Black flag band biography
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TeachRock
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Black Flag
Black Flag and Circle Jerks opened the golden age of "beach punks". While Circle Jerks produced a faster and louder version of Germs on Group Sex (1980), Black Flag (12) proved to be the more gifted musicians. They crafted the second masterpiece of Los Angeles' punk-rock, Damaged (1981), a collection of brief, epileptic, devastating ruminations pierced by guitarist Greg Ginn's merciless bombardment and shaken by the anthemic/suicidal howls, shrieks and roars of exuberant vocalist Henry Rollins. As Ginn began to indulge in hard-rock sludge and free-form guitar improvisation, Rollins began to indulge in verbose ramblings and theatrical orations. The lumbering sludge of My War (1983) pioneered both doom-metal and mathcore. For a while Black Flag's schizophrenia paid off, as albums such as Slip It In (1984) and Loose Nut (1985) alternated between heavy-metal and punk-jazz, allowing Ginn to show off tornadoes of feedbacks, drones, fuzz-tones, atonal screeches, glissandos, harmolodic phrases, etc. The EP Process Of Weeding Out (1985) found the missing link between garage-rock and free jazz.
(Translation of my original Italian text by Nicholas Green)
Guitarist Greg Ginn formed Black Flag in 1976 in Hermosa Beach with Keith Morris on vocals. After t
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Black Flag (band)
American hardcore punk band
Black Flag is an American punk rock band formed in 1976 in Hermosa Beach, California. Initially called Panic, the band was established by Greg Ginn, the guitarist, primary songwriter, and sole continuous member, and singer Keith Morris. They are widely considered to be one of the first hardcore punk bands, as well as one of the pioneers of post-hardcore. After breaking up in 1986, Black Flag reunited in 2003 and again in 2013.[3] The second reunion lasted well over a year, during which they released their first studio album in nearly three decades, What The... (2013). The band announced their third reunion in January 2019.[4]
Black Flag's sound mixed the raw simplicity of the Ramones with a style of atonalguitar soloing compared to that of the New York Dolls’ lead guitarist Johnny Thunders,[5] and, in later years, frequent tempo shifts. The lyrics were written mostly by Ginn, and like other punk bands of the late 1970s and early 1980s, Black Flag voiced an anti-authoritarian and nonconformist message, in songs punctuated with descriptions of social isolation, neurosis, poverty, and paranoia. These themes were explored further when Henry Rollins joined the band as lead singer in 1981. Most of