
Nardcore bands playlist/
By combining the words “Oxnard” and “hardcore”, the name is a reference to the Oxnard, California hardcore punk scene. Brandon Cruz credits Dr. Know guitarist Ismael Hernandez as the originator of the term.
This suburban community, sixty miles north of Los Angeles, California, was the spawning ground for many hardcore punk bands of the early 1980s and became a hotbed for punk and skate bands.
Their collective sound became known as “Nardcore.” Nardcore was popularized by the bands themselves, with a little help from Mystic records, Doug Moody and Mystic Promotion Director Mystic Mark Wilkins over a series of Vinyl Releases in the early 1980s.
Nardcore tends to have a lot of the same characteristics as skate punk; however, it has a sound closer to traditional hardcore punk. A congealing of the style was the epinonimous compilation LP release in 1984.
“Punk music was Exploited, Discharge. The bands coming from England, and the bands that copied them were punk bands. The stuff we were producing was an original form of Californian music, thrash, or skateboard punk. It originated here.”— Doug Moody
Below the nardcore bands list, you can see the nardcore bands playlist
Notable nardcore bands
A
Agression
nardcore
Column 2
Column 3
C
Conquer the Martians
nardcore
Column 2
Column 3
D
Dr. Know
nardcore, crossover thrash, punk
Column 2
Column 3
F
False Confession
hardcore punk, nardcore
Column 2
Column 3
H
Habeas Corpus
hardcore punk, nardcore, skate punk, surf punk, horror punk, straight edgeColumn 3Column 2
I
Ill Repute
hardcore punk, nardcore
Column 2
Column 3
R
RKL (Rich Kids on L.S.D.)
punk rock, skate punk, crossover thrash, hardcore punk
nardcore
Strand Quentin
Column 3
S
Scared Straight
punk rock, pop punk, alternative rock, melodic hardcore, skate punk, hardcore punk, nardcore
Stäläg 13
nardcore
Strand Quentin
punk rock, pop punk, alternative rock, melodic hardcore, skate punk, hardcore punk, nardcore
nardcore bands playlist



















