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Hardcore dancing grew out of the eastern United States hardcore scene, especially the New Jersey, New York, Boston, and Florida hardcore scenes. A hardcore pit differs from the usual mosh pit routine of pogoing and crashing into each other in an often controlled, but violent way. Participants in hardcore pits move around with rhythm to various beats, some slow and some faster. Hardcore dancing is typically associated and executed only during certain points in musical breakdowns. Red shows states east of the Mississippi River, pink shows states not fully eastern or western The U.S. Eastern states are the states east of the Mississippi River. ...
New Jersey hardcore (NJHC) refers to hardcore punk and metalcore music created in New Jersey and to the subculture associated with that music. ...
New York Hardcore (NYHC) refers to hardcore punk music created in New York City and to the subculture associated with that music. ...
Boston Hardcore is the influential hardcore punk scene of Boston, Massachusetts. ...
Audience members at a Dillinger Escape Plan concert moshing in front of the stage. ...
The pogo is a dance where the dancers jump up and down to an eight-count rhythm, similar to the dances of the Pentecostal faith and various African tribes. ...
This style of dancing was common in the late 1990s. As some hardcore bands incorporated slower syncopated, metal-influenced rhythms into their songs, the modern breakdown — and the dancing that went with it — was introduced.[citation needed] Early Earth Crisis and Biohazard concerts were common venues for this type of hardcore dancing. Heavy metal redirects here. ...
For other uses, see Break. ...
Earth Crisis was a straight edge vegan hardcore band from Syracuse, New York, USA that recorded and performed from 1991 until 2001. ...
Biohazard was a band originally based out of Brooklyn, New York. ...
New York hardcore band Sick of it All featured a tongue-in-cheek how-to guide for hardcore dancing in their music video for "Step Down" and AFI's video for "The Leaving Song Pt. II" is a depiction of hardcore and Straight Edge culture, popular for its relentless representation of Hardcore Dancing. A Day to Remember also did a video showing a how to guide for dance moves in the pit, Ron Jeremy was the fictional martial arts instructor showing the moves. Sick of It All (SOIA) is a New York Hardcore band formed by brothers Lou Koller (vocals) and Pete Koller (guitar), Armand Majidi (drums) and Rich Capriano (bass) in 1984. ...
AFI, in recent years short for A Fire Inside, is an American band from Ukiah, California. ...
Hardcore Punk is a subgenre of Punk Rock that originated in North America in the late 1970s. ...
For the drawing or cutting tool, see Straightedge. ...
An editor has expressed a concern that the subject of the article does not satisfy the notability guideline or one of the following guidelines for inclusion on Wikipedia: Biographies, Books, Companies, Fiction, Music, Neologisms, Numbers, Web content, or several proposals for new guidelines. ...
Ron Jeremy (born Ron Jeremy Hyatt on March 12, 1953) is an American pornographic actor currently residing in Long Island, New York, United States. ...
2-Step The 2-step is the dance move performed by hardcore dancers to a steady snare beat. It involves swinging or "stepping" your legs around each other in time to the snare drum. 2-Steps vary from scene to scene. while the idea remains the same, some variations include floorpunching, windmilling or kicking backwards. Most hardcore dancers strive to produce their own unique 2-Step, often pushing the boundaries of balance. For example, one style is to punch your arms around your body in time with the swinging of each leg. Another is to bend down to either side and touch the floor while they dance, pushing the boundaries of the dancers balance. Various dancers mix 2-Step styles and use various types of foot motion. Most dancers generally cross their legs in a subsequent pattern or keep their legs in a identical position and do a shifting 2-step motion with their feet. Generally this dance is the main skill a hardcore dancer strives to develop, as it is the most used form of dancing for many of this scene.
Kicking/Flipping Hardcore Dancers often do Martial Arts type moves. Jump kicks, back flips, and even some varieties of those. Hardcore dancers stage dive and also can be very violent if not controlled.
Windmill The windmill is a dance move performed quickly swinging your arms in circles resembling the moving of a windmill. Often dancers alternate arms, keeping one at their side while swinging the other and then switching after each rotation. Variations include swinging with fists together, swinging backwards, and swinging with only one arm. Many variations of this include imitating loss of balance and beating of chest. Also horizontal swinging of arms is very common to find during this move. Dancers of this dance are often referred to derogatorily as " Windmillers." And are often looked down on and called "pousers," by members of the metal/hardcore community.
Penny picking/Picking up Change/Floorpunching The Floorpunch is when the hardcore dancer throws his/her fists towards the floor, not intending to make contact with it, and then Penny picking violently brings them back up.Not many Hardcore Dancers do this anymore, it is a more oldschool technique. Alternative feet are sometimes stomped to the music as arms are raised, i.e. left arm raised right leg stomped. This is dangerous to people behind the dancer if the elbows are thrown hard enough. There are many different variations of this technique again. It is a hardcore dancer's need to be unique that pushes them to push the boundary. For example, one technique is to keep both legs straight and together, double over, stretch out both arms and jump from side to side on both legs, in the imitation of a bird or an airplane.
Hate Moshing/Crowd Killing Hate Moshing is when a dancer involves on-lookers in their moves. The most common of these is known as a "Lawnmower", which involves rushing into both sides of a Mosh Pit whilst windmilling or pulling your arms up from the ground. This is often used to create space before a Breakdown but sometimes is used before/after the song is played (a common way of opening up a pit is a less violent push-back, simply involving a dancer or dancers having their back to the crowd and pushing them back). Other Crowd Killing moves involve simply lunging into bystanders, throwing kicks backwards with the intention of making contact, etc. Though in some scenes this is far more violent and there are repeated roundhouse kicks and spinning elbows as well as randomly swung fists going into the crowd. This article or section should be merged with mosh. ...
For other uses, see Break. ...
See also This article or section should include material from mosh pit. ...
External links Sick of It All (SOIA) is a New York Hardcore band formed by brothers Lou Koller (vocals) and Pete Koller (guitar), Armand Majidi (drums) and Rich Capriano (bass) in 1984. ...
Hardcore Punk is a subgenre of Punk Rock that originated in North America in the late 1970s. ...
Christian hardcore is a form of hardcore and metalcore music and a subgenre of punk rock played by bands where the musicians promote Christian beliefs. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Crusty redirects here. ...
D-beat is a drum beat, specifically a fast rock beat unique to hardcore punk, especially in its UK and European variants. ...
Digital hardcore is a music genre or style that was first defined by Alec Empire. ...
Look up emo in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Funkcore is a music genre or movement derived from a fusion of hardcore punk and funk. ...
Grindcore, often shortened to grind, is an evolution of crust punk, most commonly associated with death metal, a very different though similarly extreme style of music. ...
HateCore historically refers to hardcore punk bands in the New York City scene in the late 1980s who wanted to point out that their sound was different from the original hardcore bands a few years earlier. ...
Melodic hardcore is a subgenre of hardcore punk. ...
Metalcore is a fusion of extreme metal and hardcore punk that began in the United States. ...
For other uses, see Oi! (disambiguation). ...
Post-hardcore; this specific genre was created by others as a sourse to relaese the emotion that builds inside, making the music intimate and touching to listeners. ...
Power violence is a cross breeding of the musical genres hardcore punk and grindcore. ...
Queercore is a cultural and social movement that began in the mid 1980s as an offshoot of punk. ...
Rapcore is a musical genre that fuses the techniques of hip hop, gangsta rap, hard rock, heavy metal, alternative rock, hardcore punk and sometimes funk. ...
Screamo is a musical genre which evolved from emo and punk in the early 1990s. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Skate punk (also known as skatepunk, skate-punk, skate-thrash, surf punk, or skate-core) was named because of its popularity among skateboarders, and the fact that many members of skate punk bands were themselves skaters. ...
Sludge metal is a form of heavy metal music that is generally regarded as a fusion of the doom metal and hardcore punk genres, often displaying southern rock influence. ...
Taqwacore is a genre of punk music dealing with Islam and its culture, originally conceived in Michael Muhammad Knights novel, The Taqwacores. ...
Thrashcore is an extremely fast subgenre of punk rock and saw its beginnings after the beginnings of hardcore punk in the early 1980s. ...
Youth crew is a sub-genre of hardcore punk that was most popular from approximately 1986 to 1990, primarily in New York City and, to a lesser degree, Los Angeles. ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Punk (music). ...
This is a list of Scandinavian (Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden) hardcore punk bands. ...
South Wales is home to a scene containing a number of influential bands within the hardcore, post hardcore metalcore, alternative metal, punk and emo musical genres. ...
Umeå is a city in northern Sweden. ...
This article does not adequately cite its references or sources. ...
Boston Hardcore is the influential hardcore punk scene of Boston, Massachusetts. ...
The California punk scene is a regional punk music scene that started in the late 1970s and still exists today. ...
Chicago developed a hardcore punk scene in the early 1980s that was more experimental than its counterparts in Washington, DC, L.A., and New York City. ...
The Detroit Suburbs were the location of one of the first important hardcore punk scenes that swept underground America in the early 1980s. ...
// The Minneapolis area has been a fertile ground for the hardcore punk scene for many years. ...
New Jersey hardcore (NJHC) refers to hardcore punk and metalcore music created in New Jersey and to the subculture associated with that music. ...
New York Hardcore (NYHC) refers to hardcore punk music created in New York City and to the subculture associated with that music. ...
Phoenix had a sizable hardcore punk scene in the 1980s that focused mainly around two bands from the citys east side, Meat Puppets and JFA. Meat Puppets, led by the Kirkwood brothers, signed to Greg Ginns SST Records and released several albums that proved to be highly...
Washington, D.C. had one of the first and one of the most influential hardcore punk scenes in the United States during the 1980s. ...
The DIY ethic (do it yourself ethic) refers to the ethic of being self-reliant and doing things yourself as opposed to paying others to do it. ...
This is a list of bands considered to be hardcore punk by some. ...
This article is about the subculture. ...
Punk ideologies are a group of varied social and political beliefs associated with the punk subculture. ...
This is a list of bands that are considered part of the second wave of punk rock, beginning in the 1980s. ...
For the drawing or cutting tool, see Straightedge. ...
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