Downloads SIBERIAN HELL SOUNDS / TRAVELS – [SPLIT] (2015) May 6, 2015 1 min read Travels/Siberian Hell Sounds split by Travels and Siberian Hell SoundsTravels/Siberian Hell Sounds split by Travels and Siberian Hell Sounds DOWNLOAD GO HERE to read my interview with SIBERIAN HELL SOUNDS and visit THIS LOCATION to grab their record “⍲⍕⍎⍱”, premiered earlier this year! Share this Facebook Messenger Twitter Whatsapp Reddit Email Tags: black metaldownloadgrindcorehardcorehardcore punkmelodic hardcorepost metalpowerviolencesiberian hell soundstravels 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 SICKMARK – “II” (2015) Next Story SERENITY NOW! – “Facsimile” [EP] (2015) Latest Frenzy industrial punks THE FAMILY MEN talk “Co/de/termination,” the Gothenburg scene, and more NICOTA’s “Kapitola IV” explores loss and injustice on “Kapitola IV” FEEL FREE debut their first demo and tie Orange County hardcore back to its San Diego neighbors Spokane / Portland d-beat hardcore punk POISE premiere “Ill Anguish”, walk through the politics behind “Iron Foot” JACKSON FIG turn a Wall Street phrase into an alt rock shoegaze record about dead-end jobs on “No One Knows the Bottom”
June 19, 2017 French punks CHAVIRÉ struggle against the order of things on their new thought-provoking record ‘Interstices’
Spokane / Portland d-beat hardcore punk POISE premiere “Ill Anguish”, walk through the politics behind “Iron Foot”
JACKSON FIG turn a Wall Street phrase into an alt rock shoegaze record about dead-end jobs on “No One Knows the Bottom”