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By June 1993, when Washington, D.C.'s Fugazi released their third full-length albumIn on the Kill Taker, the quartet was reaching a thunderous peak in popularity and influence. With two EPs (combined into the classic CD13 songs) and two albums (1990's genre-definingRepeaterand 1991's impressionistic follow-upSteady Diet of Nothing) inside of five years, Fugazi was on creative roll, astounding increasingly large audiences as they toured, blasting fist-pumping anthems and jammy noise-workouts that roared into every open underground heart. When the album debuted on the now-SoundScan-driven charts, Fugazi had never been more in the public eye.
Few knew how difficult it had been to make this popular breakthrough. Disappointed with the sound of the self-producedSteady Diet, the band recorded with legendary engineer Steve Albini, only to scrap the sessions and record at home in D.C. with Ted Niceley, their brilliant, under-known producer. Inadvertently, Fugazi chose an unsure moment to makeIn on the Kill Taker: as Nirvana and Sonic Youth were yanking the American rock underground into the media glare, and breaking punk in every possible meaning of the word. Despite all of this,Kill Takerbecame an alt-rock classic in spite of itself, even as its defiant, muscular sound stood in stark contrast to everything represented by the mainstreaming of a culture and worldview they held dear.
This book features new interviews with all four members of Fugazi and members of their creative community.
In on the Kill Takerexamines how the album became an alt-rock classic, and the difficulties leading up to the band's breakthrough success.Joe Grosshas written forSpin, Rolling Stone, theVillage Voice, theWashingtonCity Paper, Radio On, and more. He covers culture, popular and un-, for theAustinAmerican-Statesman, among other places, and lives with his family in Austin, lC=Copyright © 2018 - 2024 ShopSpell