Please go to your post editor > Post Settings > Post Formats tab below your editor to enter video URL. Music Videos BRUTAL TRUTH release a new video March 2, 2012 1 min read BRUTAL TRUTH have released a video for their songs “Malice” and “Fuck Cancer”, which is available for viewing online over at Metal Sucks. The group once again worked with director Tyson Archimedes Montrucchio on the clip. Share this Facebook Messenger Twitter Whatsapp Reddit Email Tags: brutal truthdeath metaldeathgrindgrindcore 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 May 18, 2018 “Gods” – Chicago’s DROWNING (Fast Break! Records) premiere new video! March 18, 2025 Into the jaws of survival: punk rocker BLACKWRISTBAND unleashes “In the Mouth of the Beast” March 14, 2025 LATTER premiere new video for “My Body Is My Sickness”, tying chronic illness and toxic relationships to noise March 14, 2025 Pop punk rockers BONY MACARONI drop “Death Drive”, announce Dutch Club Tour Previous Story NAPALM DEATH – “Analysis Paralysis” video Next Story CORROSION OF CONFORMITY release a video for “The Moneychangers” Latest CAGED VIEW premiere “New Fuel For An Old Fire”, discuss Bay Area hardcore, and more Finnish fierce hardcore band KIROT fights forward at full speed with “Kaasu Pohjaan” Sensual post hardcore act DENA premieres excellent new album “ANABASA” MOONKISSER channels lockdown-era creativity into grungy post hardcore heavy rock single “Swept Away” Kick off your spring with WEAKS’s “Look at These Streets”, capturing the weight of change in familiar places
March 18, 2025 Into the jaws of survival: punk rocker BLACKWRISTBAND unleashes “In the Mouth of the Beast”
March 14, 2025 LATTER premiere new video for “My Body Is My Sickness”, tying chronic illness and toxic relationships to noise
Kick off your spring with WEAKS’s “Look at These Streets”, capturing the weight of change in familiar places