version sound wrote:Has anything entered the pink/hardcore canon since 1990?
version sound wrote:As a subtopic, are there any punk/hardcore records that were originally released after 1990 that are currently fetching big bucks or you think may in the future? I’m just curious if collector nerds will still be focusing on records from the ‘80s in 20 years, or if other records will replace them.
version sound wrote:First of all, OOF! on that typo (though Pink was supposedly a punk BITD). My fucking autocorrect and keyboard are garbage.
mean’s info is highly interesting. I’ve heard some of those records, but not others. Those sale prices are pretty surprising. I bought that Circus Lupus record from drew for like $8.00 a few years ago. I still own it, and it ain’t going anywhere. Thanks again, drew!
Green Day! I didn’t even think about them. Do “real” punks like that record, I mean, besides greg?
version sound wrote:mean’s info is highly interesting. I’ve heard some of those records, but not others. Those sale prices are pretty surprising.
version sound wrote:Green Day! I didn’t even think about them. Do “real” punks like that record, I mean, besides greg?
the mean wrote:version sound wrote:Green Day! I didn’t even think about them. Do “real” punks like that record, I mean, besides greg?
Which record? I think everything through Insomniac is pretty good.
version sound wrote:Dookie, I guess. That was the huge one, right? I have found what I’ve heard by them fairly enjoyable, but I’m not really a pop punk guy beyond early Buzzcocks. That record was so huge that it’s hard for me to really see it as a legit punk record (whatever that means). I know those guys came up through the Gilman Street scene, so I can’t deny their credentials, but I’m old, and my entire experience growing up with punk rock was that it was something distinctly outside of the mainstream that older metalheads, stoners, and squares would physically threaten you for showing any interest in. I know it’s happened, but I still can’t get my heard around the idea of any punk record selling in the millions.
jaybird wrote:My late 80s/early 90s band opened for The Offspring at an American Legion Hall show in Ferndale, MI in 1990. It was an early all ages show, and we had a 2nd show booked in Detroit later that night, so we only stuck around to watch a few songs of their set before we loaded out to get to our next gig for soundcheck. I felt kinda guilty/lame for bailing on them during their set so I bought a copy of their first album on my way out the door... last time I checked on discogs, the median price was like $200 I think. I still have it, but since it's kind of a shitty record, I should probably sell it.
drew wrote:Question: Does the Dischord 7” box set kill the value of those records?
drew wrote:Cast Iron Hike- “we must burn” Lots,of folks called this the “master of puppets” of HC. It’s a good album for metalcore
But otherwise I didn’t get the hype.
xxxMidgexxx wrote:But perhaps I just love drone stuff in general.
Knutsen wrote:Leatherface - MUSH goes for 100£ up to 250€ on discogs for the first UK/EU pressing of 1991.
xxxMidgexxx wrote:But perhaps I just love drone stuff in general.
the mean wrote:
I did not include the OP Ivy - "Plea for Peace" 7" (recorded in the 80s, released in 1992) or the "Mission District" (box set, with the best Jawbreaker song) in this list.
xxxMidgexxx wrote:But perhaps I just love drone stuff in general.
drew wrote:Cast Iron Hike- “we must burn” Lots,of folks called this the “master of puppets” of HC. It’s a good album for metalcore
But otherwise I didn’t get the hype.
patient_ot wrote:Plenty of non-U.S. hardcore records from after 1990 aren't exactly cheap.
https://www.discogs.com/release/1286758 ... nd-Of-Pain
https://www.discogs.com/release/1797831 ... ossibility
Just 2 examples for you.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 169 guests