You have to understand, now during a time when so much is available at the strike of a few keys, the depths we'd resort to in the 90s to obtain recordings that were only a few years old. If it was something contemporary, you'd typically be able to find it at a good underground record store, via mail order, or a show distro. If it was a few years older, you might be able turn up a secondhand copy, or maybe it was just temporarily out of print. But if it was more obscure than your typical Dischord, Revelation, or Victory catalog, you might be shit out of luck. If you were like me, in that I bought a ton of CDs because they were easier to transport, you'd split the difference, and end up buying the Lost & Found version. Because that was literally the only one you could turn up with any regularity.
This 1994 sampler from the Hanover-based quasi-legitimate label remains a great place to start to see what they were up to, and serves as the late 80s version of Killed By Death for kids like yours truly. There were contributions from the first wave of DCHC (Void, Government Issue, Artificial Peace), NYHC legends (Warzone, Side By Side, Judge, Violent Children), and contemporary Euro hardcore bands (Brightside, Rykers, Crivits). It was also the only place I could track down Project X, Abused, and Citizens Arrest. L&F kept bands like Unity and Urban Waste available long after those bands had broken up.
Should they have paid the bands for what they released? Well, duh. Should they have asked permission? Absolutely. But I'm glad to have had exposure to the Warzone tracks that went out of print when Caroline quit pressing "Don't Forget the Struggle...", and the Ignite cuts when Conversion went out of business. The FU's records that Xclaim! put out are amazing classics; can you imagine knowing they exist, but can't find a copy to listen to other than a 3rd generation tape for years afterwards? Lost & Found filled that void, and, legitimately or not, kept a great deal of classic HC available for so many kids in the 90s. And that's why I don't feel bad sharing this one today.










