From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Crossed Out
Californian powerviolence band
Californian powerviolence band
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Crossed Out |
| caption | Crossed Out at Gilman |
| origin | Encinitas, California |
| years_active | 1990–1993 |
| genre | Powerviolence |
| label | Slap-a-Ham |
| associated_acts | Man Is the Bastard |
| past_members | Tad Miller |
| Scot Golia | |
| Rich Hart | |
| Eric Wood | |
| Dallas Van Kempen |
Scot Golia Rich Hart Eric Wood Dallas Van Kempen Crossed Out was a powerviolence band from Encinitas, California. The band was active from early 1990 until late 1993. The group is considered to be a very important band that helped define powerviolence with a style that incorporated political lyrics, blast beats, and quick tempos. They have been named as the "dark lords of powerviolence" by Beau Beasley of Insect Warfare.
History
Crossed Out played sixteen shows and released a demo, 7-inch, split 7-inch with Man Is the Bastard, split 5" with Dropdead, and two songs for the Son of Blleeaauurrggh compilation. Many bands, such as The Locust, Dropdead, Su19b, Slices, and Iron Lung, have covered songs originally performed by Crossed Out.
In 1991, Spazz bassist and vocalist Chris Dodge, who also ran Slap-a-Ham Records, asked the band to send him a demo. Five months after that recording, in the fall of 1991, their seven-song self-titled 7-inch was released, including a firing squad cover photo. In 1992, the band recorded a live radio show on KSPC, a split 5" with Dropdead, a contribution to Slap-a-ham's Son of Blleeaauurrggh compilation 7-inch, and a split 7-inch with Man is the Bastard. By 1993, Crossed Out, along with Man is the Bastard, No Comment and Capitalist Casualties, played 924 Gilman Street's first power violence-only show, the Fiesta Grande. After the departure of original bassist Rich Hart, Eric Wood - bassist and vocalist of Man is the Bastard - volunteered to play bass; he remained with the group until their break up. The summer that followed, Dropdead toured the U.S. with the release of their split 5", playing two shows with Crossed Out. An August 1993 show with Spazz, Anal Cunt, and Dropdead, titled "Grindcore Night", on a flyer at Gilman St., led to the vocalist's comment "Fuck grindcore". "Fuck Grindcore" later became a bootleg 10-inch of their self-titled record. The group broke up in late 1993.
Members
- Tad Miller – drums (1990–1993)
- Scot Golia – guitars (1990–1993)
- Rich Hart – bass (1990–1993)
- Eric Wood – bass (1993)
- Dallas Van Kempen – vocals (1990–1993)
Discography
;EPs
- Demo '91 (1991, Self-released)
- Crossed Out 7-inch EP (1992, Slap-A-Ham)
- Crossed Out/Dropdead split 5" with Dropdead (1992, Crust/Selfless/Rhetoric)
- Crossed Out/Man Is the Bastard split 7-inch with Man Is the Bastard (1993, Slap-A-Ham)
;Compilation Albums
- 1990-1993 discography CD/LP (1999, Slap-A-Ham)
;Compilation Appearances
- Son of Blleeaauurrggh 7-inch (1993, Slap-A-Ham)
;Unofficial Albums
- Live 10-inch (1996, Noize For The Masses Records)
- Fuck Grindcore 10-inch (1998)
References
References
- "Power violence: The Dysfunctional Family of Bllleeeeaaauuurrrgghhh!!". ''Terrorizer'' no. 172. July 2008. p. 36-37.
- "Powerviolence: An Extremely Angry 200+ Song Playlist". Noise Creep.
- "Crossed Out 1990-1993 Review". In Music We Trust.
- "Crossed Out Review". Ink 19.
- "An Oral History of Powerviolence". Lion City DIY.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Crossed Out — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report