fury for Another, Brace, Trial By Fire, and The Suspects, and more recent bands like Moment of Youth, Lion of Judah, The Alleged Bricks, Set To Explode, Police and Thieves, Time To Escape, Bail Out!, VPR, Porch Mob, The Scare, The Commie Pinkos, In My Way, Good Clean Fun, 86 Mentality, and 1983.

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[edit] Bibliography

Andersen, Mark and Mark Jenkins (2003). Dance of Days: Two Decades of Punk in the Nation's Capital. Akashic Books. ISBN-10: 1888451440
Blush, Steven (2001). American Hardcore: A Tribal History. Feral House. ISBN-10: 0922915717

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