Alambrada: RĂos De Sangre 12"
The highly anticipated 12" follow up to the 2021 Muerte Preventiva 7". 12 Tracks of breakneck ultra hardcore MANIA! A brain melting display of raw power performed at inhuman speeds. Uncontrollable chaotic destruction!!!
Covers screen printed in BogotĂĄ
Includes lyric insert and large foldout poster.
Our take: RĂos de Sangre, the debut LP from BogotĂĄ, Colombiaâs Alambrada, arrived earlier this summer in a small edition that disappeared instantly, and now that we have a restock in-house, I wanted to hip anyone who might have missed out on this monster record the first go-round. While displaying the trademark intensity we expect from the contemporary BogotĂĄ hardcore scene, RĂos de Sangre fits with a particular strain of hardcore Iâve often championed at Sorry State. I donât think thereâs a name for this sub-scene, but I think of it as true psycho shit, bands that play at ridiculously fast tempos, cramming their songs to overflowing with musical ideas and whose unbalanced, evil-sounding vibe borrows from the outsider hardcore canon of Cheetah Chrome Motherfuckers, Spike in Vain, and Septic Death. Allergic to safety of convention, this is music that keeps the listener off-balance through a carpet-bomb deployment of odd rhythms and whiplash tempo changes. Incredibly, Alambrada keeps up the intensity across this recordâs entire 20 minutes, not only abandoning hardcoreâs genre-wide conventions, but rigorously avoiding repeating themselves or falling into their own patterns that might deaden the impact of their constant jump scares. It would take longer to catalog Alambradaâs seemingly endless bag of tricks than it would to actually listen to RĂos de Sangre, but even the final quarter of the album feels full of surprises, like the exceptional Buzzcocks-esque guitar solo in âSilencio Sepulcralâ or when the drummer finally does a full-on blast on âRabia.â Itâs a wild ride, and like similarly over-the-top recent records from Psico Galera and Idiota Civilizzato, these twelve tracks will crank your heart up to hummingbird tempo and not let you rest until they hit the last note.
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Alambrada: RĂos De Sangre 12"
Alambrada: RĂos De Sangre 12"
The highly anticipated 12" follow up to the 2021 Muerte Preventiva 7". 12 Tracks of breakneck ultra hardcore MANIA! A brain melting display of raw power performed at inhuman speeds. Uncontrollable chaotic destruction!!!
Covers screen printed in BogotĂĄ
Includes lyric insert and large foldout poster.
Our take: RĂos de Sangre, the debut LP from BogotĂĄ, Colombiaâs Alambrada, arrived earlier this summer in a small edition that disappeared instantly, and now that we have a restock in-house, I wanted to hip anyone who might have missed out on this monster record the first go-round. While displaying the trademark intensity we expect from the contemporary BogotĂĄ hardcore scene, RĂos de Sangre fits with a particular strain of hardcore Iâve often championed at Sorry State. I donât think thereâs a name for this sub-scene, but I think of it as true psycho shit, bands that play at ridiculously fast tempos, cramming their songs to overflowing with musical ideas and whose unbalanced, evil-sounding vibe borrows from the outsider hardcore canon of Cheetah Chrome Motherfuckers, Spike in Vain, and Septic Death. Allergic to safety of convention, this is music that keeps the listener off-balance through a carpet-bomb deployment of odd rhythms and whiplash tempo changes. Incredibly, Alambrada keeps up the intensity across this recordâs entire 20 minutes, not only abandoning hardcoreâs genre-wide conventions, but rigorously avoiding repeating themselves or falling into their own patterns that might deaden the impact of their constant jump scares. It would take longer to catalog Alambradaâs seemingly endless bag of tricks than it would to actually listen to RĂos de Sangre, but even the final quarter of the album feels full of surprises, like the exceptional Buzzcocks-esque guitar solo in âSilencio Sepulcralâ or when the drummer finally does a full-on blast on âRabia.â Itâs a wild ride, and like similarly over-the-top recent records from Psico Galera and Idiota Civilizzato, these twelve tracks will crank your heart up to hummingbird tempo and not let you rest until they hit the last note.
Original: $29.00
-70%$29.00
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Description
The highly anticipated 12" follow up to the 2021 Muerte Preventiva 7". 12 Tracks of breakneck ultra hardcore MANIA! A brain melting display of raw power performed at inhuman speeds. Uncontrollable chaotic destruction!!!
Covers screen printed in BogotĂĄ
Includes lyric insert and large foldout poster.
Our take: RĂos de Sangre, the debut LP from BogotĂĄ, Colombiaâs Alambrada, arrived earlier this summer in a small edition that disappeared instantly, and now that we have a restock in-house, I wanted to hip anyone who might have missed out on this monster record the first go-round. While displaying the trademark intensity we expect from the contemporary BogotĂĄ hardcore scene, RĂos de Sangre fits with a particular strain of hardcore Iâve often championed at Sorry State. I donât think thereâs a name for this sub-scene, but I think of it as true psycho shit, bands that play at ridiculously fast tempos, cramming their songs to overflowing with musical ideas and whose unbalanced, evil-sounding vibe borrows from the outsider hardcore canon of Cheetah Chrome Motherfuckers, Spike in Vain, and Septic Death. Allergic to safety of convention, this is music that keeps the listener off-balance through a carpet-bomb deployment of odd rhythms and whiplash tempo changes. Incredibly, Alambrada keeps up the intensity across this recordâs entire 20 minutes, not only abandoning hardcoreâs genre-wide conventions, but rigorously avoiding repeating themselves or falling into their own patterns that might deaden the impact of their constant jump scares. It would take longer to catalog Alambradaâs seemingly endless bag of tricks than it would to actually listen to RĂos de Sangre, but even the final quarter of the album feels full of surprises, like the exceptional Buzzcocks-esque guitar solo in âSilencio Sepulcralâ or when the drummer finally does a full-on blast on âRabia.â Itâs a wild ride, and like similarly over-the-top recent records from Psico Galera and Idiota Civilizzato, these twelve tracks will crank your heart up to hummingbird tempo and not let you rest until they hit the last note.











