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Digital hardcore

Digital hardcore is a fusion genre that combines hardcore punk with electronic dance music genres such as breakbeat, techno, and drum and bass while also drawing on heavy metal and noise music.[1][2] It typically features fast tempos and aggressive sound samples.[2] The style was pioneered by Alec Empire of the German band Atari Teenage Riot during the early 1990s, and often has sociological or leftist lyrical themes.[2]

Not to be confused with Hardcore (electronic dance music genre), electronicore, or digicore.

Digital hardcore

Characteristics[edit]

Digital hardcore music is typically fast and abrasive, combining the speed, heaviness and attitude of hardcore punk, thrash metal, and riot grrrl[2][3] with electronic music such as hardcore techno,[2] gabber,[2] jungle,[2] drum and bass, glitch, and industrial rock.[2] Some bands, like Atari Teenage Riot, incorporate elements of hip-hop music, such as freestyle rap.


According to Jeff Terich of Treble Media, digital hardcore is "on the verge of reaching speeds incompatible with popular music, as if the rapid acceleration of BPMs would render the idea of rhythm irrelevant or, at the very least, unpredictable. Maybe this is music for dancing; definitely this is music for screaming and breaking things."[4]


The electric guitar (either real or sampled and usually heavily distorted) is used alongside samplers, synthesizers and drum machines. While the use of electronic instruments is a defining feature of the genre, bass guitars, electric guitars, and drum kits are optional. Vocals are more often shouted than sung by more than one member of the group. Typically, the lyrics are highly politicized and espouse left-wing or anarchist ideals.[2] Some practitioners have been influenced by anarcho-punk.[4]

Digital Hardcore Recordings

Breakcore

Electronicore

Electropunk

Cybergrind

Industrial metal

Reynolds, Simon (1999). Generation Ecstasy: Into the World of Techno and Rave Culture. Routledge.  0-415-92373-5

ISBN

Taylor, Steve (2006). The A to X of Alternative Music. Continuum International Publishing Group.  0-826-48217-1

ISBN