
Music should be college radio - indie, alternative, hardcore, punk type music. Contributors can request up to 5 per month. Use the search box at the top left of the page or the bands list to the right. Before making a request, please make sure that the release hasn't already been posted. If you're rude, I won't fulfill your request(s). One request (new post) per month, please. Please email to ihatethe90s gmail com to make your request or use the dropdown box below to email me. It makes it so much easier on me and saves me from having to try and decipher what it is you're asking for. Please, dear readers, when emailing me directly, give me some information such as wanting a file reupped, or a file posted. Huddleston continued work with Foundation as Ann Beretta eventually went on hiatus. Two years later, Ann Beretta left Lookout for the small Canadian punk imprint Union 2112 for the release of Three Chord Revolution. A third studio effort, New Union Old Glory, surfaced in early 2001 (Lookout) Huddleston also released his first album of folk-influenced solo work under the moniker Foundation that same year. Bitter Tongues appeared in summer 2000, again through FBR, and the live album The Band Played On: Live at Home followed shortly thereafter. After that, Rupp and Baker left the band to start Sixer, Matt Bedford joined on bass (though he was later replaced by Donovan Greer), and the band continued on as a three-piece. They released the Burning Bridges single in 1999 on Fueled by Ramen Records and followed it later that year with the full-length debut To All Our Fallen Heroes on Lookout Records. Featuring members of the defunct local act Inquisition, the group formed in 1996 and was heavily influenced by the likes of the Clash, Rancid, and Stiff Little Fingers. Not a person but a four-piece punk band from Richmond, VA, Ann Beretta consisted of guitarists/vocalists Rob Huddleston and Leer Baker, bassist Chris Rupp, and drummer Russ Jones.
