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  1. 3 days ago · This skate punk bands list ranks the best skate punk groups and musicians by votes and lets you see who skate punk fans believe are the best bands in skate punk music. Originally a derivative of the West Coast punk scene, skate punk gets its name for its popularity within the skating community. Skate punk can be defined as melodic punk that ...

    • Voodoo Glow Skulls – Firme
    • Goldfinger – Goldfinger
    • Capdown – Civil Disobedients
    • The Interrupters – Fight The Good Fight
    • Less Than Jake – Losing Streak
    • Citizen Fish – Flinch
    • Rancid – Life Won’T Wait
    • Culture Shock – Onwards & Upwards
    • The Mighty Mighty Bosstones – More Noise & Other Disturbances
    • Operation Ivy – Energy

    Almost 35 years as a going concern, Voodoo Glow Skulls are geared at the chunky riff-heavy end of ska punk and were originally influenced by Fishbone and Red Hot Chili Peppers, as well as their hardcore punk peers. On Firme, their debut for Epitaph, and second album overall, the seven-piece’s furious but wacky brand of ska punk set them apart from ...

    Taking cues from '70s British punk as well as Operation Ivy and Rancid, Goldfinger would eventually abandon the ska influence but their debut album’s musicianship elevated them above late '90s bands like Reel Big Fish, Save Ferris, Mad Caddies and similar landfill ska punkers who had beat the genre into submission by the millennium. Here In Your Be...

    The UK’s revitalised ska punk scene took off in 2000, most notably with albums from Milton Keynes’ Capdown, London’s King Prawn and Tewkesbury’s Spunge. At the grittier hardcore end of ska punk, with influences from Snuff to Citizen Fish and boating an occasional horn section, Capdown’s reputation as an incredibly tight musical unit earned from rel...

    Keeping the ska punk dream alive into the 2020s, session musicians/studio engineers the Bivona brothers and singer-songwriter Aimee Allen coalesced as LA’s The Interrupters in 2011 while taking part in Tim Armstrong’s Tim Timebomb side project. The quartet's third album, with its 2-Tone, Joan Jett and The Distillers influences in the upbeat and liv...

    By the time that ska punk broke in the US, Florida’s Less Than Jake already had four years of trading – launched by their supremely annoying debut Pezcore – under their belts. And the musicianship and confidence displayed on their major label debut Losing Streak would place them alongside Mighty Mighty Bosstones in terms of popularity, thanks to th...

    While their previous band was a direct reaction to the overwhelmingly negative outlook of anarcho punk, ex-Culture Shock vocalist Dick Lucas and bassist Jasper Pattinson, along with guitarist Phil Bryant (replacing Larry on the debut) and returning Subhumans drummer Trotsky reinvented the ska punk genre. Their 1990 debut Free Souls in a Trapped Env...

    By the time Tim Armstrong and Matt Freeman resurfaced with Rancid following the Operation Ivy split, it looked as if they’d all but left ska punk behind with the raw urgency of their hardcore 1993 self-titled debut. But by the time of their crowning glory, 1995’s …And Out Come The Wolves, it had crept back in. Well, for three tracks at least: Time ...

    Following the original split of the Subhumans in 1985, Dick Lucas returned with Culture Shock, whose sound couldn’t have been further from the nightmarish anarcho punk his former band delivered on The Day The Country Died and Cradle to The Grave. Influential debut album Go Wild , with its infectious grooves, mirrored the socio-political themes of t...

    In terms of skilled musicianship and songwriting prowess, few ska punk bands could touch The Mighty Mighty Bosstones, specifically the compositional talent of core members vocalist Dicky Barratt, Joe Gittleman the bass fiddleman, guitarist Nate Albert and trombonist Dennis Brockenborough, the latter heading up the greatest horn section that ska pun...

    Filtering their love of 70s punk through the 2-Tone movement, UK pals Culture Shock, and 80s hardcore, Operation Ivy’s two-year existence was brief, but the urgent and chaotic yet uplifting Energy established a ska punk template for decades to come. The band - vocalist Jesse Michaels, guitarist Tim ‘Lint’ Armstrong, bass prodigy Matt ‘McCall’ Freem...

    • Operation Ivy. 1,877 votes. Operation Ivy, a pioneering ska-punk band that originated in Berkeley, California, in the late 1980s, holds a significant place in the history of ska music.
    • The Mighty Mighty Bosstones. 1,615 votes. With their unique blend of punk rock energy, brass instrumentation, and infectious melodies, The Mighty Mighty Bosstones helped put ska on the mainstream musical map during the 1990s.
    • Rancid. 1,895 votes. Rancid is often hailed as one of the most influential ska-punk bands to emerge from the 1990s. With roots tracing back to members' time in Operation Ivy, Rancid seamlessly combined elements of punk and ska with their own gritty style.
    • The Specials. 1,462 votes. As pioneers of two-tone ska in the late 1970s and early 1980s, The Specials played a significant role in popularizing ska music across the globe.
    • Vinnie Fiorello
    • THE MIGHTY MIGHTY BOSSTONES – The Impression That I Get (1997) “The Bosstones were monsters live, devastatingly tight and with the right amount of anger and aggression.
    • THE SUICIDE MACHINES – Break The Glass (1996) “Friends and brothers. The Machines were happening at the same time as LTJ and when we found them on our second tour, we bonded.
    • SKANKIN’ PICKLE – Song #3 (1997) “The blueprint for LTJ’s touring ethic, and also releasing some early music from us, Skankin’ Pickle’s studio records rarely did anything for me, but watching and listening to those songs live made a lightbulb go off.
    • REEL BIG FISH – Sell Out (1996) “Speaking of fun… Reel Big Fish’s lyrics took satire and dry wit to new levels: quirky, but with a dark side. After touring with RBF, I can say the lyrics and music perfectly match singer/guitar player Aaron Barrett.
  2. Feb 28, 2020 · Doug Moody, still laser-sharp well into his 80s, is the founder of Mystic Records, a California-based label that released early albums, singles and compilation tracks from many of the bands that would become synonymous with the skate-punk movement of the 1980s – bands like JFA, Suicidal Tendencies, Ill Repute, RKL, DRI and Dr. Know.

    • Ken Mcintyre
  3. Feb 11, 2020 · Ska-punk also became an entirely different beast than first-wave Jamaican ska and than second-wave 2 Tone ska. 2 Tone bands like The Specials, The Beat, and Madness were adjacent to Clash-style ...

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  5. 88FL boasts a wider range than most skatepunk bands, on this one fast skatepunk boarders hardcore with songs like “State” and the super fast “Worst Man Won”. The bass on “100 proof” is exceptional (by Joe Principe who would join Rise Against one year later).

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