Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Warriors is an American hardcore punk band originally from Tehachapi, California. Due to member changes, The Warriors are now primarily based in Oxnard, California. Their work is heavily influenced by 1990s bands such as Rage Against the Machine and Snapcase. [1]
The Warriors: An Imaginary Ballet, a work for orchestra and three pianos composed by Percy Grainger; The Warriors (American band), a hardcore punk band; The Warriors (British band), a Beatles inspired rock band; Warriors (band), a Yugoslav heavy metal band "The Warriors", a song by Royce da 5'9" featuring Slaughterhouse from Street Hop
Hardcore punk (commonly shortened to hardcore) is an underground music genre that generally revolves around a thicker and more aggressive tone than earlier punk rock. This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.
Scowl (band) SIN 34; Snot (band) Social Distortion; Some Girls (California band) Spazz (band) Spitboy; Stains (Los Angeles band) Stick to Your Guns (band) Straight Faced; Strictly Ballroom (band) Strife (band) Strung Out; Suffering Luna; Suicidal Tendencies; Sunami (band) Super Unison; Swing Kids (band)
Dines worked as a recording engineer before pursuing YouTube full time. [2] He started his YouTube channel to promote his band, They Charge Like Warriors, in 2011. [3] His first major success on the platform came in 2014 when he published "10 Styles of Metal".
In 1983, the band released their first self-titled album through PGP-RTB [1] with Tom Martin (a former member of the band Izazov) on drums, however, not as an official band member. [2] After the release of their debut album, Warriors moved to Toronto and signed for Canadian record label Attic Records. [3]
Commitment to Complications was met with generally positive reviews. Writing for AllMusic, Neil Z. Yeung saw the album as a refinement of Youth Code's sound, saying, "Commitment to Complications demonstrates clear growth from the former hardcore kids, establishing Youth Code as a distinctive duo instead of merely a derivative tribute to their influences."
According to Pearson the band was an attempt to return a sense of lunacy and excitement to the hardcore punk scene, which had begun to appear dry and pedantic to Pearson. Pearson says he modeled the group on the Dead Boys. The band also included Jimmy LaValle and Jesse F Keeler of Death from Above 1979/MSTRKRFT. Pearson has stated "we got all ...