Faith / Void Split

Last updated
Faith/Void Split LP
Faith-Void.jpg
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 1982
Recorded Inner Ear Studios
1982
Genre Hardcore punk
Length28:00
Label Dischord
Producer Ian MacKaye, Don Zientara
Void chronology
Condensed Flesh
(1982)
Faith/Void Split LP
(1982)
Potion for Bad Dreams
(Unreleased)
The Faith chronology
Faith/Void Split LP
(1982)
Subject to Change
(1983)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [1]

The Faith/Void Split LP is a split album by Washington D.C. hardcore groups Void and the Faith, released on Dischord Records in 1982. Void was one of the earliest examples of hardcore/metal crossover with their chaotic musical approach cited as particularly influential. [2] Kurt Cobain listed the album in his top fifty albums of all time. [3] [4]

Contents

Background and influence

The Faith and Void were hardcore bands from Washington D.C., both with few releases (this is Void's only release throughout the band's existence), [5] but the record built a relatively large underground following among punk and hardcore punk fans. [6] Both bands were connected to Dischord Records, the punk label run by Ian MacKaye and Jeff Nelson of Minor Threat and were considered pioneers of DC Hardcore. [7]

Writing for the Guardian, Craig Finn of the Hold Steady referred to the split as “one of the most vital hardcore records ever released” and continued: “It's a reminder of hardcore at its finest: angry and dangerous without being cartoonish”. [8] This sentiment is popular among fans, with other publications calling the split: one of the greatest hardcore records ever put to wax, [9] or the Void side of the split: “probably the most influential on the punk-thrash scene of the 90's”. [10]

Distribution

The record was number 8 in the Dischord catalog, indicating it was the label's 8th release. Originally, the record was available in a test pressing with a handmade sleeve, followed by a regular pressing in cardboard sleeve with two lyrics inserts, one per band, both made in 1982. Dischord has since remastered the album and re-released it twice - in 2008 in clear purple vinyl, and in 2011, in black vinyl. [11]

Packaging

The sleeve art for the LP (which dedicates one side to each of the bands on the original vinyl) is also rather iconic.[ citation needed ]

Track listing

The Faith

  1. "It's Time"
  2. "Face to Face"
  3. "Trapped"
  4. "In Control"
  5. "Another Victim"
  6. "What's Wrong with Me?"
  7. "What You Think"
  8. "Confusion"
  9. "You're X'd"
  10. "Nightmare"
  11. "Don't Tell Me"
  12. "In the Black"

Void

  1. "Who Are You?"
  2. "Time to Die"
  3. "Condensed Flesh"
  4. "Ignorant People"
  5. "Change Places"
  6. "Ask Them Why"
  7. "Organized Sports"
  8. "My Rules"
  9. "Self Defense"
  10. "War Hero"
  11. "Think"
  12. "Explode"

Re-issue

Dischord re-issued the album on compact disc in November 1993, with the following extra tracks (from the Faith's Subject to Change EP). The disc was remastered at Silver Sonya in 2002 and subsequently re-released.

  1. Aware
  2. Say No More
  3. Limitations
  4. No Choice
  5. Untitled
  6. Subject to Change
  7. More of the Shame
  8. Slowdown

Personnel

Faith/Void personnel as listed in the album liner notes.

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References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. "Stereogum".
  3. "Top 50 by Nirvana [MIXTAPE]". Archived from the original on 18 October 2014. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  4. Cross, Gaar, Gendron, Martens, Yarm (2013). Nirvana: The Complete Illustrated History. p. 100. ISBN   978-0-7603-4521-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. "Void (12)". Discogs .
  6. "The Faith and Void: The glorious Dischord of 1980s harDCore punk". TheGuardian.com . 27 October 2011.
  7. "- (Album review ) | Sputnikmusic".
  8. "The Faith and Void: The glorious Dischord of 1980s harDCore punk". TheGuardian.com . 27 October 2011.
  9. "Faith / Void: Split 12".
  10. "The Faith / Void - Faith/Void/Faith". October 2004.
  11. "The Faith* / Void (12) - the Faith / Void". Discogs . 1982.