N.Y.H.C. (film)

Last updated

N.Y.H.C.
Directed by Frank Pavich
Produced byFrank Pavich
Stephen Scarlata
Anthony Edwards (EP)
Dante Di Loreto (EP)
Starring Madball
25 ta Life
Vision of Disorder
Crown of Thornz
108
No Redeeming Social Value
District 9
CinematographyHenryk Tzvi Cymerman
Edited byJason Airey
Frank Pavich
Distributed by HALO 8 Entertainment
Release date
  • 1999 (1999)
Running time
87 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

N.Y.H.C. is a documentary film directed by Frank Pavich [1] about the mid-1990s New York hardcore scene. Filmed in mid-1995, it was completed and self-released on VHS by Pavich in 1999.

Contents

The documentary was acquired for distribution by HALO 8 Entertainment in December 2007. On March 25, 2008, Halo-8 released a two-disc special edition for the documentary's first time on DVD. Disc 2 features previously unreleased footage including "Where Are They Now?" interviews shot ten years after the original documentary, live performances of complete songs by Vision of Disorder, Madball, 25 ta Life, 108, No Redeeming Social Value, District 9, and more, as well as new interviews with Lou Koller (Sick of It All) and Toby Morse (H2O). [2]

Plot

One of the few documentaries focusing on the hardcore music scene of one city, N.Y.H.C. featured seven bands prominent in the mid-90s scene. A diverse grouping was selected, from Long Island suburbanites to Bronx inner-city youth to Hare Krishna devotees.

Live performances

The featured bands are:

Interviewees

Interviewees include:

Notable in this film is interview footage of Roger Miret while using a wheelchair due to a vertebrae injury sustained at a show.

Film festivals

Soundtrack

The N.Y.H.C. Documentary Soundtrack was released in 1996 prior to the film’s release by SFT Records on compact disc. It was intended to help raise funds for the completion of the documentary itself (which was finally completed & released in 1999). This CD featured live tracks as well as interview clips. The featured bands are Madball, 25 ta Life, Vision of Disorder, 108, Crown of Thornz, No Redeeming Social Value, and District 9.

N.Y.H.C. Documentary Soundtrack
Nyhccoundtrack.jpg
Soundtrack album
Released1996
RecordedRecorded 1995
Genre Hardcore punk
Length73 minutes
Label S.F.T Records
Producer Velebit Productions

All tracks were recorded live in mid-1995.

Track listing

  1. Crown of Thornz - "Juggernaut"
  2. 25 ta Life - "Da Lowdown"
  3. Kevin Gill of SFT Records (interview dialogue)
  4. Vision of Disorder - "Suffer"
  5. Virginia (interview dialogue)
  6. District 9 - "Fool"
  7. Freddy Madball (interview dialogue)
  8. Madball - "New York City"
  9. Rasaraja dasa of 108 (interview dialogue)
  10. 108 - "Solitary"
  11. Vinnie & Dean of NRSV (interview dialogue)
  12. No Redeeming Social Value - "New 64"
  13. Myke & Todd of District 9 (interview dialogue)
  14. District 9 - "Victim"
  15. Rick ta Life (interview dialogue)
  16. 25 ta Life - "Separate Ways"
  17. John Joseph of the Cro-Mags (interview dialogue)
  18. 108 - "Holyname"
  19. Tim & Brendan of Vision of Disorder (interview dialogue)
  20. Vision of Disorder - "Formula for Failure"
  21. Roger Miret of Agnostic Front (interview dialogue)
  22. Madball - "It's Time"
  23. Madball - "Crucified" (with Roger Miret on vocals)
  24. Dean & Vinnie of NRSV with Chris of In Effect Magazine (interview dialogue)
  25. No Redeeming Social Value - "No Regrets"
  26. Tim Williams, Matt Baumbach, Mike Kennedy & Mike Fleischmann of Vision of Disorder (interview dialogue)
  27. Vision of Disorder - "D.T.O."
  28. Ezec of Crown of Thornz (interview dialogue)
  29. Crown of Thornz - "Crown of Thornz"

Home media

The film was released on DVD on March 25, 2008. [3]

Related Research Articles

Agnostic Front

Agnostic Front is an American hardcore punk band from New York City. Founded in 1980, the band is considered an important influence to the New York hardcore scene, as well as for pioneering the crossover thrash genre.

Kanaka Dasa kannada saint

Kanaka Dasa was a Haridasa, a renowned composer of Carnatic music, poet, philosopher and musician. He is known for his keertanas and ugabhoga, compositions in the Kannada language for Carnatic music. Like other Haridasas, he used simple Kannada language and native metrical forms for his compositions.

New York hardcore

New York hardcore is both the hardcore punk music created in New York City and the subculture and lifestyle associated with that music. New York hardcore grew out of the hardcore scene established in Washington, D.C., by bands such as Bad Brains and Minor Threat. Initially a local phenomenon of the 1980s and 1990s, New York hardcore eventually grew to establish an international reputation with little to moderate mainstream popularity but with a dedicated and enthusiastic underground following, primarily in Europe and the United States. With a history spanning over more than four decades many of the early New York hardcore bands are still in activity to this day. Some of them have been continuously or almost continuously active since their formation as well as having reunion shows.

Vision of Disorder American metalcore band

Vision of Disorder is an American metalcore band from Long Island, New York, that initially released three albums before disbanding in 2002. The band garnered attention for blending melody and groove into a traditional hardcore framework, but its attempts to pursue an alternative metal direction on its third album were met with limited commercial success. The band reunited in 2008 and have since released two further albums, The Cursed Remain Cursed in 2012 and Razed to the Ground in 2015.

Equal Vision Records is an independent record label based in Albany, New York. Equal Vision Records was founded in the early 1990s by Ray Cappo, singer for the bands Youth of Today, Shelter, and Better Than a Thousand.

Madball

Madball is a New York hardcore band formed in New York City that originated in the late 1980s as a side project of Agnostic Front. The band developed after Agnostic Front's front man Roger Miret would let his younger half-brother Freddy Cricien take the microphone and perform lead vocals during Agnostic Front shows.

Freddy Cricien

Freddy Lafayan Cricien, also known as Freddy Madball, is an American musician, primarily known as the vocalist of New York hardcore band Madball. He is also the vocalist of Hazen Street, and has a hip hop career from which debut album was November 2009's Catholic Guilt. He also moonlights as an MC with DJ Stress as the hip hop duo Freddy Madball & DJ Stress.

Yonassan Gershom

Yonassan Gershom is a Rabbi and writer who was ordained in the Jewish Renewal movement during the 1980s, and is now a follower of Breslov Hasidism. He was associated with the early days of the B'nai Or movement, a forerunner of Jewish Renewal, in which he was ordained by Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi in 1986, although he is not in agreement with the direction that the movement has taken in more recent years.

HALO-8 Entertainment is a transmedia entertainment company specializing in cinema, documentaries, genre graphic novels, midnight movies, music-driven lifestyle videos, and animation. Its most popular releases include arthouse films Pop Skull and Threat; animated series Godkiller and Xombie; lifestyle-DVD franchise Fitness For Indie Rockers; and documentaries Grant Morrison: Talking With Gods, Your Mommy Kills Animals, N.Y.H.C., and Ctrl+Alt+Compete.

Dan Singer, known professionally as Danny Diablo a.k.a. Lord Ezec, is an American hardcore punk and hip hop vocalist. He is a current member of underground hip hop acts The ShotBlockers, KAOS 13 and FTW, and a founding member of hardcore bands Crown of Thornz, Skarhead and Icepick, which gained him success on the New York hardcore scene.

Striving For Togetherness Records is an independent hardcore music label. It is most famous for its successful run of mid-1990s New York hardcore releases.

108 is an American hardcore band founded in 1991. Their music reflects the Hare Krishna faith of the band members.

<i>The Murder of Fred Hampton</i> Murder of an American civil rights activist

The Murder of Fred Hampton is a 1971 American documentary film about the short life and death of Fred Hampton, a young African-American civil rights activist in Chicago and leader of the Illinois Black Panther Party. During the film's production, Hampton was fatally shot on December 4, 1969 in a pre-dawn raid at his apartment by the Chicago Police Department. The raid was revealed to have been organized in cooperation with the FBI.

No Redeeming Social Value, also known as NRSV, is an American hardcore punk band. The band was started in 1988 by the brothers D Thrilla and K9 the sonic Maximizer of the Queens Village neighborhood of New York City. Alcohol, marijuana and parties are major themes in the group's music.

GoDigital

GoDigital is a full service digital and video-on-demand (VOD) distribution company. Launched in 2008, the Beverly Hills-based company as of 2013 had a library of over 1000 films ranging from independent cinema to award-winning documentaries and foreign films. GoDigital has direct deals with a number of primary VOD services, including iTunes, Netflix, Amazon.com, Hulu and YouTube.

Drew Stone

Drew Stone is an American film director, producer, film editor and musician. His works include music videos, commercials, documentary films and television.

<i>Jodorowskys Dune</i> 2013 documentary by Frank Pavich

Jodorowsky's Dune is a 2013 American-French documentary film directed by Frank Pavich. The film explores cult film director Alejandro Jodorowsky's unsuccessful attempt to adapt and film Frank Herbert's 1965 science fiction novel Dune in the mid-1970s.

Hardcore 4 The Coldhearted is the double CD album by American hardcore punk and hip hop artist Danny Diablo. It was released on August 29, 2008 via Countdown Records.

References

  1. Everleth, Mike. "Movie Review: 2000 NYUFF: Day 4, Part 2: N.Y.H.C." Underground Film Journal. Retrieved September 18, 2020.
  2. "NYHC Documentary to be Released on DVD". Alarm Magazine. ALARM. Retrieved January 2, 2020.
  3. Jane, Ian. "N.Y.H.C." Rock! Shock! Pop!. Retrieved September 18, 2020.