Poguba: V Živo cassette
This 17 minute recording is the document of bands' live set in Klub Attack, the venue in Zagreb where we were blown away by highly energetic set from this young Ljubljana HC-punk unit. If you imagine members of U.B.R. having a trip to Bristol in '83 and having a session with DISORDER after couple of cold ones, you might be on the right track to illustrate the abrasive, dark and raging sound of Poguba.
Our take: Autsajder Produkcija brings us two cassettes from this young band from Ljubljana, Slovenia, continuing the labelās hot streak. Poguba strikes me as an extraordinary band, and while Iāll attempt to describe what they sound like, thereās something magical about these songs and performances that you really need to hear to appreciate. When Poguba is in hardcore mode, they remind me most of the primitive punk that came from the UK in the early 80s, though not any band or scene in particular⦠one minute they might sound like Chaos UKās first couple of singles, while the next Iām thinking of the 4 Skinsā toughest tracks, and fans of the Massacred will dig āMrtvaÅ”ki Ples,ā which speeds things up to a Special Duties type of tempo. But then thereās this whole other side of Poguba where they bring in these dark, post-punk-ish melodies that recall both 80s Eastern European punk and Joy Divisionās earliest recordings (see āNadgrobnikā and āAnarkist Javisst (Palimpsest)ā). While Pogubaās music evokes these past eras of punk, it doesnāt have the copy/paste quality that so much contemporary punk has⦠thereās some quality of authenticity thatās hard to pin down, but definitely there. Pogubaās other strength is that their vocals ooze charisma. My favorite vocal moment is the closing track on the studio tape, āZ Glavo Skoz Zidā which has this manic blathering thing that makes me think of Amde Petersenās Arme if they were obsessed with Eastern European punk instead of American hardcore. Thereās definitely something special happening here, and itās easy to imagine Poguba letting their ambitions run wild and quickly outgrowing DIY punkās limited scope. Maybe theyāll even be like Fucked Up or Ice Age and garner the attention of indie rock fans and labels. For now, though, they are a unique and special underground punk band that you should hear. I recommend starting with the studio demo, Sedem Pesmi, then proceeding to the live cassette, V Živo, which captures (mostly) the same set of songs with slightly lower fidelity and slightly higher energy.
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Poguba: V Živo cassette
Poguba: V Živo cassette
This 17 minute recording is the document of bands' live set in Klub Attack, the venue in Zagreb where we were blown away by highly energetic set from this young Ljubljana HC-punk unit. If you imagine members of U.B.R. having a trip to Bristol in '83 and having a session with DISORDER after couple of cold ones, you might be on the right track to illustrate the abrasive, dark and raging sound of Poguba.
Our take: Autsajder Produkcija brings us two cassettes from this young band from Ljubljana, Slovenia, continuing the labelās hot streak. Poguba strikes me as an extraordinary band, and while Iāll attempt to describe what they sound like, thereās something magical about these songs and performances that you really need to hear to appreciate. When Poguba is in hardcore mode, they remind me most of the primitive punk that came from the UK in the early 80s, though not any band or scene in particular⦠one minute they might sound like Chaos UKās first couple of singles, while the next Iām thinking of the 4 Skinsā toughest tracks, and fans of the Massacred will dig āMrtvaÅ”ki Ples,ā which speeds things up to a Special Duties type of tempo. But then thereās this whole other side of Poguba where they bring in these dark, post-punk-ish melodies that recall both 80s Eastern European punk and Joy Divisionās earliest recordings (see āNadgrobnikā and āAnarkist Javisst (Palimpsest)ā). While Pogubaās music evokes these past eras of punk, it doesnāt have the copy/paste quality that so much contemporary punk has⦠thereās some quality of authenticity thatās hard to pin down, but definitely there. Pogubaās other strength is that their vocals ooze charisma. My favorite vocal moment is the closing track on the studio tape, āZ Glavo Skoz Zidā which has this manic blathering thing that makes me think of Amde Petersenās Arme if they were obsessed with Eastern European punk instead of American hardcore. Thereās definitely something special happening here, and itās easy to imagine Poguba letting their ambitions run wild and quickly outgrowing DIY punkās limited scope. Maybe theyāll even be like Fucked Up or Ice Age and garner the attention of indie rock fans and labels. For now, though, they are a unique and special underground punk band that you should hear. I recommend starting with the studio demo, Sedem Pesmi, then proceeding to the live cassette, V Živo, which captures (mostly) the same set of songs with slightly lower fidelity and slightly higher energy.
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Shipping & Returns
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Description
This 17 minute recording is the document of bands' live set in Klub Attack, the venue in Zagreb where we were blown away by highly energetic set from this young Ljubljana HC-punk unit. If you imagine members of U.B.R. having a trip to Bristol in '83 and having a session with DISORDER after couple of cold ones, you might be on the right track to illustrate the abrasive, dark and raging sound of Poguba.
Our take: Autsajder Produkcija brings us two cassettes from this young band from Ljubljana, Slovenia, continuing the labelās hot streak. Poguba strikes me as an extraordinary band, and while Iāll attempt to describe what they sound like, thereās something magical about these songs and performances that you really need to hear to appreciate. When Poguba is in hardcore mode, they remind me most of the primitive punk that came from the UK in the early 80s, though not any band or scene in particular⦠one minute they might sound like Chaos UKās first couple of singles, while the next Iām thinking of the 4 Skinsā toughest tracks, and fans of the Massacred will dig āMrtvaÅ”ki Ples,ā which speeds things up to a Special Duties type of tempo. But then thereās this whole other side of Poguba where they bring in these dark, post-punk-ish melodies that recall both 80s Eastern European punk and Joy Divisionās earliest recordings (see āNadgrobnikā and āAnarkist Javisst (Palimpsest)ā). While Pogubaās music evokes these past eras of punk, it doesnāt have the copy/paste quality that so much contemporary punk has⦠thereās some quality of authenticity thatās hard to pin down, but definitely there. Pogubaās other strength is that their vocals ooze charisma. My favorite vocal moment is the closing track on the studio tape, āZ Glavo Skoz Zidā which has this manic blathering thing that makes me think of Amde Petersenās Arme if they were obsessed with Eastern European punk instead of American hardcore. Thereās definitely something special happening here, and itās easy to imagine Poguba letting their ambitions run wild and quickly outgrowing DIY punkās limited scope. Maybe theyāll even be like Fucked Up or Ice Age and garner the attention of indie rock fans and labels. For now, though, they are a unique and special underground punk band that you should hear. I recommend starting with the studio demo, Sedem Pesmi, then proceeding to the live cassette, V Živo, which captures (mostly) the same set of songs with slightly lower fidelity and slightly higher energy.












