Industrial-ish bands cover DK tunes. Be warned: None of the covers are punk, dub, or reggae. Like DK, the production quality is as thin as a tequila shit.
Stuff here steps outta the confines of fill-in-the-blanks punk, Oi!, and ska. Most kick in three songs, so you actually get a feel for what they’re about.
Whether an icon in the straight-edge movement, the tough-guy movement, or the street-thug subgenre of hardcore, Slapshot is revered as one of the best.
Full-on techno versions of Halen’s greatest blood-grain alcohollers. At least the label slaps on a famous second-string hair vocalist to each abortion.
Good ol’ dirty-sounding pop-punk, the kinda stuff the bigger underground labels polish for mass consumption. Here it is in original, messy form, warts and all.
Not only are there the standard big names and mediocre bands that the label wants you to know about, there’re some bands that you’d not expect to find here.
’70s gangster film soundtrack music. From India. In the ’70s & ’80s, Bombay cranked out dozens of “Brownsploitation” movies in the vein of Dolomite and Shaft.