Discharge: Hear Nothing See Nothing Say Nothing
1982
Clay Records
Format I Own it on: Compact Disc
Track Listing: 1. Hear Nothing See Nothing Say Nothing 2. The Nightmare Continues 3. The Final Blood Bath 4. Protest and Survive 5. I Won't Subscribe 6. Drunk With Power 7. Meanwhile 8. Cries of Help 9. A Hell on Earth 10. The Possibility of Life's Destruction 11. Q: And Children? A: And Children 12. The Blood Runs Red 13. Free Speech for the Dumb 14. The End Bonus Tracks: 15. Never Again" 16. Death Dealers 17. Two Monstrous Nuclear Stockpiles 18. State Violence State Control 19. Doomsday 20. Warning 21. Where There Is a Will There Is a Way 22. In Defence of Our Future 23. Anger Burning
Blimey! It's a Cabbage 'ead!
Have you guys ever heard this Discharge record? Man, this is some serious cloth patch music!
Just listening to it makes me want to tattoo the inside of my lip or beg for some change!
Ma'am...Don't look down...Just keep walking...No, you don't have any change. Who has change these days? Everything is plastic, man! These kids better get with the times...Maybe ask if she has any bitcoins...And don't those gutterpunks know that sitting on concrete like that gives you the piles?!?!?! Is that what the kids are into these days? Piles?!?!!
Anyway, if you're into the hard and fast stuff, then you've got to check out Discharge's "Hear Nothing See Nothing Say Nothing," which is either the band's first full length or second album depending on how you look at the "Why?" 10-inch that preceded it...I guess the best way I can explain the album is imagine if Motorhead were the last survivors of a nuclear holocaust...So single-minded in its fast, chugging, pissed-offed-ness that it ends up being one of the most brutal albums ever laid to tape...
In reality, if you hear the first minute of the album, you've essentially heard the whole thing...Every song utilizes the exact same formula of aggressive cement-mixer guitars, terse one-note shouting, and Boom-boom-bap-ba-bap drum beats, so don't expect much in the way of dynamics, but if you're into being pummeled over the head with a sledgehammer for a half-hour, look no further...The songs are catchy in a "protest chant" kind of way...Whenever I put this on I'm usually walking around the house the next couple days shouting, "DRUNK WITH POWER! OBSESSED WITH DEATH! DEATH AND DESTRUCTION! DRUNK WITH POWER!"
Oh yea, probably the single most entertaining aspect of the album is the fact that it contains a lyric sheet...The words to each song contain only a couple of sparse sentences repeated multiple times...Here are a few examples of complete lyrics:
Cries of Help:..........................................................................................................
Napalm tumbles from the sky,
Cries of help, cries of pain,
Skin looking like bloody hardened meat.
Two Monstrous Nuclear Stockpiles:........................................................................................................
Should East and West be ever divided,
Resigned to living, living in fear.
Free Speech for the Dumb:.........................................................................................................
Free speech free speech for the dumb.
Most of the lyrics don't even have a line count high enough to qualify as a haiku, resulting in a lyric sheet that basically looks like a page of random sentences...It's pretty brilliant, really...I mean, what else is there to say? There's not a lot of time to pontificate when a freakin' atom bomb is turning your flesh into bloody, hardened meat...
The CD copy I have also contains a couple of EP's and the "State Violence State Control" single...Unless you're a real glutton for punishment, it's best to break these up, as an hour of Discharge is a lot to swallow...But it's all amazing...On these later tracks you can hear the band's sound thin out a little as they get a bit more melodic ("Dooms Day" could almost pass as GBH), but it's only relative...I'm sure most folks would regard these tracks as nothin' but a bunch of bloody noise, but I love it...If you're a fan of hardcore, metal, or any combination of the two then this is an absolute must have...A vital precursor to the Crossover genre which showed that punk and metal weren't as diametrically opposed as some narrow-minded fans would have you believe...By the time you get to the "Warning" Ep, the lines between punk and metal are completely blurred. It's such an ideal blend of the two genres that it's hard to believe the band would go glam metal on their very next album...But let's forget about that...
(Margaret Thatcher was to British Hardcore what Ronald Reagan was to American Hardcore)
Right now feels like a good time to blast some good ol' British Hardcore...The real, heavy shit...Let's crack open a few lagers and listen to some Discharge, mate...Here's "Hear Nothing See Nothing Say Nothing"...Happy Friday!
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