Start Today
Start Today is the debut and only studio album by the American hardcore punk band Gorilla Biscuits, released in 1989 by Revelation Records.[1] Recorded in New York City and produced by the band alongside engineer Don Fury, the album features 12 tracks (14 on CD editions) characterized by fast-paced rhythms, dual guitar work, and positive, straight-edge themed lyrics addressing personal growth, social issues, and anti-complacency messages.[2][3] Start Today marked a refinement of the band's sound from their 1988 debut EP, emphasizing catchy hooks alongside raw energy, as heard in standout tracks like "New Direction," "Start Today," and "Competition."[4] The album's cover art, featuring a simple black-and-white design with the band's logo, reflects the DIY ethos of the era's independent punk movement.[3] Hailed as one of the most influential records in hardcore punk history, Start Today helped define the late-1980s youth crew subgenre and inspired bands across punk, metalcore, and pop-punk.[1] Its enduring legacy is evident in reissues, such as the 2014 remastered edition on Bandcamp and various colored vinyl pressings by Revelation Records, continuing to resonate with fans for its motivational spirit and technical prowess.[5]Background
Band formation
Gorilla Biscuits formed in 1987 in New York City amid the vibrant New York hardcore (NYHC) scene, a movement rooted in punk's raw energy and community-driven ethos. The band was founded by vocalist Anthony "Civ" Civarelli and bassist Arthur Smilios, whom Civarelli met in high school in [Long Island](/page/Long Island). Guitarist Walter Schreifels, fresh from his tenure in the influential straight edge band Youth of Today, joined shortly after, aiming to channel the scene's intensity into performances at iconic venues like CBGB's, drawing on his experiences to craft a band that blended melodic elements with hardcore aggression.[6][7] The band's origins were deeply tied to the straight edge hardcore movement, which emphasized sobriety and personal integrity as antidotes to the excesses of the 1980s punk world. Influenced by pioneers like Minor Threat, whose 1981 song "Straight Edge" coined the term, and Schreifels' former band Youth of Today, Gorilla Biscuits committed to promoting drug-free lifestyles and positive youth empowerment within the often volatile NYHC environment. This scene, centered around Manhattan clubs and characterized by mosh pits and fervent crowds, provided fertile ground for the band's emergence, alongside contemporaries like Agnostic Front and Sick of It All.[6][8] Initial lineup iterations reflected the fluid nature of early NYHC bands, starting with Civarelli (vocals), Smilios (bass), guitarist Nick Drysdale, and a rotating rhythm section including drummer Ernie Parada for early shows and the 1987 demo. By late 1987, the configuration stabilized with the addition of second guitarist Alex Brown, bassist Eric Fink, and drummer Luke Abbey, enabling the group to rehearse and gig regularly. Gorilla Biscuits distinguished itself through its dedication to uplifting, youth-focused messages—stressing resilience and self-improvement over nihilism—helping to evolve the NYHC sound toward more accessible, anthemic hardcore.[9][7]Early releases
Gorilla Biscuits released their debut self-titled 7-inch EP in 1988 through Revelation Records, marking their first official recording after forming in the New York hardcore scene.[10] The EP, recorded at Demo Demo Studios in January 1988 with an initial pressing of 1,000 copies, featured eight tracks including "High Hopes," "Hold Your Ground," and "Breaking Free," capturing the band's raw, energetic straight edge hardcore sound.[11] This release quickly gained traction within the underground scene, selling out rapidly and establishing the band as a rising force in the youth crew movement.[12] Prior to the EP, the band contributed two tracks—"Better Than You" and "Forgotten"—to Revelation Records' 1988 compilation New York City Hardcore: The Way It Is, which showcased emerging NYHC acts and helped introduce Gorilla Biscuits to a broader audience in the straight edge community.[13] These early appearances, combined with a 1987 demo tape, represented the short-lived but pivotal pre-album output that highlighted the band's potential without a full-length record.[14] The EP's success fueled growing underground buzz, enabling Gorilla Biscuits to play key live shows that built anticipation for a debut LP, including their first major gig at CBGB in August 1987 supporting Token Entry and The NY Hoods, and a high-profile benefit at the same venue in October 1988 alongside Agnostic Front.[8] These performances, often in packed venues like The Anthrax in Connecticut, solidified their reputation in the straight edge hardcore circuit and paved the way for national touring opportunities.[15]Production
Recording sessions
The recording sessions for Start Today occurred intermittently in January, February, and April 1989 at Demo² Studios in New York City. These sessions followed the band's self-titled EP release in 1988 and built on material developed during their formative years in the New York hardcore scene.[3][11] The process was quick and intense, reflecting the DIY ethos of hardcore punk, with an emphasis on preserving the band's raw live energy through limited takes and an 8-track setup rather than a more polished multi-track environment.[16] This approach presented challenges, particularly with vocals on newer songs that received less prior rehearsal compared to tracks carried over from the EP era.[16] Prior to entering the studio, Gorilla Biscuits conducted rehearsals to refine selections from their EP, ensuring a tight performance foundation amid the breakneck pace of the sessions.[3] Producer Don Fury's guidance during these dates contributed to the album's unvarnished sound, aligning with the band's vision for immediacy.[16]Production team
The production of Gorilla Biscuits' Start Today was led by Don Fury, a prominent figure in the New York hardcore (NYHC) scene who served as both producer and engineer.[17] Fury, renowned for his work with influential NYHC acts such as Agnostic Front and Youth of Today, brought a signature approach that emphasized a clean yet aggressive sound, capturing the band's raw energy while highlighting melodic elements and rapid tempos.[18][16] This style aligned with the evolving straight edge hardcore aesthetic, prioritizing clarity and intensity over excessive effects.[18] Recording took place at Fury's Demo² Studios in New York City during early 1989, utilizing an 8-track setup that the band preferred for its unadorned fidelity after an initial dissatisfaction with a larger 24-track facility.[17][16] The Gorilla Biscuits, co-producers on the album, exerted considerable influence on the sessions, particularly in refining vocals for unrehearsed tracks and insisting on a mix that preserved their straight edge ethos—eschewing over-polished production to maintain authenticity and urgency reflective of their lyrical commitment to sobriety and personal growth.[17][16][18] Mastering was handled at Trutone Mastering Labs, ensuring the final product balanced the album's dynamic range for vinyl and cassette releases.[17] This collaborative effort between Fury and the band resulted in a sound that became a benchmark for melodic hardcore, influencing subsequent NYHC recordings with its precise yet visceral execution.[18][16]Composition
Musical style
Start Today exemplifies the youth crew hardcore genre by fusing its characteristic punk aggression with melodic guitar lines and anthemic choruses, creating a sound that emphasizes positivity and accessibility over the raw, metallic brutality typical of many New York Hardcore (NYHC) contemporaries like Agnostic Front or Cro-Mags.[19] This blend distinguishes the album within the late-1980s hardcore scene, where Gorilla Biscuits prioritized catchy, harmonized elements to broaden appeal while retaining the genre's high-speed intensity.[20] The result is a blueprint for melodic hardcore, influencing subsequent bands in the youth crew movement.[21] The instrumentation underscores this fusion, with dual guitars handled by Walter Schreifels and Alex Brown delivering interlocking, harmonized riffs that weave melody into the aggressive punk framework.[22] Luke Abbey's fast-paced drumming propels the tracks forward with relentless energy, often at breakneck tempos, while Arthur Smilios' driving bass lines provide a solid, propulsive foundation that amplifies the overall thrust without overpowering the melodic focus.[20] This setup allows for dynamic shifts, from thrashing verses to soaring, chant-like choruses, maintaining a raw edge honed during the band's live performances in New York's competitive scene.[22] Clocking in at 24 minutes across 14 tracks, Start Today embodies the ethos of brevity and intensity central to youth crew hardcore, delivering punchy songs—most under two minutes—that prioritize impact over indulgence.[23] This compact structure reinforces the album's urgent, motivational vibe, aligning sonically with its straight edge themes of personal resolve and collective action.[20]Lyrical themes
The lyrics of Start Today revolve around personal growth, the straight edge philosophy, and pointed social critiques, reflecting the band's roots in New York City's youth crew hardcore scene.[24] Drawing from straight edge ideals, the album promotes sobriety and resilience as pathways to self-empowerment, emphasizing ethical living without overt preachiness or militancy.[24] This approach fosters a sense of community and purpose among young listeners, encouraging them to reject escapism and embrace proactive change.[4] The title track "Start Today" exemplifies this ethos as a rallying cry for immediate positive action, with lines like "Procrastinate / it can wait / I put it off / Let’s start today" highlighting the urgency of overcoming inertia and making meaningful shifts in one's life.[4] Anthony "Civ" Civarelli's raw, impassioned vocal delivery amplifies the song's motivational tone, making it an anthem for seizing the present moment.[22] Recurring motifs throughout the album address overcoming negativity, an anti-drug stance inherent to straight edge, and empowerment for youth navigating societal pressures. For instance, "Degradation" critiques prejudice and unfair conflict, urging listeners to reject divisive behaviors like racism or bullying in favor of fairness and solidarity.[8] Tracks like "Cats and Dogs" extend this to social critique, advocating compassion for all living beings and challenging exploitative norms, while reinforcing sobriety as a tool for clarity and ethical strength.[24] Overall, these elements empower young audiences to build resilience against external and internal adversities, prioritizing personal integrity over conformity.[4]Release and promotion
Initial release
Start Today was released on July 14, 1989, by Revelation Records as Gorilla Biscuits' debut full-length album, cataloged as REV:12.[25][26] The initial formats included vinyl LP in black and purple pressings, as well as cassette; the first pressing was limited to approximately 6,000 copies, with 4,977 on black vinyl and 1,015 on purple.[27][28][26] The album's cover art featured an embossed design and a shrink-wrap seal running top to bottom, reflecting the band's commitment to a DIY punk aesthetic through simple, tactile packaging.[27][26]Touring and marketing
To promote Start Today, Gorilla Biscuits embarked on extensive U.S. tours in 1989 and 1990, sharing stages with fellow straight edge hardcore acts like Chain of Strength and Slapshot, which significantly elevated their profile within the underground punk scene.[29][30] The band's dedicated "Start Today" U.S. tour spanned July 1 to August 18, 1989, encompassing dozens of shows across states from Florida to California, often alongside bands such as Bold and Insted to tap into growing regional hardcore networks.[30] These outings, including multi-date runs with Chain of Strength in mid-August 1989 at venues like The Phantasy Nite Club in Cleveland and River Rock Cafe in Buffalo, fostered grassroots momentum by exposing the album to diverse audiences in the burgeoning straight edge movement.[30] Revelation Records leveraged its deep ties to the straight edge community for marketing, distributing promotional materials like posters and fliers through scene connections, while securing features in influential punk zines that highlighted the album's role in the youth crew ethos.[31][32] This DIY approach, rooted in the label's support for straight edge bands since its inception, amplified Start Today's reach without mainstream advertising, relying instead on word-of-mouth and communal distribution at shows and gatherings.[32] Live renditions of tracks like "New Direction" captured the album's urgent energy, transforming them into mosh-pit anthems that incited fervent crowd participation and reinforced the band's connection to hardcore's physical and ideological intensity.[33][34]Reception
Contemporary reviews
Upon its release in 1989, Start Today received positive coverage in key punk zines for its high energy and melodic elements in the New York hardcore (NYHC) sound. The band's growing tour buzz in 1989-1990 further amplified these reactions, as live shows often showcased the album's material to enthusiastic crowds.Retrospective acclaim
Over the years, Start Today has garnered widespread acclaim as one of the cornerstone albums of the New York hardcore (NYHC) scene, frequently ranked among the greatest in melodic hardcore and youth crew subgenres. On Sputnikmusic, a 2007 user review awarded it 4.5 out of 5 stars, praising its "raw energy with just the right amount of melody, motivating, intelligent lyrics" across its 14 tracks.[22] Similarly, on Rate Your Music, the album holds a 3.66/5 average rating from over 3,300 user votes and ranks #86 in the best albums of 1989.[35] Critics and historians have lauded the album for its role in pioneering positive hardcore, emphasizing themes of self-improvement and straight-edge ethos amid the aggression of NYHC. A 2012 retrospective in Scene Point Blank described it as "one of the greatest hardcore records that has ever been written," highlighting its balance of intensity and uplifting messages that influenced subsequent youth crew bands.[4] In the 2014 oral history NYHC: New York Hardcore 1980-1990, author Tony Rettman includes interviews with scene participants who credit Start Today with elevating positive, motivational hardcore during the late 1980s, distinguishing it from more nihilistic contemporaries.[36] The album's cult status has been solidified through repeated reissues and a surge in digital accessibility, introducing it to new generations. Revelation Records has re-pressed the LP multiple times since 1989, including limited-edition colors, while its availability on streaming platforms like Spotify has driven significant plays—title track "Start Today" alone exceeding 7 million streams as of 2023.[1][37] This digital resurgence has amplified its influence, with a 2022 analysis in Memory Screen Zine calling it a "total game changer" whose impact persists in modern hardcore.[8]Legacy
Genre influence
Start Today played a pivotal role in shaping melodic hardcore by blending the raw aggression of New York hardcore with infectious hooks and melodic elements, particularly through its highly singable choruses and groovy rhythms. This fusion influenced subsequent bands such as Lifetime, whose 1995 album Hello Bastards echoed the melodic intensity and youth crew energy of Gorilla Biscuits throughout its tracks.[38] The album was instrumental in elevating the profile of Revelation Records, the independent label that released it, by becoming one of its flagship releases and solidifying the label's reputation as a cornerstone of the youth crew movement. Its emphasis on positive mental attitude and earnest, motivational lyrics reinforced the subgenre's focus on empowerment and community, distinguishing it within the broader hardcore landscape.[39][40] As a cultural touchstone, Start Today helped sustain the straight edge ethos into the 1990s and beyond, promoting sobriety and personal responsibility amid evolving punk scenes. The album's enduring impact is reflected in its frequent inclusion among the top rankings of hardcore records.[22]Reissues and enduring popularity
Following its initial 1989 release, Start Today saw a CD reissue in 1991 by Revelation Records, making the album more accessible in the emerging digital format of the era. Additional CD pressings followed in 1994 and 1996, broadening its distribution internationally through labels like We Bite Records in Germany and Real Cool Records in Japan.[3] These reissues helped sustain the album's presence amid the shift from vinyl to compact discs in the 1990s hardcore scene. In recent years, Revelation Records has continued repressing the album on vinyl, with a 2024 edition on baby blue pressing and a 2025 repress on pink opaque vinyl (limited to 1,621 copies) exemplifying ongoing efforts to maintain physical availability.[3] A remastered digital edition from 2014 is available via Bandcamp, offering high-resolution audio downloads in formats like FLAC at 16-bit/44.1kHz for enhanced fidelity over original pressings.[5] This version, distributed by Revelation Records, provides clearer sound dynamics, appealing to audiophiles and longtime fans seeking improved playback quality. The album's enduring popularity is evident in its widespread streaming availability on platforms like Spotify and Bandcamp, where it has introduced the record to new generations of listeners beyond the original New York hardcore audience.[41] These digital options have driven renewed discovery, with streams contributing to its status as a cornerstone of melodic hardcore. Original pressings on purple vinyl, limited to 1,015 copies with embossed covers, have achieved collectible status among enthusiasts, with auction prices reaching up to $630 for sealed examples.[42][43] Rising demand in the vinyl revival market has elevated these variants' value, underscoring the album's lasting appeal in collector circles.Album content
Track listing
All songs written by Gorilla Biscuits.[3]| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "New Direction" | 2:29 |
| 2. | "Stand Still" | 2:07 |
| 3. | "Degradation" | 1:34 |
| 4. | "Good Intentions" | 0:29 |
| 5. | "Forgotten" | 1:31 |
| 6. | "Things We Say" | 1:47 |
| 7. | "Start Today" | 1:25 |
| 8. | "Two Sides" | 0:58 |
| 9. | "First Failure" | 2:31 |
| 10. | "Competition" | 0:51 |
| 11. | "Better Than This" | 1:02 |
| 12. | "Bury Me" | 1:45 |
| 13. | "Sitting Round at Home" | 1:17 |
| 14. | "Biscuit Power" | 1:23 |
Personnel
Gorilla Biscuits- Anthony "Civ" Civarelli – lead vocals
- Walter Schreifels – guitar, backing vocals
- Alex Brown – guitar
- Arthur Smilios – bass
- Luke Abbey – drums
- Don Fury – producer, engineer
- Walter Schreifels – producer