Mixed Media
MUSIC
PHOTO: HOLDEN BLANCO â17
Sunny Singh â08 began shooting and sharing videos of hardcore punk band performances as a Haverford junior. Now, with his website hate5six.com, he has an international following.
ardcore punk is loud, fast, raw, and primal musicâand it has inspired a community built on the passion of its fans. âHardcore shattered my expectations that art needs to be easily digestible and crafted to have mass appeal,â says Sunny Singh â08, who is drawn in âby the sounds of a vocalist screaming and the chaos of a show where the line between band and crowd blurs.â Singh isnât in a band, but via his hate5six website heâs become a key part of the hardcore scene around the world, channeling his passion for the music to help support, expand, and preserve its community. Singh, who is 35 and lives in South Philadelphia, started collecting and trading videotapes of live hardcore punk performances during high school in Marlton, N.J., in the early 1990s. But he wasnât able to get serious about shooting and
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sharing his own videos until his junior year at Haverford in 2007, when he found a high-definition video camera on eBay and used the then-new platform YouTube to share his work with a wider audience. The idea for hate5six as a centralized repository for his videos came via the Great Recession: âWhen I graduated in 2008, it was difficult to find a tech job,â says Singh, who majored in math and minored in physics. âI needed to work on a project to keep my mind and skills sharp, so I decided to build the website as a way to learn web development. Soon Iâd built a whole content publishing pipeline.â (The name hate5six jokingly refers to the new area code that had come into Singhâs South Jersey town while he was in high school. âIt changed from 609 to 856, and I was irrationally upset about it,â he says.) With the website built, he began uploading his SUMMER 2021
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