| 01 | From Now On | |||
| 02 | A Lot To Learn | |||
| 03 | Over The Edge | |||
| 04 | Mass Movement | |||
| 05 | Never Too Late | |||
| 06 | Back To Back | |||
| 07 | Underdog | |||
| 08 | Without Fear | |||
| 09 | Blindside | |||
| 10 | The Vanishing Point | |||
| 11 | No Matter What |
| Title, Format | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Vanishing Point (Cass) | Caroline Records | CAR 01381-4 | US | 1989 | ||
| The Vanishing Point (LP) | Go-Kart Records, Sound Views, Mendit | GK 030, SVR009, | US | 1998 | ||
| The Vanishing Point (LP, Album) | Caroline Records | CAR 01381 | US | 1989 | ||
| The Vanishing Point (CD) | Go-Kart Records, Sound Views, Mendit | GK 030, SVR009, | US | 1998 |
In addition, 1989 was a time of evolution for certain parts of the hardcore scene, and it could be said that Underdog was part of that. Between the production and the sound they chose, Underdog was clearly looking to carve their own niche. Years before the stomp/"groovecore" sound became popular in hardcore, Underdog was utilizing slow building tempos to highlight Richie Birkenhead's distinct and often anguished vocals. The opening "From Now On" and "A Lot To Learn" set the album up for this band's powerful messages driven by very tight musicianship. While hardcore purists will decry this as too much production, the album sounds like a cohesive whole and even a well-thought-out document. Underdog was a unique hardcore band, and one that fascinatingly, never really broke up. This NJ-based act still plays out sporadically, and this album was reissued by Go-Kart in 1998 with bonus tracks.
Underdog is well worth another visit by grown up hardcore kids who'd passed them by, and by fans of hard and spiritual music overall.