Give 'Em The Boot

Let's dig a little deeper into the non-pop/rock side of the 90s punk scene, i'm talking ska, hardcore, and oi!.

What the hell does any of that mean, bottle?

Oh, sorry, i forgot that i never gave you a proper history lesson. I talked about the early punk/new wave interchangeability thing, but there was actually a 3rd ingredient, Reggae.

One of the big questions the twenty-agers had in the 70s was "why are all you people so goddamned racist?" Remember, punk is a leftist enterprise. We're all equal and whatever music you like blends with whatever music i like and that's what we play. Bring your trumpets and trombones, and i'll crank up the distortion. Bagpipes? Yeah sure, bagpipes are pretty punk. This is the stuff Tim Armstrong wanted to sign to his joint venture with Brett Gurewitz, Hellcat Records. Tim Armstrong. You know, Operation Ivy, Rancid. Yeah, that Tim Armstrong.

Look, i'm not a huge ska guy, but there are a lot of great tracks from that world on the inaugural Give 'Em The Boot. I'm much more of a hardcore/street punk guy, so Swingin' Utters and Dropkick Murphy's and Choking Victim are the standout bands for me.

Interesting tangent, Choking Victim broke up and STZA eventually formed Leftöver Crack, then he got real mad at Tim and Hellcat in general and defected to the Fat Wreck Chords camp for CD releases, and Jello Biafra's label publishing vinyl. Not a Scott Sturgeon essay.

This is mainly a ska compilation, but it's still quite listenable. Swingin' Utters "Fifteenth and T" though, that track blew my 17 year old mind and i still love them today.

If you like out of order playlists, here's the 4 album series:

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLvORFyGhNVP4-no-Wm9Az-KLdXZITAMhv

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