Full set from one of the best shows I've ever been to: Albany, NY, July, 1997. Full lineup: Monster X, Devoid Of Faith, Spazz, Charles Bronson, Quadiliacha, Judas Iscariot. (Please contact me if you
The stars had to align for this to make it on youtube man. Someone that went to shows like these didnt usually have the money for a decent camera, the odds of the video surviving long enough to make it to the youtube uploading era,paired with even remembering you have this or finding it. just. man. glad its here though. Thanks friend!
think about this: today in 2024, the time between this show and the video being uploaded is about equal to the time between the video being uploaded and today.
History In The Making 1:17 Fuck Technology, I’ll Keep My Pocket Change 2:36 Marriage Can Suck It 3:26 Deaf And Dumb 4:13 Obligatory Jock Slaughter Song 5:29 Youth Attack 7:20 Shrinkage 8:12 One Life Crew Goes On Slimfast 9:25 You Get What You Pay For 10:08 Rich Crusties Shall Pay 10:31 Individualized Floor Puncher 11:24 Punching A Gift Horse In The Mouth 12:23 Punch Drunk (Husker Du) 14:11 Silenced 14:37 Last Warning (Who Fucking Cares) 16:39
One of my coolest punk rock stories was waking up in the old 31g/gsl house to this dude with a mod mop going through my cds. I was super drunk and he took out a Charles Bronson cd and asked what I thought about them. I said “great band, but FYP did it better.” As the last word comes out of mouth I realize I just told Mark McCoy his band was an FYP rip-off band. And instead of getting annoyed he immediately responded “dude no one ever gets that!” Loved that dude ever since.
Absolute legend for uploading this. As others have said. For even recording it you're amazing. But holding on to it for so many years, converting what was probably a mini DV tape to digital and then uploading, you're just amazing. Thank you from the bottom of my cold black heart.
@@christiancontreras2312 lol. I know right. I was expecting a shirtless muscular Bronson tearing it up. Except you have this scrawny kid with a Moe haircut screaming.
This is pretty decent quality, I'm surprised. Thanks to whoever ripped & uploaded this! Too bad I was still in elementary school when they played this show, shamelessly listening to R&B, Pop Punk, Oldies, and Casey Casem's Top 40 back then. 😔
ha..thinking the same thing. was like yesterday when i slapped their first 7 inch on right when it was first released..blew me away. now its 2016..ha jesus
(Please contact me if you... What? We're on the edge of our seat. Also, thank you for uploading this. Never thought to look on youtube for CB, but I never expected much CB to remain after all these years. Very much appreciate it.
to this day, i'm still searching for their LP with the limited metal cover. it has been, god knows how long, since it came out. chances i will never owned it but i like to putting it out there to the universe, incase the universe wanted to do me a solid 😅
Obviously very influenced by the Carpenters. Not the group, the awful noise those machines make when they cut the timber. The polite applause is cracking me up. Hilarious, and I sort of like it too.
@@Ethyl.breaks plenty of interplay between metal and punk in the 80s already (crust punk, thrash metal, and through them, death metal and black metal), and it definitely carried over to the 90s (most obviously sludge). Just because you weren't aware of it doesn't mean it wasn't there
@@Ethyl.breaks uh, I didn't know people saw assück as metal, that's odd to me. I wasn't there for it, so it's interesting for me to learn what the scene was actually like in terms of what people were into and not just what the bands were doing creatively (which i guess mostly came down to geography, really), so thanks for sharing. That said, if your metalhead friends knew about Dystopia and didn't like that's just lame lol. As for the solos thing, I consider myself a metalhead first, and most of the time I look at solos as more of a flourish, and not really something essential, especially in the more extreme genres
@@Ethyl.breaks i personally had a weird entry into punk, from extreme metal to hardcore punk (and all its subgenres), and only after that did I start to pay attention to the "lighter" stuff. All I have to say about the popularity of bands being more about trends or fashion is that it makes finding the underground gems feel great