When you find a standard "Corrosion of Conformity discography" post, it usually suffers from three fatal flaws. A truly fixed version resolves these:
Genre: Southern Metal / Hard Rock
Blogspot issue: Most uploads are 128kbps CBR.
Fixed version: 2015 German pressing (SPV) — 320kbps, includes the Japanese bonus track "Long Whip/Big America" (Country Western version).
By [Your Name/Editor]
If you were a metalhead with a broadband connection in the late 2000s, you know the feeling. You’d land on a Blogspot page—usually with a black background and neon green text—scroll past a plea to "support the artists," and find the holy grail: a Mediafire or Megaupload link to a band’s entire discography.
For the uninitiated, the search query "Corrosion of Conformity discography blogspot fixed" might look like broken English. But to the diggers, it signifies something specific. It means someone took the time to clean up the mess. It means no missing tracks, no incorrect bitrates, and proper album art. It is the digital equivalent of finding a first pressing in a dollar bin.
Today, we’re looking back at the legacy of Corrosion of Conformity (C.O.C.) through the lens of that obsessive, curatorial internet culture that kept their music alive when the industry tried to pretend it didn't exist.

