Nothing Is Underrated

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Nothing Is Underrated album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 36:36

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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
Spare, mellow and focused: mature rock from a Fugazi vet.
Label: Dischord Records

First things first: Yes, Nothing Is Underrated reunites the erstwhile Fugazi bassist with former bandmates Ian MacKaye and Guy Picciotto. No, all of them do not show up on the same tracks at once. No, Fugazi drummer Brendan Canty is not here. Yes, Lally's voice has improved since his days as Fugazi's George Harrison figure, a sometime singer and a player crucial to their sound, despite the fact that many fans thought of him as less important than the other two guys who played stringed instruments. MacKaye produced this (immaculate sounding) album at Dischord House; the m.o. seems to be that Lally's collaborators improvise music over Lally's pre-written bass lines — collaborators that include members of Haram, Capillary Action and Medications.

Interestingly, in contrast to MacKaye's worthy project the Evens, the results don't sound much like Fugazi at all. Instead, Lally has hit upon his own mature-rock language — spare, mellow and focused. Picciotto teams up with his ex-Rites of Spring/Happy Go Licky bandmate Eddie Janney on a few tracks, their guitars melting into feedback. MacKaye, too, is a ghostly presence, his signature SG buzzing here and there. Even though Lally… read more »

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chronique de bokson.net

bokson

Une nouvelle fois, on retrouve avec un certain enthousiasme cette tension caractéristique, ces lignes de basse réfléchies ("Tonight At Ten"), et ces contributions externes qui nous font toujours espérer un grand retour du combo de Washington DC plutôt que d'en faire définitivement le deuil. En effet, c'est aussi pour les guitares de Ian McKaye et Guy Picciotto qu'on se penche plus volontiers sur ce "Nothing Is Underrated". Même si les rythmiques réparties entre les batteurs de Capitol City Dusters, Haram et Medications, ou la six corde d’Eddie Janny (Rites Of Spring) contribuent elle aussi à la richesse et l'originalité de ce disque. www.bokson.net

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I miss Fugazi...

pabs138

If you liked the quasi-reggae breakdowns in latter-day Fugazi records, or the "Joe" songs, this is right up yr. alley. They were good filler, but I don't know if I want a whole album full of them. I'm gonna download this anyway.

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Icon: Fugazi

By Joe Gross, eMusic Contributor

"Beautiful, funny people. Generous to and respectful of the people they work with. Inspirational in a lot of ways. Maybe the best band." - Steve Albini on Fugazi From their first public performances in 1987 to the start of their indefinite hiatus in 2002, Fugazi kept every promise they ever made. The D.C. supergroup - Dischord Records co-founder and Minor Threat frontman Ian MacKaye on guitar and vocals, singer/guitarist Guy Picciotto and drummer Brendan Canty, both… more »

They Say All Music Guide

It’s difficult to discuss a solo record without examining how it fits with that particular artist’s former band. And Joe Lally’s Nothing Is Underrated is no exception. The first three tracks are perfect examples of what the non-drum-playing members of Fugazi brought to that band. “Day Is Born” is a prime example of Joe Lally’s contribution, that organic, woody, slow groove that was so prevalent on Red Medicine; “Scavenger’s Garden,” featuring the twin talents of Guy Picciotto and Eddie Janney, is a slightly less-hinged affair, with feedbacking guitars à la “Burning” or “Bad Mouth”; and “Map of the World,” which features Ian MacKaye, is reminiscent of the quieter explorations of the band that were brought to light on the Instrument soundtrack. That is — most certainly — not to say that Nothing Is Underrated is Lally simply rehashing his early work. While There to Here was a slightly jarring affair, best described as an artist suddenly out on his own and finding his feet, Nothing Is Underrated is Lally a bit more comfortable, settling into a really solid groove at times (“Via Nomentana,” “Skin and Bone”), calling up a mantra at others (“Motora”), and yet others summoning up the ghosts of the Velvet Underground without sounding — as is the case with most bands or artists who try — like some sort of sycophant. Nothing Is Underrated is a fine record that shows, without a doubt, that Lally is continuing to grow as an artist on his own. – Chris True

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