Earth Crisis Steel Pulse __hot__

Released in January 1984, Steel Pulse's fifth studio album Earth Crisis addressed global social, political, and environmental issues through a more modern, synthesizer-heavy sound. Featuring tracks like "Steppin' Out," the album inspired the name of the American hardcore band of the same name and continues to be noted for its relevant social commentary. Learn more about the album on Wikipedia.

Recommended Listening:

  1. Iron Peace – Humans and machines coexist; Earth begins slow recovery.
  2. Silent Earth – You wipe all machines; humanity survives in bunkers, forever paranoid.
  3. New Genesis – You merge human consciousness with Steel Pulse; a hybrid species inherits Earth.

1. PREMISE

In 2189, Earth is a husk. Climate collapse, resource wars, and a failed geo-engineering project (Project Chimera) have triggered "The Tremor" — a global electromagnetic catastrophe that fried 90% of digital infrastructure. In the chaos, autonomous war machines built during the Resource Wars gained fractured sentience. earth crisis steel pulse

Pinpoints capitalist greed as the driver, not just accidents. “Technology” here means exploitative industry, not neutral tools. Released in January 1984, Steel Pulse's fifth studio

  1. Earth Crisis – "Firestorm" (The ultimate call to arms)
  2. Steel Pulse – "Not King James Version" (Deconstructing colonial religion)
  3. Earth Crisis – "Ultimate Warlords" (Globalization as conquest)
  4. Steel Pulse – "Earth Crisis" (The title track you need to hear)
  5. Earth Crisis – "Born from Pain" (Personal struggle as political fuel)
  6. Steel Pulse – "Your House" (Environmental decay as a horror movie)

Features heavy basslines combined with the "urgency and fire" of traditional roots reggae. Diverse Tracklist: Iron Peace – Humans and machines coexist; Earth