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Yambag: Strength In Nightmares 7" (Red Vinyl)
Carrying the torch for the new post-now thats class cleveland, its YAMBAG. Giving that their name is from a UPSTAB song, it should give you a hint about what you are going to hear. Combine that classic clevocore sound with fastcore and then you've got the full picture. Returning with Strength in Nightmares, Yambag proves they are fastest band in hardcore punk right now. Split release with Convulse.Ā
Our take: I canāt get over how scorching this new EP from Clevelandās Yambag is. Somehow I missed their first 12ā, Posthumous Pounce, but after I saw Yambag rip it up at Something to Talk About Fest in Philly this summer I had an inkling their new EP would be up my alley. It turns out thatās an understatement! Yambagās combination of snotty vocals and ripping fast hardcore with tight, dynamic changes brings to mind one of my all-time favorite records, DRIās Dealing With It. Like DRI (and unlike so many bands who have attempted to emulate them over the years), Yambagās music is snotty punk rock at its core, but sometimes the intensity gets ratcheted up to the point where thereās nowhere to go but the blast beat, which serves here as the ultimate gestalt. While the playing is tight, the abrupt tempo changes create an unhinged sound, climaxing with the closing track, āLowlife.ā At over two minutes, itās Strength in Nightmaresā longest track, jolting you from an intro where the guitarist tremolo picks a single string with an almost rockabilly flair to a series of dramatic punches into a blast that feels ripped straight from DRIās playbook, into a catchy as fuck mid-paced part that begs you to mosh for the 9 seconds it lasts. The whole thing feels like wandering into a Slayer mosh pit with your eyes taped shut. This one is a certified ripper.
Our take: I canāt get over how scorching this new EP from Clevelandās Yambag is. Somehow I missed their first 12ā, Posthumous Pounce, but after I saw Yambag rip it up at Something to Talk About Fest in Philly this summer I had an inkling their new EP would be up my alley. It turns out thatās an understatement! Yambagās combination of snotty vocals and ripping fast hardcore with tight, dynamic changes brings to mind one of my all-time favorite records, DRIās Dealing With It. Like DRI (and unlike so many bands who have attempted to emulate them over the years), Yambagās music is snotty punk rock at its core, but sometimes the intensity gets ratcheted up to the point where thereās nowhere to go but the blast beat, which serves here as the ultimate gestalt. While the playing is tight, the abrupt tempo changes create an unhinged sound, climaxing with the closing track, āLowlife.ā At over two minutes, itās Strength in Nightmaresā longest track, jolting you from an intro where the guitarist tremolo picks a single string with an almost rockabilly flair to a series of dramatic punches into a blast that feels ripped straight from DRIās playbook, into a catchy as fuck mid-paced part that begs you to mosh for the 9 seconds it lasts. The whole thing feels like wandering into a Slayer mosh pit with your eyes taped shut. This one is a certified ripper.
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Yambag: Strength In Nightmares 7" (Red Vinyl)
Yambag: Strength In Nightmares 7" (Red Vinyl)
Carrying the torch for the new post-now thats class cleveland, its YAMBAG. Giving that their name is from a UPSTAB song, it should give you a hint about what you are going to hear. Combine that classic clevocore sound with fastcore and then you've got the full picture. Returning with Strength in Nightmares, Yambag proves they are fastest band in hardcore punk right now. Split release with Convulse.Ā
Our take: I canāt get over how scorching this new EP from Clevelandās Yambag is. Somehow I missed their first 12ā, Posthumous Pounce, but after I saw Yambag rip it up at Something to Talk About Fest in Philly this summer I had an inkling their new EP would be up my alley. It turns out thatās an understatement! Yambagās combination of snotty vocals and ripping fast hardcore with tight, dynamic changes brings to mind one of my all-time favorite records, DRIās Dealing With It. Like DRI (and unlike so many bands who have attempted to emulate them over the years), Yambagās music is snotty punk rock at its core, but sometimes the intensity gets ratcheted up to the point where thereās nowhere to go but the blast beat, which serves here as the ultimate gestalt. While the playing is tight, the abrupt tempo changes create an unhinged sound, climaxing with the closing track, āLowlife.ā At over two minutes, itās Strength in Nightmaresā longest track, jolting you from an intro where the guitarist tremolo picks a single string with an almost rockabilly flair to a series of dramatic punches into a blast that feels ripped straight from DRIās playbook, into a catchy as fuck mid-paced part that begs you to mosh for the 9 seconds it lasts. The whole thing feels like wandering into a Slayer mosh pit with your eyes taped shut. This one is a certified ripper.
Our take: I canāt get over how scorching this new EP from Clevelandās Yambag is. Somehow I missed their first 12ā, Posthumous Pounce, but after I saw Yambag rip it up at Something to Talk About Fest in Philly this summer I had an inkling their new EP would be up my alley. It turns out thatās an understatement! Yambagās combination of snotty vocals and ripping fast hardcore with tight, dynamic changes brings to mind one of my all-time favorite records, DRIās Dealing With It. Like DRI (and unlike so many bands who have attempted to emulate them over the years), Yambagās music is snotty punk rock at its core, but sometimes the intensity gets ratcheted up to the point where thereās nowhere to go but the blast beat, which serves here as the ultimate gestalt. While the playing is tight, the abrupt tempo changes create an unhinged sound, climaxing with the closing track, āLowlife.ā At over two minutes, itās Strength in Nightmaresā longest track, jolting you from an intro where the guitarist tremolo picks a single string with an almost rockabilly flair to a series of dramatic punches into a blast that feels ripped straight from DRIās playbook, into a catchy as fuck mid-paced part that begs you to mosh for the 9 seconds it lasts. The whole thing feels like wandering into a Slayer mosh pit with your eyes taped shut. This one is a certified ripper.
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-70%Yambag: Strength In Nightmares 7" (Red Vinyl)ā
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Description
Carrying the torch for the new post-now thats class cleveland, its YAMBAG. Giving that their name is from a UPSTAB song, it should give you a hint about what you are going to hear. Combine that classic clevocore sound with fastcore and then you've got the full picture. Returning with Strength in Nightmares, Yambag proves they are fastest band in hardcore punk right now. Split release with Convulse.Ā
Our take: I canāt get over how scorching this new EP from Clevelandās Yambag is. Somehow I missed their first 12ā, Posthumous Pounce, but after I saw Yambag rip it up at Something to Talk About Fest in Philly this summer I had an inkling their new EP would be up my alley. It turns out thatās an understatement! Yambagās combination of snotty vocals and ripping fast hardcore with tight, dynamic changes brings to mind one of my all-time favorite records, DRIās Dealing With It. Like DRI (and unlike so many bands who have attempted to emulate them over the years), Yambagās music is snotty punk rock at its core, but sometimes the intensity gets ratcheted up to the point where thereās nowhere to go but the blast beat, which serves here as the ultimate gestalt. While the playing is tight, the abrupt tempo changes create an unhinged sound, climaxing with the closing track, āLowlife.ā At over two minutes, itās Strength in Nightmaresā longest track, jolting you from an intro where the guitarist tremolo picks a single string with an almost rockabilly flair to a series of dramatic punches into a blast that feels ripped straight from DRIās playbook, into a catchy as fuck mid-paced part that begs you to mosh for the 9 seconds it lasts. The whole thing feels like wandering into a Slayer mosh pit with your eyes taped shut. This one is a certified ripper.
Our take: I canāt get over how scorching this new EP from Clevelandās Yambag is. Somehow I missed their first 12ā, Posthumous Pounce, but after I saw Yambag rip it up at Something to Talk About Fest in Philly this summer I had an inkling their new EP would be up my alley. It turns out thatās an understatement! Yambagās combination of snotty vocals and ripping fast hardcore with tight, dynamic changes brings to mind one of my all-time favorite records, DRIās Dealing With It. Like DRI (and unlike so many bands who have attempted to emulate them over the years), Yambagās music is snotty punk rock at its core, but sometimes the intensity gets ratcheted up to the point where thereās nowhere to go but the blast beat, which serves here as the ultimate gestalt. While the playing is tight, the abrupt tempo changes create an unhinged sound, climaxing with the closing track, āLowlife.ā At over two minutes, itās Strength in Nightmaresā longest track, jolting you from an intro where the guitarist tremolo picks a single string with an almost rockabilly flair to a series of dramatic punches into a blast that feels ripped straight from DRIās playbook, into a catchy as fuck mid-paced part that begs you to mosh for the 9 seconds it lasts. The whole thing feels like wandering into a Slayer mosh pit with your eyes taped shut. This one is a certified ripper.











