Policy Of 3 Policy Of 3

Released
15th September 2025
Label 
Stonehenge
Format

12 Inch Double

Black

£25.00

‘Under the grip of the not-so-pleasant man, he’s taken power from our sweat again. We stumble, we cry, we’ve moved an inch of the mile.’ (1%)

Policy Of 3 are a hardcore band from Philadelphia / South Jersey, who were first active between 1992 and 1995.  This remastered 17-track discography brings together all of the band’s released material, featuring their sole full-length, 1993’s Dog Dead Summer, together with two EPs – 1993’s self-titled 7-inch and 1995’s American Woodworking – and a variety of compilation contributions.

The band originally began three years earlier as Matter Of Fact, born of New Jersey’s straight edge scene.  Their rebirth as Policy Of 3 was a conscious response to the increasing militancy and growing political ambiguity of elements of the East Coast straight edge community.  In this form, playing with everyone from Antischism to Undertow via Groundwork on their first US tour, they emerged as a notably influential band.  Not just musically, but also in terms of their commitment to the DIY ethic and reasserting the political dimension.

The band are, perhaps, best understood as a bridge between the Washington DC scene of the late 1980s and that which later coalesced around Ebullition and Gravity Records in the mid-to-late 1990s.  Although, elements also speak to the more indie punk expressions that also evolved in that latter half of the decade.

The key to the band’s dynamics lies, perhaps, in their restraint and patience, the desire to explore the introspective and the cathartic in tandem. They are not afraid to allow the momentum ebb and flow, before locking in and building layer upon layer, ratcheting up the tension as they go.  The release of the culminative eruptions is almost cleansing.  The energetic, often dual vocals imbuing them with a vibrantly impassioned intensity.  The serpentine convulsions of Improve Kulture Kill and Of The Wolf contrasting with the coruscating detonations of 1% and Drone.

Reanimating the political component of hardcore is also central to the band’s identity.  The lyrics are often allusive in flavour, yet are used to explore themes of social justice, endemic violence, animal rights, and wider environmentalism that the band promoted through benefit gigs and literature at their shows.

The band broke-up late in 2015, having just completed a seven-week tour of Europe.  It was an unexpected split, one that saw the band remain friends, but left them collectively feeling a sense of the unrealised that took some time to resolve.  Members went on to play in Four Hundred Years and Margot & The Nuclear So And So’s, before reforming last year.  If you’re interested in digging a little deeper and not least reliving the joys of DIY touring in the early 1990s, I can highly recommend an extensive 2014 audio interview with the band courtesy of loudfastphilly.com.

—Foundation Vinyl