The Hardcore Therapist
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2255460/fan_mail/new] Today’s guest is someone who captured a moment in time that a lot of people talk about—but very few people actually saw the way he did. I’m joined by Kevin Salk, a photographer who documented the early Southern California hardcore scene in the 1980s—not as press, not as an insider trying to make a name for himself, but as a kid with a camera who was just trying to make sense of where he fit. Kevin was there photographing bands like Black Flag, Circle Jerks, Minor Threat, and the Misfits—at a time when hardcore wasn’t polished, it wasn’t nostalgic, and it definitely wasn’t safe. It was raw, chaotic, and, for a lot of people, one of the only places they felt like they belonged. What makes Kevin’s work so different is that he wasn’t trying to document history. He wasn’t trying to build a career. He was observing. He was paying attention. And in a lot of ways, he was standing just outside of it all—capturing something that people inside the chaos don’t always see. And then, he walked away from it. For decades. Until recently, when those photos resurfaced—and now they’re being seen not just as documentation, but as a really honest perspective of what that time actually felt like. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2255460/support]
269 episodes
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