
NY punk heavily influenced by the early 80s UK scene ala Sacrilege demos, Varukers, & Potential Threat. Members of some other fuckin bands. The demos were good, this LP is much better. Strangely timeless, I feel like this could have come out in '85, '95, or '05, but seems really fresh to my ears too.
550 copies, art by Joe B, recorded by Scott Tamucci at Danbro Studios, mastered at Noise Room, Tokyo.
Our take: New Yorkās Subversive Rite have put out two tapes, previously compiled on a limited 12ā on Bloody Master, but Songs for the End Times is their first proper, made-for-vinyl release. As the label states in their description, āthe demos were good, this LP is much better.ā The style is the same, but better, more powerful production and more finely honed songwriting and arrangements make this record hit a lot harder. If you havenāt heard them, I donāt think itās a stretch to say Subversive Rite takes a lot of influence fromĀ Sacrilege. If Behind the Realms of Madness is the perfect 50/50 mix of Discharge/Broken Bones-inspired hardcore and thrash metal, Subversive Rite tilts more toward the hardcore side with less metallic riffing and a more straightforward, Poison Idea-influenced drumming style. When the band lays into big, dramatic punches they hit with the force of a battering ram. Itās rare to hear a band that has such a fast and metallic style generate such brute force. While itās pretty much all-go, no slow, thereās enough variation to make this short LP a gripping, teeth-clenched listening experience for its entire duration. If you like your hardcore to sound huge and powerful, I canāt recommend Songs for the End Times highly enough.