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Must-Have NYHC Records From the 1980s

Following on the heels of the city’s punk rock star, a faster, straight-forward alternative arose in the form of these DIY pioneers.

By Tony Rettman

Essential New York Hardcore Header

When the blistering, crass sounds of hardcore punk swept through America at the start of the 1980s, it was largely considered a suburban phenomenon blasted out of the beach towns of Southern California and affluent suburbs surrounding Washington D.C. With its decrepit landscape and trash-lined streets, lower Manhattan – the location many considered the birthplace of punk rock – stood in absolute contrast to these environments. Perhaps due to this, it didn’t gain significant attention in those first few years. 

It wouldn’t be until the decades’ midpoint when bands like the street-tough Thrasher Magazine. As a result, the city’s hardcore fanzine underground became anything but underground, spreading the DIY ethos and inspiring many of the bands forming in the garages and bedrooms across the country. 

Consider the below list of records as a map to the New York Hardcore scene’s evolution in both sound and impact, and how the combination went on to inform and influence both America and the world well into the 1980s and beyond.


The Stimulators

Loud Fast Rules! (1980)


Bad Brains

Bad Brains (1982)


Kraut

An Adjustment To Society (1982)


Agnostic Front

Victim In Pain (1984)


Cro-Mags

The Age Of Quarrel (1986)


Murphy’s Law

Murphy’s Law (1986)


Youth Of Today

Break Down The Walls (1986)


Various

New York City Hardcore – The Way It Is (1988)


Gorilla Biscuits

Start Today (1989)


Judge

Bringin’ It Down (1989)

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