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Coriky
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Coriky is an American alternative rock band from Washington D.C., formed in 2015. The band is made up of Ian MacKaye (Minor Threat, Fugazi, The Evens), Amy Farina (The Warmers, The Evens), and Joe Lally (Fugazi, The Messthetics). The band's straightforward approach is reflected in the band's bio, which in its entirety read: "Coriky is a band from Washington, D.C. Amy Farina plays drums. Joe Lally plays bass. Ian MacKaye plays guitar. All sing."[1]
Key Information
History
[edit]In 2015, Farina and MacKaye, who played together as The Evens, began playing music with Joe Lally (Fugazi, The Messthetics).[2] In 2018, the group played their first show, now with the adopted moniker Coriky.[3] The band was named after Kuriki, a dice game described as popular amongst touring bands.[4] During early 2020, Coriky released two songs, "Clean Kill" and "Too Many Husbands", via various free streaming services. Although the self-titled debut album was originally set for release on March 27, 2020, the COVID-19 lockdown enacted in the United States during March 2020 delayed its release until June 12, 2020, in part to accommodate independent record stores closed due to the pandemic.[5][6] The band previewed their album at a free show in D.C.'s St. Stephen and the Incarnation Episcopal Church on February 22, 2020.[7]
Upon release the record was favorably reviewed, and compared and contrasted to MacKaye and Farina's other band The Evens, and to MacKaye and Lally's other band Fugazi.[8][9][10]
Discography
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Strauss, Matthew (February 11, 2020). "Coriky (Ian Mackaye, Joe Lally, and Amy Farina) Announce Debut Album, Share New Song: Listen". Pitchfork. Pitchfork Media. Retrieved July 20, 2023.
- ^ "Ian MacKaye, Joe Lally & Amy Farina's band played their first show (pics)". Brooklyn Vegan. November 12, 2018. Retrieved February 11, 2020.
- ^ Grow, Kory (February 11, 2020). "Coriky — Featuring Fugazi, Evens Members — Tease Album With 'Clean Kill'". Rolling Stone. Retrieved February 11, 2020.
- ^ Williams, Elliot C. (February 11, 2020). "Ian MacKaye's Band 'Coriky' Is Putting Out An Album". DCist. Retrieved January 17, 2025.
- ^ "Coriky release update". Dischord Records. April 13, 2020. Retrieved April 15, 2020.
- ^ Sacher, Andrew (February 11, 2020). "Ian MacKaye's new band Coriky announce debut album, share "Clean Kill"". Brooklyn Vegan. Retrieved February 11, 2020.
- ^ "Ian MacKaye's band Coriky played DC's St. Stephen and the Incarnation Episcopal Church (pics)". Brooklyn Vegan. February 24, 2020. Retrieved February 25, 2020.
- ^ "Coriky is the sound of D.C.'s punk past landing squarely in the present". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 15, 2020.
- ^ "Coriky - Coriky". Brooklyn Vegan. June 12, 2020. Retrieved June 15, 2020.
- ^ "Album Of The Week: Coriky Coriky". Stereogum. June 9, 2020. Retrieved June 15, 2020.
External links
[edit]Coriky
View on GrokipediaHistory
Formation and early years
Coriky was formed in 2015 by Ian MacKaye on guitar and vocals, Joe Lally on bass and vocals, and Amy Farina on drums and vocals, drawing from their established collaborations within Washington, D.C.'s punk ecosystem.[1][7] MacKaye and Lally had previously co-founded Fugazi in 1987, a band central to the city's post-hardcore evolution, while MacKaye and Farina had been active together in The Evens since 2001, prioritizing intimate, self-produced recordings.[8] The group's inception stemmed from casual jamming rather than a premeditated project, reflecting the organic interplay among participants shaped by decades in D.C.'s underground scene.[9] Rooted in the D.C. hardcore punk milieu of the early 1980s, the members embodied a self-reliant ethos that emphasized independence from industry norms, as evidenced by MacKaye's establishment of Dischord Records in 1980 to document local acts without external funding or distribution pressures.[10] Lally's basslines had anchored Fugazi's rhythm section through its two-decade run, contributing to the band's reputation for rigorous, uncompromised live ethics, while Farina's work in The Evens extended this approach into duo dynamics focused on direct, venue-scaled performances.[11] These backgrounds fostered Coriky's low-key start, prioritizing song accumulation through home-based practice over immediate public exposure or promotional cycles typical of faster-paced punk outfits. For the first three years, Coriky eschewed live activity, concentrating instead on developing material at their own tempo to ensure material depth without succumbing to performative haste.[1] This measured progression aligned with the trio's history of deliberate creative control, allowing songs to emerge from repeated, unhurried rehearsals rather than deadline-driven output. Their debut performance finally took place on November 10, 2018, at St. Stephen and the Incarnation Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C., marking a transition from private experimentation to selective public engagement.[12][13]Recording and debut release
Coriky's first live performance occurred in 2018 at St. Stephen and the Incarnation Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C., marking the band's transition from informal rehearsals to public presentation.[14] This low-profile debut aligned with the group's emphasis on organic development over promotional spectacle, consistent with the DIY ethos of Dischord Records, the independent label co-founded by Ian MacKaye that has enabled financial and creative autonomy for affiliated acts since 1980.[15] Recording sessions for the debut album followed in 2019 at Inner Ear Studios in Arlington, Virginia, engineered by Don Zientara, a longtime collaborator on Dischord releases known for capturing raw, unpolished sounds without major-label intervention.[5] [8] The self-titled album Coriky, comprising 11 tracks, was initially scheduled for release on March 27, 2020, via Dischord.[8] The lead single, "Clean Kill," was previewed on February 11, 2020, showcasing the trio's concise, rhythm-driven post-hardcore style with MacKaye on guitar and vocals, Lally on bass and vocals, and Farina on drums and vocals.[16] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic's disruptions, including lockdowns that halted physical distribution and live promotion, the full album's digital and streaming release shifted to June 12, 2020, while vinyl and CD formats followed later.[17] This adjustment reflected practical constraints rather than strategic marketing, underscoring the band's aversion to hype-driven cycles prevalent in mainstream music industry practices.[2]Live performances and later developments
Coriky's live performances were limited prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. The band debuted onstage in 2018 after forming in 2015, followed by two shows in October 2019: October 11 at 2640 Space in Baltimore, Maryland, and October 12 at Georgetown Frame Shop in Washington, D.C..[1][18] Plans for further touring were expressed by the band around their 2020 album release, but global restrictions curtailed activity.[1] Post-2020, Coriky has remained largely inactive in live settings, with no scheduled tour dates as of 2025.[19] Members' commitments to other endeavors contributed to this pattern, including Joe Lally's extensive touring and recording with The Messthetics, as well as Ian MacKaye's ongoing management of Dischord Records and collaborations in The Evens alongside Amy Farina.[20] In a 2023 interview, Lally described Coriky as a recent project but emphasized making music "when and where it's possible," reflecting priorities on selective output amid competing schedules.[20] By October 2025, no new albums, singles, or major announcements had emerged, indicating dormancy influenced by the musicians' ages—MacKaye and Lally in their early 60s, Farina in her early 50s—and preference for sustained catalog relevance over frequent activity.[21] Fan engagement persists through Dischord's vinyl reissues, such as the 2022 pink pressing of their self-titled album, and Bandcamp digital sales/streaming, underscoring endurance via existing material rather than new performances.[5][2]Band members and personnel
Core lineup
Coriky comprises a fixed trio of Ian MacKaye on guitar and vocals, Joe Lally on bass and vocals, and Amy Farina on drums and vocals, with all members contributing to the shared vocal duties.[1][7] Ian MacKaye, who founded Dischord Records and pioneered the straight-edge movement—promoting abstinence from alcohol, drugs, and excesses through Minor Threat's influential song of the same name—anchors the band with guitar riffs rooted in hardcore punk's emphasis on personal accountability over scene indulgences.[22][23] Joe Lally, Fugazi's bassist since the band's 1987 inception, supplies foundational bass lines and vocals, informed by his solo output that explores rhythmic experimentation within post-hardcore frameworks.[24][25] Amy Farina, who plays drums and sings in the duo The Evens alongside MacKaye, adds propulsive percussion and layered harmonies drawn from her indie rock background.[26] The absence of additional or touring members preserves the group's core dynamic as a lean, interdependent unit focused on unembellished punk interplay.[8]Contributions and roles
Ian MacKaye's use of baritone guitar in Coriky delivers riffs that rumble and sparkle, providing a versatile structural foundation capable of spanning bass-like depths and higher-register sparks while evoking the angular intensity of his prior work, albeit in a more simmering, restrained manner.[27][28][3] Joe Lally's basslines, infused with dub and reggae influences, anchor the grooves with rich, resonant independence, darting dynamically rather than rigidly locking in to create rhythmic space and depth that complements the guitar's contours without redundancy.[29][3] Amy Farina's drumming contributes propulsion through shuffling polyrhythms and subtle flourishes like snare brushes, emphasizing eloquent interplay over flashy displays to drive the trio's momentum with veteran precision.[27][3] The instrumentation synergizes in a jazz-like fashion, with members building on each other's ideas through mutual trust honed over years of private rehearsals, yielding a power-trio dynamic where bass and drums push exploratively while guitar frames the tension-release cycles.[29][27] Vocally, all three members contribute, with MacKaye and Farina handling the majority but Lally adding support, enabling layered harmonies and rounds that interweave crystalline alto against stentorian bellows for added emotional resonance and avoiding punk's common frontman-centric pitfalls.[29][27] This collective vocal and improvisational approach, rooted in extended collaborative development, ensures balanced input across the band, fostering a sound where individual roles enhance communal cohesion rather than ego-driven dominance.[27][29]Musical style and influences
Sound characteristics
Coriky's sound draws from the Washington, D.C. punk tradition, manifesting as indie rock with post-punk elements characterized by mid-tempo rhythms and controlled dynamics that prioritize tension over explosive release.[28] The trio's instrumentation—guitar, bass, and drums—employs sparse arrangements that avoid dense layering or distortion, allowing each element to maintain distinct clarity amid propulsive, serpentine grooves.[11] Drums function melodically rather than overwhelmingly, contributing to a lived-in looseness that evokes rehearsal-room intimacy extended to full recordings.[30] [31] Recorded and mixed at Inner Ear Studios in Arlington, Virginia, by Don Zientara during winter 2018–2019, the production emphasizes minimalism and self-reliance, eschewing external gloss for unadorned fidelity that highlights instrumental interplay without artificial enhancement.[8] This approach yields clean, breathable tracks where subtle angularity and unease build through restraint, bridging the simmering restraint of predecessors like The Evens with echoes of Fugazi's rhythmic tension, yet tempered to avoid overt aggression.[32] [27] Songs often groove at moderate paces, incorporating melodic hooks amid an ominous undercurrent that simmers rather than boils over.[33] [3] The result is a sound that channels punk's urgency into indie-rock accessibility, with bass lines providing slinky propulsion and guitar delivering sparse, hook-driven lines that underscore dynamic shifts without relying on volume swells or effects-heavy polish.[11] [34] This DIY ethos in production and arrangement reflects a deliberate rejection of industry-standard bloat, favoring observable sonic economy that amplifies the band's core interplay.[5]Lyrical themes and songwriting
Coriky's lyrics frequently delve into themes of restrained political anger and the opacity of everyday societal dysfunction, eschewing the explicit sloganeering of earlier punk traditions in favor of subtle, observational critiques. Tracks like "Clean Kill" evoke the normalized detachment in remote warfare, portraying a drone operator's unremarkable post-shift routine amid underlying moral erosion, with lines emphasizing futile attempts at cleansing guilt ("Not enough soap and water").[35][28] Similarly, "Have a Cup of Tea" confronts inherited complicity in national failings, invoking inescapable traits ("It's in our DNA") tied to imperialism and racial tensions, framing personal agency within broader systemic unease.[35][28] These elements reflect a pervasive anxiety and disorder, channeling opposition to militarism and conformity without resorting to overt polemic, as MacKaye's phrasing balances cryptic introspection with pointed societal observation.[35] The band's songwriting process emphasizes collaborative refinement rooted in informal home sessions, prioritizing organic development over commercial considerations. Ian MacKaye typically introduces core ideas—musical riffs or conceptual seeds—which the trio, including bassist Joe Lally and drummer Amy Farina, collectively shapes into completed songs through iterative jamming until they achieve a sense of resolution.[20] This approach fosters authenticity, drawing from the DIY ethos of the Washington, D.C. punk scene, where experimentation occurs in low-pressure environments rather than structured production. All three members contribute vocals across tracks, distributing lyrical delivery to provide multifaceted perspectives and avoid singular dominance, as seen in harmonized choruses that amplify shared frustration without hierarchical attribution of lyrics.[2][20] Lally has noted MacKaye's abundance of ideas as a driving force, underscoring the group's focus on translating raw concepts into cohesive expressions of bottled tension.[20]Discography
Studio albums
Coriky is the band's only studio album, released on June 12, 2020, by Dischord Records.[5] Originally scheduled for March 27, 2020, the release was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with physical formats following on June 26.[36] Recorded in 2019 at Inner Ear Studios with Don Zientara, the self-titled album consists of 11 tracks issued in digital, compact disc, and vinyl (including limited pink edition) formats.[5][2] As of October 2025, no additional studio albums have been released, underscoring the project's emphasis on a singular, deliberate output rather than ongoing prolific recording.[37] The track listing is as follows:- Clean Kill
- Hard to Explain
- Say Yes
- Have a Cup of Tea
- Too Many Husbands
- BQM
- Last Thing
- Jack Says
- Shedileebop
- Inauguration Day
- Woulda Coulda [5]
