In the early years of Los Angeles punk, one of the premiere hardcore bands was T.S.O.L., which stood for the True Sounds of Liberty. Offering poppier music than many of their contemporaries and featuring an image that appealed to punks who wanted to dive deeper into the gothic subgenre already being offered by many British punk bands, T.S.O.L. became hugely popular in the local scene but never translated that success to national exposure because of their ever shifting lineup and sound.
Formed in 1978 by four pasty faced youths with a passion for the emerging hardcore scene, T.S.O.L. was originally based in Huntington Beach, California. Featuring the lineup of vocalist Jack Grisham, guitarist Ron Emory, bassist Mike Roche, and drummer Todd Barnes, the band burst into the local club scene with an image that included white face paint and dark, energetic anthems about alienation and other troubled youth topics. A few members had already tried their luck with a band called Vicious Circle, so gigs in the South Bay and Orange County were easy to get despite many of those shows ending with riots that would ban them from the very same clubs. A politically fueled eponymous EP would be the band's first official release, and it's emotional sound and vicious attitude were enough to ensure their standing as a major force in the scene.
Genre: Hardcore
Year: 1981
Tracklist:
01. Superficial Love
02. Property Is Theft
03. No Way Out
04. Abolish Government/Silent Majority
05. World War III
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