Politics in Grindcore – Are they necessary?

When listening to any grindcore band, with lyrics in hand, you cannot help but notice the political themes which pervade the genre.

After all, grindcore is almost directly a derivative of crust punk, hardcore punk and thrash in the 1980’s — both of which were heavily politically-motivated genres as well. Many will point to Napalm Death, one of the main innovators in grindcore and see their use of political themes in their lyrics across nearly all of their albums. Some will even go so far as to tell you “grindcore is politics.”

But why is it that other innovators in grind, such as Repulsion, opted to maintain the “dark” themes that pervaded death metal (and would influence later “goregrind” creators Carcass)? After all, death metal and grindcore are so closely related, that not even lyrical themes can be the only criteria that set the two apart.

Perhaps the later grindcore artists saw the use of their music as political propaganda — and its clear intent to manipulate — as a detractor to their music as an artform and the overall experience they wished to express.

In theory, fans would become attracted to the music solely because of its political motivations, and not due to the music itself. It’s easy to nod your head to rhythmic music, even if it’s very noisy and unappealing, if it means instant inclusion into a social group. A leftist vegan grind band probably would’ve been considered “original” and “unique” decades ago, if the punks hadn’t done it before, and if the hippies hadn’t done it even further back.

While it would be great to get more people together to be politically active through music thing for an activist cause, political representation is highly unbalanced; grindcore bands tend only to support staunch modern leftist/democratic ideas, as remnants of the political motivations of the bands that influenced them before. And as I said before, it can potentially detract from the music itself — propaganda is not often seen as art. Bands that can be seen as overly preachy can be a huge turnoff to many.

Perhaps subtlety is the best recipe — a special recipe laced with politics that goes down unnoticed with the music, even with music that is as attention-grabbing and imposing as grind, it can’t hurt to be a little more subtle in approach.

In truth, politics lose their value because they are discussed so much on television, in schools, at work, and anywhere else. Ask anyone who once considered themselves a part of the punk/crust subculture. It helps to be politically aware, but both politics and music (or any artform, for that matter) lose any other value they had to begin with when they are deliberately mixed together, unless they are used sparingly or expressed in an indirect fashion, the latter being difficult to do successfully.

What is often seen as art is a truthful re-interpretation of reality. “Goregrind,” as crafted by the masterminds behind Carcass during the band’s early years, was not as politically-motivated, even though the musicians in particular were alumni of some highly politically-motivated bands — Bill Steer, once a guitarist of Napalm Death, and Jeffrey Walker, a former bassist of UK underground crust punk band Electro Hippies.

The idea behind Carcass’ music was to pair repulsive themes with repulsive sounds. Looking at that formula, it becomes easy to understand why you wouldn’t want to pair repulsive sounds with politics. With something as important as politics, you don’t want to associate it with theatrical horror.

But, perhaps Carcass’ music was still socially or politically motivated, but reinterpreted as allegory. One could view Carcass’ lyrics as a social critique, past or present, about the sickest things that latch onto society’s underbelly, where we can hardly see their horrors:

Grimly I dig up the turfs
To remove the corrupted stiffs
Trying to contain my excitement
As I desecrate graveolent crypts…
Fingers claw at coffin lids
Eager festal exhumation
Hugging your wry, festered remains
With posthumous joy and elation…
Body snatched, freshly interred
Whatever takes my fancy
To satisfy my gratuitous pica
My culinary necromancy…
Scrutinised then brutalized
My forensic inquisition is fulfilled
My recipe is now your epitaph
Be it fried, boiled or grilled…
I devour the pediculous corpse
Whetting my palate as I exhume
The festering stench of rotting flesh
Makes me drool as I consume…
Caskets I grate
My larder’s a grave
I’m sickly obsessed (with the badly decomposed)
Rotten remains I eat
Purulent meat
What a funeral feast (putrid reek)
Weeping tissue is stripped
Pus dribbles from my lips
Pulverising this pustular chaff
Butchering up morgues makes me laugh…
Ulcerated flesh I munch
Rotting corpses are my lunch
On bones I love to crunch (on the badly decomposed)
Shrivelled innards I lick
The corpse’s head I kick
Crumbling shreds I pick (eat the stiffs)
(Solo: morbid melody for the deceased with salt to taste)
Rancid flesh, slaughter the dead
- Caskets exhumed…
Corpses disenterred, graves disturbed
- To consume…
Bereaved relatives are not amused
As on their dear departed I feverishly consume…
Slavering worms, decomposure burns
Corrosion born, as bacteria gnaw
Desecrate…
Precipiate…(from the muddy grave)
Macerate…
Eviscerate…
Caskets I grate
My larder’s a grave
I’m sickly obsessed (with the badly decomposed)
Rotten remains I eat
Purulent meat
What a funeral feast (putrid reek)
Saponified fats, nibbled by rats
-Freshly exhumed…
Deep down six feet is where I like to eat
-Human flesh to consume…

The lyrics for their song Exhume to Consume were basically a very articulated, poetic description of a psychopath with a penchant for necrophagia: A subtle call to the audience to support vegan/vegetarianism (at least according to the band). There isn’t any inherent political themes here, but it is just one gross-out of a song for the sake of showing the listener that things like this aren’t outside the realm of reality.

Carcass injected this style with a grotesque, ironic sense of humor which, like the Misfits before them, turned 1950s style rock music into a parodic horror suggesting a society of pleasant illusions hiding a corrupt and more literal reality.

~Reek of Putrefaction review at Dark Legions Archive

The lyrics are almost laughable in a sense, until the dreadful soundtrack that accompanies the evocative lyrics reminds you that it isn’t. Carcass contrasted the absurd with the imminent.

4 comments to Politics in Grindcore – Are they necessary?

  • PJ

    I think you’ll find a fair share of political (or anti-political) themes in a majority of different genres of music. I don’t believe it is more prevalant in grind than the topic of homicide or “gore” related themes. The problem here is this, a vast majority of the bands out there passing themselves off as grind are honestly horrid. They are cookie-cutter growl/blast bands ranting and raving about the last corpse they fisted or why religion is a farce. It was fun and original at one point but I believe the genre is getting ridiculously watered down by these talentless, visionless, clones. The topic of politics in extreme music has also been covered since the beginning but at least politics is a constantly changing source of ideals and problems. Whether it’s the war in Iraq, Global Warming, Communism, Or a chimp being put to death for ripping a woman’s face off, picking up the morning paper and perusing the front page is enough for a decent 37 tracks (20 minutes) of material to pull from. It takes the ability to perceive and structure rather than a snuff film and a thesaurus. That’s why politics hasn’t gotten old.

    Is it a trademark of Grindcore music? No, I don’t believe it is. No more than it is a trademark in alternative, rock, thrash, country, any of it. Grindcore is an aggressive, chaotic, and cathartic sound – lyrical themes need to coincide with that sound or else it’s simply taking away from the overall essence. It’s whatever it is that pisses you off. And politics really pisses alot of people off. Gore is easy, and unfortunately I believe alot of it is stupid. Because I don’t buy into it. I don’t mean to take anything away from Carcass, but I don’t think Jeff Walker is out there sodomizing cadavers on a friday night. It’s musical dungeons and dragons. But I do believe that Barney Greenway is seriously pissed off about organized religion utilizing their propaganda to control a gullible society. But I suppose it’s whatever blows your hair back. I love Grind music, I love music in general. But at the end of the day, when these dudes or any other musicians out there ranting and raving on stage with a microphone in hand lay their heads down on their pillows at night, that’s all they are is musicians. They’re not curing cancer, they’re not knee deep in it in the middle east. They sing songs and they help give direction I suppose to those looking for that kind of catharsis.

    One could even argue that the simple label of Grind and it’s characteristics are so difficult to pinpoint and categorize because in that light it offers bands the opportunity to use that sound as a basis to go in any musical direction that they choose to. The fury of bands like Napalm Death and Repulsion molded the sound as much as a band like the slow droning Swans influenced it. Perhaps we are better off not breaking down what this phenomenon is. Maybe we should just call it what it really is, the new punk. Because as the morning papers get more and more fucked up, Punk just won’t cut it anymore.

    Dig the site man, hope you keep at it.

  • Rejectamenta

    10th anniversary of our fine record. We want to give it to you for free:
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  • Guy

    Gore in Grindcore – Is it necessary?
    Sex in Grindcore – Is it necessary?

    >> grindcore bands tend only to support staunch modern leftist/democratic ideas
    Yeah, for sure – as every consistent form of degenerated art does. Only black metal pinguins didn’t get this.

    >> In truth, politics lose their value because they are discussed so much on television, in schools, at work, and anywhere else.
    It seems to me that TV and schools mainly teach state or corporate views on politics, don’t they? It also seems to me that everybody also talks of sex and that gore and sex themes are already covered in a much more spectacular way in movies. Much more than politics (at least on the US market).

    If grindcore is really art – it is freedom of expression. Why arguing that it should avoid talking about a theme or another? Everything is politics, including denying politics and looking elsewhere when some guys manage with your life and future.

    If a grindcore band has a clever and strong political statement to share, let’s put it in music. When I read interviews of death or black metal bands, I immediately understand why I turned into grindcore.

    By the way, that page is great and I’m just waiting for its future development.

    Guy (France)

  • Thank you guys very much for your perspectives, I can agree for the most part.

    I’m glad you all like the site so far. There’s plenty more things to come!

    Spread the word, and thanks for the support!

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