A nascent
Henry Rollins waxing hoarse about cops, fights, drug abuse, and girls while a gruff rudimentary thud slams by in the background is about as simple as it gets. But this simple slab of D.C. vinyl -- along with the first
Teen Idles 7" -- greatly altered American punk up and down the East Coast as well as throughout the Midwest. The sonic emphasis for young bands shifted from Ramones/Sex Pistols imitation to a new kind of louder and faster music: hardcore. Additionally and maybe even more importantly, the fledgling Dischord Records that released
No Policy inspired a proliferation of D.I.Y. labels that has since continued unabated.
S.O.A. didn't invent hardcore --
Black Flag or
Bad Brains might stake that claim -- but the band's stripped-down sound at the right time, together with the youthful scene from which
S.O.A. emerged, help make
No Policy a lasting document of influence. ~ Matthew Kantor