đ Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale

Neos: Fight With Donald 7"
Victoriaâs pioneers of hyperactive speed-punk, critically acclaimed as one of the very first of their kind. As lead-up to our soon to be released âThree Teens Hellbent On Speedâ discography LP, Supreme Echo presents this 25th anniversary reissue from the original John Golden stampers. Blistering fast, raw and wild Canadian hardcore insanity recorded 1982-83. 18 songs, including âSleeveâ which is the only recording to reappear on their upcoming LP, maintaining this EP as a rather unique collection. Housed in its original multi-panel fold-over cover which folds out into a 14â x 21â collage poster.Â
Our take: If you donât know the Neos, hereâs the quick version: they were from Victoria, British Columbia and they released two 7âs in the 80s: End All Discrimination and  Hassibah Gets The Martian Brain Squeeze. They are both brilliant, singular records. One of the Neosâ claims to fame is that they were one of the fastest bands of the time, up there with bands like Siege and Deep Wound, and similarly influential on later genres like grindcore and power violence. This isnât grind or power violence, though, just really, really fast hardcore. The tempos might be historically important, but when you listen to the Neos, you realize theyâre not just a historical footnote⊠theyâre one of the best bands hardcore has ever produced. The records that stick with me are ones that capture something unique, and the Neosâ precocious teenager vibe combined with the musicâs blistering speedâwhich evokes a hyperactive childâs tantrumâwas the kind of genius that it would be silly and fruitless to imitate. Anyway, Fight with Donald came out in 1995 and compiles rehearsal and live recordings. Neosâ two early 80s 7âs are not lacking in rawness, so I could see feeling like you donât need this record, but I enjoy it every time I throw it on. And for those of you who only need the EPs, note this serves as a teaser for an official Neos discography LP coming later this year. Even if you think you donât need Fight with Donald, you definitely need that.
Our take: If you donât know the Neos, hereâs the quick version: they were from Victoria, British Columbia and they released two 7âs in the 80s: End All Discrimination and  Hassibah Gets The Martian Brain Squeeze. They are both brilliant, singular records. One of the Neosâ claims to fame is that they were one of the fastest bands of the time, up there with bands like Siege and Deep Wound, and similarly influential on later genres like grindcore and power violence. This isnât grind or power violence, though, just really, really fast hardcore. The tempos might be historically important, but when you listen to the Neos, you realize theyâre not just a historical footnote⊠theyâre one of the best bands hardcore has ever produced. The records that stick with me are ones that capture something unique, and the Neosâ precocious teenager vibe combined with the musicâs blistering speedâwhich evokes a hyperactive childâs tantrumâwas the kind of genius that it would be silly and fruitless to imitate. Anyway, Fight with Donald came out in 1995 and compiles rehearsal and live recordings. Neosâ two early 80s 7âs are not lacking in rawness, so I could see feeling like you donât need this record, but I enjoy it every time I throw it on. And for those of you who only need the EPs, note this serves as a teaser for an official Neos discography LP coming later this year. Even if you think you donât need Fight with Donald, you definitely need that.
Victoriaâs pioneers of hyperactive speed-punk, critically acclaimed as one of the very first of their kind. As lead-up to our soon to be released âThree Teens Hellbent On Speedâ discography LP, Supreme Echo presents this 25th anniversary reissue from the original John Golden stampers. Blistering fast, raw and wild Canadian hardcore insanity recorded 1982-83. 18 songs, including âSleeveâ which is the only recording to reappear on their upcoming LP, maintaining this EP as a rather unique collection. Housed in its original multi-panel fold-over cover which folds out into a 14â x 21â collage poster.Â
Our take: If you donât know the Neos, hereâs the quick version: they were from Victoria, British Columbia and they released two 7âs in the 80s: End All Discrimination and  Hassibah Gets The Martian Brain Squeeze. They are both brilliant, singular records. One of the Neosâ claims to fame is that they were one of the fastest bands of the time, up there with bands like Siege and Deep Wound, and similarly influential on later genres like grindcore and power violence. This isnât grind or power violence, though, just really, really fast hardcore. The tempos might be historically important, but when you listen to the Neos, you realize theyâre not just a historical footnote⊠theyâre one of the best bands hardcore has ever produced. The records that stick with me are ones that capture something unique, and the Neosâ precocious teenager vibe combined with the musicâs blistering speedâwhich evokes a hyperactive childâs tantrumâwas the kind of genius that it would be silly and fruitless to imitate. Anyway, Fight with Donald came out in 1995 and compiles rehearsal and live recordings. Neosâ two early 80s 7âs are not lacking in rawness, so I could see feeling like you donât need this record, but I enjoy it every time I throw it on. And for those of you who only need the EPs, note this serves as a teaser for an official Neos discography LP coming later this year. Even if you think you donât need Fight with Donald, you definitely need that.
Our take: If you donât know the Neos, hereâs the quick version: they were from Victoria, British Columbia and they released two 7âs in the 80s: End All Discrimination and  Hassibah Gets The Martian Brain Squeeze. They are both brilliant, singular records. One of the Neosâ claims to fame is that they were one of the fastest bands of the time, up there with bands like Siege and Deep Wound, and similarly influential on later genres like grindcore and power violence. This isnât grind or power violence, though, just really, really fast hardcore. The tempos might be historically important, but when you listen to the Neos, you realize theyâre not just a historical footnote⊠theyâre one of the best bands hardcore has ever produced. The records that stick with me are ones that capture something unique, and the Neosâ precocious teenager vibe combined with the musicâs blistering speedâwhich evokes a hyperactive childâs tantrumâwas the kind of genius that it would be silly and fruitless to imitate. Anyway, Fight with Donald came out in 1995 and compiles rehearsal and live recordings. Neosâ two early 80s 7âs are not lacking in rawness, so I could see feeling like you donât need this record, but I enjoy it every time I throw it on. And for those of you who only need the EPs, note this serves as a teaser for an official Neos discography LP coming later this year. Even if you think you donât need Fight with Donald, you definitely need that.
$690.00
Original: $2,300.00
-70%Neos: Fight With Donald 7"â
$2,300.00
$690.00Description
Victoriaâs pioneers of hyperactive speed-punk, critically acclaimed as one of the very first of their kind. As lead-up to our soon to be released âThree Teens Hellbent On Speedâ discography LP, Supreme Echo presents this 25th anniversary reissue from the original John Golden stampers. Blistering fast, raw and wild Canadian hardcore insanity recorded 1982-83. 18 songs, including âSleeveâ which is the only recording to reappear on their upcoming LP, maintaining this EP as a rather unique collection. Housed in its original multi-panel fold-over cover which folds out into a 14â x 21â collage poster.Â
Our take: If you donât know the Neos, hereâs the quick version: they were from Victoria, British Columbia and they released two 7âs in the 80s: End All Discrimination and  Hassibah Gets The Martian Brain Squeeze. They are both brilliant, singular records. One of the Neosâ claims to fame is that they were one of the fastest bands of the time, up there with bands like Siege and Deep Wound, and similarly influential on later genres like grindcore and power violence. This isnât grind or power violence, though, just really, really fast hardcore. The tempos might be historically important, but when you listen to the Neos, you realize theyâre not just a historical footnote⊠theyâre one of the best bands hardcore has ever produced. The records that stick with me are ones that capture something unique, and the Neosâ precocious teenager vibe combined with the musicâs blistering speedâwhich evokes a hyperactive childâs tantrumâwas the kind of genius that it would be silly and fruitless to imitate. Anyway, Fight with Donald came out in 1995 and compiles rehearsal and live recordings. Neosâ two early 80s 7âs are not lacking in rawness, so I could see feeling like you donât need this record, but I enjoy it every time I throw it on. And for those of you who only need the EPs, note this serves as a teaser for an official Neos discography LP coming later this year. Even if you think you donât need Fight with Donald, you definitely need that.
Our take: If you donât know the Neos, hereâs the quick version: they were from Victoria, British Columbia and they released two 7âs in the 80s: End All Discrimination and  Hassibah Gets The Martian Brain Squeeze. They are both brilliant, singular records. One of the Neosâ claims to fame is that they were one of the fastest bands of the time, up there with bands like Siege and Deep Wound, and similarly influential on later genres like grindcore and power violence. This isnât grind or power violence, though, just really, really fast hardcore. The tempos might be historically important, but when you listen to the Neos, you realize theyâre not just a historical footnote⊠theyâre one of the best bands hardcore has ever produced. The records that stick with me are ones that capture something unique, and the Neosâ precocious teenager vibe combined with the musicâs blistering speedâwhich evokes a hyperactive childâs tantrumâwas the kind of genius that it would be silly and fruitless to imitate. Anyway, Fight with Donald came out in 1995 and compiles rehearsal and live recordings. Neosâ two early 80s 7âs are not lacking in rawness, so I could see feeling like you donât need this record, but I enjoy it every time I throw it on. And for those of you who only need the EPs, note this serves as a teaser for an official Neos discography LP coming later this year. Even if you think you donât need Fight with Donald, you definitely need that.












