Jamey is so personable. I've met him at least five times, and he has never acted like a rock star. He talks to every single person everytime. I'm not even a huge Hatebreed fan, but I am a huge Jamey fan. Keep on kicking ass.
I really appreciate your videos man, but I just can't see how you couldn't also say how emotionality intelligent some of Panteras music is! Lots of their lyrical content is about such deep subjects. Shedding skin, hard lines sunken cheeks, uplift, 10s, just Phil's lyricism was so poetic I think and he had such a way of putting words together to convey deep subjects Keep it up man! Killer video
When I was going through brain cancer last year everyday when I woke up sick to my stomach from treatment I would listen to the song Perseverance right when I got up and it helped me fight and beat my cancer, cancer free for a year already 😎🤘🏻👊🏻
I was a black kid who grew up in the late 90s 2000's hardcore scene. Hatebreed got me through some dark times in my life. not fitting in with hardcore kids due to racism in he day and not fitting in with black kids because i liked hardcore and metal. among other issues I was having in my life at the time reading lyrics and listening to hatebreed brought me back from the edge. I hate to sound cheesy but without bands like Hatebreed and Circa Survive, I would be dead today, i would have never met my wife and never had my amazing daughter.
As a white person, it makes me deeply embarrassed to hear about people of color being discriminated against anywhere, but especially in the heavy music scene. Respect to you for getting through that shit.
@@dcfromthev You're awesome for making it through. I try to fight racism through actions not just words. I lived in Eric Garner's neighborhood and I got pretty involved in the community. I did many protests for justice for Eric Garner. At the time I was on the board of directors of peace action of Staten Island. We worked really closely with Staten Island against racism and police brutality. We helped provide support to Eric Garner's family and to get school supplies for the schools his kids went to. White people need to start getting outraged about racism. We can't leave it up to black people to fix a problem they did not create. I wish there were more anti racist anthems in metal.
Same! But just remember when it gets tough bro, aint one legend ever been written about any warrior who had it easy. "In ashes they shall reap" is a daily spin for me as well.
I’ve been telling people about this for 15 years. Hatebreed is the most positive hard-core metal band ever was and ever will be. Thank you for this video. It puts the most metal tear in my eye.
I don't even know that I'd narrow them to just hardcore...I don't personally know of any metal/rock band as positive as Hatebreed and hardcore isn't even my main genre of music I like lol curious what you and others have to say.
Nailed it. All one has to do is just _listen_ to Jamey’s lyrics, and one will find that they’re not puddle deep, dunce cap kid in the corner words. The lyrics contain deep, personal feelings that most people can relate to. Yin and Yang.
I'm 28 now and the first song I listened too was destroy everything when I was in my teens. Later on I heard another song of theirs that talked about corruption which I thought was different so I kept listening. They're not on my Playlist currently but I never forgot them
Hard yes to this! Alienated hardcore black kid back in the day that ended up getting into weight lifting and heavily inked, Hatebreed is chicken noodle soup for the soul. Jamey Jasta's lyrics remind me of rap lyrics at times with overcoming adversity and addressing haters, so it was an instant win for me. Thanks for defending the fans on this.
@@mitchelnorton2692 hey man all the power to you ✊ Hatebreed was one of the first, I guess you could say "heavy" bands that I came across and through any and all obstacles I've faced, that phrase always plays through my head. They are on my constant gym rotation and gets the blood pumping every time
Legit, the whole Supremacy album helped me through some trying times. The lyrics make you want to conquer the world while bettering yourself at the same time. 🤘🏻
This is going to sound lame but this video legitimately did help me. I’m going through a really crappy breakup where my ex girlfriend cheated on me and lied to me for 3 months while stringing me along. It’s a super toxic situation but reading some of those lyrics and trying to put a more positive spin on my outlook is something I definitely need to do to get back on track and not let this situation eat at me like it has. Thank you for this.
You'll get through it! I had a similar experience over the course of six months. On the plus: I learned to not ignore red flags and became a better person eventually for it. I hope the same for you, internet stranger. 💜
@@alexmorado2182 thanks bro. It sucks this happening now but maybe it’s a blessing. I don’t know. Good luck to you dude. I hope things get better for you too!
In my darkest hour their music saved my life as a 37+ year old woman. The lyrics are incredible, raw, honest and hopeful. Also it has the ability to drive away dark minded people. I sing my being out and am free to go forward unrestricted. This is my all time favorite band in all ways. Thanks to sin who was 14 when he introduced me to the this amazing band.
Been a metal guy since I was about 3 years old, and I have about 4 or 5 Hatebreed songs I really like. They're a decent group. I can't seem to finish one of their albums in one sitting because about halfway through I get bored listening to it.
@Luke You hear Metal because Hatebreed are a Metalcore band. Their sound is rooted in both Hardcore and Metal. Traditional Hardcore is rooted in the Punk scene so for Metal enthusiasts who don't like Punk and Hardcore, their Hardcore sound is very obvious, which can be a turnoff for some Metalheads. When I first listened to Hatebreed, my first interpretation of them was a Hardcore band that stole Slayer riffs. My opinion has shifted since then. I'm not the biggest fan of the band. The music is good, but not amazing. It's Jasta's lyrics that really grab onto me. Everything that is said in this video is exactly why I like this band.
Im just here cause i seen the word hardcore. And it really brought back my deep rooted hatred for slam dancers. Those trash pickin windmill kickin fucks.
Im from Connecticut, New London CT. We used to have a banger club called the El N Gee club. Hatebreed played there all the time when coming up. In 2003, when the place was going under, they played a show and donated all the funds to keep it alive. I got love for them.
Hatebreed is one of the most positive bands ever. Strength, struggle, honor. That is what Hatebreed is about. That being said, Social Distortion is still one of the most important bands in my history. But the Ned Flanders was hilarious
I have been through a lot trauma. When I found I will be heard in high school, it got me through. Their music helps me deal with intense feelings. I love it.
“Talk to me after you’ve been up for 3 days in downtown LA doing coke.” Oh man. Words can’t describe how awful that feeling is. And it was awesome hearing how you found the right emotions in music that helped you moved past that horrible state of mind.
Hatebreed is literally the first band I ever saw perform live. Not on purpose either. I was 12 years old and went to the 2007 free Ozzfest and Hatebreed just happened to be the band that was playing when I arrived. Never heard of them at the time (I was there for Ozzy). Definitely a fantastic introduction to live music.
I was a gangster rap person. Until my first hardcore show in Detroit at the Shelter. Earth Crisis leading and Hatebreed opening. Scare the shit outta me when I saw how big some of them dudes in the pit were. Nowhere to run. The crowns tightens around you as everyone tries to get closer. You just gotta deal. It was a great rush. Last Breath is what roped me though. I use them when I need a push.
I was at the concert, where they filmed Destroy Everything. Jasta stopped mid song, because he saw someone go down in the mosh pit and got this guy help. As you can see in the video, there were 20,000 people there, and it was wild! But because of Jasta we all watched out for each other. Dude is a legend!
@@WeBeFit I thought this is an unwritten rule at shows. Never been at a concert where the crowd continued doing there thing when someone was gone down. Instead immediately a circle formed to allow the dude to get up, with or without help.
I suppose the message is in here. OP thought it inspiring that Jamey was bringing the hardcore values to tens of thousands of people, and that IS his biggest legacy
That one meme where the dude is talking to the uninterested girl who is staring off into the distance: “Yeah, so they’re called Hatebreed. And they’re actually way deeper than most people give them credit for. You see this tattoo? ....”
The biggest circle pit I have ever seen in Cleveland at old Nautica stage which is now Jacob's pavilion .Tattoo the Earth festival. Absolutely unforgettable 💯❤️🤟. Jamey isn't called the hardest working man and hardcore for nothing!💯🤟
@@floydsemlow8253 I was there too! That was a great show. Around the same time, maybe a year earlier, I saw Hatebreed with Run Devil Run at the old Peabodys. It was equally as memorable.
@@62killab I love run devil run I was there as well I haven't missed Hatebreed come to Cleveland ever since I saw them on tattoo the Earth festival that old Nautica stage they had that whole floor a circle pit I was memorized I haven't missed them since but that show at Old Peabody's was awesome they always rip live. 🙌🤘🍻
Definitely. I listen to Alive Or Just Breathing regularly and Fixation On The Darkness, Vide Infra and Rise Inside are some of my favourite songs ever. I'll even add the first Killswitch song I ever heard This Fire Burns (thanks CM Punk)
Just in general those are usually my favorite types of bands. And pretty much for the exact same reason Finn talked about in the video, not wallowing in darkness but not avoiding it either.
The end of the 2nd verse is so amazing.... "Resurrect every dream that you buried alive and never surcome to the war that you fight INYOURHEART" Then the breakdown riffs come in and its definitely inspirational
Perseverance absolutely changed my life. I have that word tattooed across my chest. Hearing that album when it dropped when I was in the 7th grade was such a game changer of an album for me in so many ways.
Being from Connecticut, have to say these guys are legends!!! Jamie is a huge inspiration around here for how hard he works in the music industry considering CT gets shadowed between NYC and Boston. Great to see them getting some love!
I was going. To say the same thing, I have a close friend who was very close to them in the hardcore sence , I always heard of them from 98 , being local I also kept an eye on them , but only recently became a fan by Listening to Jamie’s podcast
El N Gee was the place to be If you lived in New London area, lots of great memories I saw so many bands there and my buddies were in a band called ThinkTank who used to open for Hatebreed...
I gotta say I enjoy the fact that you’re putting more of yourself into your videos lately. Hearing how you connect with Hatebreed is so much cooler than just talking through their timeline or something like lots of other videos out there.
My cousin is the bassist. We used to play Star Wars when we were little back in Bridgeport CT. I'd go to their house & all their Star Wars figures were decapitated. They got the GI Joe Flagg. That's one GI Joe toy I never really wanted. I moved South & we lost contact because their phone was disconnected.
I don’t normally like to be the “this band changed my life” type of guy. But I gotta say hatebreed had helped me out of some pretty dark times in my life. Their lyrics are that nice truthful smack across the face that you need when you start to feel sorry for yourself. I’m going through some more shit in my life and whenever I begin to think dark thoughts I just play hatebreed and it give me that extra shot of motivation that I need!
Absolutely same, man. I make a point to wait around (sometimes for hours) after every one of their shows I go to just to tell Jamie that he saved my life.
the only time i felt i was help from music was when i went to the sound of perseverance tour and live death were amazing. i was blown away from living monstrosity and flattening of emotion
Gojira is another band that has a lot emotional intelligence fused into their music. I have the lyrics from The Link tattooed on my arm as a reminder live with integrity. "Be the link, you create what you are"
I was about to write this man. Gojira gives a similar point of view based on this duality of being. Far distant from Hardcore in it's core, for me was Gojira first and Hatebreed last, but if you love this band and never heard of Gojira, give them a chance. From 2 music nerds, to one random guy reading this in another timeline.
The last time I saw Hatebreed was 2019 when they played with Terror. A few of us tripped over each other in the pit and I ended catching a knee to the face and got split open. I was 41 at the time. I can’t stay away from shows or the pit. I still get goosebumps every time I go to a show , I love hardcore. I always will
54 here . Broke my nose twice in a Slayer pit. Tore my rotator cuff in a Lamb of God pit. And I ♥️♥️♥️ the pit to this day. Hatebreed shows are always brutal. I just remember to keep my arms up to protect my nose🤣 The dichotomy of brutality and a positive message is always appealing to me.
Fuck no! Hatebreed absolutely saved my life. In my darkest hour when I was ready to end my life. I only had my mp3 playing their songs like perseverance, live for this and this is now playing and felt the will to continue returning and stepped off the edge. Looking back I know I would have jumped without their music. And the more they release, the more I know they care and want others to strive and flourish. I really wish I could thank them in person for saving my life. My babies wouldn’t be here being the absolute best anything in my life. My mother would have had the last laugh and my dad would have bragged about been right about me.
I just heard the opening lines of Perseverance, and I almost started bawling. And I haven’t cried in years. It describes exactly what I am going through, how I feel and the way I feel it.
This vid made my cry. Cause it was exactly what made me love hate breed, and attracted me to hardcore in the first place. Being the only black kid in the pit growing up made me realize when you said pure will cut real deep. It was overcoming the darkness.
Not to be creepy, but what part of the country are you from? If you're anywhere near me I have a place or two you might be interested in that have a consistently diverse crowd for hardcore/punk/some metal shows. It bothers me that being uncomfortable like that can keep you from something you love, because we'd love to have you.
@@colemarie9262 it has nothing to do with diversity. I'm from NYC and loved the fact I was a outsider it gave me more respect in the pit. Plus growing up in a melting pot I'm use to it. I don't want to be in a place with everyone being my color its boring and not ground breaking. I broke ground by showing others that ppl like myself were just as hardcore and misunderstood as they were. I got out of it because of the elitist and ppl being like thinking I was not ok with being the only black kid there.
@@colemarie9262 if you look for old biohazard demos when they played with under cards like painmask and Gizmachi the black kid in those old cover photos was me. I never once felt out of place why the music I never was looked down on or pushed away by the contrary I was imbraced for it. This line split is what's destroying the metal and hardcore. If you love heavy music that should be what units us
“Negative, self-loathing bullshit.” Dude, I can’t express enough how much the punk scene’s “ I’m not good enough for anything/let’s get drunk ‘til the end of time” dictated my life and also, my friends lives. God I wish I wasn’t such an idiot. I swear I thought all I was good for was working in a factory and listening to punk. That was life....
@@Sergio-nb4hj Lots? And Im not going to go down the road of blaming bands for my early life attitude, but it did play a part. King Size Braces: Great Oi! bandit all their songs are about drinking and Id put it on and tell myself it was ok to get blackout drunk. A lot of punks do this. Leftover Crack, Choking Victim and other bands in that sub genre idolize smoking crack and shooting heroin, And don't tell me that its a joke or they are saying those things so kids DONT do drugs. Thats bullshit. I wanted to be like them as a kid. I wanted to emulate my heroes. theres a parallel in hip hop/rap with the guns and cars an money. y'know?
I started listening to Hatebreed last year and fell in love with their message I listened to "I will be heard" like Finn said: in the right moment, at the right place, 'cause I was going through a difficult time with my family and going to therapy to deal with it better, so, the song in question helped me a lot into making the decision to finally kick out my drunk ass step father. The song was perfect for what I was going through and those lyrics were just perfect and now are my anthem. I find it unbelieveable how much I felt that those lyrics was just the thing I needed. Now is the time for me to rise to my feet wipe your spit from my face wipe this tears from my eyes I swear to live by those lyrics.
A few of their songs really hit home for me and helped me as a teenager when I felt alone and hopeless. I grew up in a broken and toxic home and was sure i was going to be loser. Im almost 30 now, ended all of my self destructive habits, im engaged to an amazing woman, doing great at work and about to buy my first home.
"This is now" is the song for me. So uplifting and gives me the strength. I'm in recovery, done many years in prison, made horrible choices but fight everyday for life. Great video. Love it, love Hatebreed, you're awesome
The Amity Affliction is another band that falls in line with that lyrical duality you talked about. That band has definitely played a huge part in giving me that extra little boost to get my head out of my ass and get my life together. I'm now 4 years clean and sober,have full custody of my kids and have and amazing woman in my life that has shown me the kind of love i never knew existed.
When I listen to “To The Threshold,” I feel like crying. It is cathartic. It is a well needed emotional release. A lot of pain is behind those lyrics, even if the message is positive. It really hits below the surface.
Hardcore kid, now hardcore adult/dad, and grew up in the scene in CT in the late 90s. Satisfaction Is The Death of Desire single handedly opened the door for my generation of kids who had no idea what hardcore was, and Hatebreed brought sooooooo many bands through that where going from NY to boston. It was definitely the thing for a while to shit on them, but I think the older the scene got the more people recognized how damn grateful we should be for them. I know for me, I wasn't getting to American Nightmare or Verse without Hatebreed first.
Their message was great no doubt, but lets also give love to how insanely catchy their riffs were, especially on Satisfaction and Perseverance. Not only did the message uplift but those breakdowns and groove riffs always had me floored.
I went to a hatebreed show in 1997 or 98 in Danbury Ct that was the most ridiculous display of violence that I’ve ever seen. At one point the band members stopped playing their instruments and jumped into the crowd and started fighting the bouncers. The whole place turned into a full scale riot like a scene out of roadhouse. There were beer bottles smashing all over the place, windows getting knocked out, doors to the venue being smashed down, I saw a guy lift up the sound board and smash it on the ground. The bouncers that weren’t able to flee were covered in blood. They had to call in the riot squad and they arrived holding the shields. That’s the craziest show I’ve ever been to and during the 90’s at a hatebreed show you always felt like you were a second away from something like that happening
I’ve seen Hatebreed around 16 times live over the years. I have never seen any putt of control violence at their shows. They have always been fun experiences. Jamie’s lyrics are very inspiring. They are my favourite heavy band of all time.
I bought a copy of Supremacy at a secondhand store years and years ago and barely ever listened to it because I wasn't all that into hardcore. In recent years, I've opened up to more music and only just heard Satisfaction all the way through this past week. Watching this video made me go dig in my closet for that old Supremacy cd and I'm gonna bump it on the way to work this week. Thanks for another great video, Finn. Stay tight!
This is the good shit I’m talking about! I gotta watch this a few more times because you’re speaking what I fell in love with about certain hardcore, punk, and hip-hop groups. Dark but hopeful! Stay up!
This video single-handedly turned me onto Hatebreed, and I can't thank you enough for making it! To give some context, I've been well aware of them for years, having heard and enjoyed "Destroy Everything" and "I Will Be Heard" years ago on Headbanger's Ball when I was in high school. However, I've never been much into hardcore music (I've always been more into heavier metal genres than the many flavors of core - with a few exceptions), and never gave them much forethought. Now, years later, I'm working towards serious self-improvement, being a huge fan of Jordan Peterson and other empowering thinkers (including you), and have started to make strides to turn my life around. Once I saw this video in my recommended feed, I figured "hey, let's see what Finn has to say", and well... I think you hit it spot on. Hatebreed really is misunderstood genius (and I was one of the many who, for years, misunderstood them in the way you described at the beginning of the video). Instantly after watching this video, I went on a Hatebreed binge, and I've been stuck on it for at least a few weeks now. I don't think I've ever found music as motivational and inspiring as what Jamey and co. have put out, and it's really helping me to fight my most recent bout of depression and power through some of the BS that I've put myself in from years of nihilism, apathy, and neglect. If I had to pick any other music that I've heard that really lights a fire under my ass like Hatebreed's music does, I'd say it'd be Mudvayne's album 'Lost and Found'. But even then, it's a bit more angsty and emotional (for lack of a better term) than Hatebreed's music, and doesn't quite push me like Hatebreed does. Thanks again, Finn!
“This is now”The rift got me listening and the lyrics hit home. Then I started digging for more and more heat read songs with lyrics that I could identify with. Looking down the barrel of today and this is now got me through some tough times.
I discovered Hatebreed earlier this year when I was going through a really tough time, and I listen to them so much on Spotify that Spotify wrapped told me I was in the top 0.01% of their fans for the year, and I only started listening to them more than Midway through the year. I love this band!
This actually gives me chills. Hatebreed is my favorite band because they helped me end my decade long meth addiction. This is now, supremacy of self, give wings to my triumph, defeatist, and live for this we’re my anthems and helped me find the strength in myself to do what needed done and now it’s been over seven years since I’ve twisted a bowl or hit a vein. Thank you for giving them the recognition they deserve and I’m glad they’re helping others as well.
Here in Brazil 🇧🇷 there's a phrase that goes like this: "Rap saved my life" is even used on t-shirts but I say it's "Hardcore that saved my life" and this statement in this video shows that well. Thank you Priest Jasta and band!
Hey Finn… I am glad you took the time to make a video to speak/describe Hatebreed primary purpose. I applaud you wrapping up Hatebreed the group and what they are about. They are incredibly hard. Maaad’ groove and crunch. I’ve had shown some tunes to people who never heard them let alone listen to aggressive hardcore music. They’re like wow It is movable…. Jasta’s lyrics pushes and exudes motivation beyond… The rest of the dudes playing it the music cheers to you all.
Their music is powerful af, they helped me get through leukemia and don’t give up. For that reason alone they will always have a special place in my heart.
Dude I 100 percent agree w every word of what you said in this video...I am a recovering addict myself...and I also come from a highly dysfunctional family w a mother who suffers from narcissistic personality disorder...I always liked hatebreed but I never really listened to them until I was in rehab for the first time...looking down the barrel of today hit me hard...and that was it ...I was all in and they have helped me through alot of shit man...i dig thus channel alot...it has reignited my love for all things hardcore ...keep on keeping on
Discovering hardcore changed my life. Growing up in a household that openly encouraged hate aimed at other groups of people. I was taught to blame everyone else for my short comings and thankfully to people like Finn I've seen the error of my ways and I actually want to make a impact on others as well as my own life.
What a proper commentary on one of the most influential bands in my life. Saw them at Chain Reaction in Anaheim 20 years at a secret show thing my friend took me too. Never ever been in energy like that.
Always felt similar about August Burns Red. And as I've grown older, their messages about family, faith, and getting yourself together resonates even better; they've aged really well compared to a lot of other bands that were popular at the same time.
This video couldn’t be more right! One of my absolute favorite bands. Helped get me through a lot of tough times. PERSEVERANCE is tattooed across my chest. Hatebreed for life
I remember seeing hatebreed live for the first time. My brother in law always played hatebreed in the car and told me the sound the exact same live. so when I saw em live, I turned my back to the stage closed my eyes. and it felt like cruizin on the backseat of my brother in laws car. he was so fucking right.
I remember the first song of Hatebreed that I listen to was “I will be heard” and after that... one thing that I can say about Hatebreed, their lyrics are “life anthems” to me... And as an anecdote, when they performed here in Ecuador, their show was brutal, I remember that I couldn’t hold the stering wheel in the way back home... LOL
This has been my favorite video of yours, so far. Thanks for opening up a little bit and sharing the same message of self reliance and positivity as bands like this 👍🏻
I saw them in 2007 when they headlined the 2nd stage at Ozzfest. I didn't know them and they killed it. I've been a fan ever since. Great live band!!!!
Very well said, solid video. I think the fact with Hatebreed being considered a 'chad' band has to do with two important factors: the fact that Hatebreed broke through to popularity (and therefore, metal and chad metal audiences), and also the fact that what used to be called brutal or heavy hardcore in the 00's is now coined (even in Wikipedia) as 'toughguy hardcore' (pause for vomit). The chad audiences that would brass knuckle people in shows have obviously never been to a Sick of it All moshpit, where there is 'one rule, anybody falls down you pick them up', and are absolute strangers to the hardcore scene unity and family feeling. Hatebreed becoming more metal in their sound made these people feel like Hatebreed is one of "theirs", FFDP-shit bands. It's actually funny but I think it could have been almost any other metal-influenced, heavy hardcore band of that era in this discussion, had it been them that became popular. Stampin' Ground, Death Before Dishonor, Merauder, Knuckledust, Medulla Nocte, the list is huge. The metal influences caused people to forget who these people are, in their values and souls. They mistook their aggressive sound, or friendly-violent shows, for posturing machismo. But the message was there all along, in what's still their best album (sorry Finn): "You see it's not the blood you spill that gets you what you want, it's the blood you share. Your family. Your friendships. Your community."
The message and point Finn is making here is exactly why I love The Color Morale's album "Know Hope". Addressing depression and the battle to overcome those feelings and accepting that there is a way to get out of those feeling while still acknowledging it. Also, my brother went to a Hatebreed concert in the late 90's and all he remembers is some dude throwing a beer bottle at his head. This Video has everything in it. lul
Dude. I love this video so much. I also discovered Hatebreed when “Perseverance” dropped, I was a junior in high school. Up to that point I was 100% a nu metal kid (my nickname in high school was “Korn” just to give you an idea of how cool I was). I didn’t have the worst family life but it was far from perfect, and all the negative stuff I listened do didn’t help my mental state. It may sound corny but Hatebreed kind of changed my life. It was different to hear this metal/hardcore band that sounded like some of the bands I was into that had a positive message instead of telling me how terrible life is all the time. Hatebreed has been a mainstay for me ever since, easily one of my favorite bands ever. We’re conditioned our entire lives to focus and dwell on the negative that when someone brings a positive message, people don’t know what to do, hence the reason some people dislike the band and think they’re corny. My wife and I became youth pastors at our church for a few years, and after dealing with some of the issues we had to deal with, one thing that became apparent to me is that positivity makes some people very uncomfortable. I apologize for the long-winded comment. Shout out from your old Cincinnati stomping grounds!
That was when I got into them as well as a junior in high school. Then my first out was seeing them live at ozzfest during perseverance. But my first major show was my friends in zao but I was sat behind Jesse's kit their drummer at the time. But good to see someone who has a similar path to me
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Jamey is so personable. I've met him at least five times, and he has never acted like a rock star. He talks to every single person everytime. I'm not even a huge Hatebreed fan, but I am a huge Jamey fan. Keep on kicking ass.
I really appreciate your videos man, but I just can't see how you couldn't also say how emotionality intelligent some of Panteras music is! Lots of their lyrical content is about such deep subjects. Shedding skin, hard lines sunken cheeks, uplift, 10s, just Phil's lyricism was so poetic I think and he had such a way of putting words together to convey deep subjects
Keep it up man! Killer video
Also man, I'm a recovering addict, keep up the good work, I'm proud of you for doing so well dude!
Solid fuckin video man
When I was going through brain cancer last year everyday when I woke up sick to my stomach from treatment I would listen to the song Perseverance right when I got up and it helped me fight and beat my cancer, cancer free for a year already 😎🤘🏻👊🏻
Happy to hear that my friend!
Stay strong brother....
Glad you persevered, and are still with us. That's the epitome of, really. Cheers man 🤘😉🤘🍻
That is awesome man, very happy for you
God Bless! overcoming through positive thinking, another great band "Against All Odds"
It's Insane how Hatebreed was formed just to write the opening song for PRMBA's UA-cam channel.
I always wondered what song that was lol
I still miss the STRAIGHT TO YOUR FACE
Ayoooo 😂
Were the lyrics removed because of copyright infringement?
any idea what song is he using for currents intro?
Hatebreed is like the badass uncle everyone needs, telling you what you need to hear
couldn't have worded it better
Facts
I was a black kid who grew up in the late 90s 2000's hardcore scene. Hatebreed got me through some dark times in my life. not fitting in with hardcore kids due to racism in he day and not fitting in with black kids because i liked hardcore and metal. among other issues I was having in my life at the time reading lyrics and listening to hatebreed brought me back from the edge. I hate to sound cheesy but without bands like Hatebreed and Circa Survive, I would be dead today, i would have never met my wife and never had my amazing daughter.
Respect ✊🏽
As a white person, it makes me deeply embarrassed to hear about people of color being discriminated against anywhere, but especially in the heavy music scene. Respect to you for getting through that shit.
Fuck racism, you are awesome bro!
@@dcfromthev You're awesome for making it through. I try to fight racism through actions not just words. I lived in Eric Garner's neighborhood and I got pretty involved in the community. I did many protests for justice for Eric Garner. At the time I was on the board of directors of peace action of Staten Island. We worked really closely with Staten Island against racism and police brutality. We helped provide support to Eric Garner's family and to get school supplies for the schools his kids went to. White people need to start getting outraged about racism. We can't leave it up to black people to fix a problem they did not create. I wish there were more anti racist anthems in metal.
You were a black kid? Your not black anymore?
"I was born to bleed fighting to succeed, Built to endure what this world throws at me"...Helps me get through the day sometimes
Same! But just remember when it gets tough bro, aint one legend ever been written about any warrior who had it easy.
"In ashes they shall reap" is a daily spin for me as well.
Still here
Played the fuck out of this song during my divorce
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I have this tatted on me. Hatebreed will forever be my favorite.
I’ve been telling people about this for 15 years. Hatebreed is the most positive hard-core metal band ever was and ever will be. Thank you for this video. It puts the most metal tear in my eye.
I don't even know that I'd narrow them to just hardcore...I don't personally know of any metal/rock band as positive as Hatebreed and hardcore isn't even my main genre of music I like lol curious what you and others have to say.
hArDcOrE mEtAl
YES.
Nailed it.
All one has to do is just _listen_ to Jamey’s lyrics, and one will find that they’re not puddle deep, dunce cap kid in the corner words. The lyrics contain deep, personal feelings that most people can relate to. Yin and Yang.
I'm 28 now and the first song I listened too was destroy everything when I was in my teens. Later on I heard another song of theirs that talked about corruption which I thought was different so I kept listening. They're not on my Playlist currently but I never forgot them
Hard yes to this!
Alienated hardcore black kid back in the day that ended up getting into weight lifting and heavily inked, Hatebreed is chicken noodle soup for the soul.
Jamey Jasta's lyrics remind me of rap lyrics at times with overcoming adversity and addressing haters, so it was an instant win for me. Thanks for defending the fans on this.
Yes! That's why I like a lot of rap lyrics too
Check out discrepancies, they're good too
Your chicken noodle soup analogy is so appropiate.
"Defeatist .. you and I will never be the same" still resonates with me to this day
Me too. Recently was homeless for almost a year. Took alot of work but I made it out two days ago.
@@mitchelnorton2692 hey man all the power to you ✊ Hatebreed was one of the first, I guess you could say "heavy" bands that I came across and through any and all obstacles I've faced, that phrase always plays through my head. They are on my constant gym rotation and gets the blood pumping every time
@@mitchelnorton2692 been there bro, hard but congrats to you for never quitting. The world needs more of that.
"How can I change tomorrow if I can't change today, I must control my self to control my destiny" my favorite line of all their songs..
Jamie's lyrics have helped more people than he could possibly know. Hatebreed songs are cathartic
Legit, the whole Supremacy album helped me through some trying times. The lyrics make you want to conquer the world while bettering yourself at the same time. 🤘🏻
20 years after finding out about Hatebreed, they still offer me catharsis after a shitty day. I fucking heart Hatebreed, super under-rated band imo.
Same for me. Divinity of purpose got me through the thorns
Jamey's podcast is really good.
Very true
This is going to sound lame but this video legitimately did help me. I’m going through a really crappy breakup where my ex girlfriend cheated on me and lied to me for 3 months while stringing me along. It’s a super toxic situation but reading some of those lyrics and trying to put a more positive spin on my outlook is something I definitely need to do to get back on track and not let this situation eat at me like it has. Thank you for this.
You'll get through it! I had a similar experience over the course of six months. On the plus: I learned to not ignore red flags and became a better person eventually for it. I hope the same for you, internet stranger. 💜
@@dead_beatbunny thank you for that. I’m sorry you went through the same situation. It’s awful.
@Jonathan A thank you for your kind words. I appreciate it.
Dawg we're in a very similar situation. It sucks now but it is better to get rid of the dead weight.
@@alexmorado2182 thanks bro. It sucks this happening now but maybe it’s a blessing. I don’t know. Good luck to you dude. I hope things get better for you too!
In my darkest hour their music saved my life as a 37+ year old woman. The lyrics are incredible, raw, honest and hopeful. Also it has the ability to drive away dark minded people. I sing my being out and am free to go forward unrestricted. This is my all time favorite band in all ways. Thanks to sin who was 14 when he introduced me to the this amazing band.
My daily hatebreed's lyrics is "if you don't live for something you will die for nothing"
This is the truth, the struggle the sacrifice! love that song
I love this but it's definitely an AA quote lol
@@fredericksoenske9192 asking alexandria or attack attack? lol if one of them says it thats cool cause its from the song live for this by hatebreed
This is my life motto
@@fredericksoenske9192 definitely you haven't listened this band lol hahahhaha
I don't have an opinion on Hatebreed- I'm a metal guy, never got far into hardcore- but Finn, this is one of the best videos you've done.
@Luke Adding on to that, Hatebreed have a lot of Metal in their DNA and have really crossed over into being big in the Metal scene.
Been a metal guy since I was about 3 years old, and I have about 4 or 5 Hatebreed songs I really like. They're a decent group. I can't seem to finish one of their albums in one sitting because about halfway through I get bored listening to it.
@Luke You hear Metal because Hatebreed are a Metalcore band. Their sound is rooted in both Hardcore and Metal. Traditional Hardcore is rooted in the Punk scene so for Metal enthusiasts who don't like Punk and Hardcore, their Hardcore sound is very obvious, which can be a turnoff for some Metalheads. When I first listened to Hatebreed, my first interpretation of them was a Hardcore band that stole Slayer riffs. My opinion has shifted since then. I'm not the biggest fan of the band. The music is good, but not amazing. It's Jasta's lyrics that really grab onto me. Everything that is said in this video is exactly why I like this band.
Im just here cause i seen the word hardcore. And it really brought back my deep rooted hatred for slam dancers. Those trash pickin windmill kickin fucks.
@@lifewithlouie420 No karate in the pit!
Im from Connecticut, New London CT. We used to have a banger club called the El N Gee club. Hatebreed played there all the time when coming up. In 2003, when the place was going under, they played a show and donated all the funds to keep it alive. I got love for them.
Hatebreed is one of the most positive bands ever. Strength, struggle, honor. That is what Hatebreed is about.
That being said, Social Distortion is still one of the most important bands in my history. But the Ned Flanders was hilarious
I'm glad I'm not the only one that's noticed how wholesome hatebreed really is
they come from a place of challenging people to do better for themselves first and foremost. i love hatebreed and their music makes me feel good.
I have been through a lot trauma. When I found I will be heard in high school, it got me through. Their music helps me deal with intense feelings. I love it.
You should have brought back the straight to your face intro for this
Edit: nevermind
...wait for it
You might want to watch the video until the end
You didn’t watch the full vid
“I was at a street fight once and a Hatebreed show broke out.”
Dam... I was in a brawl and a blood for blood show broke out. Funny how these things happen 🤣
@@Iwatched138 truly!!
Back when, yes. Now they're just another mainstream band.
ROFL
Hatebreed and earth crisis at the el n gee ct huge fight
“Talk to me after you’ve been up for 3 days in downtown LA doing coke.” Oh man. Words can’t describe how awful that feeling is. And it was awesome hearing how you found the right emotions in music that helped you moved past that horrible state of mind.
Hatebreed is literally the first band I ever saw perform live. Not on purpose either. I was 12 years old and went to the 2007 free Ozzfest and Hatebreed just happened to be the band that was playing when I arrived. Never heard of them at the time (I was there for Ozzy). Definitely a fantastic introduction to live music.
Me too!
Same, back in like 2000-2004 in CT. All CT shows were nuts back in the day.
Mine too actually supporting machine head in newport uk
I was a gangster rap person. Until my first hardcore show in Detroit at the Shelter. Earth Crisis leading and Hatebreed opening. Scare the shit outta me when I saw how big some of them dudes in the pit were. Nowhere to run. The crowns tightens around you as everyone tries to get closer. You just gotta deal. It was a great rush. Last Breath is what roped me though. I use them when I need a push.
Hope you got to see cold as life such a underrated band.
I was at the concert, where they filmed Destroy Everything. Jasta stopped mid song, because he saw someone go down in the mosh pit and got this guy help. As you can see in the video, there were 20,000 people there, and it was wild! But because of Jasta we all watched out for each other. Dude is a legend!
Jasta always reinforces “If someone goes down. You pick them up” at Hatebreed shows.
Respect. Look out for others in the pit.
@@WeBeFit I thought this is an unwritten rule at shows. Never been at a concert where the crowd continued doing there thing when someone was gone down. Instead immediately a circle formed to allow the dude to get up, with or without help.
@@j1shin that’s been my experience too.
@@j1shinGo to a Travis Scott show. Those fools have no common sense!
I suppose the message is in here. OP thought it inspiring that Jamey was bringing the hardcore values to tens of thousands of people, and that IS his biggest legacy
That one meme where the dude is talking to the uninterested girl who is staring off into the distance:
“Yeah, so they’re called Hatebreed. And they’re actually way deeper than most people give them credit for. You see this tattoo? ....”
😂
Hilarious and that man is me
@@Howsoonisnow2009that’s me too bro lol straight up 😂
Merry Christmas Eve Finn and Lynn! Same goes to everyone watching this video!
Merry Christmas
And Punk Rocking New year
Merry Christmas!
Merry Christmas
Thank you dude. Merry Christmas to you too!
"Satisfaction is the Death of Desire" was absolutely amazing.
A hardcore masterpiece.
All their albums are masterpieces. Anyone who is a fan knows this.
The biggest circle pit I have ever seen in Cleveland at old Nautica stage which is now Jacob's pavilion .Tattoo the Earth festival. Absolutely unforgettable 💯❤️🤟. Jamey isn't called the hardest working man and hardcore for nothing!💯🤟
@@floydsemlow8253 I was there too! That was a great show. Around the same time, maybe a year earlier, I saw Hatebreed with Run Devil Run at the old Peabodys. It was equally as memorable.
@@62killab I love run devil run I was there as well I haven't missed Hatebreed come to Cleveland ever since I saw them on tattoo the Earth festival that old Nautica stage they had that whole floor a circle pit I was memorized I haven't missed them since but that show at Old Peabody's was awesome they always rip live. 🙌🤘🍻
A lot of these Hatebreed lyrics remind me of Killswitch Engage in a way--intense, yet positive and defiant. Bravo once again, Finn!
Their last 3 albums Disarm the Decent, Incarnate and Atonement with Jesse Leach's writing are all amazing.
Definitely. I listen to Alive Or Just Breathing regularly and Fixation On The Darkness, Vide Infra and Rise Inside are some of my favourite songs ever. I'll even add the first Killswitch song I ever heard This Fire Burns (thanks CM Punk)
Just in general those are usually my favorite types of bands. And pretty much for the exact same reason Finn talked about in the video, not wallowing in darkness but not avoiding it either.
The lyrics of Perseverence is the best lyrics of all times. If u hvnt listen to it go do it even if u r not a metalhead
Perseverance is one of those albums that got me through all the lowest lows in my life.One of the most Lyrically positive I have heard in my life.
Loved Satisfaction but this was such an amazing jump in maturity both lyrically and musically
The end of the 2nd verse is so amazing....
"Resurrect every dream that you buried alive and never surcome to the war that you fight INYOURHEART"
Then the breakdown riffs come in and its definitely inspirational
Supremacy is my all time favorite album. The reason is cause a lot of the songs are motivating and they get you in the mood.
Perseverance absolutely changed my life. I have that word tattooed across my chest. Hearing that album when it dropped when I was in the 7th grade was such a game changer of an album for me in so many ways.
*The "Doomsayer" breakdown is still the most filthy breakdown in the history of breakdowns. BREAKDOWNS!*
*YOUR DOOM AWAITS YOU!*
The one in Divine Judgment is wild too.
Chris Beatties bass is a huge part of their sound. His breakdowns especially on Doomsayer are massive
@@rorz999 First time I died was in the pit during that song
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“Once had a shotgun to my head they said I wasn’t worth the bullets”
“Now the world is my trigger and I’m gunna Fucking pull it”
Being from Connecticut, have to say these guys are legends!!! Jamie is a huge inspiration around here for how hard he works in the music industry considering CT gets shadowed between NYC and Boston. Great to see them getting some love!
*They sure are. I'm from New Britain and I've been a fan since 97. What a journey!*
I was going. To say the same thing, I have a close friend who was very close to them in the hardcore sence , I always heard of them from 98 , being local I also kept an eye on them , but only recently became a fan by Listening to Jamie’s podcast
Dude, I got goosebumps when he showed that show poster from the El n Gee. I miss the CTHC and punk scene of the late 90's/early 2000's.
I’ve heard a lot of mixed things but at the end of the day CTHC represent 💪 but more importantly we got Death Threat out of it
El N Gee was the place to be If you lived in New London area, lots of great memories I saw so many bands there and my buddies were in a band called ThinkTank who used to open for Hatebreed...
I gotta say I enjoy the fact that you’re putting more of yourself into your videos lately. Hearing how you connect with Hatebreed is so much cooler than just talking through their timeline or something like lots of other videos out there.
My cousin is the bassist. We used to play Star Wars when we were little back in Bridgeport CT. I'd go to their house & all their Star Wars figures were decapitated. They got the GI Joe Flagg. That's one GI Joe toy I never really wanted. I moved South & we lost contact because their phone was disconnected.
I don’t normally like to be the “this band changed my life” type of guy. But I gotta say hatebreed had helped me out of some pretty dark times in my life. Their lyrics are that nice truthful smack across the face that you need when you start to feel sorry for yourself. I’m going through some more shit in my life and whenever I begin to think dark thoughts I just play hatebreed and it give me that extra shot of motivation that I need!
Been there brother. Stay strong.
We are built to endure what this world throws at us.
Absolutely same, man. I make a point to wait around (sometimes for hours) after every one of their shows I go to just to tell Jamie that he saved my life.
the only time i felt i was help from music was when i went to the sound of perseverance tour and live death were amazing.
i was blown away from living monstrosity and flattening of emotion
Gojira is another band that has a lot emotional intelligence fused into their music. I have the lyrics from The Link tattooed on my arm as a reminder live with integrity. "Be the link, you create what you are"
I was about to write this man. Gojira gives a similar point of view based on this duality of being. Far distant from Hardcore in it's core, for me was Gojira first and Hatebreed last, but if you love this band and never heard of Gojira, give them a chance. From 2 music nerds, to one random guy reading this in another timeline.
I can definitely tell that im a Jira nerd because I sung that quote in my head as soon as I saw it 😂
I remember a friend lending me his Perseverance album. By the end of the week I was obsessed. What a band!
The last time I saw Hatebreed was 2019 when they played with Terror. A few of us tripped over each other in the pit and I ended catching a knee to the face and got split open. I was 41 at the time. I can’t stay away from shows or the pit. I still get goosebumps every time I go to a show , I love hardcore. I always will
Same here, man. I'm 40 and still can't stay away from the pit.
51 years old now and I'm the same . Love hardcore
This is the way
54 here . Broke my nose twice in a Slayer pit. Tore my rotator cuff in a Lamb of God pit. And I ♥️♥️♥️ the pit to this day.
Hatebreed shows are always brutal. I just remember to keep my arms up to protect my nose🤣
The dichotomy of brutality and a positive message is always appealing to me.
Was at same tour,times square Sony theater,ripping,great show and I'm 61.
Fuck no! Hatebreed absolutely saved my life. In my darkest hour when I was ready to end my life. I only had my mp3 playing their songs like perseverance, live for this and this is now playing and felt the will to continue returning and stepped off the edge. Looking back I know I would have jumped without their music. And the more they release, the more I know they care and want others to strive and flourish. I really wish I could thank them in person for saving my life. My babies wouldn’t be here being the absolute best anything in my life. My mother would have had the last laugh and my dad would have bragged about been right about me.
In hospital now man, i know how you felt. 😢
I just heard the opening lines of Perseverance, and I almost started bawling. And I haven’t cried in years. It describes exactly what I am going through, how I feel and the way I feel it.
This vid made my cry. Cause it was exactly what made me love hate breed, and attracted me to hardcore in the first place. Being the only black kid in the pit growing up made me realize when you said pure will cut real deep. It was overcoming the darkness.
Not to be creepy, but what part of the country are you from?
If you're anywhere near me I have a place or two you might be interested in that have a consistently diverse crowd for hardcore/punk/some metal shows. It bothers me that being uncomfortable like that can keep you from something you love, because we'd love to have you.
@@colemarie9262 it has nothing to do with diversity. I'm from NYC and loved the fact I was a outsider it gave me more respect in the pit. Plus growing up in a melting pot I'm use to it. I don't want to be in a place with everyone being my color its boring and not ground breaking. I broke ground by showing others that ppl like myself were just as hardcore and misunderstood as they were. I got out of it because of the elitist and ppl being like thinking I was not ok with being the only black kid there.
@@colemarie9262 if you look for old biohazard demos when they played with under cards like painmask and Gizmachi the black kid in those old cover photos was me. I never once felt out of place why the music I never was looked down on or pushed away by the contrary I was imbraced for it. This line split is what's destroying the metal and hardcore. If you love heavy music that should be what units us
“Negative, self-loathing bullshit.” Dude, I can’t express enough how much the punk scene’s “ I’m not good enough for anything/let’s get drunk ‘til the end of time” dictated my life and also, my friends lives. God I wish I wasn’t such an idiot.
I swear I thought all I was good for was working in a factory and listening to punk. That was life....
What bands were you into?
@@Sergio-nb4hj Lots? And Im not going to go down the road of blaming bands for my early life attitude, but it did play a part. King Size Braces: Great Oi! bandit all their songs are about drinking and Id put it on and tell myself it was ok to get blackout drunk. A lot of punks do this. Leftover Crack, Choking Victim and other bands in that sub genre idolize smoking crack and shooting heroin, And don't tell me that its a joke or they are saying those things so kids DONT do drugs. Thats bullshit.
I wanted to be like them as a kid. I wanted to emulate my heroes. theres a parallel in hip hop/rap with the guns and cars an money. y'know?
Hah! I wasn’t even good enough to work at a factory 😁
@@KarryKarryKarry Awe! Bro! You're good enough to work in my warehouse. Remember that!
In some sort this self-loathing bullshit is the thing that killed the modern guitar music.
I started listening to Hatebreed last year and fell in love with their message
I listened to "I will be heard" like Finn said: in the right moment, at the right place, 'cause I was going through a difficult time with my family and going to therapy to deal with it better, so, the song in question helped me a lot into making the decision to finally kick out my drunk ass step father.
The song was perfect for what I was going through and those lyrics were just perfect and now are my anthem. I find it unbelieveable how much I felt that those lyrics was just the thing I needed.
Now is the time for me to rise to my feet
wipe your spit from my face
wipe this tears from my eyes
I swear to live by those lyrics.
have you considered getting a third Hatebreed tattoo?
A few of their songs really hit home for me and helped me as a teenager when I felt alone and hopeless. I grew up in a broken and toxic home and was sure i was going to be loser. Im almost 30 now, ended all of my self destructive habits, im engaged to an amazing woman, doing great at work and about to buy my first home.
"This is now" is the song for me. So uplifting and gives me the strength. I'm in recovery, done many years in prison, made horrible choices but fight everyday for life. Great video. Love it, love Hatebreed, you're awesome
The Amity Affliction is another band that falls in line with that lyrical duality you talked about. That band has definitely played a huge part in giving me that extra little boost to get my head out of my ass and get my life together. I'm now 4 years clean and sober,have full custody of my kids and have and amazing woman in my life that has shown me the kind of love i never knew existed.
When I listen to “To The Threshold,” I feel like crying. It is cathartic. It is a well needed emotional release. A lot of pain is behind those lyrics, even if the message is positive. It really hits below the surface.
Hardcore kid, now hardcore adult/dad, and grew up in the scene in CT in the late 90s. Satisfaction Is The Death of Desire single handedly opened the door for my generation of kids who had no idea what hardcore was, and Hatebreed brought sooooooo many bands through that where going from NY to boston. It was definitely the thing for a while to shit on them, but I think the older the scene got the more people recognized how damn grateful we should be for them. I know for me, I wasn't getting to American Nightmare or Verse without Hatebreed first.
Their message was great no doubt, but lets also give love to how insanely catchy their riffs were, especially on Satisfaction and Perseverance. Not only did the message uplift but those breakdowns and groove riffs always had me floored.
"ITS YA BOI RAID SHADOW LEGENDS"
Brooo! That literally made me laugh out loud! Not something I usually do.
I went to a hatebreed show in 1997 or 98 in Danbury Ct that was the most ridiculous display of violence that I’ve ever seen. At one point the band members stopped playing their instruments and jumped into the crowd and started fighting the bouncers. The whole place turned into a full scale riot like a scene out of roadhouse. There were beer bottles smashing all over the place, windows getting knocked out, doors to the venue being smashed down, I saw a guy lift up the sound board and smash it on the ground. The bouncers that weren’t able to flee were covered in blood. They had to call in the riot squad and they arrived holding the shields. That’s the craziest show I’ve ever been to and during the 90’s at a hatebreed show you always felt like you were a second away from something like that happening
Sounds about right
"which is why hatebreed has to be hatebreed and not lovebreed." best quote
I’ve seen Hatebreed around 16 times live over the years. I have never seen any putt of control violence at their shows. They have always been fun experiences. Jamie’s lyrics are very inspiring. They are my favourite heavy band of all time.
I bought a copy of Supremacy at a secondhand store years and years ago and barely ever listened to it because I wasn't all that into hardcore. In recent years, I've opened up to more music and only just heard Satisfaction all the way through this past week. Watching this video made me go dig in my closet for that old Supremacy cd and I'm gonna bump it on the way to work this week. Thanks for another great video, Finn. Stay tight!
This is the good shit I’m talking about! I gotta watch this a few more times because you’re speaking what I fell in love with about certain hardcore, punk, and hip-hop groups. Dark but hopeful! Stay up!
This video single-handedly turned me onto Hatebreed, and I can't thank you enough for making it!
To give some context, I've been well aware of them for years, having heard and enjoyed "Destroy Everything" and "I Will Be Heard" years ago on Headbanger's Ball when I was in high school. However, I've never been much into hardcore music (I've always been more into heavier metal genres than the many flavors of core - with a few exceptions), and never gave them much forethought.
Now, years later, I'm working towards serious self-improvement, being a huge fan of Jordan Peterson and other empowering thinkers (including you), and have started to make strides to turn my life around. Once I saw this video in my recommended feed, I figured "hey, let's see what Finn has to say", and well... I think you hit it spot on. Hatebreed really is misunderstood genius (and I was one of the many who, for years, misunderstood them in the way you described at the beginning of the video).
Instantly after watching this video, I went on a Hatebreed binge, and I've been stuck on it for at least a few weeks now. I don't think I've ever found music as motivational and inspiring as what Jamey and co. have put out, and it's really helping me to fight my most recent bout of depression and power through some of the BS that I've put myself in from years of nihilism, apathy, and neglect.
If I had to pick any other music that I've heard that really lights a fire under my ass like Hatebreed's music does, I'd say it'd be Mudvayne's album 'Lost and Found'. But even then, it's a bit more angsty and emotional (for lack of a better term) than Hatebreed's music, and doesn't quite push me like Hatebreed does.
Thanks again, Finn!
The Perseverance album got me through alot of rough times in my life.
“This is now”The rift got me listening and the lyrics hit home. Then I started digging for more and more heat read songs with lyrics that I could identify with. Looking down the barrel of today and this is now got me through some tough times.
First time I heard Hatebreed...”I will be heard” on the XXX soundtrack 🤘🤘
Same here! Immediately went and found a hatebreed album at the local record store
I discovered Hatebreed earlier this year when I was going through a really tough time, and I listen to them so much on Spotify that Spotify wrapped told me I was in the top 0.01% of their fans for the year, and I only started listening to them more than Midway through the year. I love this band!
I remember seeing hatebreed by mistake the night they were filming perseverance. It literally changed my life.
People who don’t like them have never read their lyrics. Hatebreed has gotten me through some really dark times
This actually gives me chills. Hatebreed is my favorite band because they helped me end my decade long meth addiction. This is now, supremacy of self, give wings to my triumph, defeatist, and live for this we’re my anthems and helped me find the strength in myself to do what needed done and now it’s been over seven years since I’ve twisted a bowl or hit a vein. Thank you for giving them the recognition they deserve and I’m glad they’re helping others as well.
Here in Brazil 🇧🇷 there's a phrase that goes like this: "Rap saved my life" is even used on t-shirts but I say it's "Hardcore that saved my life" and this statement in this video shows that well. Thank you Priest Jasta and band!
Hey Finn…
I am glad you took the time to make a video to speak/describe Hatebreed primary purpose.
I applaud you wrapping up Hatebreed the group and what they are about.
They are incredibly hard. Maaad’ groove and crunch. I’ve had shown some tunes to people who never heard them let alone listen to aggressive hardcore music. They’re like wow
It is movable….
Jasta’s lyrics pushes and exudes motivation beyond…
The rest of the dudes playing it the music cheers to you all.
As a metalhead i always loved their gigs, pure energy. And I always felt like they were some kind of hardcore paladins
Their music is powerful af, they helped me get through leukemia and don’t give up. For that reason alone they will always have a special place in my heart.
Dude I 100 percent agree w every word of what you said in this video...I am a recovering addict myself...and I also come from a highly dysfunctional family w a mother who suffers from narcissistic personality disorder...I always liked hatebreed but I never really listened to them until I was in rehab for the first time...looking down the barrel of today hit me hard...and that was it ...I was all in and they have helped me through alot of shit man...i dig thus channel alot...it has reignited my love for all things hardcore ...keep on keeping on
Discovering hardcore changed my life. Growing up in a household that openly encouraged hate aimed at other groups of people. I was taught to blame everyone else for my short comings and thankfully to people like Finn I've seen the error of my ways and I actually want to make a impact on others as well as my own life.
That's what's up
i really can't comprehend putting these guys in the same group as five finger donkey punch.....
@@xbfdx988 as a former fan of 5FDP... just... No.
@@xbfdx988 you must be correct because you ended your sentence with 'actually'.
What a proper commentary on one of the most influential bands in my life. Saw them at Chain Reaction in Anaheim 20 years at a secret show thing my friend took me too. Never ever been in energy like that.
Betrayed By Life is one of my all time "I'm gonna get through this shit" songs. I love this video great work as always!
Back when they actually kicked ass.
Your screen name is legendary, btw.
@@voiceofreason1208 thank you thank you v much or I guess I should say thank you fuck you bye 😉
Hate breed is literally my favorite band thank you for making this video my first show was hate breed when I was twelve
Not crazy about the music but I'll take some time this week to listen and keep an open mind
Great points. I love Crowbar, but I wish there was more of a duality to their lyrics.
I'll have to check these guys out. Seems like a band that could be up my alley.
Always felt similar about August Burns Red. And as I've grown older, their messages about family, faith, and getting yourself together resonates even better; they've aged really well compared to a lot of other bands that were popular at the same time.
Hatebreed rocks. I had their first two albums when they came out and loved them. I just recently found jasta and they freaking jam too
This video couldn’t be more right! One of my absolute favorite bands. Helped get me through a lot of tough times. PERSEVERANCE is tattooed across my chest. Hatebreed for life
Finn "I Can Respect That " Mckenty at it with another dope breakdown.
One of my favorite bands of all time. In the hardcore scene its between them and Blood for Blood.
I remember seeing hatebreed live for the first time. My brother in law always played hatebreed in the car and told me the sound the exact same live. so when I saw em live, I turned my back to the stage closed my eyes. and it felt like cruizin on the backseat of my brother in laws car. he was so fucking right.
I remember the first song of Hatebreed that I listen to was “I will be heard” and after that... one thing that I can say about Hatebreed, their lyrics are “life anthems” to me... And as an anecdote, when they performed here in Ecuador, their show was brutal, I remember that I couldn’t hold the stering wheel in the way back home... LOL
This has been my favorite video of yours, so far. Thanks for opening up a little bit and sharing the same message of self reliance and positivity as bands like this 👍🏻
I feel the same way about The Ghost Inside. Angry, emotional, heavy music + inspiring and empowering lyrics.
@@morisjustin I personally like both of them
Ghost Inside is great too. I think I was lead from Hatebreed to them and was glad they were recommended.
I've thought this too. A lot of similarities there 👍
I saw them in 2007 when they headlined the 2nd stage at Ozzfest. I didn't know them and they killed it. I've been a fan ever since. Great live band!!!!
Absolutely nailed it. I’m so glad someone gets it. I’m 37 and been a Hatebreed fan since I was 15-16. They walked me through a lot in life.
"Takes you to the place where you're just staring into the abyss of anger, depression, and addiction"
*gives Emmure the side eye*
I played " In Ashes They Shall Reap" during my active duty in the morning on my way to pt formation.
I've been hitting the gym for about a year now, trying to get back on track and making progress. Thank you, Hatebreed, for keeping me motivated.
I just need to quote Being As An Ocean's Vocalist "I learned that hardcore music is not for happy kids with perfect lives"
man, i wish BAAO back to their style like in their how we both wondrously perish album.
I think perseverance it's one of the most consistently good music album in the metalcore hardcore genre, still one of my top 5 albums of all time !!!
Very well said, solid video.
I think the fact with Hatebreed being considered a 'chad' band has to do with two important factors: the fact that Hatebreed broke through to popularity (and therefore, metal and chad metal audiences), and also the fact that what used to be called brutal or heavy hardcore in the 00's is now coined (even in Wikipedia) as 'toughguy hardcore' (pause for vomit). The chad audiences that would brass knuckle people in shows have obviously never been to a Sick of it All moshpit, where there is 'one rule, anybody falls down you pick them up', and are absolute strangers to the hardcore scene unity and family feeling. Hatebreed becoming more metal in their sound made these people feel like Hatebreed is one of "theirs", FFDP-shit bands.
It's actually funny but I think it could have been almost any other metal-influenced, heavy hardcore band of that era in this discussion, had it been them that became popular. Stampin' Ground, Death Before Dishonor, Merauder, Knuckledust, Medulla Nocte, the list is huge. The metal influences caused people to forget who these people are, in their values and souls. They mistook their aggressive sound, or friendly-violent shows, for posturing machismo.
But the message was there all along, in what's still their best album (sorry Finn): "You see it's not the blood you spill that gets you what you want, it's the blood you share. Your family. Your friendships. Your community."
The message and point Finn is making here is exactly why I love The Color Morale's album "Know Hope". Addressing depression and the battle to overcome those feelings and accepting that there is a way to get out of those feeling while still acknowledging it. Also, my brother went to a Hatebreed concert in the late 90's and all he remembers is some dude throwing a beer bottle at his head. This Video has everything in it. lul
Such an underrated album !!! I asked for them in a bands that should have been bigger video
I've never knew that people looked down their noses at hatebreed.
I didn't know that either.
It's because the Gen Z snowflakes don't care for this heavy and intense stuff.
@@jeremyfincham1422 ok boomer
@@donkeypuncher81 sorry kid, but this isn't unicorns 🦄 & rainbows 🌈
@@jeremyfincham1422 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
In Brisbane in 2013, Jamie saw me try photobomb, then asked me if I wanted a photo with him when he saw me hanging around. Really appreciated that.
Dude. I love this video so much. I also discovered Hatebreed when “Perseverance” dropped, I was a junior in high school. Up to that point I was 100% a nu metal kid (my nickname in high school was “Korn” just to give you an idea of how cool I was). I didn’t have the worst family life but it was far from perfect, and all the negative stuff I listened do didn’t help my mental state.
It may sound corny but Hatebreed kind of changed my life. It was different to hear this metal/hardcore band that sounded like some of the bands I was into that had a positive message instead of telling me how terrible life is all the time. Hatebreed has been a mainstay for me ever since, easily one of my favorite bands ever.
We’re conditioned our entire lives to focus and dwell on the negative that when someone brings a positive message, people don’t know what to do, hence the reason some people dislike the band and think they’re corny. My wife and I became youth pastors at our church for a few years, and after dealing with some of the issues we had to deal with, one thing that became apparent to me is that positivity makes some people very uncomfortable.
I apologize for the long-winded comment. Shout out from your old Cincinnati stomping grounds!
That was when I got into them as well as a junior in high school. Then my first out was seeing them live at ozzfest during perseverance. But my first major show was my friends in zao but I was sat behind Jesse's kit their drummer at the time. But good to see someone who has a similar path to me
great story, thanks for sharing, have you heard Kill Switch Engage, its very Christian focused believe it or not