*Features 3 tracks from the "3 Songs E.P."
Contains 14 tracks total.
Country: U.S.A.Genre: Post Hardcore
Label Number: DISCHORD 45
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© 1990 Dischord Records
AllMusic Review by Andy Kellman
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© 1990 Dischord Records
AllMusic Review by Andy Kellman
With its righteous disdain for capitalism and the
almighty dollar, Repeater sounds like an angrier American update of Gang of Four's Solid Gold,
which had been made ten years earlier. Lines/slogans like "When I need
something/I reach out and grab it," "You are not what you own," "I was
caught with my hand in the till," and "Everything is greed" bear this
out. Though not lacking any sense of conviction, Repeater honestly gets a
little stifling. It's not too difficult to see why the band was
allegedly lacking a sense of humor at this stage. They could have been
yelling about filing their taxes; the yelling begins to fade into a din
after a while. The title makes sense, if only by mistake. But -- and
that's a big but -- Repeater nearly matches the Fugazi and Margin Walker
EPs with its musical invention and skill, spewing out another group of
completely invigorating songs, which makes the subject matter and
finger-pointing a little easier to swallow. Few rhythm sections of the
time had the great interplay of Joe Lally and Brendan Canty. Likewise, the guitar playing and interaction of Ian MacKaye and Guy Picciotto
almost always get overlooked, thanks to all the other subjects brought
up when the band is talked about. A guitar magazine even rated Repeater
as one of the best guitar records of the '90s, and rightfully so. Anemic
revs spiked by pig squeals (or is it a screeching train?) highlight the
title track, one of the band's finest moments. (Don't miss MacKaye's vicious double-tracked vocals, either.) As always, MacKaye and Picciotto's
noise-terrorism-as-guitar-joust avoids flashiness, used as much as
rhythm as punctuation device. Sharp, angular, jagged, and precise. Other
gnarling highlights include the preachy "Styrofoam," the late-breaking
"Sieve-Fisted Find," and the somewhat ironic "Merchandise," which
skewers Mr. Business Owner by asking, "What could a businessman ever
want more/Than to have us sucking in his store?" Plenty of fans had to
suck in someone's store to get this record, after all. [The CD version
of Repeater added the 3 Songs 7" as a bonus, titled as Repeater + 3 Songs.]
tags: fugazi, repeater, repeater + 3 songs, 1990, flac,
aac 256kbps re-upload pls link is dead
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