Of course, not everyone is in a band, and a scene would be nothing without fans. Here at Furnace Fest, they’ve arrived in their droves from around the United States and elsewhere, all gathered in Birmingham, Alabama in the name of heavy music. Walking around the festival site, you can feel a tangible community spirit – from stalls dedicated to wellness and healing, to countless people selling merch, art and zines, to even a heavyweight gym with some of the most stacked dudes you’ve seen in your life. Because this scene is about more than music, it’s a lifestyle.
“It’s never a bad thing to have more friends – more community, more love,” says Amelia, who’s travelled to the U.S. for the very first time this weekend from Newfoundland, Canada. “There’s no other genre where I would feel safe enough to come down and chill out, but it’s such a community, and if you fall back in the pit you’ve got 19 hands picking you back up. It’s love and trust in general.”
“Hardcore for me means community. I’ve met a lot of friends throughout the years of coming to Furnace, and it’s where I feel at home,” adds Anna, who lives in Los Angeles but is originally from South America. “Being from Brazil where there’s a lot of social disparity, I think [this music] is where I found a political voice and a way to stand for the things that I believe in. Hardcore is where I found my people.”
“I love the way it makes me feel, the emotions it brings out. It brings out good emotions,” explains Magda from San Antonio, Texas, who actually named her son after the band Zao, who are playing in The Shed. “It’s a culture, for sure. It’s not a very calming genre of music, so it’s fun to find people who like the same thing. People think it’s just loud music but it’s so much more than that. It always hits that breakdown that you feel in your soul.”
Josh from north-west Indiana agrees from behind his luchador mask. “Whenever you’re down and you got something bad, you just listen to hardcore music and that shit flips you around – it gets you in a positive forward motion. The positivity is gonna bring you out of a funk, get you out of that tunnel, and it’s gonna get you on track.”
“People want to put their anger into something,” offers Andrew who drove here from Atlanta. “We came off the heels of pop music that’s like, ‘Have a good time, don’t worry about anything,’ and people can’t do that anymore. No matter what their background is, they want music that matters, they want music that has a statement to it.”
“People need a voice,” Anna reiterates. “They need to connect to something real and I think hardcore’s where you can find that.”