Tag hellcat records

Review: Rancid

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Rancid “Self titled” (Hellcat Records) Remember when  ..And Out Come The Wolves came out?  The first song, Maxwell Murder, started playing and you thought, ‘Fuck yeah, Rancid got back to it’s punk roots!’.  Then you listened to the rest of…

Review: F-minus

F-minus “Self-Titled” (Hellcat Records) Woooa, check this shit out.  F-minus is hardcore, down and dirty garage-punk at its very finest.  The songs on their self-titled CD are short, loud, obnoxious and very to the point. Like “Hostage’s” with lyrics, “Fuck…

Review: King Django

King Django ““Reason”” (Hellcat Records) Reggae never was the biggest genre in my musical backround. Sure, I know the big artists (Bob Marley, um..that fast talkin white guy Snow) but that’s about where my knowledge grinds to a halt. In…

Review: Nekromantix

Nekromantix “Return of the Loving Dead” (HellCat Records) Finally, Denmark exports something that is worth my time.  Nekromatix has released their American debut on Hellcat and shown us that psychobilly with style can come from anywhere.  We Americans should be…

Review: Tiger Army

Tiger Army “Early Years” (Hellcat Records) Re-releases are cool right now.  If re-releases were muscles they’d be abs.  Everyone wants great abs and everyone seems to be falling all over each other, trying to get the most recent re-release by…

Review: U.S. Bombs

U.S. Bombs “Covert Action” (Hellcat Records) Duane Peters has done the loop.  The freaking loop, man.  He stood on his skateboard, rolled down the tranny, hit the opposite wall, compressed, sped back towards where he’d started from, straightened, and rolled…

Interview: Tiger Army

Tiger Army interview

Hailing from the nocturnal underground sound of pyschobilly, there comes Tiger Army (TA). Fronted by Nick 13, it is a trio mixed with mystery, passion, and a dedication to this thing called psychobilly. While most bands take pride in mimicking…

Review: Rancid

Rancid “Self-Titled” (Hellcat Records) Remember when “…And Out Come The Wolves” came out? The first song, ‘Maxwell Murder’, started playing and you thought, ‘Fuck yeah, Rancid got back to it’s punk roots!’ Then you listened to the rest of the…