🎉 Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
Product image 1
Product image 2
HomeStore

Fugazi – Steady Diet Of Nothing

Fugazi – Steady Diet Of Nothing

Condition: Brand New
  • Description
  • Release details
  • Tracklist
  • From the opening swarms of "Exit Only," you can tell Steady Diet of Nothing will differ from Fugazi's earlier records. Repeater's excellence can't be denied, but the band stood in danger of stagnating its sound. To its benefit, Fugazi made some changes, employing more herk-a-jerk rhythms and dub influences, and changing up the lyrical focus. Actually, the lyrics get a bit vague -- bordering on equivocality at times -- which has its advantages and disadvantages.


    With Steady Diet, Fugazi get more economical and less forceful. Though not nearly as neck-gnawing as Repeater, Steady Diet still packs a sizable wallop, but with slower tempos and less deliberate instrumentation. As always, a poison-tipped dart is pointed at the government, media, and major entertainment outlets. Ian MacKaye's "destroy your television" rant on "Polish" is one of the more direct and simple songs. His "KYEO" comes straight from the rice paddy or homefront, depending on interpretation. It urges the listener to always remain aware, whether awaiting the enemy's next battle move or remaining blissfully unaware of how people can be taken advantage of by others. As with the rest of the band's catalog, lyrics are provided in the booklet. This makes things much easier on the intent listener, as both Picciotto and MacKaye have weird voices that become unintelligible when howled over their instrumental din. The lyric sheet is most useful on Picciotto's "Latin Roots." He's not warning you that "it's time to meet Jamaicans," as it sounds, but rather "it's time to meet your makers." Not quite lending itself to "Purple Haze"-like levels of butchery, but important to point out nonetheless.



    Genre: Punk & Alternative

    Review

    AllMusic rating:
    AllMusic users:
    (392 votes)
    Read the AllMusic.com review
  • Artist: Fugazi
    Label: Dischord Records
    Format: LP
    Units: 1
    Country: US
    Genre: Punk & Alternative
    Style: Hardcore, Indie Rock, Post Rock, Punk
  • A1 Exit Only
    A2 Reclamation
    A3 Nice New Outfit
    A4 Stacks
    A5 Latin Roots
    A6 Steady Diet
    B1 Long Division
    B2 Runaway Return
    B3 Polish
    B4 Dear Justice Letter
    B5 Kyeo

$11.66

Original: $33.31

-65%
Fugazi – Steady Diet Of Nothing

$33.31

$11.66

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Condition: Brand New
  • Description
  • Release details
  • Tracklist
  • From the opening swarms of "Exit Only," you can tell Steady Diet of Nothing will differ from Fugazi's earlier records. Repeater's excellence can't be denied, but the band stood in danger of stagnating its sound. To its benefit, Fugazi made some changes, employing more herk-a-jerk rhythms and dub influences, and changing up the lyrical focus. Actually, the lyrics get a bit vague -- bordering on equivocality at times -- which has its advantages and disadvantages.


    With Steady Diet, Fugazi get more economical and less forceful. Though not nearly as neck-gnawing as Repeater, Steady Diet still packs a sizable wallop, but with slower tempos and less deliberate instrumentation. As always, a poison-tipped dart is pointed at the government, media, and major entertainment outlets. Ian MacKaye's "destroy your television" rant on "Polish" is one of the more direct and simple songs. His "KYEO" comes straight from the rice paddy or homefront, depending on interpretation. It urges the listener to always remain aware, whether awaiting the enemy's next battle move or remaining blissfully unaware of how people can be taken advantage of by others. As with the rest of the band's catalog, lyrics are provided in the booklet. This makes things much easier on the intent listener, as both Picciotto and MacKaye have weird voices that become unintelligible when howled over their instrumental din. The lyric sheet is most useful on Picciotto's "Latin Roots." He's not warning you that "it's time to meet Jamaicans," as it sounds, but rather "it's time to meet your makers." Not quite lending itself to "Purple Haze"-like levels of butchery, but important to point out nonetheless.



    Genre: Punk & Alternative

    Review

    AllMusic rating:
    AllMusic users:
    (392 votes)
    Read the AllMusic.com review
  • Artist: Fugazi
    Label: Dischord Records
    Format: LP
    Units: 1
    Country: US
    Genre: Punk & Alternative
    Style: Hardcore, Indie Rock, Post Rock, Punk
  • A1 Exit Only
    A2 Reclamation
    A3 Nice New Outfit
    A4 Stacks
    A5 Latin Roots
    A6 Steady Diet
    B1 Long Division
    B2 Runaway Return
    B3 Polish
    B4 Dear Justice Letter
    B5 Kyeo

You may also like

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Digital Stylus Force Gauge - 0.01g Precision Tracking Force Scale

$31.23

$10.93

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Vinyl Record Cleaning Brush - Anti-static, Carbon Fibre

$10.41

$3.64

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Sealable Large 12" Blake Record Outer Sleeves - Crystal Clear 50 Micron BOPP

$11.45

$4.01

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Round Bottom 12" Record Inner Sleeves - Frosted 40 Micron HDPE

$6.25

$2.19

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Turntable Mat – Cork & Rubber

$17.35

$6.07

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

10" Blake Record Outer Sleeves Crystal Clear Plastic

$8.15

$2.85

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Regular 12" Blake Record Outer Sleeves - Crystal Clear 50 Micron BOPP

$7.63

$2.67

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

7" Blake Record Outer Sleeves - Crystal Clear 50 Micron BOPP

$4.86

$1.70

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Arcade Fire – Reflektor (2xLP)

$40.25

$14.09

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Rage Against The Machine – Evil Empire

$31.23

NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Kendrick Lamar – Untitled Unmastered.

$36.09

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

David Bowie – The Man Who Sold The World

$43.03

$15.06