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Repeater is the full-length debut studio album by the American post-hardcore band Fugazi. It was released on April 19, 1990, as Repeater on LP, and in May 1990 on CD bundled with the 3 Songs EP as Repeater + 3 Songs. It was recorded at Inner Ear Studios in Arlington, Virginia, and produced and engineered by Don Zientara and Ted Niceley.
Fugazi's music was an intentional departure from that of the hardcore punk bands the members had played in previously. Fugazi combined punk with funk and reggae beats, irregular stop-start song structures, and heavy riffs inspired by popular rock bands such as Led Zeppelin and Queen, bands that the punk community of the time largely disdained. [56]
Steady Diet of Nothing is the second studio album by American post-hardcore band Fugazi, released in July 1991 by Dischord Records.Although a persistent rumor alleges that the title is an allusion to a quote by the late American stand-up comedian Bill Hicks, [1] the album title predates the Hicks quote by several years and was actually thought up by bassist Joe Lally.
The discography of Fugazi, an American post-hardcore band, consists of six studio albums, four EPs, a compilation album, a soundtrack album, a demo and a series of hundreds of live recordings. All of the band's releases have been published by Dischord Records , the independent record label co-owned and operated by Fugazi singer and guitarist ...
"I'm So Tired" is a song by the American punk rock band Fugazi. Released on their 1999 album Instrument Soundtrack, the song is a piano ballad [2] played and sung by vocalist Ian MacKaye, a departure from the band's typical post-hardcore output. Commentators have described the song's lyrics as pertaining to depression and suicidal ideation. [3 ...
3 Songs is a 7-inch EP by Washington, D.C., post-hardcore band Fugazi. It was originally released in a collectors edition of 2,000 copies (800 on black vinyl, 1,200 in green vinyl) by Sub Pop Records as the December 1989 issue of their Singles Club. [2] [3] Dischord Records gave the record wider release one month later with different cover and ...
[13] A similar point was made by Verbicide, who wrote that the song "is to Fugazi what "Smells Like Teen Spirit" is to Nirvana—the one song that you know, even if you know no others." [ 11 ] "While the band's sound would continue to grow over the arc of its existence," wrote Jes Skolnik for Pitchfork , ""Waiting Room" is the song that first ...
It is a mainly instrumental soundtrack for Instrument, the documentary film about the band produced by the band and filmmaker Jem Cohen.. The soundtrack mostly consists of previously unreleased songs and studio outtakes culled from Fugazi's history to that point, as well as seven demo versions of songs from their proper albums (six from 1998's End Hits and one from 1993's In on the Kill Taker).