In 1979, Fábio Sampaio, who would become the singer in Olho Seco, started a record shop in downtown São Paulo named
Punk Rock Discos. This shop would become the main focus and meeting spot for the city's punk scene in the years to come, helping unite otherwise isolated gangs, bands and individuals from different parts of the city and therefore creating a proper movement. Punk Rock Discos also gave the São Paulo scene a distinctively
hardcore musical identity through the records and tapes distributed at the shop. By 1980 or 1981, Sampaio had found international connections and had established unorthodox methods to import records from
England and have them available shortly after they were released abroad. However, since most punks could not afford imported vinyl, the shop would make
mixtapes with what Sampaio considered to be the best material and sell the cassettes for a lower cost. Partially due to Sampaio's personal taste, British bands like
Discharge and
Disorder as well as Swedish and Finnish hardcore soon became the main reference for São Paulo punks, being listened to almost immediately after the records came out in their countries of origin. Around 1981, punk gigs were already happening often around São Paulo where there were already dozens of active bands, mostly playing
hardcore punk and similar styles. Most important among these bands were
Cólera, Olho Seco and
Inocentes. These three bands appeared on the Grito Suburbano compilation LP released in early 1982. The first punk rock record to come out in
Latin America, Grito Suburbano's example was soon followed by the band Lixomania, who put out their own EP in the same year as well as
Ratos de Porão, Psykoze and Fogo Cruzado, who took part (with Cólera appearing on vinyl for the second time) in another compilation LP called
SUB released roughly one year after Grito Suburbano. In late 1982, the first big punk festival was organized. Named O Começo do Fim do Mundo ("The Beginning Of The End Of The World") it included most of the more active bands from São Paulo city and the neighboring
ABCD Region. A live recording of the show came out on vinyl the following year. São Paulo also had a thriving post-punk scene in the early 1980s with bands like
Agentss,
Mercenárias,
Ira!, Voluntários da Pátria, Akira S,
Fellini,
Smack and others playing often around the city. Despite sharing political and cultural values, the (hardcore) punk and post-punk bands had little else in common at this point, with wide musical and class gaps separating the two scenes. While the self-identified punks were usually teenagers from working class areas who worked as office boys or factory workers, the post-punks were mostly middle class young adults with university educations. Bands from the two scenes rarely, if ever, played together on the same bills. Among other reasons, because very few venues would let hardcore punk bands play. Meanwhile, the scene in Brasília was also growing. After the first local band Aborto Elétrico began playing gigs in 1980, other groups emerged, such as Blitx 64 and Plebe Rude. However, as the decade went on, most of the Brasília bands drifted towards
post-punk and
new wave.
Rio de Janeiro also had a productive punk scene in the early 1980s. Started by a gang of
skateboarders from the working class Campo Grande district, Rio punk revolved around bands such as
Coquetel Molotov, Descarga Suburbana and Eutanásia. In 1984, inspired by the urgency of the message in the legendary Grito Suburbano album, the very first punk rock band from Porto Alegre was formed, Pupilas Dilatadas. Notably, the band were not entirely influenced by other Brazilian punk outfits of the time, playing songs with slower tempos, more in tune with bands like
Public Image Ltd or
Killing Joke than with more hardcore artists. Their sound was an original mix of post-punk, California hardcore and experimental sounds. From the same time period, is the band Lixo Urbano who played traditional punk music inspired by bands like the Sex Pistols. These two punk bands are regarded as pioneers of the Punk movement in Porto Alegre. ==Mid-late 1980s==