Please go to your post editor > Post Settings > Post Formats tab below your editor to enter audio URL. Downloads JACK MOVE – [DEMO] (2014) March 25, 2014 1 min read JACK MOVE – [DEMO] (2014) Fresh blood from Paris, France! The band features members of CUT LOOSE, GET LOST and MONEY TIME. Follow them via this address. DOWNLOAD Share this Facebook Messenger Twitter Whatsapp Reddit Email Tags: hardcorehardcore punkjack movestraight & alert records Karol Kamiński DIY rock music enthusiast and web-zine publisher from Warsaw, Poland. Supporting DIY ethics, local artists and promoting hardcore punk, rock, post rock and alternative music of all kinds via IDIOTEQ online channels. Contact via [email protected] You might be interested in April 8, 2020 BORUTA – “Try To Tread Us” (2010) [DOWNLOAD] July 4, 2017 VA – BDHW Rec. SAMPLER Vol. 4 (2017) June 19, 2017 French punks CHAVIRÉ struggle against the order of things on their new thought-provoking record ‘Interstices’ May 21, 2017 Philadelphia heavy hardcore mob TEN TON HAMMER release new EP “Chains” Previous Story MIASM – “The Dark Roads” (2014) Next Story HESPERIAN DEATH HORSE – “Mrtav” (2013) Latest Baltimore’s emo alt rockers STILL BONES turn frustration into motion on collaborative EP “Start/Stop” KNUMEARS turn “Directions” into a map of change, family, and SoCal screamo THE SADDEST LANDSCAPE confront time, loss, and unfinished thoughts on “Alone With Heaven” – an interview Emo math rockers PASTEL stretch a decade of doubt into “A Lovers Manifesto,” a record shaped by instability and stubborn continuity Metallic hardcore mob WRECKONIZE push back on scene tourists with “Dead 2 Me / Nowhere 2 Run”
June 19, 2017 French punks CHAVIRÉ struggle against the order of things on their new thought-provoking record ‘Interstices’
Baltimore’s emo alt rockers STILL BONES turn frustration into motion on collaborative EP “Start/Stop”
THE SADDEST LANDSCAPE confront time, loss, and unfinished thoughts on “Alone With Heaven” – an interview
Emo math rockers PASTEL stretch a decade of doubt into “A Lovers Manifesto,” a record shaped by instability and stubborn continuity