by RavenwolfX April 18, 2008
Get the hard-eyed mug.the kind of love that exists only in real life, between real people, for real reasons. as apposed to the fairy tale, run of the mill, high school romance, at first sight, and so on and so on, this love encompasses all. it is up and down, easy and hard, right and wrong, a boy and a girl, day and night, peanut butter and jelly, addiction and sobriety, falling and flying.
you will know your love is "hard love" when you make it through all of the obstacles and challenges, all the good times and celebrations, and at the end of the day look into eachothers eyes and know you made it together, know you did it for eachother. know that it was all perfect.
you will know your love is "hard love" when you make it through all of the obstacles and challenges, all the good times and celebrations, and at the end of the day look into eachothers eyes and know you made it together, know you did it for eachother. know that it was all perfect.
when k-sleazy and i were apart, it was hell, but knowing in my heart we would once be together again made this "hard love" worth even more than we had been through.
"jj allstar, i fuckin hard love you"
"jj allstar, i fuckin hard love you"
by junglefacejake March 30, 2010
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A two handed, two footed assault, such as what is used by Jason Statham in The Transporter. The Hard 20 is commonly used in a situation when a person is acting up and a simple bitch-slapping will not suffice. (Also known as the Hard 21 in the case of the man with 6 fingers on his right hand in the Princess Bride.)
by Andrew Baraniak December 13, 2006
Get the Hard 20 mug.by Zulfa December 4, 2018
Get the Hard nipples mug.A hardcore crew is a group of kids who know each other from punk/hardcore/metal shows.
These kids usually have plenty in common: they're middle class white kids, looking for the backing of their friends during fights, and when they're in other troubling situations.
Almost every hardcore band, and even bands that aren't hardcore but grew up around a scene have a crew affiliation. Some crews hate other crews, while some small crews group together.
Hardcore kids with Myspace sometimes put their crew name or acronyms in fromt of their myspace name.
These kids usually have plenty in common: they're middle class white kids, looking for the backing of their friends during fights, and when they're in other troubling situations.
Almost every hardcore band, and even bands that aren't hardcore but grew up around a scene have a crew affiliation. Some crews hate other crews, while some small crews group together.
Hardcore kids with Myspace sometimes put their crew name or acronyms in fromt of their myspace name.
I went to a show last night and there was this hardcore crew called "No Push Mosh Crew" that stopped me from push moshing.
The hardcore crew F.S.U. has heavy ties to almost every alternative music band out of Boston, they're also largely apart of the "Boston Beatdown" video series.
Myspace example name: FYWE (Johnathon) XXX
The hardcore crew F.S.U. has heavy ties to almost every alternative music band out of Boston, they're also largely apart of the "Boston Beatdown" video series.
Myspace example name: FYWE (Johnathon) XXX
by platypuss June 24, 2006
Get the hardcore crew mug.by tradesman June 15, 2004
Get the school of hard knocks mug.Originally, a generation of art punk bands emanating from the infrastructure of what had been the American hardcore punk scene. Closely related or perhaps even derivative styles of post-hardcore included math rock and emo.
The Washington, DC scene surrounding Dischord records circa 1985 is often considered ground zero for post-hardcore, thanks largely to Revolution Summer, a campaign by Dischord to revitalize the then-creatively stagnant Washington, DC hardcore punk scene. Initially, groups like Embrace, Rites of Spring and Ignition integrated melody, a sense of groove, an introspective lyrical focus, and a stronger command of rock songwriting into hardcore sensibilities, though subsequent groups formed circa 1987 such as Moss Icon and Soulside moved post-hardcore into a more art rock direction by introducing elements such dynamic shifts, progressive songwriting styles, and angular guitar work influenced by the original post-punk movement, in many ways the sonic and spiritual antecedent of post-hardcore.
Fugazi, formed in the late 1980s by former members of Embrace and Rites of Spring, were arguably the most important and influential post-hardcore band. Committed to independent rock values, touring throughout the world, and relentlessly pioneering stylistically, Fugazi played throughout the 1990s and set the tone for the American underground rock scene during that time. By the start of the new millennium, post-hardcore groups like At The Drive-In, Unwound, Les Savy Fav and the Dismemberment Plan had all released sonically lush albums, landed major label contracts, or both. Additionally post-hardcore had also arrived as a force in popular culture by that time under the guise of emo, for better or worse. Sadly, post-hardcore's current state is one of confusion and dilapidation, as many pedestrian emo groups have adopted the term as representative of their style in hopes of increasing their credibility.
The Washington, DC scene surrounding Dischord records circa 1985 is often considered ground zero for post-hardcore, thanks largely to Revolution Summer, a campaign by Dischord to revitalize the then-creatively stagnant Washington, DC hardcore punk scene. Initially, groups like Embrace, Rites of Spring and Ignition integrated melody, a sense of groove, an introspective lyrical focus, and a stronger command of rock songwriting into hardcore sensibilities, though subsequent groups formed circa 1987 such as Moss Icon and Soulside moved post-hardcore into a more art rock direction by introducing elements such dynamic shifts, progressive songwriting styles, and angular guitar work influenced by the original post-punk movement, in many ways the sonic and spiritual antecedent of post-hardcore.
Fugazi, formed in the late 1980s by former members of Embrace and Rites of Spring, were arguably the most important and influential post-hardcore band. Committed to independent rock values, touring throughout the world, and relentlessly pioneering stylistically, Fugazi played throughout the 1990s and set the tone for the American underground rock scene during that time. By the start of the new millennium, post-hardcore groups like At The Drive-In, Unwound, Les Savy Fav and the Dismemberment Plan had all released sonically lush albums, landed major label contracts, or both. Additionally post-hardcore had also arrived as a force in popular culture by that time under the guise of emo, for better or worse. Sadly, post-hardcore's current state is one of confusion and dilapidation, as many pedestrian emo groups have adopted the term as representative of their style in hopes of increasing their credibility.
by Mmccormick88 March 18, 2008
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