Somebody grabs the microphone and bellows, "This is hardcore! Love it or leave it!" This person is about four feet away from me, but the bodies are jammed into the living room tight enough that I can't tell whether it's a member of the band or of the crowd. (The distinction isn't really important.) The man's point, I think, is that the room isn't going hard enough. But the room is, by any meaningful standard, going pretty fucking hard.
There are few things as soul-cleansing as a good house show. House shows exist in pretty much every genre, but this interconnected network of grimy crashpads is especially important to the punk and hardcore ecology. It's a crucial part of the experience, for bands and for everyone else. Virtually every member of every noteworthy hardcore band has spent time on the house-show circuit; many are still there. And when you go to these things, even if you don't know anybody, you feel like you're part of a community.
On this night in Richmond, the house in question is Crystal Palace, a place that is neither crystalline nor palatial. If you show up halfway though a band's set, you are not seeing that band. You are, instead, stuck in the crowded kitchen, craning your neck and watching silhouettes of bodies flying in different directions. There are holes in the wall in the living room, and it's fun to imagine that they're mosh-related damage, even if they're more likely the result of somebody clumsily moving a couch or whatever. Above the drum kit, a big plastic Slimer hangs.
After that guy says what he says about loving it or leaving it, the local band Downfall only has one song left. People go off. Downfall, who released a banger of an EP called Dead To Me last year, play a commanding hard-bark take on the genre that riffs on the music of old-school NYHC bands like Madball. If you're going to a local show, you dream of seeing a band like this. These guys have a following in the area, and they probably know most of the people in the room. People are that much more determined to show out for them, and they are that much more determined to show out for their people. Bedlam ensues.View this post on InstagramDownfall and Restraining Order at the Crystal Palace!
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When Downfall finish up, I see a girl step out onto the back-porch area with blood streaming down her face and onto her shirt, half-bragging that she's just broken her nose. A few minutes later, she disappears into the house, then reemerges saying that somebody just reset her nose for her. I'm pretty sure she stays for the rest of the show. It's one of the most badass things I've ever seen. People go so hard for Downfall, in fact, that the next band, the scrappy and discordant Kansas City group Devil's Den, plays to a half-empty living room. Maybe people are still catching their breath. Maybe they're saving it up for the main event. Tonight, the main event is Restraining Order, a West Springfield, Massachusetts band that's been on fire lately. Restraining Order are a rare thing these days: a young hardcore band devoted to music that was presumably made before any of the members of the band were born. Restraining Order formed with the specific intent of making "1982-style" hardcore, and that is what they do. Their sound is fast, and it specifically recalls the frantic, strident sound of early Boston bands like SSD and DYS. (There's a fair amount of Minor Threat in there, too.) Hardcore long ago branched out and became its own thing, with its own network of subgenres. But Restraining Order still sound like a punk band in the most fundamental sense of the term.THIS FEELING INSIDE.... pic.twitter.com/eVBcj8kIdQ
— Downfall (@DOWNFALLVA) August 23, 2019
When I type it out, the idea of 1982-style hardcore does not look especially cool. Hardcore has gone in a whole lot of different directions since those frenetic early days, and bands who attempt to recreate the past often come across as faint shadows. But that's not the deal with Restraining Order. They make this music sound urgent and vital and often a whole lot catchier than you'd think a 66-second song could logically be. Singer Pat Cozens is driven and rabid, like his innards would dissolve if he didn't scream these lyrics about hating normal people and not being able to function in the world. The rest of the band plays fast but not sloppy. Their songs have force and structure and, usually, some pretty great basslines. They rule. Last year, Restraining Order released their debut LP This World Is Not Enough, one of the most powerfully satisfying 15-minute albums I've heard in years. (I really fucked up by not including it in this list.) Their set at Crystal Palace might be even shorter than that, but it's hard to tell, since the room immediately becomes a blur of tangled limbs and time sort of warps and distends. In a place like this, Restraining Order's best songs ("Don't Really Think," "Something For The Youth," "What Will You Do") hit like absolute anthems. Restraining Order tracks invite and maybe even demand mass singalongs. In Richmond, that's what they get. Restraining Order have bigger things coming up: a European trip, a tour with Terror and Kublai Khan and Magnitude, a date back in Richmond at the United Blood festival. I hope everything they do has the same energy as that house show. It was some shit. This is only the second installment of this column, but hardcore lives and dies based on live shows, and I happen to live a short drive away from one of the best hardcore scenes in the country. So I figure I'll devote most of these columns to talking about those shows, rather than reviewing records or getting into whatever people on hardcore Reddit or Twitter might be arguing about lately. There's always stuff happening in Richmond that's worth discussing. And in a couple of months, there will also be United Blood.@restrainorderhc was awesome last night 🔥🔥🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/a6uSO4uDa1
— RTF FTW (@RTFRecords) January 31, 2020
As with the first installment of this column, I'm also including a list of hardcore and hardcore-adjacent songs that I like and that came out in the past month. I'm leaving out stuff from bigger, more established bands like Code Orange and Envy, both of whom have new music. (You could argue that I should also leave out new music from bands like Drug Church and Higher Power, since they're both pretty big, too. But I'm not doing that. Sorry.) Let's go.View this post on InstagramA post shared by Richmond Hardcore Shows (@richmondhardcoreshows) on






