After a whirlwind few years, Los Angeles’ MILITARIE GUN are landing proper with their debut album.
Hardcore means a lot of things to a lot of people, but there’s no question that sparks fly when anger and vulnerability collide. Touché Amoré have been one of hardcore’s most forward-thinking, open and cathartic acts, with vocalist Jeremy Bolm cataloguing his grief on the astonishingly personal ‘Stage Four’. There’s little posturing on their records, just someone making sense of their feelings and the world around them.
Equally, what Touché Amoré does so well – and this is matched by
Militarie Gun – is finding that fine line between being sincere and worthy (or over-earnest). No one wants to listen to a vocalist crying woe-is-me bullshit over 10 tracks of bludgeoning hardcore but instead wants to be guided towards empathy and reflection. ‘
Life Under the Gun’ does this beautifully – although it’s been a journey for Ian to get to that point.
“Vulnerability isn’t the most obvious trait within hardcore,” considers Ian. “But when you think about bands like Touché, they’re drawing from broader places. Isaac Brock from Modest Mouse is probably one of the most influential musicians to me, and there’s such vulnerability and poetry in everything that happens there.