In on the Kill Taker

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In on the Kill Taker album cover
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Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 42:02

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Joe Gross

eMusic Contributor

Joe Gross hails from Falls Church, VA, one of the Chocolate City's most vanilla suburbs. He has written for Spin, Rolling Stone, the Village Voice, the Washingt...more »

04.22.11
A return to rage as powerful as it was heartfelt.
Label: Dischord Records

Underground leaders at the time but all but unknown compared to, say, Pearl Jam, Fugazi released this album as the rise of alternative rock no longer seemed like a fluke but a historical inevitability. After 1991's bone-dry Steady Diet of Nothing,1993's Kill Taker was a return to rage as powerful as it was heartfelt. The furious opener "Facet Squared" finds Ian MacKaye writing perfect punk maxims ("We draw lines, stand behind them/ That's why flags are SUCH UGLY THINGS”) while Picciotto shouted out Native America ("Smallpox Champion") and his favorite filmmaker ("Cassavetes"). "Great Cop" yells at journalists, "Sweet and Low" is an instrumental lullaby and "Instrument" tries to get the balance right. For all emo took from the album, that style never did catch up to Kill Taker's refined, hellacious power.

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yeesssss

FurryAligator

this is the album I fell in love to fugazi with.. it rocks hard

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Absolutly outstanding

Thatdude

This is one of my favorite cds of all time. It is an outstanding first cd for anyone who is on the fence about Fugazi. Everyone should own it, 13 songs and Red Medicine. the intricacies of the music are incredible. and with lyrics as deep and complicated as these, you could easily listen to it for years and not have everything figured out. Incredible...buy it!

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The best?

Lopside

Possibly Fugazi's best-- if not their most lovable-- album. 'Kill Taker' occupies a special place in my youth as one of the first tapes I bought with my own money. Perhaps I'm biased. Fugazi was what people I admired listened to and pretty soon I was able to see why. What I didn't know was that they were all digging on 'Steady Diet' while I was plowing through the raw abrasion of 'Rend It.' Well, it was hard going at first but very well worth it. If you're a fan you already know; If not, this may not be the place to start, but it's a hell of a place to be.

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The best

JediBoy

This is the best Fugazi album by a long way...and that's saying something considering how brilliant their other albums are. Get it now and you will not regret it.

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You're under twenty two, or you're stupid...

MarkRock

If you didn't get this off of an older sibling, well...you might be missing a very important boat. This record is not only a pre-cursor to many things that got lifted for post-90's "rock", but an essential record for any "post punk" fan...these guys are easily the Wire of the last decade. They are the detailers of what a guitar through an amp ALONE can sound like...no wonder they're such jazz fans...

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As co-founder Ian MacKaye has noted, in spite of its punk pedigree, Dischord Records is, for all intents and purposes, a folk label, documenting the music made by a particular community. Various names have been given to the music that community has made: hardcore punk ( Minor Threat, everyone on 1981: The Year in Seven Inches) to the tragically-named emo (Rites of Spring, Embrace, Beefeater, etc.) to post-emocore whatever (see below). The scene has received… more »

They Say All Music Guide

In on the Kill Taker is like scrubbing your face with steel wool. It finds the band relying on rusty guitar shards that scrape, seethe, and hiss, further removing itself from the sound of 13 Songs and Repeater. Harsh and grating, Fugazi surprisingly produces sheer noise at times, best witnessed in the lengthy closing of “23 Beats Off” and the unintentional Gremlins homage that opens “Walken’s Syndrome.” Joe Lally’s bass and Brendan Canty’s drums are relegated to acting as a guide; they’re pushed — but not squashed — down in the mix, allowing for Ian MacKaye and Guy Picciotto’s guitars to take control, corrosively so. It’s probably Fugazi’s least digestible record from front to back, but each track has its own attractive qualities, even if not immediately perceptible. “Facet Squared” and “Public Witness Program” open the record furiously, but the majority of the following “Return the Screw” is hardly audible, aside from occasional vocal tantrums. A good amount of time is spent alternating between low-key guitar noodling and intrusive bursts of aggression. They’re smart with their sequencing, placing the gentle instrumental “Sweet and Low” (the only track where Lally plays a prominent role) after the exhaustive cacophony of “23 Beats Off,” and generally piecing together a set of rather diverse tracks that flows well. Picciotto’s anti-Hollywood rant on the properly titled “Cassavetes” is a classic Fugazi moment, as is his similarly name-dropping “Walken’s Syndrome.” Buried at the end of the record are two excellent lurchers, MacKaye’s “Instrument” and Picciotto’s “Last Chance for a Slow Dance.” Not Fugazi’s finest hour, but one of its most daring and rewarding. – Andy Kellman

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