Fugazi
Latest about Fugazi

The holy grail of '90s post-hardcore has finally been released
By Paul Brannigan published
Fugazi's Albini Sessions is available now to purchase for a brilliant cause

Why you still can't buy an official T-shirt from one of the greatest American rock bands ever
By Paul Brannigan published
Fugazi owe you nothing

Clutch's Neil Fallon: 10 songs that changed my life
By Rich Hobson published
Clutch's firebrand preacher explains how blues, funk and hip hop all set him on the path to music

Debate: what's the greatest punk album ever?
By Louder published
Ramones? Fun House? The Crack? Dookie? The Shape Of Punk To Come? Randy the Band? We want to know your pick for punk's finest hour

“There’s always a lingering chance that we’re going to get back together," says Fugazi drummer Brendan Canty
By Stef Lach published
Post-hardcore heroes Fugazi have been on indefinite hiatus for more than 20 years

Fugazi: “Dealing with everyone else’s success was a headache for us, a real nightmare”
By Paul Brannigan published
Released on June 30, 1993, Fugazi's In On The Killtaker may have been the Washington DC quartet's best-selling record, but it emerged at a time when the alt. rock 'revolution' was proving to be a "headache" for Ian MacKaye and co.

Washington DC's punk scene changed the world, and Scream's DC Special album finds members of Fugazi, Bad Brains and their ex-drummer Dave Grohl paying tribute
By Paul Brannigan published
US hardcore punk legends Scream are touring the UK and Europe this month with Soulside, promoting their first album in 30 years. Frontman Pete Stahl tells us the story behind their return

“We speak out together in solidarity with the Palestinian people’s struggle for freedom, justice and equal rights": Rage Against The Machine, Mogwai, Pulp among 4000 artists calling for a ceasefire in Gaza
By Paul Brannigan published
Over 4000 artists from the music world are joining the chorus of voices urging for a ceasefire in Gaza

"It would have been the most stupid and self-destructive thing we could possibly have done": Why the man who signed Led Zeppelin and The Rolling Stones failed in his repeated bids to sign Fugazi, not even for 10 million dollars
By Paul Brannigan published
Music industry legend Ahmet Ertegun was desperate to sign the famously-independent Fugazi to Atlantic Records, but his promises of millions of dollars failed to sway the DC punks
Select the newsletters you’d like to receive. Then, add your email to sign up.

