This is a re-upload of a video from the beginning of September. Dischord Records did not want their content to be attached to an advertisement. This is the original video without any ads. Enjoy!
MacKaye stopped in the middle of a song to save my mom from a mosh pit when she got sucked in and fell. Broke her ankle but Ian saved her ass lol I am also named after him. My parents couldn't decide on one until after we had already been released and gone back home. My parents listened to Fugazi in the car on the way home from the hospital. I was definitely happy when my mom told me that stuff back in jr high
“There’s a difference between wanting to play in a band and wanting to play music.” Gee, I wish someone had told me that when I was a teenager. Then I wouldn’t have spent two years in a shit metal band when I was in college.
: I saw them at the After Dark in Honolulu HI in 1995. 6$ both nights. (Hawaii Shows were 1.00 more than the mainland) Both nights totally sold out (Crammed full of 180 people). Both nights had a single opener, a mostly HARSH Skinhead band with members of a band called MUG (Mean Ugly Guys) from Waay back in the day. Fugazi played mostly from 13 songs (but never in the order of the album) Ian kept stopping the show mid song because girls were getting pushed into the Pit. On the second night a guy kept yelling "You Guys Suck! I want Minor Threat!" And Ian stopped the show (I think it was during the song Burning Too, but it might have been Suggestion. This escapes me) He said "We suck? You want your money back?" and the guy said "yeah" and Ian scrounged up 4 bucks from Brenden and took the other 2 bucks out of his pocket and the guy came to the front and Ian knelt down and gave him the money. Ian then said something to the tune of "theres your 6 bucks, now get the fuck out." The crowd went nuts. I have a photographic memory and this was one my earliest shows I can recall as if it were yesterday. They played 2 years later as well and that show was $7.
@@andrewhall7930 that is very cool. I wish i wouldve gone more often when it was there. That whole place is just a strip mall and storage place (i think...i dont go down there very often anymore, im from kaneohe).
Years back I was walking down the mall in DC. Clinton's motorcade came through, bunch of cops and sirens and all that. Kept walking and came across a crowd of people around some tent thing, went to investigate and saw there was a stage in there. It was a free Fugazi show. That was a good day.
yeah if you lived around DC in the 90s you could see fugazi for free multiple times a year. fort reno was a given, but they'd usually play 2-3 other free benefit type shows a year. i saw them at least 5 times and don't think i ever had to pay
Fugazi are the best. The absolute fucking best. They've never broken up and are still friends. They could still play again some day if they feel like it. I was born in 1981, and was a kid when they released a lot of their music, but got seriously into them in the late 90's. I saw them live twice, and those 2 gigs are definitely 2 of my best ever. I've never known anyone play punk music with the same level of musical ambition and accomplishment as Fugazi. They're super fast, super tight and super versatile. Nobody else can do what they do. The fact they've done all that while being absolute exemplars of integrity and decency in their conduct just blows my mind. There's a whole lot of bullshit around the idea of being 'punk rock', but Fugazi have consistently lived up to every shattered ideal.
I didnt know all this shit but a friend played me long division when it came out and I was in love, and I loved that their albums were stickered "do not pay more than "XXX" for this album"... way before pearl jam took a stand (and kudos to PJ for doing that)
They were spectacular live , saw them in chapel hill nc in 1990, we saw Ian at a counter eating and had no idea who he was and asked him if he was going to see fugazi, he said yeh I think I might go, one of my funnier moments in life, the evens are great as well he is a person that is on a mission to never sell out
for real??? i'm from carrboro, was this at cats cradle? do you remember where he was eating at at all? this is so funny to me, no one cool really comes to chapel hill no more. I know this is a 3 year old comment but I'm so curious, tickled for real
They were so much more. I knew Ian and Brendan in the early 80s and they were genuinely great guys. I remember it as a time you would go to shows not because of the headliners necessarily, but to support a DC band; established or not. It was the best time of my life surrounded by the best people I ever met.
Dude. I've been watching your stuff for the last hour. Such quality. My first Fugazi experience was by somehow finding Repeater in a music shop (I live in South Africa so Lord only knows how it got there) in high school. I can honestly say it changed my musical taste for the better
I have seen a lot of great live music. This is not hyperbole; Fugazi really was the best live act I have ever experienced. No fancy lazers or light show-only four guys playing music and some meta-physical energy that is hard to describe. They were masters at what they did.
Excellent video. Fugazi were the most important band to me in my youth. I had the exquisite pleasure of seeing them play live a total of five times (would have been 6, but my friends and I were in a serious car accident driving to their show on The Argument tour). I’ve seen some great shows in my time, but Fugazi were always the one I looked forward to the most. It was a time when I could expect virtually everyone I was friends with to attend their shows, from all over various parts of my home town, St. Louis, Missouri. As I’ve changed over the years, their anti-consumerism is far less interesting to me, though their intention behind it and overriding attempt to control all aspects of their music is something I will always respect. They will always be my favorite band because of the energy, emotion, innovation, and intelligence of their music.
Nice. We opened for them in Birmingham on that tour, 2002. I had a feeling I was seeing one of their last shows. It was my sixth time seeing them live. They were legends and awesome humans.
I loved Fugazi shows! It was always an event in on itself. Even if you went alone, you'd leave with tons of friends! If you fell in the mosh, you'd be sure to be picked up and put back on your feet. Ian and Guy would lecture if the crowd got too out of control, but we'd love them anyway! I took my sister to see it. It was the first concert my sister ever saw, being all ages, it blew her 15 yo mind! I really miss FUGAZI shows... have a pleasant evening...
Saw them at the Collingwood Town hall in Melbourne. They were awesome. Someone threw Ian a t-shirt with some band on it. Ian said 'thanks, we prefer clean, plain tees'.
Thanks for posting! I saw them in ‘95 in Dayton at a fairly small club and was blown away. A friend of mine at the time got me into 80’s socal and DC punk bands at that time. The concert was a great taste of what I missed in that earlier era. Been a fan ever since.
Fugazi remains the only band I have ever seen two nights in a row. Saw them in London one night and Brighton the next. Both gigs rocked but the great thing was it was totally different sets. They were just jamming I swear they didn't even have a setlist they just played what they felt like. One of best bands I have ever seen live.
I saw Fugazi in the early 90s at an outdoor venue in Phoenix. At one point during the show a police helicopter hovered overheard and shined their spotlight down on the crowd. Ian then led us in a mass middle finger salute to the cops in the helicopter. I also lost my watch in the pit, but it was worth it.
I must have went to 300 concerts between 1988 and 2000. That was literally all we did was drive to STL and go to shows. I saw Fugazi either 5 or 6 times at Mississippi Nights on the landing in STL, and once in their home town of DC. No other band stimulated as much energy as they did. Their shows were magical that way. I was almost trampled to death at one show. Ah, the memories.
What you have now got is = Coriki, The Evens, The Messthetics - they're all currently active and ongoing with various erstwhile Fugazi personnel. Only Guy is absent in action from those.....
I grew up in the 2nd coming of the SoCal. punk scene (was in H.S. 88'-92' in Orange County). Used to see all of the bands that became HUGE in the mid 90's (Offsping, Green Day, No Doubt, Face to Face, Guttermouth, Bad Religion, Pennywise, NOFX, etc.) usually for free at a local bar, or for $5 at some shit hole club. But I still loved the H.C. punk music that came before. And that's where I found Minor Threat. So becoming a Fugazi fan was inevitable. I writes this, because of the countless bands/shows I've seen (and still go to see)....... Fugazi at the Hollywood Palladium (90' or 91'?) was the GREATEST SHOW I'D EVER SEEN !!!! Everything about that show, from the band, to the people, were PERFECT!!!
13 Songs was my favorite Fugazi album; I remember skating on our local vert ramp and I couldn’t skate till I heard that first track “Waiting Room” hearing that bass line kick in!#🛹🎸🔥❤️🤘🏻
It's actually not an album though, it's two separate EPs: "Fugazi" (1988) and "Margin Walker" (1989). The production on these two EPs is quite a bit different from each other.
The thing that gets missed is that this is a band of four very talented, very opinionated people. It could have imploded at the get-go. But there is a lot of trust, collaboration, and most of all commitment to the collective experience that it allowed them to go on, at a pretty brutal pace, for 14 odd years. I was at the Mass Art show in 1990. While that was an amazing show, the equally amazing thing was the word of mouth about that show. There was no internet and only a few flyers put up around the city. Word of that show traveled through certain circles extremely fast and the line outside the gym wrapped around the block. They delivered on every single show I saw them at and every album. They never got bored, jealous, greedy. They only hit pause because geography and personal commitments made it impossible to deliver to the standards they had set. Like many great groups, what came before, and what comes after weaves a thread, but nothing any of those guys have done outside Fugazi eclipses the quality and importance of their music together. In the literary world, we would consider Minor Threat and Rites of Spring formative work - Fugazi is the masterwork.
yes. they used heat.. the clip from "instrument" you used was brendan canty JOKING about the giant halo that people try to place on the band's image. he was like "this shit is ridiculous. i even had someone come up to me and he was like "i heard they don't use heat" like even THEY were bewildered at times how far the whole music scene (business + fans) would go in terms of beatifying these guys. "omg like WHO TURNS DOWN A BIG LABEL CONTRACT KLJFJHFHFZZHJHKKH" i totally get that you had to reupload this without ads tho. dischord doesnt advertise so they didnt want the label associated with any kind of advert. that said they tend to be really cool with rights for all the copyrighted material, audio + video that this mini-doc used, so yeah. no big deal. to me it makes perfect sense. i will be 40 this year and grew up in the DC suburbs and was profoundly lucky in that i was able to see these guys play live probably more than any other live act i've ever seen repeatedly. everywhere from church basements to fort reno to the black cat and 930. they are consummate musicians and performers and never disappoint. they are also really fucking nice people, like true gentlemen, and were/are incredibly accessible to their fans,. their stances and politics only seem radical because the status quo is such an impossibly foul and fetid shitfeast that its come to the point that folks actually see them as some sort of ascetic monks. yes. they use heat ffs. they probably also poop even. their tenets were not much more than common sense bullet points on a piece of paper titled "how not to be complete assholes as musicians / human:s 1987-2002" it wasnt some dalai lama ethos it was simply some gifted musicians making fucking incredible music and applying basic ethics to every facet of such an endeavor. selah/so it goes
@@itsMrNoble my friend and myself did an interview with Ian afterwards for our little local fanzine. Very approachable dude. Is every member pretty vividly there was about 30 skinhead standing around wanting to kick our asses.. the heckling didn't even phase him. Pretty amazing actually outside of verbal insults no incident happened. The venue was at the YMCA in the Frankford section of Philadelphia. It was an alternative venue. The local venue that was right down the street (club pizzaz)had closed about 3 or 4 months earlier... and this was probably the only space available in the neighborhood
Fugazi were such immediate legends that when I bought their first album in 1990, I thought they'd been around for years already. Back then, you couldn't just check this sort of thing on the internet and you were too drunk to remember if you asked someone.
This really made my day. Excellent coverage and commentary on the fugazi ethos , and their experiences and impact .. so stoked I got to see them play live in their , and my testimony is no different than the others here in the comment section : wise-assed and humorous pauses by Ian , settling down the goobers in the crowd .. I’ve kept in touch with his friendship and dialogue with Rollins over the years too , such a rad impact on culture .. damn I would really love to catch a performance if they play again
Saw Fugazi a few times in the 80s, they certainly are the band who wrote waiting room and did it their way, but for me, they will always be the greatest band I ever saw live. Unlike anything I had seen before or have seen since, overwhelming positivity.
This was a fantastic look into the myth that is Fugazi. I was an immediate fan after one of my hardcore friends played me Waiting Room back in 97. I never had the opportunity to see them live due to there elusive nature and by the time the 2000’s rolled around, it was too late. I really enjoyed this because I never really knew too much info about the band. This is the first time I have seen a video on your channel and you definitely have a new fan. Again, thank you for sharing this and I look forward to seeing another one of your videos! Cheers!
My brother and I went to see them play a show at MUBC. We were sitting in a space they ended up putting all their gear. After taking with them and helping carry things, we got to know them as people. Some of my best memories of my youth revolve around their shows. Ian, Brandon, Guy, I wish I had stayed in touch with you guys. I feel like you taught me good life lessons.
I saw Fugazi many, many times over the years -- always $5 -- and always completely amazing. Would love to see them working together again, but have resigned myself with the fact that this is unlikely to ever be the case. That said, I have loved all the output that the various members have done since 2002. I would also say that even though Mackaye can come across as very intense, he is a genuinely nice guy.
My favorite band ever. And I'm not just saying that. Their music was everything to me when I was a teenager. I sincerely hope they see a significant resurgence someday. Thank you very much for this video. I encourage everyone to watch "Instrument" if you haven't already seen it. Fucking brilliant doc for a fucking brilliant band.
I met ian mackaye at a shitty grocery store I was working at after I failed out of college. I couldnt believe it, he walked by and it didnt register. he walked past me and I stared at him and didnt say anything and then it hit me and I said "hi ian, big fan" but not quite loud enough really so he just kinda looked back at me and waved politely just in case he heard me right. it was awesome. I guess he was in town with the evens.
Great video, a little shout out to the inclusivity of their shows and ethos wouldn't have gone amiss, I think that stuff is paramount to their importance and influence.
There had to be at least the ONE band with Fugazi’s ethic, totally anti commercial, no stardom, their whole thing. Yet Ian’s made a living off it, a lifetime of music playing. Gotta envy that unquestioning attitude, as far as what to do with ones life.
I just bought their first 4 Vinyl 1st pressings off a guy that had bought them back in the day. For some reason, 1st pressings of their stuff isn’t that expensive. That could be because there was a lot of it pressed.
@@matthewcohen7488 that may be. Also, and it hurts to say this, they just aren't that well known among the general public. Enjoy the albums! I still haven't broken the seals yet, since I had the cd's too, so I might try picking up additional copies to actually play, as I just bought a new quality turn table.
Well, I mean... I always knew about Fugazi being this great eco friendly diy ethics kinda band but had only heard "Waiting Room". This video was great for me.
Saw them in Norwich in 1992 or so, I remember the drums sounded like gunshots, such a tight sound. But as brilliant and original as Waiting room is, Gimme the Cure was the killer track for us.
Saw them when they came the UK and played in Portsmouth 89 i think. What a night 🔥🔥 £3 on the door - they then stayed the night on my mates floor! The most awesome, down to earth, friendly people you could wish to meet. There was more Britanny in this vide than I expected…
It’s hard to describe how exciting it was when Fugazi was coming into being in ‘87 in DC. Minor Threat was so important and the various iterations and combinations afterwards, excepting Dag Nasty, just hadn’t got it right. When we got our hands on the 5th or 7th generation copy of their demo tape, everyone knew something special was coming together, especially after the inclusion of Guy who wasn’t featured on the demo, or at least not heavily. It’s funny how spoiled we were in those years, seeing Fugazi for free at Fort Reno or for three bucks or whatever at that church in Adams Morgan, along with other great bands like Swiz, Soulside, Gray Matter, and of course - I-Spy.
Long time fan. Seen them live a bunch times and never new about the acronym of their name. Always thought it was an ironic play on words from the Italian word “fugazi” which means fake or damaged beyond repair. Good stuff and great video
y'all should listen to the wu-tang vs fugazi mashup album "wugazi - 13 chambers". that record gave me a whole new perspective on the music of both groups.
My only Fugazi show was at the Silver Dollar club in Phoenix- they didn't play inside- they played in the alley behind the building. There was a police helicopter with a spotlight hovering over the whole show. Surreal.
Extremely important, musically and professional innovative, down to earth and inspirational; Fugazi is the most important band of my adolescence. I’m so thankful I was introduced to them and was even more fortunate to see them live multiple times, including as one of their (thousands of) support bands.
The first time I seen fugazi live I had never herd of them, it was a gig at the funkyard in Brisbane Australia they blew my mind ,I got so excited I ripped a disco ball out of the ceiling stage diving haha
One very important thing you left out: they did a TON of shows for charity, very often they gave away the income from their gigs straight to ONG’s and it’s all very well documented. Fugazi were a force of common good.
Regarding the thing about the producer telling them to take out the "stop" part in Waiting Room. That surprises me. Not that he said that, but that Fugazi let anyone outside the band produce. They are, by their own admission "total control freaks" with their music. I just can't imagine what alternate universe collision had a producer telling them what to do.....
This is a re-upload of a video from the beginning of September. Dischord Records did not want their content to be attached to an advertisement. This is the original video without any ads. Enjoy!
it is nice they weren't objecting to using the footage period tho.
Jesus... Imagine doing a Fugazi vid with ads attached. Wtf were you thinking?
Respect
Sorry your content had to be taken down, but props to Ian being consistent to his views. Also, wonderful stuff, as always.
Well, that makes a LOT of sense!
This had a lot more Britney Spears than I was expecting
Bwahahaha I just spit ice cream everywhere. Great comment!
@@ashwilliams6080 You are not that bad, you been eating ice cream
"If the demo version of Waiting Room had opened their first release, Britney Spears would have never been born."
--Pitchfork
*antidote:* ruclips.net/video/QJdBLnqCKd4/видео.html
Dave Lawlis which would be sad.. what would the singer from Haim then like besides Fleetwood Mac .. 😜
MacKaye stopped in the middle of a song to save my mom from a mosh pit when she got sucked in and fell. Broke her ankle but Ian saved her ass lol I am also named after him. My parents couldn't decide on one until after we had already been released and gone back home. My parents listened to Fugazi in the car on the way home from the hospital.
I was definitely happy when my mom told me that stuff back in jr high
Ian Severtson what a special little ❄️ you are ❤️❤️
That's a nice story
that is so punk rock. ur mom sounds awesome
Youre a weenee
That's a fuckin awesome story!
It's a miracle Brittney made it this far, having stopped so many damn times.
lol bravo
This is the best RUclips comment in the history of RUclips comments hahaha
Right
i imagine she wished she could have said No too.
“There’s a difference between wanting to play in a band and wanting to play music.”
Gee, I wish someone had told me that when I was a teenager. Then I wouldn’t have spent two years in a shit metal band when I was in college.
I nearly died at a Fugazi show when I was 17 ('93). Was a great night.
Now that would be a shirt design
this is the best string of comments on RUclips methinks
oh, you must be really old now
If you don't mind me asking, how did you almost die?
I saw them on that tour in Houston...what a fuc*in show...$5...like 4000 people.
: I saw them at the After Dark in Honolulu HI in 1995. 6$ both nights. (Hawaii Shows were 1.00 more than the mainland) Both nights totally sold out (Crammed full of 180 people).
Both nights had a single opener, a mostly HARSH Skinhead band with members of a band called MUG (Mean Ugly Guys) from Waay back in the day.
Fugazi played mostly from 13 songs (but never in the order of the album) Ian kept stopping the show mid song because girls were getting pushed into the Pit. On the second night a guy kept yelling "You Guys Suck! I want Minor Threat!" And Ian stopped the show (I think it was during the song Burning Too, but it might have been Suggestion. This escapes me) He said "We suck? You want your money back?" and the guy said "yeah" and Ian scrounged up 4 bucks from Brenden and took the other 2 bucks out of his pocket and the guy came to the front and Ian knelt down and gave him the money. Ian then said something to the tune of "theres your 6 bucks, now get the fuck out." The crowd went nuts.
I have a photographic memory and this was one my earliest shows I can recall as if it were yesterday. They played 2 years later as well and that show was $7.
I miss those days
Haha after dark was awesome! I saw nofx once there when i was in high school
@@jasonmay2023 nice! I saw Bad Religion, Tool, NIN and RAGM there. Although the name of the venue changed it was still the same club.
@@andrewhall7930 that is very cool. I wish i wouldve gone more often when it was there. That whole place is just a strip mall and storage place (i think...i dont go down there very often anymore, im from kaneohe).
Youll never forget your first concert. Mine was Poe opening for Gravity Kills.
Years back I was walking down the mall in DC. Clinton's motorcade came through, bunch of cops and sirens and all that. Kept walking and came across a crowd of people around some tent thing, went to investigate and saw there was a stage in there. It was a free Fugazi show. That was a good day.
Maybe not the same show since this is from 91 ie Bush Sr. but...
ruclips.net/video/c_5OZOwAhas/видео.html
yeah if you lived around DC in the 90s you could see fugazi for free multiple times a year. fort reno was a given, but they'd usually play 2-3 other free benefit type shows a year. i saw them at least 5 times and don't think i ever had to pay
Fugazi are the best. The absolute fucking best. They've never broken up and are still friends. They could still play again some day if they feel like it. I was born in 1981, and was a kid when they released a lot of their music, but got seriously into them in the late 90's. I saw them live twice, and those 2 gigs are definitely 2 of my best ever. I've never known anyone play punk music with the same level of musical ambition and accomplishment as Fugazi. They're super fast, super tight and super versatile. Nobody else can do what they do. The fact they've done all that while being absolute exemplars of integrity and decency in their conduct just blows my mind. There's a whole lot of bullshit around the idea of being 'punk rock', but Fugazi have consistently lived up to every shattered ideal.
Guy Picciotto is a great dancer
agreed
him, Yorke and Byrne are my faves
He dances like Elaine from Seinfeld
Indeed
I like that it was all about the ads and they don't care about anyone using their content.
I've heard Waiting Room, what, 2,000 times? Still gives me chills every time...
That pause. That damn pause. After a while, you know the music is coming, but dammed if you don't get rev'd up in anticipation,
Fugazi is the type of a band Jack Black tried to communicate to his kids in School of Rock.
In this movie, there is a Fugazi sticker in his bedroom....
@@jean-francoispilote5751 amazin'!
And on the chalkboard in class
His character in High Fidelity lists Pailhead as an influence on his band too
Waiting Room is apparently popular in real life schools of rocks. There's a handful of vids on RUclips.
I will happily watch this again, shit man I'll watch it a third time if it's deleted again. I love fugazi's story.
Find and watch Instrument. It's amazing.
I wish it was longer and had more live footage, but it was still great to see.
Definitely a 👍
Forever grateful that my friend got me into Fugazi in 1989, and I got to see them live a bunch of times. Thanks, Keith...miss ya dude!
They were the best live act I've ever seen. No lightshow, just stark striplight moshpit beauty. On the Steady Diet of Nothing tour. Unforgettable.
Light show? For real? You weren’t around for the days of 5 bands for 5 bucks, we’re you?
@@tsquipnottsquip5128 no, I'm not quite that old
I didnt know all this shit but a friend played me long division when it came out and I was in love, and I loved that their albums were stickered "do not pay more than "XXX" for this album"... way before pearl jam took a stand (and kudos to PJ for doing that)
They were spectacular live , saw them in chapel hill nc in 1990, we saw Ian at a counter eating and had no idea who he was and asked him if he was going to see fugazi, he said yeh I think I might go, one of my funnier moments in life, the evens are great as well he is a person that is on a mission to never sell out
Lmao how do you ask someone if he goes to see a band when you don't even know how their frontman looks like
Onche518 Ian isn’t the frontman and back then the internet didn’t exist so you would only have the small photos in the liners.
That's awesome, sounds like something Ian would say. I've met him a few times and he's very droll and unassuming
for real??? i'm from carrboro, was this at cats cradle? do you remember where he was eating at at all? this is so funny to me, no one cool really comes to chapel hill no more. I know this is a 3 year old comment but I'm so curious, tickled for real
Lmfao
They were so much more. I knew Ian and Brendan in the early 80s and they were genuinely great guys. I remember it as a time you would go to shows not because of the headliners necessarily, but to support a DC band; established or not. It was the best time of my life surrounded by the best people I ever met.
Dude. I've been watching your stuff for the last hour. Such quality.
My first Fugazi experience was by somehow finding Repeater in a music shop (I live in South Africa so Lord only knows how it got there) in high school.
I can honestly say it changed my musical taste for the better
I have seen a lot of great live music. This is not hyperbole; Fugazi really was the best live act I have ever experienced. No fancy lazers or light show-only four guys playing music and some meta-physical energy that is hard to describe. They were masters at what they did.
Excellent video. Fugazi were the most important band to me in my youth. I had the exquisite pleasure of seeing them play live a total of five times (would have been 6, but my friends and I were in a serious car accident driving to their show on The Argument tour). I’ve seen some great shows in my time, but Fugazi were always the one I looked forward to the most. It was a time when I could expect virtually everyone I was friends with to attend their shows, from all over various parts of my home town, St. Louis, Missouri. As I’ve changed over the years, their anti-consumerism is far less interesting to me, though their intention behind it and overriding attempt to control all aspects of their music is something I will always respect. They will always be my favorite band because of the energy, emotion, innovation, and intelligence of their music.
Was at the last ever Fugazi shows ever that took place in London. One of the best live and recorded rock bands ever.
Nice. We opened for them in Birmingham on that tour, 2002. I had a feeling I was seeing one of their last shows. It was my sixth time seeing them live. They were legends and awesome humans.
@@bennyshambles what was your band called?
Kentish Town forum, in the words of James Murphy... I WAS THERE, great gig... Got my album signed...
@@nickthelick absolutely with Erase Errata and Q & Not U opening. Amazing you got your album signed. Which one? The Argument?
My dad opened for one of their concerts with his band Unwritten Law back in the early 90s in Cali. Great band
This is seriously my new favorite yt channel. I’m always like- I’ll watch one.
3 trash theory videos later...
I have always wanted to be in a band like this. Something honest and heartfelt.
Repeater is an absolute masterpiece.
Fucking A! I have noticed the older i get the more i get out of Repeater in different ways. A definite masterpiece
no its not
I loved Fugazi shows! It was always an event in on itself. Even if you went alone, you'd leave with tons of friends! If you fell in the mosh, you'd be sure to be picked up and put back on your feet. Ian and Guy would lecture if the crowd got too out of control, but we'd love them anyway! I took my sister to see it. It was the first concert my sister ever saw, being all ages, it blew her 15 yo mind! I really miss FUGAZI shows... have a pleasant evening...
saw them 4 times in Australia, 3 of those were in 3 nights in a row on same tour - 3 different shows. Best live act I ever saw!!!
Saw them at the Collingwood Town hall in Melbourne. They were awesome. Someone threw Ian a t-shirt with some band on it. Ian said 'thanks, we prefer clean, plain tees'.
One of the greatest bands of all time
Duh
Thanks for posting! I saw them in ‘95 in Dayton at a fairly small club and was blown away. A friend of mine at the time got me into 80’s socal and DC punk bands at that time. The concert was a great taste of what I missed in that earlier era. Been a fan ever since.
Fugazi is one of favorite bands of all time.
Thanks for this. Fugazi was amazing and I appreciate a good take on them.
Fugazi remains the only band I have ever seen two nights in a row. Saw them in London one night and Brighton the next. Both gigs rocked but the great thing was it was totally different sets. They were just jamming I swear they didn't even have a setlist they just played what they felt like. One of best bands I have ever seen live.
Supposedly, they didn't use set lists. They all apparently had to be ready to go into any song at any time.
I've always had mixed feelings about Fugazi, but this video gave me a lot of love and appreciation for the band. Thanks!
I saw Fugazi in the early 90s at an outdoor venue in Phoenix. At one point during the show a police helicopter hovered overheard and shined their spotlight down on the crowd. Ian then led us in a mass middle finger salute to the cops in the helicopter. I also lost my watch in the pit, but it was worth it.
Saw them live in '92 in a Knights of Columbus basement in downtown Savannah, GA. Still have the ticket stub -
Nice. I saw them in a Riverstreet bar in Savannah in 2000
Check out the last comment on kevins thread applies to you also
The point was really driven when they played all that Brittany spears LMFAO.
Man that was funny
The dood that made this shit is a weenee
I must have went to 300 concerts between 1988 and 2000. That was literally all we did was drive to STL and go to shows. I saw Fugazi either 5 or 6 times at Mississippi Nights on the landing in STL, and once in their home town of DC. No other band stimulated as much energy as they did. Their shows were magical that way. I was almost trampled to death at one show. Ah, the memories.
First time hearing about them! I don’t even listen to the genre but these fools were gold, thanks for the video.
This is an amazing video, I love Fugazi. Such a unique band even to this day. Can't wait to see what comes next!
Probably nothing under that moniker.
What you have now got is = Coriki, The Evens, The Messthetics - they're all currently active and ongoing with various erstwhile Fugazi personnel. Only Guy is absent in action from those.....
I grew up in the 2nd coming of the SoCal. punk scene (was in H.S. 88'-92' in Orange County). Used to see all of the bands that became HUGE in the mid 90's (Offsping, Green Day, No Doubt, Face to Face, Guttermouth, Bad Religion, Pennywise, NOFX, etc.) usually for free at a local bar, or for $5 at some shit hole club. But I still loved the H.C. punk music that came before. And that's where I found Minor Threat. So becoming a Fugazi fan was inevitable. I writes this, because of the countless bands/shows I've seen (and still go to see).......
Fugazi at the Hollywood Palladium (90' or 91'?) was the GREATEST SHOW I'D EVER SEEN !!!!
Everything about that show, from the band, to the people, were PERFECT!!!
13 Songs was my favorite Fugazi
album; I remember skating on our local vert ramp and I couldn’t skate till I heard that first track “Waiting Room” hearing that bass line kick in!#🛹🎸🔥❤️🤘🏻
It's actually not an album though, it's two separate EPs: "Fugazi" (1988) and "Margin Walker" (1989). The production on these two EPs is quite a bit different from each other.
The thing that gets missed is that this is a band of four very talented, very opinionated people. It could have imploded at the get-go. But there is a lot of trust, collaboration, and most of all commitment to the collective experience that it allowed them to go on, at a pretty brutal pace, for 14 odd years. I was at the Mass Art show in 1990. While that was an amazing show, the equally amazing thing was the word of mouth about that show. There was no internet and only a few flyers put up around the city. Word of that show traveled through certain circles extremely fast and the line outside the gym wrapped around the block. They delivered on every single show I saw them at and every album. They never got bored, jealous, greedy. They only hit pause because geography and personal commitments made it impossible to deliver to the standards they had set. Like many great groups, what came before, and what comes after weaves a thread, but nothing any of those guys have done outside Fugazi eclipses the quality and importance of their music together. In the literary world, we would consider Minor Threat and Rites of Spring formative work - Fugazi is the masterwork.
Wow, well done sir! What a tribute to such an amazing band. This band has defined my taste in music since Jr high school
Fugazi, Shellac and the Ex at Congress Theater in Chicago June 2001- best concert I’ve ever seen. I’m so lucky.
Sounds wild. Enjoy my jealousy!!!😜
yes. they used heat.. the clip from "instrument" you used was brendan canty JOKING about the giant halo that people try to place on the band's image. he was like "this shit is ridiculous. i even had someone come up to me and he was like "i heard they don't use heat" like even THEY were bewildered at times how far the whole music scene (business + fans) would go in terms of beatifying these guys. "omg like WHO TURNS DOWN A BIG LABEL CONTRACT KLJFJHFHFZZHJHKKH"
i totally get that you had to reupload this without ads tho. dischord doesnt advertise so they didnt want the label associated with any kind of advert. that said they tend to be really cool with rights for all the copyrighted material, audio + video that this mini-doc used, so yeah. no big deal. to me it makes perfect sense.
i will be 40 this year and grew up in the DC suburbs and was profoundly lucky in that i was able to see these guys play live probably more than any other live act i've ever seen repeatedly. everywhere from church basements to fort reno to the black cat and 930. they are consummate musicians and performers and never disappoint. they are also really fucking nice people, like true gentlemen, and were/are incredibly accessible to their fans,.
their stances and politics only seem radical because the status quo is such an impossibly foul and fetid shitfeast that its come to the point that folks actually see them as some sort of ascetic monks. yes. they use heat ffs. they probably also poop even. their tenets were not much more than common sense bullet points on a piece of paper titled "how not to be complete assholes as musicians / human:s 1987-2002"
it wasnt some dalai lama ethos it was simply some gifted musicians making fucking incredible music and applying basic ethics to every facet of such an endeavor.
selah/so it goes
their stance re the status quo, well put
Saw them around 2001. They played for almost three hours. One of the best shows I've ever seen...
you would get spoiled by how long they played
There was a period when they were opening shows with "Exit only". That set a mood.
I was at the Philadelphia show where guy was upside down in the basketball hoop. Indescribably amazing experience. Fan for life
James Mahon did he really fall into the drums after?
@@itsMrNoble .. I don't believe so. But it is over 30 years ago so. Memory might be a little fuzzy
@@itsMrNoble my friend and myself did an interview with Ian afterwards for our little local fanzine. Very approachable dude. Is every member pretty vividly there was about 30 skinhead standing around wanting to kick our asses.. the heckling didn't even phase him. Pretty amazing actually outside of verbal insults no incident happened. The venue was at the YMCA in the Frankford section of Philadelphia. It was an alternative venue. The local venue that was right down the street (club pizzaz)had closed about 3 or 4 months earlier... and this was probably the only space available in the neighborhood
Fugazi were such immediate legends that when I bought their first album in 1990, I thought they'd been around for years already. Back then, you couldn't just check this sort of thing on the internet and you were too drunk to remember if you asked someone.
Great video. I really appreciate the history of these awesome, under appreciated bands. Thanks folks
This really made my day. Excellent coverage and commentary on the fugazi ethos , and their experiences and impact .. so stoked I got to see them play live in their , and my testimony is no different than the others here in the comment section : wise-assed and humorous pauses by Ian , settling down the goobers in the crowd .. I’ve kept in touch with his friendship and dialogue with Rollins over the years too , such a rad impact on culture .. damn I would really love to catch a performance if they play again
Saw Fugazi a few times in the 80s, they certainly are the band who wrote waiting room and did it their way, but for me, they will always be the greatest band I ever saw live. Unlike anything I had seen before or have seen since, overwhelming positivity.
This was a fantastic look into the myth that is Fugazi. I was an immediate fan after one of my hardcore friends played me Waiting Room back in 97. I never had the opportunity to see them live due to there elusive nature and by the time the 2000’s rolled around, it was too late. I really enjoyed this because I never really knew too much info about the band. This is the first time I have seen a video on your channel and you definitely have a new fan. Again, thank you for sharing this and I look forward to seeing another one of your videos! Cheers!
Watched a second time. Thank you for respecting Dischords wishes
My brother and I went to see them play a show at MUBC. We were sitting in a space they ended up putting all their gear. After taking with them and helping carry things, we got to know them as people. Some of my best memories of my youth revolve around their shows. Ian, Brandon, Guy, I wish I had stayed in touch with you guys. I feel like you taught me good life lessons.
One of the ten most important bands ever assembled.
Just out of curiosity, who are the other 9, lol?
@@jasondankenbring1710 I'd say L7 were one of the pretty important ones.
If the other 9 don’t include Limp Bizkit or Nickelback then I’m not interested
@@keanuismyfather7477 Don't forget Imagine Dragons!
michael801 Hey, don’t diss Imagine Dragons! They might suck now but back in the day they were my jam!
I saw them in the 90's in Gainesville, FL Best show of my life!
At the Hardback? I didn't get to Gainesville until '98 but got to see that place before it closed and Hot Water Music a bunch of times.
I loved their music & their energy. Saw them live in Toronto
I saw Fugazi many, many times over the years -- always $5 -- and always completely amazing. Would love to see them working together again, but have resigned myself with the fact that this is unlikely to ever be the case. That said, I have loved all the output that the various members have done since 2002. I would also say that even though Mackaye can come across as very intense, he is a genuinely nice guy.
no mention of their all ages policy?
All Asians?
@@slugworth3111 i saw you on the wavywebsurf comment section
I dont know why that's important but here we are
Anyways i didnt know about the policy thanks
Weedthrasher why you thrashin weeds homie?
Fuck yeah dude...my 13th b day present was a ticket to see them. My 1st show. And my favorite of all time. Meant the most for sure. Still does
I think that's the most Brittany Spears I've ever listened to.
Sucks for you then, those are rookie numbers...come back when you’ve got a couple albums under your belt
I skipped right over that.
*free Britney!* :)
My favorite band ever. And I'm not just saying that. Their music was everything to me when I was a teenager. I sincerely hope they see a significant resurgence someday. Thank you very much for this video. I encourage everyone to watch "Instrument" if you haven't already seen it. Fucking brilliant doc for a fucking brilliant band.
I met ian mackaye at a shitty grocery store I was working at after I failed out of college. I couldnt believe it, he walked by and it didnt register. he walked past me and I stared at him and didnt say anything and then it hit me and I said "hi ian, big fan" but not quite loud enough really so he just kinda looked back at me and waved politely just in case he heard me right. it was awesome. I guess he was in town with the evens.
Great video, a little shout out to the inclusivity of their shows and ethos wouldn't have gone amiss, I think that stuff is paramount to their importance and influence.
Attended the Eugene show on the Repeater tour, tagging along with a friend, with no prior knowledge of the band; still the best show I've ever seen.
There had to be at least the ONE band with Fugazi’s ethic, totally anti commercial, no stardom, their whole thing. Yet Ian’s made a living off it, a lifetime of music playing. Gotta envy that unquestioning attitude, as far as what to do with ones life.
I saw them in 2000 and Ian passed out fresh cherries :)
that's a very Ian thing to do...
A roommate introduced me to a steady diet of nothing. Still one of my favorite albums.
Love Fugazi. Have all their albums on vinyl, sealed imports, first pressings too! And yes, I bought them when they were new.
Fine.
"You are not what you own"
I just bought their first 4 Vinyl 1st pressings off a guy that had bought them back in the day. For some reason, 1st pressings of their stuff isn’t that expensive. That could be because there was a lot of it pressed.
@@matthewcohen7488 that may be. Also, and it hurts to say this, they just aren't that well known among the general public. Enjoy the albums! I still haven't broken the seals yet, since I had the cd's too, so I might try picking up additional copies to actually play, as I just bought a new quality turn table.
“Imports”? You mean the fact that all that Dischord stuff said “Made in France”? Those aren’t imports.
Seen Fugazi three times, (1989 1991 & 1999) Always outstanding live!
I don’t need to rethink anything. Nor does anyone who watched this video. If you clicked on the thumbnail you already know fugazi is the greatest.
Well, I mean... I always knew about Fugazi being this great eco friendly diy ethics kinda band but had only heard "Waiting Room". This video was great for me.
I have one of their live CDs that is pretty hard to come by now, opens with a cow bell and a roar. Fucking love it.
saw them in Houston in '92, most amazing live show ever. I named my youngest son after him and even talked to him by email once years ago also.
Saw them in Norwich in 1992 or so, I remember the drums sounded like gunshots, such a tight sound. But as brilliant and original as Waiting room is, Gimme the Cure was the killer track for us.
Fortunate to see these gentleman for 3 shows. Was a swell time!
Saw them twice around the release of Repeater, once in Dayton and another in Indianapolis. Great live shows.
Saw them when they came the UK and played in Portsmouth 89 i think. What a night 🔥🔥 £3 on the door - they then stayed the night on my mates floor! The most awesome, down to earth, friendly people you could wish to meet. There was more Britanny in this vide than I expected…
Still technically together! I saw them back in the day.. Five dollars and REALLY worth it!
Happy I got to see them a handful of times . So good .
It’s hard to describe how exciting it was when Fugazi was coming into being in ‘87 in DC. Minor Threat was so important and the various iterations and combinations afterwards, excepting Dag Nasty, just hadn’t got it right. When we got our hands on the 5th or 7th generation copy of their demo tape, everyone knew something special was coming together, especially after the inclusion of Guy who wasn’t featured on the demo, or at least not heavily.
It’s funny how spoiled we were in those years, seeing Fugazi for free at Fort Reno or for three bucks or whatever at that church in Adams Morgan, along with other great bands like Swiz, Soulside, Gray Matter, and of course - I-Spy.
Long time fan. Seen them live a bunch times and never new about the acronym of their name. Always thought it was an ironic play on words from the Italian word “fugazi” which means fake or damaged beyond repair. Good stuff and great video
Great band. Great sound on their albums. The drums and Bass on Long Division are incredible.
My band got to play a show with them on an Aussie tour. Excellent humans. Felt like i was talking to royalty at the time.
y'all should listen to the wu-tang vs fugazi mashup album "wugazi - 13 chambers". that record gave me a whole new perspective on the music of both groups.
Ha ha lol that is genius I have to listen to it! :-)
A great mashup album!
god i love ian mackaye so much. also props for not removing the politics from punk as so many people tend to do now :/
Seeing this made me want you to do vids of the history of 'beastie boys' - and the history of 'sugar ray' and how they changed over the years
Like how sugar Ray started out as a great band became one of the most soulless pop groups of all time
My only Fugazi show was at the Silver Dollar club in Phoenix- they didn't play inside- they played in the alley behind the building. There was a police helicopter with a spotlight hovering over the whole show. Surreal.
Extremely important, musically and professional innovative, down to earth and inspirational; Fugazi is the most important band of my adolescence. I’m so thankful I was introduced to them and was even more fortunate to see them live multiple times, including as one of their (thousands of) support bands.
The first time I seen fugazi live I had never herd of them, it was a gig at the funkyard in Brisbane Australia they blew my mind ,I got so excited I ripped a disco ball out of the ceiling stage diving haha
My favorite band ever. Hands down.
Fugazi a sido la banda que mas e disfrutao y mas me a influenciado en todo aspecto, no solo musical; pero definitivamente es mucho mas. Gracias.
Fugazi still on hiatus...I really want them to come back
Fuck I’d fly anywhere to see them
One very important thing you left out: they did a TON of shows for charity, very often they gave away the income from their gigs straight to ONG’s and it’s all very well documented. Fugazi were a force of common good.
Nothing wrong with tight, polished high end hard core...
Thanks for making this bud
May 5th, 1991. Orlando
First show I ever went to
You started out with a bang
Awesome vid, looking forward to the tribute album coming out this year.
Regarding the thing about the producer telling them to take out the "stop" part in Waiting Room.
That surprises me. Not that he said that, but that Fugazi let anyone outside the band produce.
They are, by their own admission "total control freaks" with their music. I just can't imagine what alternate universe collision had a producer telling them what to do.....
They almost recorded Kill Taker with Albini.
or at least considered it enough to have him record demos.
Maybe everything in this Doc. isn't true ?