
Jackal: S/T 7"
Rough, tough, and raw as hell. Jackal arrive with a 4-song 45 of pounding and classic-sounding USHC, direct from south Florida. Comparable to over-before-they-start thrashers like White Cross, Violent Children, and YDI. Mixed and mastered at Side Two.Â
Our take: After an earlier demo (which we still have in stock as Iâm writing this), Floridaâs Jackal deliver their debut vinyl on Painkiller, and it is a total rager. Itâs fitting that Jackal share their name with YDIâs frontman, because this 7â has a similar quality to the blind rage-out that is that bandâs legendary A Place in the Sun EP. The recording is super raw (with audible tape his between the tracks), but somehow this doesnât dilute the bandâs power. The drums are full of that analog crunch, which accentuates how Jackal can move from a Negative Approach-style ripping part to a punky riff that reminds me of the first 86 Mentality EP to a blistering, hyper-speed convulsion a la Straight Ahead. The record doesnât have an ounce of fat and itâs over before you know it. Highly recommended if you ride for the early 80s USHC sound.
Rough, tough, and raw as hell. Jackal arrive with a 4-song 45 of pounding and classic-sounding USHC, direct from south Florida. Comparable to over-before-they-start thrashers like White Cross, Violent Children, and YDI. Mixed and mastered at Side Two.Â
Our take: After an earlier demo (which we still have in stock as Iâm writing this), Floridaâs Jackal deliver their debut vinyl on Painkiller, and it is a total rager. Itâs fitting that Jackal share their name with YDIâs frontman, because this 7â has a similar quality to the blind rage-out that is that bandâs legendary A Place in the Sun EP. The recording is super raw (with audible tape his between the tracks), but somehow this doesnât dilute the bandâs power. The drums are full of that analog crunch, which accentuates how Jackal can move from a Negative Approach-style ripping part to a punky riff that reminds me of the first 86 Mentality EP to a blistering, hyper-speed convulsion a la Straight Ahead. The record doesnât have an ounce of fat and itâs over before you know it. Highly recommended if you ride for the early 80s USHC sound.
Description
Rough, tough, and raw as hell. Jackal arrive with a 4-song 45 of pounding and classic-sounding USHC, direct from south Florida. Comparable to over-before-they-start thrashers like White Cross, Violent Children, and YDI. Mixed and mastered at Side Two.Â
Our take: After an earlier demo (which we still have in stock as Iâm writing this), Floridaâs Jackal deliver their debut vinyl on Painkiller, and it is a total rager. Itâs fitting that Jackal share their name with YDIâs frontman, because this 7â has a similar quality to the blind rage-out that is that bandâs legendary A Place in the Sun EP. The recording is super raw (with audible tape his between the tracks), but somehow this doesnât dilute the bandâs power. The drums are full of that analog crunch, which accentuates how Jackal can move from a Negative Approach-style ripping part to a punky riff that reminds me of the first 86 Mentality EP to a blistering, hyper-speed convulsion a la Straight Ahead. The record doesnât have an ounce of fat and itâs over before you know it. Highly recommended if you ride for the early 80s USHC sound.












