Hey, stay safe out there and have fun. Generic advice but it goes a long way when you view it as more of a general guideline than a platitude. Don't do too many drugs (I'd recommend not dabbling at all at your age but that never stopped me or anyone else and there are many experiences I don't regret so just use good prudence instead) until you're a bit older even if it's common in a lot of music scenes (I mostly hang around punks even though the actual music I play is jazz piano and I don't even like most punk music that much, many exceptions ofc. It's their principles and philosophy and nonconformity and individualism that made me end up becoming friends with so many punks and led to me going to a lot of shows for my local scene), I didn't realize the substance use was negatively impacting me until it was too late and around your age is where I started drugs, a bit younger. I wouldn't say being around the scene worsened it but it definitely contributed because I'm autistic and had to get drunk or high to socialize or take amphetamines. Embrace your passion for this and start giving your own shot at writing or playing music even if you don't feel like you'll be good at it. I was into some pretty good music at your age too and if you're here and you feel the magic that means you've got a good ear for it. Overall just do whatever you want and think for yourself, it's truly your life and most adults giving advice to late teenagers don't seem to understand that doing what one wants and what is edifying for them is what is best. I just wanted to throw some of that at you knowing you're still young and probably gonna be hanging around these scenes and making the best times of your life and probably becoming immersed in a lot of drama both meaningless and meaningful. Stay safe boss, I really wish you the best. You're watching the magic happen right in front of you and you have the chance to seize the day and be a part of it. I'd recommend playing music even for the hell of it even if you don't think you'll be good at it, if you're already making music then that's even better and don't listen to anyone who doesn't understand the type of music you're into. People understood my music less when I played black metal even though it's what I'd make if I had the tools at my disposal. I don't know why I wrote all this, I just felt compelled to tell you you're PART of that revival and you can contribute to it as much or as little as you like. You are part of the magic you speak of just like this EP was something magical and new. When I was 16 I wasn't aware of how much I was capable of or how much influence you can have with tiny things and really just getting out there and trying to make music and finding people to make music with or helping out your local bands with things like printing their T shirts and set up during their shows and stuff (there's many other important roles beyond playing music or making art I'm not really telling you to do anything in particular I'm just rambling because I'm high as fuck, my point is that you should immerse yourself in the scene using whatever skills you have or develop skills to build it up. You don't have to do any particular thing I say and for all I know you could already be doing all this shit) is how you really immerse yourself in that magic and revival and it's so fucking good to be a part of something. I hope you're doing well at finding your purpose and identity, I'll stop myself from talking now, peace. I'm glad you're a part of this, you can play a huge role in whether or not your local scene flourishes or wilts away, even if it doesn't seem like people take you seriously yet (or maybe they do, I know nothing about you). Seriously, it's great that you're listening to this and feeling the magic and that you're hyped about this revival. Hold on to that and never let go of it if you were made to be able to see magic in a world full of terror.
@@jesusman6666 I'm glad you read it too because, I am manic as fuck and on a lot of drugs and couldn't stop fucking talking. I have schizoaffective disorder and tend to compulsively ramble about things that most people would be able to say with a far fewer words so I tend to go in circles and write people I don't know very long paragraphs. I don't even know why I wrote all of that but it was pretty good, it was probably because I was on sketchy research chemical stimulants I ordered off the internet and because I cut my dose of my antipsychotic in half. I appreciate you too, have a good day. I flushed the stimulant I was taking and plan to seek help for my substance abuse so I'm gonna try to get it under control but at least in the ocean of rambling I did day some things that are pretty important for people getting into any music scene to know and especially things like the punk or emo scene, particularly the part about how it's gonna be some of the best times of your life and that you'll be immersed in drama both meaningless and meaningful. It's very important to distinguish what drama is actually important and what is people pretending to act principled but actually being conceited or disingenuous (something I see often in the punk scene). Overall though, I just write too much because it's a symptom of my mental illness and I thought I had some sort of divine purpose to help this kid change the music scene because I stopped taking my meds and started taking insane amounts of stimulants. I can usually churn out the same quality and depth of meaningful advice or insight while I'm on my meds and stable, it's just a bit less excessive and more grounded. I'm not usually so prone to writing so much based off so little info on someone but something about the way they connected discovering this to the revival of the scene and appreciated it in such a succinct way made me feel like I had to say something because you don't see people appreciate things in such a grand yet succinct way at the same time. It's kind of like the idea of moving a mountain with faith, if I say enough bullshit something will stick, and maybe I'll help someone appreciate and contextualize their experiences in the scene better clearly seeing it's a strong passion for them and clearly something they're looking forward to in their lifetime. As a schizophrenic honestly being around the punk scene was pretty hard for me sometimes and I never got that deeply into it but I learned how to deeply appreciate what it stood for and represented and to see it symbolically as something very important. I still value the experiences I've had and will continue to have hanging around that scene but I think it's important to view it through a manifold lens; one must find what is edifying within these scenes while also seeing their shortcomings and making sure to take an active part in building something. I've seen so many webs of connections and learned so much history just hanging around punks and getting to take part in helping out local bands getting their footing and going to shows. It's such a complex thing to tackle but it's really good seeing how the scene around me is blowing up and helping my community in a more collective and direct way than a lot of our major institutions do (unsurprisingly). I don't know why I went on that rant or this one but you never know when you'll end up saying something that means something and it's better to try to say something meaningful and end up regurgitating a bunch of bullshit than to get the feeling you should say something and then not do it. Ultimately I talk too much but some people hate it and some people find it edifying, really it's just a symptom of my schizophrenia and my most consistent and robust one at that.
It is the preservation of beautiful music like this that I appreciate TH-cam. I won’t forget the first time I heard breakwater I felt like the emotion in me surged to a place that gave me the strength to pounce right off the face of the earth. Truly kept me feeling during my teenage years. Just raw goodness note after note. So many good bands good shows good times.
Woah, just walked into my 16 year old heart.. Great shows played at the Fernwood Community Centre just before Jode & Steve open up 2 Youts Records.. to this day, one of my favourite records!
Just scored this on Discogs for $30 USD, shipped. My grail record that I thought I'd never get...because I couldn't justify $50+ for 2 songs. So stoked.
this may be a comment from 3 years ago, but i am absolutely stoked to be reading this. i hope you’re still cherishing that lineage. im so happy you were able to get such an amazing piece of work. this bitch is hard to find
Man i've never been into screamo but this truly hits the spot. Such great music. It makes me feel things i haven't felt in years. A real gem. Thank you so much for this upload.
I love listening to music and hoping to make something meaningful for myself even though that'll probably won't happen. There's no such thing as joining as scene and its even more rare to get along with my peers in this town that will enjoy the sames things as i do
I've been a skramz/emo/hard-core obsessive for about 20plus years now and I can't believe it took me so long to find this lineage. This is really groundwork stuff for the whole thing. Thanks again Simon
During this quarantine I've really explored emo/hardcore music from this time. It's so creative, emotional, and personal all of it. Of course something so beautiful died young. But it's still there for us to share and enjoy. Five has become one of my favorite songs. Thank you for uploading.
@@peterross8610 Actually not true, BW was a band in the early 90's. *I met them in 1992. And It's not even comparable in terms of the 'Emotional Hardcore' sound in its infancy (Embrace vs.Fugazi vs. Minor Threat argument, not even an argument). Sure lots of other bands before Breakwater doing the crossover thing but not like this. Lightyears ahead of the scene. Thats like saying Hot Water Music was before Poison the Well, true but Post Hardcore isn't ALL the same idea. The latter isn't the same sound yet its Post Hardcore and/or Emotional Hardcore. Yeah, Poison the Well was before Sleighbells if you want to nerd-out but does that make SB cross-over hardcore still? I mean its the same guitarist right? LOL
@@brhn3385 This record came out in 1995 so your logic kind of falls apart immediately right there. This sound had already existed for at least 2 or 3 years before they put any music onto vinyl. Hoover and Indian Summer were already big names in the scene and put out music like this in 92/93. By 95 there were already a bunch of bands that sounded like this.
+Alfredge Meyer well no, the purpose of these records is to make you feel. sadness is merely a social construct based off individual subjectivity. if you get sad, then that's all on you buddy.
A short list of things that started DIY, went a tiny bit mainstream and slithered back to it's rightful spot in the underground: Screamo/post-hardcore (w/e you wanna name it) Extreme pogo jumping
Home is where the heart dies....... probably, hopefully, the generation after this (millennials) will be the last to have to say that. Man this band hits hard.
What was that kids name that gave me this 7inch. So long ago. He allowed my friends and I to stay at his parents house. For a show in Victoria bc. 😍🥰🥰🥰
@@JD-oe5uc in the early 90's being called emo was a scarlet letter and not something to be proud of. i have seen fist fights over people calling hardcore bands "emo"
Oh course not. They recorded this live on a 4-track, they just played REALLY loud. It’s hard to put it in context 25 years after it came out. But more mics probably wasn’t an option, 1, and 2 - at the time Lo Fi DIY wasn’t looked down upon. Not everyone has the access to top notch equipment like Drive Like Jehu’s masterful Yank Crime album.
@@SimonB. I know - I had the benefit of staying with them while traveling with a Waxwing tour during the Republic Of Freedom Fighters era for those guys. I phrased that wrong - in two ways. First, they did record the ROFF album straight through on a 4track. Breakwater never really had a full length outside of a demo of singles I managed to get a copy of. 2 - I think I was trying to say more mics would’ve made it sound way worse considering the 4 track, and how overwhelming their volume is. ROFF’s 12” and year of the rat 7” are my two favorite DIY punk releases ever, as they were my first introduction to predominantly screaming music at 16. Jode from Breakwater and ROFF was also a SUPER nice dude for the record. He sat me down and made me a comp of Clikitat Ikatowi, The CrownHate Ruin, A Minor Forest’s “Flemish altruism,” and The Monorchid’s first album. Still have that cassette after all these years. But yeah. Terrible phrasing on my part. I literally dubbed the breakwater stuff straight from the 4 track. They also were handing out breakwater 7”s like crazy - still have one of those too.
@@rgg1009 The Sophie’s Floorboard Blog Page always has a decent description of these types of artists But not that much is known really. What I do know tho is they were a four man group from British Columbia and were around from 1994-1996
Been listening to Five multiple times a day for the past four days. I really want to find more songs out there that sound and/or feel the same/very similar. I really like Will Haven, Far, Glassjaw, Alexisonfire, but nothing they've done that I can think of really hits quite like this, Sharks And Danger by Alexisonfire comes kindof close. Will Haven's early stuff is similar, like the song Asking.
dave wenger being in both breakwater and daddy's hands is so amazing... rip to him
Oh snap Daddy's hands! I should've worn my brand new helmet!!!
being 16 and discovering this while the scene is being revived is magical
Hey, stay safe out there and have fun. Generic advice but it goes a long way when you view it as more of a general guideline than a platitude. Don't do too many drugs (I'd recommend not dabbling at all at your age but that never stopped me or anyone else and there are many experiences I don't regret so just use good prudence instead) until you're a bit older even if it's common in a lot of music scenes (I mostly hang around punks even though the actual music I play is jazz piano and I don't even like most punk music that much, many exceptions ofc. It's their principles and philosophy and nonconformity and individualism that made me end up becoming friends with so many punks and led to me going to a lot of shows for my local scene), I didn't realize the substance use was negatively impacting me until it was too late and around your age is where I started drugs, a bit younger. I wouldn't say being around the scene worsened it but it definitely contributed because I'm autistic and had to get drunk or high to socialize or take amphetamines. Embrace your passion for this and start giving your own shot at writing or playing music even if you don't feel like you'll be good at it. I was into some pretty good music at your age too and if you're here and you feel the magic that means you've got a good ear for it. Overall just do whatever you want and think for yourself, it's truly your life and most adults giving advice to late teenagers don't seem to understand that doing what one wants and what is edifying for them is what is best. I just wanted to throw some of that at you knowing you're still young and probably gonna be hanging around these scenes and making the best times of your life and probably becoming immersed in a lot of drama both meaningless and meaningful. Stay safe boss, I really wish you the best. You're watching the magic happen right in front of you and you have the chance to seize the day and be a part of it. I'd recommend playing music even for the hell of it even if you don't think you'll be good at it, if you're already making music then that's even better and don't listen to anyone who doesn't understand the type of music you're into. People understood my music less when I played black metal even though it's what I'd make if I had the tools at my disposal. I don't know why I wrote all this, I just felt compelled to tell you you're PART of that revival and you can contribute to it as much or as little as you like. You are part of the magic you speak of just like this EP was something magical and new. When I was 16 I wasn't aware of how much I was capable of or how much influence you can have with tiny things and really just getting out there and trying to make music and finding people to make music with or helping out your local bands with things like printing their T shirts and set up during their shows and stuff (there's many other important roles beyond playing music or making art I'm not really telling you to do anything in particular I'm just rambling because I'm high as fuck, my point is that you should immerse yourself in the scene using whatever skills you have or develop skills to build it up. You don't have to do any particular thing I say and for all I know you could already be doing all this shit) is how you really immerse yourself in that magic and revival and it's so fucking good to be a part of something. I hope you're doing well at finding your purpose and identity, I'll stop myself from talking now, peace. I'm glad you're a part of this, you can play a huge role in whether or not your local scene flourishes or wilts away, even if it doesn't seem like people take you seriously yet (or maybe they do, I know nothing about you). Seriously, it's great that you're listening to this and feeling the magic and that you're hyped about this revival. Hold on to that and never let go of it if you were made to be able to see magic in a world full of terror.
@@jeremymaez5311 glad i read all of that, you are appreciated
i needed this the most, i appreciate the amazing response seriously.@@jeremymaez5311
@@jesusman6666 I'm glad you read it too because, I am manic as fuck and on a lot of drugs and couldn't stop fucking talking. I have schizoaffective disorder and tend to compulsively ramble about things that most people would be able to say with a far fewer words so I tend to go in circles and write people I don't know very long paragraphs. I don't even know why I wrote all of that but it was pretty good, it was probably because I was on sketchy research chemical stimulants I ordered off the internet and because I cut my dose of my antipsychotic in half. I appreciate you too, have a good day. I flushed the stimulant I was taking and plan to seek help for my substance abuse so I'm gonna try to get it under control but at least in the ocean of rambling I did day some things that are pretty important for people getting into any music scene to know and especially things like the punk or emo scene, particularly the part about how it's gonna be some of the best times of your life and that you'll be immersed in drama both meaningless and meaningful. It's very important to distinguish what drama is actually important and what is people pretending to act principled but actually being conceited or disingenuous (something I see often in the punk scene). Overall though, I just write too much because it's a symptom of my mental illness and I thought I had some sort of divine purpose to help this kid change the music scene because I stopped taking my meds and started taking insane amounts of stimulants. I can usually churn out the same quality and depth of meaningful advice or insight while I'm on my meds and stable, it's just a bit less excessive and more grounded. I'm not usually so prone to writing so much based off so little info on someone but something about the way they connected discovering this to the revival of the scene and appreciated it in such a succinct way made me feel like I had to say something because you don't see people appreciate things in such a grand yet succinct way at the same time. It's kind of like the idea of moving a mountain with faith, if I say enough bullshit something will stick, and maybe I'll help someone appreciate and contextualize their experiences in the scene better clearly seeing it's a strong passion for them and clearly something they're looking forward to in their lifetime. As a schizophrenic honestly being around the punk scene was pretty hard for me sometimes and I never got that deeply into it but I learned how to deeply appreciate what it stood for and represented and to see it symbolically as something very important. I still value the experiences I've had and will continue to have hanging around that scene but I think it's important to view it through a manifold lens; one must find what is edifying within these scenes while also seeing their shortcomings and making sure to take an active part in building something. I've seen so many webs of connections and learned so much history just hanging around punks and getting to take part in helping out local bands getting their footing and going to shows. It's such a complex thing to tackle but it's really good seeing how the scene around me is blowing up and helping my community in a more collective and direct way than a lot of our major institutions do (unsurprisingly). I don't know why I went on that rant or this one but you never know when you'll end up saying something that means something and it's better to try to say something meaningful and end up regurgitating a bunch of bullshit than to get the feeling you should say something and then not do it. Ultimately I talk too much but some people hate it and some people find it edifying, really it's just a symptom of my schizophrenia and my most consistent and robust one at that.
@@jeremymaez5311 aight gang, aint reading all THAT
Cheers from a 51 year old hardcore "kid" in Detroit. I was very active in the 90s scene. Fun times!
Don’t give up
Home is where the heart dies.
It is the preservation of beautiful music like this that I appreciate TH-cam. I won’t forget the first time I heard breakwater I felt like the emotion in me surged to a place that gave me the strength to pounce right off the face of the earth. Truly kept me feeling during my teenage years. Just raw goodness note after note. So many good bands good shows good times.
I always come back to this little masterpiece.
After 10 years I have to see this
Woah, just walked into my 16 year old heart.. Great shows played at the Fernwood Community Centre just before Jode & Steve open up 2 Youts Records.. to this day, one of my favourite records!
im 17 jut recently found this band. feel it in the heart too
@@dthvlly 17 as well
I've been listening to this since I was 14 and 1/2
Check out Google maps video for that community centre lol
Five is perfect. Just with a few words it says everything
I see so many of your comments on emo / hardcore songs I love. The playlists on your account are amazing
@@elias-lc8dh thank you very very much :)
Home is where the heart dies!
@@joelmedina6837 Go ahead, you will anyways.
ive been crying
I wish I could
@@martinhuguet3372you can it’s called expressing your emotions and not holding them in…
You could become a Detroit lions fan if you want to cry more
Heard that.
Same yo, same.
I'd love to have a beer with Simon and just listen to his catalogue with him
I never get tired of this song
This bands just lives in our memories
Just scored this on Discogs for $30 USD, shipped. My grail record that I thought I'd never get...because I couldn't justify $50+ for 2 songs. So stoked.
this may be a comment from 3 years ago, but i am absolutely stoked to be reading this. i hope you’re still cherishing that lineage. im so happy you were able to get such an amazing piece of work. this bitch is hard to find
i had to pay $140 for mine LOL
@@luxieluci i fucking hate people making a profit off of something like this.
Man i've never been into screamo but this truly hits the spot. Such great music. It makes me feel things i haven't felt in years. A real gem. Thank you so much for this upload.
ty for saving me with these uploads during this quarantine, simon, love you
one of my fav releases ever
me too
Oh god this is so good. I need to hear their split with closure now.
cloudwatcher not as good as this
Simon B the legend of TH-cam! I got into this band after listening to this album on your page. Thanks man!
im so happy i have this record
Jesús Christ this is one of the best things I’ve ever stumbled upon
Thank you for saving me from another existential undoing with your glorious uploads.
I love listening to music and hoping to make something meaningful for myself even though that'll probably won't happen. There's no such thing as joining as scene and its even more rare to get along with my peers in this town that will enjoy the sames things as i do
I've been a skramz/emo/hard-core obsessive for about 20plus years now and I can't believe it took me so long to find this lineage. This is really groundwork stuff for the whole thing. Thanks again Simon
Love breakwater hell yeah
Simon B., I love you. Also this album rocks.
absolute gem
This is real music. Subscribed. Thanks man.
undiscovered obscure 7" equals instant like and subscribe
Is 7 refering to a year? or another category of good shit? or both?
so beautiful
First time hearing this and damn this is so good
During this quarantine I've really explored emo/hardcore music from this time. It's so creative, emotional, and personal all of it. Of course something so beautiful died young. But it's still there for us to share and enjoy. Five has become one of my favorite songs. Thank you for uploading.
boucle
A friend just got me a copy of this beautiful piece of music and I cant be more ecstatic
@@najaytheslug Grats, thats a gem for sure!
This record goes for usually a hundo or more. May find it around $75 if you’re lucky. That was very generous of your friend to get this for you.
Home is where the heart dies❤
just snagged copy of this today… finally
the 7"? how much did you pay?
just got mine
Que hermosos temas
Now this sounds nice
This kicks ass
I'am envy with your collections. Subscribed.
dude yes
beautiful
This was the first hardcore cross over band to do this sound. It changed my life when I heard it.
pretty sure that lincoln predates this...great stuff nonetheless.
@@peterross8610 Actually not true, BW was a band in the early 90's. *I met them in 1992. And It's not even comparable in terms of the 'Emotional Hardcore' sound in its infancy (Embrace vs.Fugazi vs. Minor Threat argument, not even an argument). Sure lots of other bands before Breakwater doing the crossover thing but not like this. Lightyears ahead of the scene. Thats like saying Hot Water Music was before Poison the Well, true but Post Hardcore isn't ALL the same idea. The latter isn't the same sound yet its Post Hardcore and/or Emotional Hardcore. Yeah, Poison the Well was before Sleighbells if you want to nerd-out but does that make SB cross-over hardcore still? I mean its the same guitarist right? LOL
The whole 2 minute intro alone is some of the best music I've ever heard.
@@CharismaStrategies ikr
@@brhn3385 This record came out in 1995 so your logic kind of falls apart immediately right there. This sound had already existed for at least 2 or 3 years before they put any music onto vinyl. Hoover and Indian Summer were already big names in the scene and put out music like this in 92/93. By 95 there were already a bunch of bands that sounded like this.
Seven is amazing, reminds me of the hot ramona summers, walking home from work.
that record made me too sad. good encounter
***** all these record will make you sad. that's the purpose of all these emo records. hahaha
+Alfredge Meyer well no, the purpose of these records is to make you feel. sadness is merely a social construct based off individual subjectivity. if you get sad, then that's all on you buddy.
lol
What now?
the song Seven makes me sad in a good way. It's nice listening to it when it's raining
A short list of things that started DIY, went a tiny bit mainstream and slithered back to it's rightful spot in the underground:
Screamo/post-hardcore (w/e you wanna name it)
Extreme pogo jumping
unbelievable...
this gives me a sense of nostalgia, bur not the soft one, the hard one
all drums should be miked up precisely like this
y’all talking abt five, seven is a gem too
actually I think I prefer Seven
all of them are
Me encanta💕💕💕💕💕
This record is tight!
The bass tone is really cool
fucking awesome
Home is where the heart dies....... probably, hopefully, the generation after this (millennials) will be the last to have to say that. Man this band hits hard.
im 19 and aching but its ok bcoz there r records like this one
Good find
Singelo demais ❤
What was that kids name that gave me this 7inch. So long ago. He allowed my friends and I to stay at his parents house. For a show in Victoria bc. 😍🥰🥰🥰
If anyones selling this cd or vinyl I need it in my collection
Man how the hell you find these masterpiece ?
Never heard this. Wow, 2 song ep that is worth the price on discogs
Bonito.
Real skramz shit
🦅🦅
Melodi
Oh, hell ya
heavy emo
Screamo ;)
@@dinjampnick back in the days we would just call it emo. Most emo bands screamed anyway….
@@JD-oe5uc yes, but now there's all this confusion with bands like My Chemical Romance and I call it screamo 😂
@@JD-oe5uc in the early 90's being called emo was a scarlet letter and not something to be proud of. i have seen fist fights over people calling hardcore bands "emo"
what are more songs like this?
Nice
❤️
Were their microphones on?
Probably not
Oh course not. They recorded this live on a 4-track, they just played REALLY loud. It’s hard to put it in context 25 years after it came out. But more mics probably wasn’t an option, 1, and 2 - at the time Lo Fi DIY wasn’t looked down upon.
Not everyone has the access to top notch equipment like Drive Like Jehu’s masterful Yank Crime album.
@@RustinChole they actually recorded on 4 track
@@SimonB. I know - I had the benefit of staying with them while traveling with a Waxwing tour during the Republic Of Freedom Fighters era for those guys.
I phrased that wrong - in two ways. First, they did record the ROFF album straight through on a 4track. Breakwater never really had a full length outside of a demo of singles I managed to get a copy of.
2 - I think I was trying to say more mics would’ve made it sound way worse considering the 4 track, and how overwhelming their volume is.
ROFF’s 12” and year of the rat 7” are my two favorite DIY punk releases ever, as they were my first introduction to predominantly screaming music at 16.
Jode from Breakwater and ROFF was also a SUPER nice dude for the record. He sat me down and made me a comp of Clikitat Ikatowi, The CrownHate Ruin, A Minor Forest’s “Flemish altruism,” and The Monorchid’s first album.
Still have that cassette after all these years.
But yeah. Terrible phrasing on my part. I literally dubbed the breakwater stuff straight from the 4 track. They also were handing out breakwater 7”s like crazy - still have one of those too.
@@RustinChole How did they get such a clean kick sound with 1 to 2 mics?
Fuuuuuuuck. This shit slapz
belleza
Yo, is that Dave Wenger? I heard Daddy's Hands, then that other band Ache Hour Credo, and i found this and its sounds very similiar
Yes it is
Breakwater a local band? I can’t find nothing on Spotify
They were from Canada and active between 1994-1996
@@SimonB. I just now heard this… I love it
@@Adam_yeah_Dude from Victoria Bc specifically
Ahead of it's time?
not really
For a Canadian band, maybe..?
Love this band so much. Do you like Republic of Freedom Fighters too?
yep! nice band
Where do i can listen to this other than ytb ? Spotify?
I can’t find it on Spotify
I wonder if Xasthur was influenced by these kind of bands and music.
It wouldn't surprise me at all.
The intro for this is super similiar to Carmen - Sadness so it’d make sense if this had some influence on the dsbm scene as a whole
what band is this? there's no wikipedia page on them, is there any online site about them and what are they?
Breakwater
@@SimonB. no but like is there any info on them? like people behind it? stuff about their music, what is it about? politics? idk, that stuff
@@rgg1009 The Sophie’s Floorboard Blog Page always has a decent description of these types of artists But not that much is known really.
What I do know tho is they were a four man group from British Columbia and were around from 1994-1996
🗣️🥀💦
arcane af
... Someone, Please.. Who TF is this?! Where can I find it? A Chanel called "release-topic" lead me here..
I'm lost.
this is the band breakwater. some of their discography (including this) are on streaming services so its easy to find
Any info on this band? too good
Canadian Emo hardcore band from Victoria, British Columbia, active between 1994 - 1996.
Or Check out some emo-blogspots ;)
Having checked out your playlist I think I'm in love with you. You own all these?
yes i transfer my stuff and upload it ;)
Simon B. we have so many good records in common. uplead some Candyland Carcrash stuff.
+Ben Dee Member played also in a banda called Republic Of Freedom Fighters. Check them out!!!
Any place where I can downlad this album?:) Would love to own a copy, but it's way to expensive...
www55.zippyshare.com/v/dLyLMEeg/file.html
@@SimonB. You got a working link to this?
@@lycanthropicPolitiko thanks a lot friend.
Does anyone know songs similar to the first ~40 seconds of this? Love this track but also need something softer
there's a whole genre called slowcore
@@gimmigimmigimmi you deserve kisses on the forehead
I Hate Myself
Moonraker
its different but a couple of UK bands like crescent and movietone have a similar sorta harmonic vibe
Does anyone know about Chino Horde?
sure! great band
4 shoo
I think a better question in this TH-cam section would be who doesn't 😂😂
I made a reddit
r/breakwateremo
nice
reddit 🤢🤮
Just followed 📌
they would have hated being called emo :/
Bandcamp?
This is kind of like an extreme version of early modest mouse.
I hate myself. Should I take drugs? Will prozac help me get laid?
Would having sex help me not want to kill myself or make it worse when she leaves me?
Should I stop eating?
I dont know if you are serious but Drugs and sex are not the solution.
What is the solution? I'm serious, but by drugs, I mean shit like Prozac. What the fuck good is living if I never feel good?
@brokenupbeat They tell me to take drugs I don't understand and that haven't worked in the past. And I am really poor.
Been listening to Five multiple times a day for the past four days. I really want to find more songs out there that sound and/or feel the same/very similar. I really like Will Haven, Far, Glassjaw, Alexisonfire, but nothing they've done that I can think of really hits quite like this, Sharks And Danger by Alexisonfire comes kindof close. Will Haven's early stuff is similar, like the song Asking.
please Look up Golem - Demo '97 Tape 1997 and start at 1:32. That one song could be a breakwater song in itself. I love it :)
Melodi
Nice profile pic 🙂😂