| | Discharge Hear Nothing See Nothing Say Nothing CD Discharge Discography of CDs
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A punk rock landmark if ever there was one, Discharge's Hear Nothing, See Nothing, Say Nothing is one of the most bleak, angry albums to ever grace the underground. The album is important on all sorts of levels, from what it did to the British hardcore scene to the long-lasting effect it had on heavy metal. And the worst part is that time has slowly erased the album from the minds of punk rockers, although the heavy metal tendencies of the band had always made them outcasts in their own scene. But this is the real thing, filled with bitter tirades against the government and predicting all-out nuclear destruction with chilling detail. The unrelenting pound of the music would create a huge movement in the hardcore world, starting first in their own country where bands like the Exploited would bring the metal sound into their music. Within a few years, bands like D.R.I., Agnostic Front, Stormtroopers of Death, and Suicidal Tendencies would make similar metal-flavored punk in the States. On the other side of the spectrum, the brutal chugging of the guitars would be a huge influence on the developing thrash metal scene. Anthrax, Metallica, Megadeth, and Slayer were its earliest champions, while later bands like Helmet and Pantera would also credit the band with inspiration. Time has hardly dulled the effect of the music; this still sounds as relevant as it did in 1982 if only because the song topics are fairly timeless. Tracks like "Protest and Survive," "Hell on Earth," and "Free Speech for the Dumb" are not only incredibly catchy and simple, but pack their maximum impact because of this simplicity. The terrifying screams of "Cries of Help" may be one of the most haunting moments on any hardcore album, while "The End" is an excellent ending track that sums up the message of the album perfectly. The re-release from the mid-'90s appended several more excellent tracks, including the savage "Two Monstrous Nuclear Stockpiles" and "The More I See," a song that possibly has the catchiest riff they have ever written. Their music before and after this point is quite unpredictable when it comes to quality, but this moment in their career was a very vital one that left an enormous imprint on music, even if most people do not realize it. [Released in 1982, Hear Nothing was reissued by Castle in 2003, and again in 2007 by Captain Oi!] ~ Bradley Torreano
Live RecordingSpin (p.104) - "The rhythms galvanized a whole hardcore subgenre..." Mojo (Publisher) (3/03, p.76) - Ranked #23 in Mojo's "Top 50 Punk Albums" - "...Even today it sounds remarkable, a blizzard of musical and emotional extremity..." Mojo (Publisher) (3/03, p.76) - Ranked #23 in Mojo's "Top 50 Punk Albums" - "...Even today it sounds remarkable, a blizzard of musical and emotional extremity..." Hear Nothing See Nothing Say Nothing Music Discharge Hear Nothing See Nothing Say Nothing Songs Hear Nothing See Nothing Say Nothing Music Hear Nothing See Nothing Say Nothing Music Review Average Rating: (5 out of 5 stars)   A Hell On Earth 25 years old this month and still the best. I found a copy of this in a friends collection in 1984, he and all our other friends hated it, I loved it. Pretty much perfect and a true five star album. Pioneers, nothing else sounded like this, they blazed a trail for others to follow Submitted by cadd (Glasgow, Scotland) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
One of the greatest hardcore bands Discharge has the best noise ive heard since D.R.I.or Minor Threat.Their music influenced so many bands and causes.Now they suck,but the memories continue.Their noise was enuff to drive both Reagan and Thatcher mad.Top 5 songs:1)protest and survive,2)Born to die in the gutter,3)Meanwhile,4)Why,5)Is this to be.
FIGHT THE POWER!!!!! Submitted by James Lott (Houston,Texas) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Never to be Equalled!!!! It is that DAMN GOOD!!!! If you don't like DISCHARGE, YOU AIN'T PUNK!!!! The nightmare continues!!!! Submitted by terry (montreal) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Best hardcore EVER The best and heaviest hardcore album ever made. I bought it when it first came out on vinyl, and still think it's the best ever even after all these years.
EXTREMELY HEAVY Submitted by a reviewer (Atlanta) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No This review is for a different format.
OUCH-STOP PUMELLING ME! My ears are bleeding! I find it hard to describe-a HEAVY sound, yet bouyed by a sunny optimism. Just kidding. I remember getting this when it 1st came out (on vinyl) and being blown away. It's still in rotation. Submitted by a reviewer (Phila., PA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No This review is for a different format.
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| | Lady June Linguistic Leprosy CD (1974) England
Hear Nothing See Nothing Say Nothing
$14.89 Lady June, aka June Campbell Cramer, was a Bohemian artist and poet who was something of an honorary member of the less commercial wing of the early-'70s British progressive rock scene. Numerous musicians lived and hung out in her flat in the Maida Vale area of London, which is most famous as the place where (at a 1973 party) Robert Wyatt fell out of a window, paralyzing him from the waist down. Lady June was already in her early forties when she recorded the debut album Linguistic Leprosy. It's such an eccentric piece of work that it's safe to say it would never have gained release had she not had such strong art-rock connections, and had Virgin Records not been at the stage where it was issuing some of the least commercial progressive rock music ever (though it's been reported the LP did sell out its 5,000-copy pressing). While Lady June does take all of the lead vocals on the record, they're actually much more spoken poetry than singing, though she does occasionally hum-sing in a tentative way. Her pieces -- it's hard to call them songs, at least in the standard sense of that term in rock music -- are odd, whimsical, rather surrealistic spoken poems, delivered in a quirkily aristocratic manner.
Without demeaning her contribution to the record, it wouldn't be nearly as interesting a rarity to art-rock fans as it is without the substantial contribution ...
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