Zurekin hasiko naiz, agur #BadReligion

The three most frightening words ever invented by any religion: come join us

#BadReligion #VisitaPapa #papa

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MAs1etGVf24

BAD RELIGION - COME JOIN US LIVE IN SÃO PAULO, APRIL 28TH, 2026 - 4K LYRICS - ESPAÇO UNIMED

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Happy Birthday to Jay Bentley, bassist and co-founding member of Bad Religion, member of Wasted Youth, T.S.O.L. and Circle Jerks, born on this day in 1964, Wichita

Photo by Paul Archuleta

#punk #punks #punkrock #jaybentley #badreligion #punkrockhistory

Listening to old #BadReligion albums and quite shocked how these 1990’s songs captured the trends that were certainly observable back then, but could have simply faded away or morphed, like many others.

But instead they not only became mainstream, and an overwhelmingly global one… Take these for example:

P.S. I’d love to link these from some Funkwhale instance but these seem to be quite limited in numbers…

Bad Religion - American Jesus

American Jesus Videohttp://www.badreligion.com/http://www.facebook.com/badreligionhttp://twitter.com/badreligionVisit us! http://www.epitaph.com/Subscribe t...

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The first 4 studio albums by Bad Religion.

Do you have a favorite?

I'll go first — Suffer is, for me, the band's standout album.

#punk #punks #punkrock #badreligion #history #punkrockhistory

@Enpunkt Auch bei mir landen diverse Alben von #BadReligion regelmäßig in der Playlist. Insbesondere Suffer, Against the Grain, Stranger than Fiction und die von Dir genannte New Maps of Hell.

Es ist erschreckend, wie aktuell viele der Songtexte immer noch sind. 🤔

In meinem privaten Blog schrieb ich über die Platte »New Maps Of Hell« der amerikanischen Band Bad Religion, die 2007 erschienen ist.

Hier:

https://enpunkt.blogspot.com/2026/04/die-neuen-landkarten.html

#punkrock #review
#badreligion

Recipe For Hate

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Arroganz – Death Doom Punks Review By Andy-War-Hall

Once, punk ruled my heart as jealously as metal. I loved the heart-in-hand abandon and DIY ethos of acts like Rise Against, Social Distortion, Bad Religion, and Descendants,1 and though I still do metal nonetheless won out as my root genre. But punk and metal have always overlapped, and when the two offshoots of rock tango together, great things can happen.2 German death metallers Arroganz have been carrying out this uneasy marriage since 2008, dropping six testaments of metallic brutality and punkish rebellion over the years. Longtime bassist/vocalist -K- and drummer -T- are joined by the newcomer guitarist -B- for lucky number seven, Death Doom Punks, a declaration of purpose if there’s ever been one. I love the attitude, but an album can’t live by ‘tude alone. Will Arroganz’s infusion of punkish qualities into the death metal elevate Death Doom Punks, or will it merely spell death/doom for these punks?

Other bands have put death riffs over d-beats before, but Arroganz channel early Immolation/Death through Black Flag/Discharge-like hardcore grime in a way that feels particularly vital on Death Doom Punks. Whether through blistering speeds like on “Pain Forged Armor” or diabolical groove on “Anti-Ideology,” Arroganz’s knack for aggressive and catchy riffcraft keeps a near-constant stankface plastered over my skull. Classic death metal walking riffs meet soaring doom bass leads on “Die for Nothing,” while “Death Doom Punks” marries hardcore and doom into a gloomy, potent combo that reminded me that Caskets Open exists. Songs on Death Doom Punks are brief and intentionally simple, but hear the spider-y basslines on “Earth’s Final Dose,” the gigantic belting and bass-work over “Under Scarred Skin,” or the gnarly death march of “Spirit Arsonist” and know that Arroganz supercharged everything they wrote with everything they had. Simply, Death Doom Punks is what it says it is, and it’s awesome.

That Death Doom Punks is Arroganz’s seventh album is no surprise, as their chemistry and chops are something else. Rhythmically, Arroganz seamlessly slide into a snarling breakdown one moment on “Arsenic Breath” and throw down thrash stampedes the next on “Incubus’ Veins.” -K- is a beast of a bassist and vocalist, littering Death Doom Punks with nimble and concussive bass riffs and punk-influenced leads while bellowing throaty, acerbic condemnations of society. -B- fits Arroganz like a fingerless glove, clobbering Death Doom Punks with crushing grooves on the title track,3 gnarled and disjointed leads on “Pain Forged Armor,” and entwining leads with -K-‘s bass licks on “Arsenic Breath.” Arroganz play well together, and Death Doom Punk’s organic production and surprisingly dynamic mix make it apparent. The snare pop right, the bass warbles and clicks right, the guitar is crunchy and deep and everything sits just right in the mix. Arroganz may be no-good punks, but Death Doom Punks is clearly the product of adamant professionals and experts of their craft.

Arroganz’s most critical success is in knowing when to switch something up. Again, Death Doom Punks’ songs are on the simple side, but Arroganz shuffle through riffs, refrains, and bridges often enough to spare the listener from boredom while affording ideas enough time to settle to save themselves from riff salad. Frequent tempo shifts electrify Death Doom Punks further, spinning “Spirit Arsonist”‘s plodding bass riff into a total death metal meltdown and opening “Die for Nothing”‘s relentless show of force in the bridge for a righteous display of bass-forward doom. Conversely, the relatively static one-two combo of “Incubus’ Veins” and “Earths Final Dose” mark Death Doom Punk’s low point. Though -K-‘s screams sound more cutting than usual on “Incubus’ Veins” and “Earths Final Dose” features some slick fills from -T-, they don’t offer as much diversity as the other tracks and feel a bit one-track as a result. But that stretch is an exception to the rule of Death Doom Punks, which is largely a wild ride front-to-back.

Death Doom Punks sees ass, and it kicks it, no questions asked. I had never heard a lick of Arroganz before diving into Death Doom Punksthe title just sounded funny to me—but they’ve quickly made a fan of me over the weeks. The riffs are relentless. The hooks are huge. Did I mention the bass lines rock? Arroganz are simply a potent entity who know who they are and what they do well, and it comes through on Death Doom Punks. You should know it, too.

Rating: Very Good
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps MP3
Label: Testimony Records
Websites: arroganz.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/arroganzgermany | www.arroganz.info
Releases Worldwide: May 15th, 2026

#2026 #35 #Arroganz #BadReligion #BlackFlag #CasketsOpen #Death #DeathDoomPunks #DeathMetal #Descendants #Discharge #DoomMetal #GermanMetal #GreenDay #Immolation #May26 #Pantera #Punk #Review #Reviews #RiseAgainst #SocialDistortion #TestimonyRecords
Hottake: Into the unknown by Bad Religion was a good album. #Hottake #BadReligion