Boston hardcore punks The Unseen helped carry street punk into a new era with raw energy, gang vocals, and unflinching social commentary that spoke to outcasts around the world. Built on the chemistry of high school friends Mark Unseen and Tripp Underwood, the band pushed from basement shows to international stages without losing the grit, urgency, and political bite that defined their earliest songs. Albums like 'So This Is Freedom?', 'Explode', and 'State of Discontent' stand as modern punk staples, pairing breakneck tempos with lyrics about alienation, injustice, and survival, and cementing The Unseen as a vital voice in hardcore and street punk culture.
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Boston hardcore punks The Unseen helped carry street punk into a new era with raw energy, gang vocals, and unflinching social commentary that spoke to outcasts around the world. Built on the chemistry of high school friends Mark Unseen and Tripp Underwood, the band pushed from basement shows to international stages without losing the grit, urgency, and political bite that defined their earliest songs. Albums like 'So This Is Freedom?', 'Explode', and 'State of Discontent' stand as modern punk staples, pairing breakneck tempos with lyrics about alienation, injustice, and survival, and cementing The Unseen as a vital voice in hardcore and street punk culture.
The Unseen