CENTRIC is an adventurous electro-rock project from Charlottesville, VA. Fu… Read Full Bio ↴CENTRIC is an adventurous electro-rock project from Charlottesville, VA. Fueled with a vision to produce a melodic blend of emotional songwriting through electronic and rock instrumentation, CENTRIC strives to bring a refreshing sound to the stage while still maintaining the visual energy of an engaging rock band.
The project was born during the winter of 2002 while founding member Jason Judy was struggling to assemble a rock band in Charlotte, NC. Frustrated by the lack of like minded musicians in the scene, he began experimenting with electronic equipment as an alternate musical outlet. Venturing into this new frontier set off a creative spark and by that spring he was out creating remix style music on the spot as CENTRIC. With an enthusiastic sense of musical freedom, Judy left Charlotte and set out in search for a new home better suited to develop the project in. After a rather nomadic year, including spending three influential months in NYC, he finally settled in Charlottesville in December of 2002 where he began working on the debut album, After the Fall, which served as a document to his trials. After two intense years of work, the record was released in October of 2004 to warm reviews from the local press, and was performed live in its entirety at the CD release show, with the help of several longtime friends and collaborators.
Having two years of work coming to life on stage was an alluring experience for Judy, and he quickly began working on assembling a permanent base of musicians to finally establish CENTRIC as an official band. One again, however, finding players who shared the vision became a daunting task, and it was over two more years before the right mix was finally dialed in. The result brought in electronic artist Paul Tucker (Bristol) in January of 2007 as the full time keyboardist of the group. This was major shift in the structure of the project, as Tucker’s dual keyboard coverage of bass, rhythm, and lead sounds allowed Judy the ability to focus solely on guitar and vocals for the first time. Judy also recruited one of Charlottesville’s busiest and most respected rock drummers, Jon Kuthy (Whitebird, Blur the Lines), who had been a collaborator in the past. This brought another major change to the sound, as the songwriting that was once primarily composed on electronics with organic instruments backing them up now, was being headed by a much more raw rock sound over a canvas of synths.
It has been a long and trying road for the project, but with one record under it’s belt, another full album worth of material ready to be recorded, and regular live performances lining up, CENTRIC has finally come full circle into the band that was envisioned nearly 5 years ago.
The project was born during the winter of 2002 while founding member Jason Judy was struggling to assemble a rock band in Charlotte, NC. Frustrated by the lack of like minded musicians in the scene, he began experimenting with electronic equipment as an alternate musical outlet. Venturing into this new frontier set off a creative spark and by that spring he was out creating remix style music on the spot as CENTRIC. With an enthusiastic sense of musical freedom, Judy left Charlotte and set out in search for a new home better suited to develop the project in. After a rather nomadic year, including spending three influential months in NYC, he finally settled in Charlottesville in December of 2002 where he began working on the debut album, After the Fall, which served as a document to his trials. After two intense years of work, the record was released in October of 2004 to warm reviews from the local press, and was performed live in its entirety at the CD release show, with the help of several longtime friends and collaborators.
Having two years of work coming to life on stage was an alluring experience for Judy, and he quickly began working on assembling a permanent base of musicians to finally establish CENTRIC as an official band. One again, however, finding players who shared the vision became a daunting task, and it was over two more years before the right mix was finally dialed in. The result brought in electronic artist Paul Tucker (Bristol) in January of 2007 as the full time keyboardist of the group. This was major shift in the structure of the project, as Tucker’s dual keyboard coverage of bass, rhythm, and lead sounds allowed Judy the ability to focus solely on guitar and vocals for the first time. Judy also recruited one of Charlottesville’s busiest and most respected rock drummers, Jon Kuthy (Whitebird, Blur the Lines), who had been a collaborator in the past. This brought another major change to the sound, as the songwriting that was once primarily composed on electronics with organic instruments backing them up now, was being headed by a much more raw rock sound over a canvas of synths.
It has been a long and trying road for the project, but with one record under it’s belt, another full album worth of material ready to be recorded, and regular live performances lining up, CENTRIC has finally come full circle into the band that was envisioned nearly 5 years ago.
Reform
Centric Lyrics
We have lyrics for 'Reform' by these artists:
Chiasm Something learned And now concerned All is different now s…
Divine Symphony Again man had let himself be taken over by his…
Jake Hook You hit the ground 3000 miles too fast and you…
Merrick's Tusk Reform Reform, Refrain So come on down, leave this town be…
Reformers Reform We won't conform I speak the hearts of every person …
Unburier Poor abuse substance whilst rich abuse power Bending the rul…
We Struck Gold Only time will tell Of the nights we spent together We've be…
We have lyrics for these tracks by Centric:
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
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@danwelterweight4137
You can organize your army as much as you want if you don't have the massive industrial manufacturing capacity base to mass produce equipment and ammunition to back it up in a peer to peer conflict that army is as good as dead in a long term peer to peer conflict.
Right now you are spending $1 Trillion a year in your military and yet you are getting completely out manufactured by the Russians in ammunition and equipment even though they are only spending 1/10 of your military budget.
Conclusion, Your military, and all your fancy high tech equipment, is meant to make money for defense contractors, nor fight and win wars.
Furthermore, all your branches except the Marines corps are struggling to recruit personnel.
A country's true military strength is not the strength of its armed forces, but it's industrial capacity base to mass produce equipment and ammunition in a very short amount of time and it's ability to mobilize huge amounts of men for military forces.
Your equipment is over priced, your industrial manufacturing base is unable to mass produce large amounts of ammunition and equipment and you struggle to recruiting personnel.
That is not sign of strength.
That is a huge sign of weakness.
In a peer to peer conflict you will lose huge amounts of equipment and men.
You can have the shiniest most sophisticated equipment in the world you can't replace both your equipment and recruit in large quantities you are in deep 💩.
Just some food for thought there.
@Schneids1216
I’m in the national guard and my particular unit is being disbanded and reorganized into a focused artillery unit in next 3 years. As I’m only a SPC, I am not able to really elaborate more about the details however this video explains why this is happening and in fact gives me a great deal of comfort knowing our army has not lost it’s edge in being the most advanced fighting force and the future’s security shall be maintained. I am even considering requesting through my coc that this video be presented to everyone in the battery cuz it made me want to extend my contact so that I can witness and be a part of the Army 2030. Definitely inspiring!
@Legionare
"Lost its edge"? Just ask a Pashtun
@MarcosElMalo2
@@Legionare Cope, seditionist and/or Ivan.
@TheTaurus454
Lol, that's a red leg for you! Oh yes, everyone needs to see this, good job specialist, great initiative 😂
@tonyaughney8945
All that and you're going to be sacrificed in a needless war for israel.
@johnd2058
From a vet: hoo-ah, high-speed!
@John_Hemingway
1:00 Not sure I like the US Army's predictions for the UK and particularly Wales in 2030 😱
@johnd2058
Shoutout from NCD & NAFO, we are SO h... stood up right now!
@alecmoriarty
Very insightful! It’ll be interesting to see how these changes affect training and missions, specially training in garrison
@yordan9669
Multiple, simultaneous, devastating, defensive, deep strikes!