Biohazard Urban Discipline Torrent
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Yakub kolas prezentacya na belaruskaj move. So, here it is, Biohazard’s infamous 1988 demo, aka 'the racist demo'. I have to say, finally getting the chance to check out these 'controversial' songs years and years after first hearing all of the rumors about ‘em, I don’t see what the big deal is at all, and I find all of the 'white power' allegations to be tremendously overblown.
Besides the fact that it’s kind of hard to swallow the notion that one of the most notable bands to have prominently fused hardcore/metal and hip-hop was at one point in time racist, not to mention the fact that one of their most prominent members (who handles 95% of the vocals on this demo) is Jewish, these songs—while immature—are very clearly exactly what the band says they are: Intended 'to shock, be vague, and get your attention'. Now, the lyrics are hard as shit to understand throughout the demo, and ironically some of the most distinguishable lines are also the most contentious, but from what I can gauge the only track that could legitimately offend politically correct nerds would be 'Money for the Unemployed', which could arguably contain some touchy comments about welfare. But what New York area hardcore band didn’t have a song that hit on that type of subject matter back in the 80’s (Agnostic Front, Antidote, etc.)? And let’s not forget: These songs were recorded 17 years ago, so Biohazard was basically still a bunch of kids. Thus it’s no great stretch to believe that some admittedly ridiculous and juvenile lyrical decisions were, in fact, strictly used for shock value. Obviously a song title like 'Master Race' is as easy a target as they come, and when the band says in an interview, '‘Master Race’ was a song about uniting all the underground kids, from punk, hardcore, metal, rap street people— and rising up, like in ‘The Warriors’,' yeah, that’s a bit of a copout.