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NYHC: New York Hardcore 1980 -1990 [Tony Rettman] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. NYHC: New York Hardcore 1980 -1990 Review: Hardcore Still Lives - As a long time fan of the NYHC scene , I eagerly anticipated reading this book . NYHC is a fun and enjoyable read , though it comes off more like a fanzine than an extensive biography . It chronicles the scene from 1980-1990 with a brief history of each hardcore heavyweight and is abundant with interviews from an exhaustive list of prominent band members . Many great photographs that capture the essence of the scene are provided . There is nothing too revealing or groundbreaking about what Rettman has to offer but it's a nostalgic trip down memory lane . All the essential bands that spearheaded the scene are acknowledged : Cro-mags, Raw Deal , Killing Time , Bad Brains , Breakdown, Sick Of It All , Sheer Terror, Agnostic Front , Gorilla Biscuits, Madball , Leeway, etc ,etc . All true fans of the scene should own a copy of this , if not only for the entertaining interviews and sentimental value . Review: NYHC - Great book ! Stories told by real people in the NYHC scene - highly recommended






| Best Sellers Rank | #776,001 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #116 in Punk Music (Books) #1,530 in Music History & Criticism (Books) #1,998 in Rock Music (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (161) |
| Dimensions | 6.7 x 1.6 x 9.4 inches |
| Edition | Illustrated |
| ISBN-10 | 1935950126 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1935950127 |
| Item Weight | 2.3 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 384 pages |
| Publication date | December 30, 2014 |
| Publisher | Bazillion Points |
D**S
Hardcore Still Lives
As a long time fan of the NYHC scene , I eagerly anticipated reading this book . NYHC is a fun and enjoyable read , though it comes off more like a fanzine than an extensive biography . It chronicles the scene from 1980-1990 with a brief history of each hardcore heavyweight and is abundant with interviews from an exhaustive list of prominent band members . Many great photographs that capture the essence of the scene are provided . There is nothing too revealing or groundbreaking about what Rettman has to offer but it's a nostalgic trip down memory lane . All the essential bands that spearheaded the scene are acknowledged : Cro-mags, Raw Deal , Killing Time , Bad Brains , Breakdown, Sick Of It All , Sheer Terror, Agnostic Front , Gorilla Biscuits, Madball , Leeway, etc ,etc . All true fans of the scene should own a copy of this , if not only for the entertaining interviews and sentimental value .
T**K
NYHC
Great book ! Stories told by real people in the NYHC scene - highly recommended
J**R
The Next Best Thing to Being There
If you’re old enough, the scene you came up in helped shape who you are - the people you surrounded yourself with and the music you listened to and the drugs you took (or didn’t take). I was shaped by the early 2000s in Morgantown, WV. There were various scenes there, centered on one of the hippie bars, or the 123, which drew some national acts but was filled most nights with local bands. The punks centered on a house on Pearl Street, that burned down under mysterious circumstances. I was part of all this, and the bands and the people went their way, with no real hit on the national consciousness. Some scenes stick though. One of those was the birth of Hardcore music out the of the refuse of the punk scene in New York in the early 80s. Some of the bands that came out of that scene still have national relevance today, like Agnostic Front and Sick of It All, and it helped shaped other scenes national from Chicago and DC to LA. In NYHC: New York Hardcore 1980-1990, Tony Rettman explores that scene in considerable depth, bringing the reader the memories of the people who were in the scene and in the bands and worked at the clubs and radio stations. The chapters are structured as brief conversations about certain aspects of the scene, so there are chapters on a band or a club or a record store. It gives the fan who was not there context for the music as it was developed and the people who put it together. There are also a lot of nice visuals from show pictures to flyers to illustrate the total artistic aspect of the Hardcore scene. It is an amazing document, but it does have some weaknesses. It was as if the writer interviewed the participants in depth, but he cut those interviews up to apply directly to the topic that was being covered. I haven’t read much oral history of music, but I am a big fan of the oral history as Studs Terkel did them, allowing the people he interviewed to share their full stories. I think the method here eliminates some depth of the experience. A second concern is that when people are interviewed, they are identified only on their first appearance. This means that if you don’t recognize how they fit in the broader narrative the author is trying to create, you have to page back and try to figure it out for yourself. There is a listing in the back, but I only found that out after I finished the book. Overall, I enjoyed it a lot, and I bought a couple of similar titles, hoping that they can deepen my appreciation of the music I listen too. One odd bit that didn’t fit anywhere: Vinnie Stigma comes off as a very flat character. He just loves being Italian and eating Italian food. There’s got to be more to him than that.
D**N
Great Oral History of NYHC
Loved this book. Just got it and read it in one day. This is a great oral history of the New York Hardcore Scene by the people who made it/were there. The first half of the book helped fill in the gaps for the years I missed, the second half was a great walk down hardcore memory lane. If you're a NYHC fan this book is a must have....and now tops a list of great NYHC books including: Radio Silence, Making A Scene, Schism Fanzine Book, Everybody's Scene and Evolution of a Cromag-non. Buy it. Buy it now.
C**Z
Incredible document of an incredible decade!
I have loved NYHC since 1986, saw a a lot of the classic bands and recently started pulling out my CDs of the old stuff. When I saw this book I knew I had to have it. It’s almost like an encyclopedia of NYHC! This is such a fantastic mammoth of a document and incredible document of an incredible decade.
C**K
Someone is missing
Not bad, I learned a lot about the bands I missed the first time around. But there's one question - How can you have a tell-all history about NYC Hardcore without talking to Harley Flanagan?! He's one of the scene's kingpins, yet he's barely mentioned! Would have had a better book with his contributions, just sayin'...............
A**R
the Ritz and the Anthrax this book was a great walk down memory lane
As someone who was part of the NYHC scene from 1986-1988 and went to many Sunday matinees at CB's as well as the Pyramid, the Ritz and the Anthrax this book was a great walk down memory lane! It is a great read for people who know the scene or want to hear what it was like from the band members themselves.
S**O
An indispensable coffee table book for hardcore punk fans
This verbal history of NYHC is comprehensive and entertaining. The format, zine excepts from various NYHC luminaries organized into a cohesive chronological narrative, is incredibly impressive. The amount of research that went into this text is downright awe inspiring. Basically what you get is many first hand accounts from different parts of the NYHC scene. The book is a treasure trove of info, particularly about the origins of NYHC music and style.
L**.
Un très bel ouvrage pour en apprendre plus sur la culture hardcore de New York. Des anecdotes croustillantes sur tous les groupes ayant participé à cette mouvance, certaines venant de grands nom du milieu. Je le recommande fortement pour les gens qui souhaiterais connaitre d'avantage cette scène ou alors la découvrir d'une facon originale.
M**T
Essential for any fan of NYHC, even if your exposure is limited to the "big" bands that came out of the scene. The stories from the players about the bands, the club, and New York when it was still a dangerous place to be.
H**)
Really comprehensive on NYHC. There are many acts worthy of books of their own. The story is told by folks from the scene and bands involved. It doesn't cover the bands whole histories in a lot of cases, some it does, but that leaves it open which is clever as this makes you want to go check out more. It isn't overly opinionated as some books on Hardcore, which is refreshing. It's also one of those books that could easily be republished and expanded out another 10 or more years. It's main plus that it pays homage to many dead and forgotten people in the scene.
D**L
Dieses Buch lebt nicht davon, dass eine Person etwas beschreibt, sondern dass viele Personen dies tun. Dies ist chronologisch einwandfrei geordnet und zeigt sowohl positive,- als auch negative Sichtweisen der Protagonisten auf. Ich war zu Beginn skeptisch ob des vielen Textes von so vielen unterschiedlichen Menschen, doch wie bereits erwähnt, lebt die Geschichte der Szene genau von eben all den Erinnerungen dieser Menschen. Hat man dieses Buch gelesen, versteht man diese Stadt, diese Szene viel intensiver, als dass es “nur“ der Soundtrack unzähliger Veröffentlichungen vermittelt.
C**U
Parfait
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