The band borrowed from the early powerviolence of Infest.[1] Lyrically, the group tended towards satirical commentary on the hardcore punk scene.[2] The group has been described as a "fast, screaming mess of tall, skinny guys with a lot to say (which you would only know if you read the liner notes)".[3] The group was sometimes criticized for its conceptual take on hardcore and art school tendencies, maintaining a long-standing feud with Felix Havoc of Code 13.[4]
The band existed for only 3 years but members went on to join Los Crudos.[5]
Discography
Albums
Youth Attack! (1997) – Lengua Armada/Coalition Records
Charles Bronson (Diet Rootbeer) 7-inch (1995) – Six Weeks Records/Youth Attack Records
Charles Bronson / Spazz Split 7-inch (1995) – 625, Evil Noise and Disgruntled Records
Charles Bronson / Unanswered split 7-inch (1995) – Trackstar Records
Charles Bronson / Ice Nine split 7-inch (1996) – Bovine Records
Charles Bronson / Quill split 7-inch (1996) – Nat Records (Japan)
Compilations
All That and a Bag o Dicks (1995) – Disgruntled Records
Double Dose of Dicks – Disgruntled Records
Speed Freaks (1995) – Knot Music
Vida Life (1996) – Lengua Armada
No Royalties (1996) – Bad People Records
Cry Now, Cry Later Vol. 4 (1996) – Pessimiser/Theologian
Another Probe 7-inch with a Girl on the Cover (1996) – Probe
El Guapo (1996) – Same Day Records
Possessed to Skate (1996) – 625 and Pessimiser Records
Deadly Encounters (1997) – Agitate 96 and Kill Music Records
Bllleeeeaaauuurrrrgghhh! A Music War (1997) – Slap A Ham Records
Reality 3 (1997) – Deep Six Records
Tomorrow will be Worse (1997) – Sound Pollution Records
Mandatory Marathon (1997) – Amendment Records
Hurt Your Feelings (2001) – Six Weeks Records
Chicago's on Fire Again (2001) – Lengua Armada
Skeletal Festival (2003) – self-released
References
^"Middle America brought Illinois' Charles Bronson, a band that took a page both from Infest's youthcrew/grind combo and Spazz's unabashed sense of humor on their many EP, 7-inch, and comp. appearances". "Powerviolence: The Dysfunctional Family of Bllleeeeaaauuurrrgghhh!!". Terrorizer no. 172. July 2008. p. 36-37.