I loved shelter when I was coming up in the scene, but I broke my edge early on and drifted away from it entirely. Alcohol went on to destroy my life, but today I sit 6 months clean and sober and this interview has been such a spiritual uplift to me. Thanks Finn, amazing content! "Well I'm gonna make that change I'm gonna set this world This world on fire "
Fucking incredible that you got Porcell on here! Imagine the sheer number of people this man has influenced in one way or another. Got to see him on that reunion tour with Judge some time back.
Just finished the whole thing, and that whole story about the van falling into the ravine was fucking terrifying, but also gives you a super clear window into the man's beliefs/broader perspective on life. I grew up in a scene with a pretty strong krishnacore presence, and if it wasn't them, there were the Ananda Marga people (I think they're called Margis?). Save for the spiritual language a lot of the teachings are couched in, there's a lot in there that'd make perfect sense to a secular audience-- much like Finn describes with the whole Shelter stuff. Great conversation, Finn!
This was an INCREDIBLE and enlightening interview! This has to be your best video for me! I'm not even into the hardcore scene like that, but this blew me away. Thank you Finn, I needed this. 🤘
Porcell! Judge was the first hardcore band I ever heard. I found a Judge tape (and a DRI tape) at the local thrift store when I was 12, and it changed my life forever. Om Krishnaya Namaha 🙏 ॐ
This guy really has walked the path, Can see why he's so inspirational actually. Wish more people could be locked into the ideas of philosophy and spirituality like he is. While i don't aspire to be like him in every way as i moved away from being straight edge around 17 and that's ok, He pretty much gets the point of it all as they say and it's hard not to dig the kind of influence he's trying to impart on the world, he chooses his words wisely I do like that. A lot of idealistic young politically activist or active types that are just woke hipster posers stand to learn a lot from someone with such a sage mindset today, more than ever too given how lost most people are now growing up. I know iv been pretty critical in the comments recently but really impressed honestly people like this does give me some hope.
This has been my favorite interview on here. I only knew a few Youth of Today songs before I watched this, but I always try to watch your videos. Anyway, I needed this. Thank you so much Porcell, you have inspired me. I'm not religious but have felt a lack of spirituality in my life. The realization hit me about 45 minutes into this video. I wanna give more and take less. Thank you Finn for putting this together so that I could not only learn about Shelter/Youth of Today, but to also hear a point of view that I usually wouldn't get from my typical podcasts. Porcell, you made a huge impact on me today. Thank you both.
Quite possibly one of the most wholesome musicians us as punk rock fans have ever been blessed with, it’s always good to hear him and ray talk about Krishna
Heavy shit discussed there. I appreciated it, thank you both. Mantra was an important LP for me as a teenager and its an album I still go back to for positive, uplifting vibes in my 40's. In fact, at this age, I appreciate the album's content more than ever because it also reflects some aspects of my own later-life spiritual convictions.
Hey Finn love the podcast, and honestly thanks to you and your videos I've learned a lot about hardcore and the older bands. Your work is awesome, and I can't wait for more content!
Whoa, Finn!!! So amazing that you got to visit with Porcell! Somehow, I missed this one, watching it now a year afterwards. All of the YOT and Shelter releases I have are on cassette, because I'm that old. I just watched a interview with Sammy from YOT tonight and learned that he played on a Limp Bizkit album, then I stumbled upon this video. Let's get Sammy and Porcell and Fred Durst to start a project. But yeah man, thanks for sharing this video. Happy for you to get to talk to one of our childhood heroes.
I'm not Krishna but I since age 14 i have kept and live by many of the practices that were taught to me through Youth of Today, Shelter, Cro Mags, 108 etc. From these bands i started researching spirituality, veganism, awareness, consciousness, meditation etc. and now at 43 years old, all of these things still play a big role in my life. i stepped away from the practices for many years and my life fell apart, i was lost for so long. I recently in the past 3 years have been have been reimplementing these practices back into my life and its like im alive again. Thank you Finn for this interview. Thank you Porcell for sharing your time and gifts with us.
Wow. I just got into Ray Cappo from YoT within the last couple years. I thought his interview on jre was incredible and it came to me when I was in dire need of an uplift. This podcast is the perfect next step in my growing connection with the YoT fellas.
How funny that this came up on my feed just now. I've followed Finn and PRMBA for a while but didn't see this until I started looking up stuff on Youth of Today. My cousin Darren played drums on Break Down the Walls and wanted to see what it was all about. Sending this to him now 😀
I'm not a Krishna, but a Buddhist. Shelter definitely renewed my interest in spirituality and bands like YOT, Gorilla Biscuits etc. made me more willing to live a better life and make a change!
Shelter are one of my all time favourite bands, great lyrics, great songs. Really enjoyed this interview, great questions, and Porcell has a lot of interesting things to say.
What a character! What a spirit! Never gave it a thought before I've watched this, but probably I'm still alive and quite sane because of that YOT cassette that I used to own, the one that made me go straight edge for 7 or 8 years
@@lumpenproletarier9584 the fact that so many of us who grew up atheists have found truths in spiritual concepts as we get older and learn more should tell you something
For most people and human civilisation itself it was the opposite way tho, as we got older and progressed spirituality became more and more obsolete. You are not finding any truths in religion nor you learn anything from it because education and scientific/social progress is what drives us away from spirituality. Whenever there was a massive step forward in human social evolution the people always turned not only against their material conditions but also their spiritual leaders for example the jacobins inspired by the enlightenment in the French revolution or the bolsheviks in Russia because people back than knew that religion always servers the preservation of the status quo and justifies the worst kinds of tyranny.
Loved the interview, I have never been straight edge or vegan but I have to say that I always admired them for being so determined in their convictions and their willpower. What a great guy. But not gonna lie, when he said he was unvaccinated I feared the conversation would devolve into covid conspiracy theory territory. Thankfully it doesn't, for anybody wondering the same.
I live 15 minutes from New Vrindavan and there was a Krishna band from there in the 90s called 13A and they gave me a shelter CD and a copy of the McMillan edition Gita in like 95 .
im currently straight edge and it is fully changing my life. I recently really got into the band 108 and the spiritual side of it all seems so much more powerful than the tribal militant stuff
Hey, i am commenting to a super old video of yours about rap metal. Not the biggest fan of the genre, but if you havnt heard of Dropout Kings, i feel like they are the best of the genre as of right now. I love your videos btw. It makes me super happy that there is a real human being with a real outlook on life and music.
Loved YoT back in the day as well as now. Watching this no and you guys mentioned MDC, I would so really love to see/hear you speak with Dave Dictor. Read his book and he has lived such an interesting and down to earth life. I would love it if you were able to get him on! Take care and thanks for your contribution to punk (music) history.
I find this so interesting. It's super jarring to me when people know are like "you're just some woke hipster with the vegetarianism and anti-capitalist stuff" when I'm like... I used to struggle to find vegan food in the 90s, my friends were talking about corporations ruining the planet when we were teenagers and just because so many people have decided they agree with that now doesn't mean my mind is going to change. I didn't follow those ideas in the 90's just because they were rebellious and I'm not turning my back on them just because they're mainstream ideas now. Shelter was actually a MASSIVE band for me, up there with Earth Crisis and Refused in terms of shaping a lot of my worldview as a teenager.
If so, you should read a lot more. Just saying. Amazing how people stick to what a fucking band says instead of actually reading a lot more about stuff that is really interesting.
@@lemmingbcn You're assuming that because some bands helped shaped my worldview 20 years ago that a) books didn't also do that (untrue - I was also studying Philosophy & Ethics and reading EXTENSIVELY) and b) that my worldview hasn't changed or evolved since then, and that reading hasn't been a massive part of that. But feel free to make assumptions based on the limited information about me provided in a two paragraph TH-cam comment. The bands may have been an entry point for ideas that resonated with me; books helped expand on that and challenge my beliefs. Just saying.
Hey Finn, late to the party but really enjoyed your interview on no jumper. Would you consider an interview with Karl (earth crisis) or Jacob (converge)? Good stuff man!
Amazing, amazing interview. I do feel like the punk/hardcore scene was waaaaay ahead of its time when it came to progressive ideals, and we are just now beginning to realize the scope of its influence. I never embraced straight edge, but it is through punk rock and hardcore that I opened my eyes to certain societal ills that were not being discussed in the least. I distinctly remember Boy Sets Fire being explicitly anti-homophobic in like 1998, and that having a profound impact on me, and inspiring me to become a LGBTQ ally. The scene didn't have all the answers; some people in it still behaved like fuckwads, but it at least gave a lot of us a solid foundation for personal growth.
@xyTJxy Hahaha thats great. I remember in the 80s the great Big Boys from TX had Biscuit Turner on vocals and he was gay but he had a great quote about it... ""I don't know if I want to answer that or not because it doesn't make any difference if I'm gay or not, I'm a human being and my sexual preference doesn't play into my lifestyle. It comes from my heart and I want people to look at me and say I'm a human being - don't ask me about what 5% of my life is" BOOM Rest Easy Randy.
Way late on this, but being from the CT/NY area, I never understood the pamphlets for dollars. Every show I went to when a Krishna band played, followers in soft orange clothing would beg for cash. For me, it soured that message he speaks of and makes it no different than Christianity. They both speak about not being an asshole yet ask for money. Loved the interview, but it’s all about seeing, watching and acting the right way. Loved his bands, Baby Gopal, as a follower, and all of them. Some things just didn’t add up to the readings or scripture they were putting out.
Noooooo, fuck, im 17min into this interview and just as Porcell was talking about his first HC show with MDC (i love that band) and his experiences in the early 80s, Finn cuts in to talk about his mom and when he discovered Shelter in the 90s, fuckkk. Finn i got love 4 u dude but dont do that, if Porcell is talking about his most early hc memories, let him talk, dont "guide" him. Anyways very interesting conversation so far, lets see how it ends.
@@FinnMckentyPRMBA I know i know dude but shit, tell me now that you think about it, wouldnt you wanna know more about PORCELL's first HC show was MDC and what came out next in the 80s, u jumped to the 90s way to fast (and listen the 90s were also my era, you and I are around the same age and belonged to the same scene) take care Finn and keep these interviews comin' (this was a fantastic interview)
On a more serious note holy fucking shit dood this and Dino and Ezec are like fuckin top tier interviews on here dood never got super big into YOT but I fuckin love da Judge-Bringing It down record I’m probably the furthest from straight edge myself but da music is some of the best HC I’ve heard in my life plus even tho me not Straight edge or anything da stuff is tbh a real awakening and breathe of fresh air instead of the bs of early punk bands bitching and moaning and being all self destructive and shit
Finn! Would love to see you react to Bloodywood, an Indian street metal band! Really interesting fusion stuff. And they do some amazing charity work so worth giving some attention to 🙌🏽
I bought a bhagavad gita and found it very hard to get into it and stopped reading it altogether. the whole 'I live only in servitude to some god' idea just put me off
I wish various horror-themed bands would generate real movements, the way straight edge bands did. Even if it was just a flash-in-the-pan thing. But I think that all musicians are full of shit, to some extent though. They all sing about things they've either never done nor ever would do. They'd be in prison if they did even half of the things they sing about. And there's always some cop-out disclaimer like, "this music just for entertainment purposes, and this band does not promote the eating of one's neighbors;" or some shit like that. I'm sure there are a few exceptions though _(who are probably in prison)..._
Would love to see your reaction to the new Carpenter Brut - it has Greg Puciato on it and I feel like BMTH got a lot of inspiration from these dark synthwave bands th-cam.com/video/6_t_ZXavIOo/w-d-xo.html
I loved shelter when I was coming up in the scene, but I broke my edge early on and drifted away from it entirely. Alcohol went on to destroy my life, but today I sit 6 months clean and sober and this interview has been such a spiritual uplift to me. Thanks Finn, amazing content!
"Well I'm gonna make that change
I'm gonna set this world
This world on fire "
Fucking incredible that you got Porcell on here! Imagine the sheer number of people this man has influenced in one way or another. Got to see him on that reunion tour with Judge some time back.
Just finished the whole thing, and that whole story about the van falling into the ravine was fucking terrifying, but also gives you a super clear window into the man's beliefs/broader perspective on life. I grew up in a scene with a pretty strong krishnacore presence, and if it wasn't them, there were the Ananda Marga people (I think they're called Margis?). Save for the spiritual language a lot of the teachings are couched in, there's a lot in there that'd make perfect sense to a secular audience-- much like Finn describes with the whole Shelter stuff.
Great conversation, Finn!
This was an INCREDIBLE and enlightening interview! This has to be your best video for me! I'm not even into the hardcore scene like that, but this blew me away. Thank you Finn, I needed this. 🤘
Porcell! Judge was the first hardcore band I ever heard. I found a Judge tape (and a DRI tape) at the local thrift store when I was 12, and it changed my life forever.
Om Krishnaya Namaha 🙏 ॐ
This guy really has walked the path, Can see why he's so inspirational actually. Wish more people could be locked into the ideas of philosophy and spirituality like he is. While i don't aspire to be like him in every way as i moved away from being straight edge around 17 and that's ok, He pretty much gets the point of it all as they say and it's hard not to dig the kind of influence he's trying to impart on the world, he chooses his words wisely I do like that. A lot of idealistic young politically activist or active types that are just woke hipster posers stand to learn a lot from someone with such a sage mindset today, more than ever too given how lost most people are now growing up. I know iv been pretty critical in the comments recently but really impressed honestly people like this does give me some hope.
This has been my favorite interview on here. I only knew a few Youth of Today songs before I watched this, but I always try to watch your videos. Anyway, I needed this. Thank you so much Porcell, you have inspired me. I'm not religious but have felt a lack of spirituality in my life. The realization hit me about 45 minutes into this video. I wanna give more and take less. Thank you Finn for putting this together so that I could not only learn about Shelter/Youth of Today, but to also hear a point of view that I usually wouldn't get from my typical podcasts. Porcell, you made a huge impact on me today. Thank you both.
This was the best fucking interview ever... Porcell is giving the new punks and hardcore kids true history on the scene and music that we love.
Quite possibly one of the most wholesome musicians us as punk rock fans have ever been blessed with, it’s always good to hear him and ray talk about Krishna
Heavy shit discussed there. I appreciated it, thank you both. Mantra was an important LP for me as a teenager and its an album I still go back to for positive, uplifting vibes in my 40's. In fact, at this age, I appreciate the album's content more than ever because it also reflects some aspects of my own later-life spiritual convictions.
Hey Finn love the podcast, and honestly thanks to you and your videos I've learned a lot about hardcore and the older bands. Your work is awesome, and I can't wait for more content!
Thank you!
Stoked it’s about punk. Thank you Finn for a great interview. Good questions and rapport.
Whoa, Finn!!! So amazing that you got to visit with Porcell! Somehow, I missed this one, watching it now a year afterwards. All of the YOT and Shelter releases I have are on cassette, because I'm that old. I just watched a interview with Sammy from YOT tonight and learned that he played on a Limp Bizkit album, then I stumbled upon this video. Let's get Sammy and Porcell and Fred Durst to start a project. But yeah man, thanks for sharing this video. Happy for you to get to talk to one of our childhood heroes.
Great interview! I remember seeing Shelter at the Dynamo open air festival. What a great show that was.
I'm not Krishna but I since age 14 i have kept and live by many of the practices that were taught to me through Youth of Today, Shelter, Cro Mags, 108 etc. From these bands i started researching spirituality, veganism, awareness, consciousness, meditation etc. and now at 43 years old, all of these things still play a big role in my life. i stepped away from the practices for many years and my life fell apart, i was lost for so long. I recently in the past 3 years have been have been reimplementing these practices back into my life and its like im alive again. Thank you Finn for this interview. Thank you Porcell for sharing your time and gifts with us.
I used to wear Vans in the mid 80's and got bullied and looked down upon. Now, 70 yr old ladies wear them !!
Wow. I just got into Ray Cappo from YoT within the last couple years. I thought his interview on jre was incredible and it came to me when I was in dire need of an uplift. This podcast is the perfect next step in my growing connection with the YoT fellas.
Complicit with Brogan
Thanks for another great interview Finn! I really enjoyed this from front to back.
How funny that this came up on my feed just now. I've followed Finn and PRMBA for a while but didn't see this until I started looking up stuff on Youth of Today. My cousin Darren played drums on Break Down the Walls and wanted to see what it was all about. Sending this to him now 😀
Great interview!
Bands like Youth of Today, 7 Seconds and Shelter taught me the power of positive thinking.
Stuff like this reminds me to try and get back to spiritual practice, and stop getting so caught up in all the noise and chatter of the world
very intriguing interview, from start to finish, many wisdom and inspirations we could take away
I'm not a Krishna, but a Buddhist. Shelter definitely renewed my interest in spirituality and bands like YOT, Gorilla Biscuits etc. made me more willing to live a better life and make a change!
Paramananda, a great devotee and musician. One of my life inspirations. Thank you for letting him share Bhakti, Finn.
Shelter are one of my all time favourite bands, great lyrics, great songs. Really enjoyed this interview, great questions, and Porcell has a lot of interesting things to say.
What a character! What a spirit! Never gave it a thought before I've watched this, but probably I'm still alive and quite sane because of that YOT cassette that I used to own, the one that made me go straight edge for 7 or 8 years
Most thanks for bringing this interview to me! 🙏
He's a good example for what a healthy lifestyle can do for you, he looks 20 years younger than he actually is.
The religious shit he's talking about is still weird tho.
@@lumpenproletarier9584 the fact that so many of us who grew up atheists have found truths in spiritual concepts as we get older and learn more should tell you something
For most people and human civilisation itself it was the opposite way tho, as we got older and progressed spirituality became more and more obsolete. You are not finding any truths in religion nor you learn anything from it because education and scientific/social progress is what drives us away from spirituality. Whenever there was a massive step forward in human social evolution the people always turned not only against their material conditions but also their spiritual leaders for example the jacobins inspired by the enlightenment in the French revolution or the bolsheviks in Russia because people back than knew that religion always servers the preservation of the status quo and justifies the worst kinds of tyranny.
@@lumpenproletarier9584 Jesus was the 1st Commie
@@lumpenproletarier9584 as for spirituality though studying quantum physics is what opened my eyes and made me stop believing in atheism
Damn Finn! Didn’t know you did this interview. Fantastic. Dudes a hero!
Crush on
My old friend Porcell! So great to hear you, brother. Thanks for making this happen Finn. 🙏🏼❤️
Loved the interview, I have never been straight edge or vegan but I have to say that I always admired them for being so determined in their convictions and their willpower. What a great guy.
But not gonna lie, when he said he was unvaccinated I feared the conversation would devolve into covid conspiracy theory territory. Thankfully it doesn't, for anybody wondering the same.
Hey Finn! Moses sent me here, and this interview was epic. Good work. And good to see you after all these years! -Avalon
Oh hey man! Great to hear from you!!
What a cool guy. Took some notes on this one.
I live 15 minutes from New Vrindavan and there was a Krishna band from there in the 90s called 13A and they gave me a shelter CD and a copy of the McMillan edition Gita in like 95 .
Awesome interview. Thank you Finn and Porcell
Awesome, such a hardcore legend. We need an interview with Tobey Morse, or maybe Lou Koller
Got to see Judge a few years back here in Denver. Highlight show for sure.
Never got to see Shelter though. 😕
One of my biggest guitar influences, awesome
im currently straight edge and it is fully changing my life. I recently really got into the band 108 and the spiritual side of it all seems so much more powerful than the tribal militant stuff
Porcell is the man, great interview 🤟🏻🤟🏻
Hey, i am commenting to a super old video of yours about rap metal. Not the biggest fan of the genre, but if you havnt heard of Dropout Kings, i feel like they are the best of the genre as of right now. I love your videos btw. It makes me super happy that there is a real human being with a real outlook on life and music.
MANTRA is still a flawless album 🙌
This was amazing, start to finish. Thanks to you both for sharing.
Loved YoT back in the day as well as now. Watching this no and you guys mentioned MDC, I would so really love to see/hear you speak with Dave Dictor. Read his book and he has lived such an interesting and down to earth life. I would love it if you were able to get him on! Take care and thanks for your contribution to punk (music) history.
For me it was Minor Threat first, but then I got into YOT and GB
How did I miss this interview.
Dude used to take my old lady to a Krishna temple in Chicago.
Wonderful interview amigo
That story there at the end was amazing
Shelter eventually led me to my first yoga class, been over a decade.
Youth of Today made me who I am today. I probably wouldn't be here now if it wasn't for them. Thank you. ❤
That story about the car crash at the end was crazy. I can't imagine that.
I find this so interesting. It's super jarring to me when people know are like "you're just some woke hipster with the vegetarianism and anti-capitalist stuff" when I'm like... I used to struggle to find vegan food in the 90s, my friends were talking about corporations ruining the planet when we were teenagers and just because so many people have decided they agree with that now doesn't mean my mind is going to change. I didn't follow those ideas in the 90's just because they were rebellious and I'm not turning my back on them just because they're mainstream ideas now.
Shelter was actually a MASSIVE band for me, up there with Earth Crisis and Refused in terms of shaping a lot of my worldview as a teenager.
If so, you should read a lot more. Just saying. Amazing how people stick to what a fucking band says instead of actually reading a lot more about stuff that is really interesting.
@@lemmingbcn You're assuming that because some bands helped shaped my worldview 20 years ago that a) books didn't also do that (untrue - I was also studying Philosophy & Ethics and reading EXTENSIVELY) and b) that my worldview hasn't changed or evolved since then, and that reading hasn't been a massive part of that.
But feel free to make assumptions based on the limited information about me provided in a two paragraph TH-cam comment.
The bands may have been an entry point for ideas that resonated with me; books helped expand on that and challenge my beliefs.
Just saying.
I think the Mantra album was release in 95 before the likes of limp bizkit which came a couple years later. That was punk/rap sound of the mid 90's.
Great interview 👍
Great interview! Any news on the new Shelter album mentioned by Porcell?
Hell yeah krishnacore🤘🤘🤘
I used to work at EVR ! this is cool!
Hey Finn, late to the party but really enjoyed your interview on no jumper. Would you consider an interview with Karl (earth crisis) or Jacob (converge)? Good stuff man!
Thank you! Yes I would love to interview either
Love it.
Very positive attitude guy
Well done. ☸
Amazing, amazing interview. I do feel like the punk/hardcore scene was waaaaay ahead of its time when it came to progressive ideals, and we are just now beginning to realize the scope of its influence. I never embraced straight edge, but it is through punk rock and hardcore that I opened my eyes to certain societal ills that were not being discussed in the least. I distinctly remember Boy Sets Fire being explicitly anti-homophobic in like 1998, and that having a profound impact on me, and inspiring me to become a LGBTQ ally.
The scene didn't have all the answers; some people in it still behaved like fuckwads, but it at least gave a lot of us a solid foundation for personal growth.
@xyTJxy Hahaha thats great. I remember in the 80s the great Big Boys from TX had Biscuit Turner on vocals and he was gay but he had a great quote about it... ""I don't know if I want to answer that or not because it doesn't make any difference if I'm gay or not, I'm a human being and my sexual preference doesn't play into my lifestyle. It comes from my heart and I want people to look at me and say I'm a human being - don't ask me about what 5% of my life is" BOOM Rest Easy Randy.
Now were talkin finn💪🏼 Cb’s, city gardens, early 90s, lower east side skins. Oi oi oi.
Porcell and Ray played a big part in guiding my youth
Does anybody know what Porcell‘s new band’s name is? And if they ever put out any songs? I’ve been searching online and can’t find it!
It‘s called: Values Here
Anybody have a recommendation on which Shelter album(s) to start with?
All their albums are great but my favorite is Quest for Certainty
@@richiemajewski6960 That's funny I'm listening to it right now
@@richiemajewski6960 I listened to When 20 Summers pass before that. Both albums are great imo
Same
Empathy is a GREAT song
Finn, when are you gonna become a devotee??!! Lol 🤪
Great interview.
Way late on this, but being from the CT/NY area, I never understood the pamphlets for dollars. Every show I went to when a Krishna band played, followers in soft orange clothing would beg for cash. For me, it soured that message he speaks of and makes it no different than Christianity. They both speak about not being an asshole yet ask for money. Loved the interview, but it’s all about seeing, watching and acting the right way. Loved his bands, Baby Gopal, as a follower, and all of them. Some things just didn’t add up to the readings or scripture they were putting out.
Seems like a great guy. Too bad he could be an asymptotic spreader. Vaccines don’t just help the individual but helps others.
How much does it cost to go to India that many times?
I used to love Shelter!
I still do
@@FinnMckentyPRMBA i need to have a listen again. Been a while
He wasn't in Better than a 1000?
Nope.
NEVER SURRENDER
First comment, Finn is one of my biggest influences shot out to the PRMBA
Noooooo, fuck, im 17min into this interview and just as Porcell was talking about his first HC show with MDC (i love that band) and his experiences in the early 80s, Finn cuts in to talk about his mom and when he discovered Shelter in the 90s, fuckkk. Finn i got love 4 u dude but dont do that, if Porcell is talking about his most early hc memories, let him talk, dont "guide" him. Anyways very interesting conversation so far, lets see how it ends.
Nah it’s my show, I’m gonna ask about what I want
@@FinnMckentyPRMBA I know i know dude but shit, tell me now that you think about it, wouldnt you wanna know more about PORCELL's first HC show was MDC and what came out next in the 80s, u jumped to the 90s way to fast (and listen the 90s were also my era, you and I are around the same age and belonged to the same scene) take care Finn and keep these interviews comin' (this was a fantastic interview)
Nope I did this because I wanted to talk about krishna not 80s hardcore
Hare Krishna!
On a more serious note holy fucking shit dood this and Dino and Ezec are like fuckin top tier interviews on here dood never got super big into YOT but I fuckin love da Judge-Bringing It down record I’m probably the furthest from straight edge myself but da music is some of the best HC I’ve heard in my life plus even tho me not Straight edge or anything da stuff is tbh a real awakening and breathe of fresh air instead of the bs of early punk bands bitching and moaning and being all self destructive and shit
How does he plan on going to tour Europe unvaxxed? Not gonna happen...
@@Nitaijonjoedasa I’m sure he’s gonna be first in line to get the NEW boosters. How many does that make? 10?
Ain't nobody trying to poison themselves with that trash
L E G E N D !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Finn! Would love to see you react to Bloodywood, an Indian street metal band! Really interesting fusion stuff. And they do some amazing charity work so worth giving some attention to 🙌🏽
Hare Krishna
I bought a bhagavad gita and found it very hard to get into it and stopped reading it altogether. the whole 'I live only in servitude to some god' idea just put me off
I wish various horror-themed bands would generate real movements, the way straight edge bands did. Even if it was just a flash-in-the-pan thing. But I think that all musicians are full of shit, to some extent though. They all sing about things they've either never done nor ever would do. They'd be in prison if they did even half of the things they sing about. And there's always some cop-out disclaimer like, "this music just for entertainment purposes, and this band does not promote the eating of one's neighbors;" or some shit like that. I'm sure there are a few exceptions though _(who are probably in prison)..._
Haribol!
Finn, I'm a middle-aged punk, and I apprecate this. Aging sucks.
Finn looks older than Porcell
Is it just me or are y’all’s twins sdddsds
But who is who ?
#allbaldppllookthesame sdddsds
Mr. Healthy Lifestyle, but still not vaccinated.
It’s selfish. A million dead here.
Would love to see your reaction to the new Carpenter Brut - it has Greg Puciato on it and I feel like BMTH got a lot of inspiration from these dark synthwave bands th-cam.com/video/6_t_ZXavIOo/w-d-xo.html