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Instrument Soundtrack
Instrument Soundtrack
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Instrument Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by
ReleasedMarch 23, 1999
RecordedSeptember 1989–March 1997[1]
Studio
Length45:37
LabelDischord
Fugazi chronology
End Hits
(1998)
Instrument Soundtrack
(1999)
Furniture
(2001)

Instrument Soundtrack is a 1999 soundtrack album by the American post-hardcore band Fugazi. It serves as the score for Jem Cohen's documentary film Instrument (1999), which follows the band.

Background

[edit]

Instrument Soundtrack is the soundtrack album to Instrument, a 1999 documentary film about Fugazi directed by Jem Cohen.[2][3] It consists of various instrumental tracks, demo recordings, and "studio outtakes".[2][4] "I'm So Tired", a piano ballad played and sung by Ian MacKaye, was performed on a piano that "just happened to be" in the recording space where the group was working on Red Medicine (1995).[5][6]

Covers

[edit]

"I'm So Tired" has been covered by Fog Lake,[7] Gengahr,[8] Jennylee,[9] Lala Lala,[10] Ultimate Painting,[11] and Eddie Vedder.[12] The song was also covered by Kiki and Herb in their 2016 cabaret show Kiki & Herb: Seeking Asylum! at Joe's Pub.[13]

Reception

[edit]
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusicStarStarStar[14]
The Encyclopedia of Popular MusicStarStar[15]
Pitchfork8.0/10[2]
Punknews.orgStarStarStarStarStar[6]
Rolling StoneStarStarHalf star[4]
Uncut7/10[3]

Brent DiCrescenzo of Pitchfork gave the album a positive review, describing it as "sound[ing] remarkably playful" and concluding: "For all those who worry that the Fugazi story may be coming to an end, both Instrument and its soundtrack show a band still growing and, in some ways, just getting started."[2] Amy Sciarretto of CMJ New Music Report wrote: "Collecting 18 surprisingly ambient, previously unreleased Fugazi demos and practice tapes, [...] Instrument is Fugazi's most focused attempt at mellowness and subtlety."[16] The New Rolling Stone Album Guide called the album "mostly ragged and unformed, but for confirmed Fugaziphiles, it's a solidly interesting peek into the band's creative process."[4]

MacKaye later said of the album:

Instrument is sort of my favorite record, because those were recorded for us. So none of it was for public consumption. So when you listen back, it's just us practicing, us playing together, and it just sounds relaxed.[17]

Track listing

[edit]

All tracks are written by Fugazi.[1]

Instrument Soundtrack track listing
No.TitleLength
1."Pink Frosty Demo"3:47
2."Lusty Scripps"3:42
3."Arpeggiator Demo"2:54
4."Afterthought"1:28
5."Trio's"2:15
6."Turkish Disco"2:34
7."Me and Thumbelina"0:45
8."Floating Boy Demo"3:35
9."Link Track"1:26
10."Little Debbie"1:49
11."H.B."1:19
12."I'm So Tired"1:59
13."Rend It Demo"3:32
14."Closed Captioned Demo"5:50
15."Guilford Fall Demo"3:29
16."Swingset"1:37
17."Shaken All Over"0:58
18."Slo Crostic"2:41

Notes

[edit]
  • "Pink Frosty Demo", "Arpeggiator Demo", "Floating Boy Demo", "Rend It Demo", "Closed Captioned Demo", and "Guilford Fall Demo" are demo recordings of tracks originally featured on the band's 1998 album End Hits.
  • "Rend It Demo" is a demo recording of "Rend It", which was originally featured on the band's 1993 album In on the Kill Taker.
  • "Slo Crostic" is a slowed down version of "Caustic Acrostic", which was originally featured on the band's 1998 album End Hits.

Personnel

[edit]

Credits adapted from the album's liner notes.[1]

Fugazi

[edit]
  • Brendan Canty – engineering (1–5, 7, 8, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18), drums (1–4, 6–12, 14–16, 18), mixing (2–4, 6, 7, 9–12, 14, 16, 17); guitar, bass (3, 14); melodica (5), vocals (17), graphic concept
  • Joe Lally – bass (1, 2, 4–6, 8–10, 15, 16, 18), engineering (1, 2, 5, 7, 8, 10, 12, 15, 18), mixing (2, 4, 6, 9, 10, 16, 17), graphic concept
  • Ian MacKaye – guitar (1, 2, 5, 6, 8–10, 15–18), engineering (1, 2, 5, 7, 8, 10, 12, 15, 18), mixing (2, 4, 6, 9, 10, 12, 16, 17), keyboards (4), vocals (7, 10, 12, 17), bass (11), piano (12), graphic concept
  • Guy Picciotto – mixing (1–6, 8–10, 13, 14, 16–18), engineering (1–5, 7, 8, 10, 12, 14, 15, 18), guitar (1, 3, 6, 8, 10, 13–16, 18), clarinet (2, 7), drum machine bass drum (3), vocals (13, 17); bass, dehumidifier percussion (13); thumb piano (17), graphic concept, insert stills

Additional contributors

[edit]
  • Don Zientara – engineering (9, 17), mixing (9)
  • Jem Cohen – cover stills
  • Jason Farrell – cover help

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Instrument Soundtrack is a by the American band , released in 1999 on . It serves as the original score for the documentary film Instrument, directed by Jem Cohen, which documents the band's evolution, performances, and creative process over a decade from 1987 to 1998. The album consists of 18 tracks, totaling approximately 45 minutes, primarily featuring instrumental demos, studio outtakes, and unreleased recordings spanning Fugazi's history from 1988 to 1998. Composed and performed by Fugazi's core lineup— and on vocals and guitar, on bass, and on drums—the album captures the band's experimental through dub-influenced effects, groovy rhythms, and eclectic textures. Many tracks originate from sessions for Fugazi's Red Medicine (1995) and End Hits (1998), including early versions like "Pink Frosty (Demo)" and "Arpeggiator (Demo)," which highlight their shift toward more emotionally complex and genre-defying sounds. Standout pieces, such as MacKaye's poignant piano-driven "," reveal the band's playful and vulnerable side beyond their signature intensity. Critically acclaimed upon release, Instrument Soundtrack earned an 8.0 rating from Pitchfork for demonstrating Fugazi's growth and enduring inspiration, while the accompanying film premiered at festivals and underscored the band's DIY punk roots in Washington, D.C. The album was later reissued on vinyl in 2009 and again in 2024 on colored vinyl, maintaining its status as a key artifact of Fugazi's prolific output.

Background and Development

Documentary Context

Instrument is a directed by Jem Cohen and released in 1999, chronicling the band Fugazi's career and ethos within the DIY punk scene from 1987 to 1998. The film captures the band's live performances, interviews with members, and interactions with fans, emphasizing their commitment to production and community engagement. Shot in various formats including Super 8, 16mm, and video, it includes footage from international tours, sessions, and everyday aspects of band life. The title Instrument derives from Fugazi's 1993 song of the same name, featured on their album . Cohen compiled the documentary from over a of accumulated footage, creating a non-linear that avoids traditional in favor of immersive, observational vignettes. It world premiered at the (IFFR) in 1999, where it was presented as a collaborative work. The project originated as a close collaboration between , a longtime acquaintance of 's members, and the band itself, with Fugazi providing access to their archives and contributing unreleased material to serve as the film's score. This partnership extended the band's DIY principles into the visual medium, resulting in a raw, unpolished depiction of their musical and cultural impact.

Album Conception

The album Instrument Soundtrack was conceived in 1998–1999 as a companion release to director Jem Cohen's documentary Instrument, a non-narrative visual record of spanning over a decade of performances, rehearsals, and interviews that eschews traditional biographical structure in favor of immersive, observational footage. The idea emerged during the film's , aiming to provide an audio counterpart that mirrored its experimental, music-centric approach by emphasizing instrumental compositions over the band's typical vocal-driven style. This timing aligned with Fugazi's ongoing archival impulses, drawing from material accumulated since their formation to create a standalone LP that extended the documentary's ethos without serving as a conventional score. Selection criteria prioritized unreleased instrumentals and session outtakes from 1988 to 1998, alongside raw demos to capture the band's creative process in its unpolished form. Among these, six tracks originated as demos for the 1998 album , while one stemmed from sessions for 1993's , offering fans insight into the evolution of familiar songs through stripped-down, instrumental iterations. The compilation avoided polished studio versions, focusing instead on practice tapes, home recordings, and exploratory jams to highlight Fugazi's improvisational dynamics and rhythmic experimentation. Distinctive inclusions underscored the album's archival and playful character, such as the rare vocal piece "I'm So Tired," a delicate ballad performed solo by vocalist , which contrasted the band's usual intensity with intimate vulnerability. Similarly, "Shaken All Over" incorporated the iconic bassline from ' 1960 hit "," blending it with dub echoes and brief, echoed vocals from MacKaye to evoke a humorous, referential nod amid the instrumentals. These elements deviated from standard Fugazi fare, emphasizing rare and lighthearted explorations. Fugazi's intent with the release was to share long-buried archival material with dedicated listeners, free from major-label commercialization, in keeping with Dischord Records' commitment to artist autonomy and affordable, direct-to-fan distribution since its founding in 1980. By issuing the album on their independent label at a modest price point—consistent with the band's $5 show policy—the project reinforced their DIY principles, prioritizing creative documentation over market-driven production.

Music and Recording

Sources of Material

The material for Instrument Soundtrack originates from a collection of unreleased demos, studio outtakes, and practice recordings spanning 's career from 1988 to 1998, primarily from 1989 to 1997, with additional contributions from the End Hits sessions. This archival compilation draws on the band's extensive tape library to provide insight into their creative process during key periods of experimentation in . Specific sources include seven instrumental demos recorded during the End Hits sessions, capturing raw sketches that foreshadowed the album's atmospheric and rhythmic explorations. One demo traces back to the In on the Kill Taker (1993) era, while outtakes from the Red Medicine (1995) sessions contribute eclectic, dub-influenced pieces, and material from the Steady Diet of Nothing (1991) period adds angular, tension-driven instrumentals reflective of the band's evolving sound. These selections underscore the album's role as an archival document, preserving fragments that were set aside during full-length productions but reveal Fugazi's iterative approach to composition. Tracks like "Pink Frosty" and "Turkish Disco" exemplify the archival significance, serving as early experiments in instrumentals that highlight the band's interest in texture, groove, and non-vocal dynamics—ideas initially developed in demo form before refinement or abandonment. "Pink Frosty," for instance, appears as a stripped-down demo from the late sessions, emphasizing rhythmic interplay without lyrical distraction. Of the album's eighteen tracks, seventeen are purely instrumental, shifting focus to the interplay of guitars, bass, , and occasional auxiliary elements like or , which trace Fugazi's progression from taut, punk-rooted rhythms to more layered, emotive soundscapes across the decade. This emphasis on non-vocal material allows listeners to appreciate the band's instrumental prowess and sonic evolution in isolation from their signature dual-vocal style.

Production Process

The production of the Instrument Soundtrack centered on assembling a diverse array of demos, outtakes, and unreleased instrumental pieces recorded over nearly a decade, from 1988 to 1998, to serve as the score for Jem Cohen's Instrument. The band members—Brendan Canty, , , and —took primary responsibility for engineering and mixing the majority of the tracks themselves, often using portable setups like 4-track cassettes and 8-track reel-to-reels in non-studio environments. Recording occurred at various locations, including home demos at sites such as Broad Branch Road in , Ian MacKaye's grandparents' house in , and the Dischord House basement, alongside sessions at Pirate House Studios in ; select tracks, such as "H.B. (Demo)" and "Link Track," were captured at Studios in Arlington, , with engineering by longtime collaborator Don Zientara. To ensure cohesion, the band edited outtakes from disparate sessions, including some from demos, while applying minimal overdubs to retain the raw, experimental quality of the originals. This approach emphasized the soundtrack's ambient and improvisational character, with sequencing carefully aligned to synchronize with the film's visuals, yielding a total runtime of 45:37. One notable decision was maintaining the sparse arrangement of "," limited to Ian MacKaye's solo piano and vocals paired with Brendan Canty's minimal percussion, recorded in May 1994 on an 8-track reel-to-reel. A key challenge lay in balancing audio from varied eras and recording formats—spanning cassette demos to multi-track studio sessions—to forge a unified listening experience that complemented the documentary's narrative arc without overpolishing the material's inherent spontaneity. For the tracks, collaborated directly with Don Zientara on engineering and mixing to integrate them seamlessly.

Release and Promotion

Commercial Release

The Instrument Soundtrack was released in 1999 by under catalog number DIS 120. It was issued in multiple formats, including CD, vinyl LP, and cassette. The initial vinyl pressing was handled by in the US. Distribution occurred primarily through independent networks, such as Dischord's mail-order service and Fugazi's live tours, with no involvement from major record labels. The did not chart on mainstream lists but saw robust performance in punk and underground communities. Reissues followed in the and later, including a remastered vinyl edition in December 2009, further represses in 2023 and 2024 (some on burgundy red vinyl), and availability in digital formats as of 2009. Promotion centered on the 1999 premiere of the companion Instrument at the , with band members conducting interviews that underscored their dedication to non-commercial, DIY ethos.

Packaging and Artwork

The for Instrument Soundtrack features a black-and-white photograph taken by Jem Cohen that echoes the aesthetic of the accompanying . This design choice emphasizes simplicity and rawness, aligning with the album's experimental and archival nature. The physical editions include a booklet containing stills from the film, written by discussing the album's purpose as an archival collection of demos and outtakes, and full production credits. The packaging reflects the band's commitment to tangible, artist-driven presentation over commercial gloss. Design responsibilities were shared among Fugazi members, Jason Farrell (who assisted with cover layout), and Jem Cohen, underscoring the DIY ethos prevalent in releases, including the absence of barcodes on early pressings to resist mainstream retail integration. Variations across formats highlight this hands-on approach: while digital reissues preserve high-resolution scans of the original artwork and booklet contents.

Reception and Legacy

Critical Reception

Upon its 1999 release, Instrument Soundtrack garnered positive critical attention for offering an intimate, experimental window into Fugazi's creative evolution, particularly through its instrumental compositions drawn from demos, outtakes, and film-specific recordings. Critics appreciated the album's raw energy and the band's willingness to explore beyond their typical framework, emphasizing rhythmic interplay and unexpected elements like and dub influences. Pitchfork's Brent DiCrescenzo rated the 8.0 out of 10, praising its "remarkably playful" tone and how it demonstrated Fugazi's ongoing growth, with tracks that "tower, massive and elegant, over all of their peers" while revealing the band's maturation in form. Similarly, a contemporary review in Ink 19 lauded the collection as high-quality material with "no filler," noting that the instrumentals avoided repetition or boredom and aligned with Fugazi's tradition of innovative, standalone releases suitable for listening independent of . The album's largely vocal-free structure was seen as both a strength—highlighting the musicianship of members like bassist and drummer —and a factor limiting broader appeal, positioning it as an essential but specialized addition for devoted fans interested in the band's archival and studio processes.

Covers and Influence

The track "I'm So Tired" from Instrument Soundtrack has been notably covered by several artists across genres, highlighting its emotional resonance beyond Fugazi's original context. British indie group offered a reverb-heavy, dream-pop interpretation the same year, stripping it down to ethereal vocals and minimal ahead of their debut . Ultimate Painting, the collaborative project of James Hoare and Jack Cooper, included a hazy, psych-inflected version on their 2015 compilation Neil's Picks Vol. I, blending it with their signature jangle-pop sound. Subsequent covers continued to reinterpret the track in diverse styles. Warpaint bassist-singer jennylee delivered a haunting, synth-driven take in 2020, evoking a sense of isolation that aligned with the song's themes of exhaustion and withdrawal. , the project of Lili Trifiletti, contributed a raw, distorted cover in 2023 for the charity compilation FADER & Friends Volume 1, amplifying its punk roots with grit to support trans rights initiatives. performed a poignant, solo version live in 2017 during Pearl Jam's tour, dedicating it as a subtle tribute following the death of friend , which underscored the song's exploration of despair. Instrument Soundtrack has exerted a subtle but enduring influence on instrumental post-hardcore, inspiring bands to experiment with raw, demo-like textures and angular rhythms that prioritize atmosphere over vocals. Its archival nature—compiling unreleased demos and sketches from 1988 to 1998—pioneered 's approach to releasing incomplete works, which later informed ' Live Series, a vast online archive of over 800 concerts made available for download starting in 2004 and expanded to streaming platforms in 2025. By 2025, the album is regarded as a key document of 's experimental evolution, essential for understanding their shift toward sonic abstraction within post-hardcore. The album's cultural footprint extends to underground scenes, with tracks like "Pink Frosty" and "Arpeggiator" frequently appearing in skate videos for their driving, propulsive energy, as seen in tributes compiling fan footage from the onward. It maintains a strong presence in punk playlists on platforms like and , fostering its cult status among DIY enthusiasts, though it achieved no mainstream chart success. A 2018 screening revival of the accompanying Instrument documentary at venues like the reignited interest in the band's creative process, further cementing the soundtrack's role in their legacy.

Track Listing and Credits

Track Listing

Instrument Soundtrack consists of 18 tracks with a total runtime of 45:37. All compositions are credited to the band . The album is predominantly , with the exception of the piano ballad "," which includes vocals performed by . As the score for the documentary film Instrument, the track sequencing is arranged to align with the film's narrative progression. Several pieces originate from demo recordings made during sessions for Fugazi's prior End Hits.
No.TitleDuration
1Pink Frosty (Demo)3:47
2Lusty Scripps3:42
3Arpeggiator (Demo)2:54
4Afterthought1:29
5Trio's2:16
6Turkish Disco2:35
7Me and 0:46
8Floating Boy (Demo)3:35
9Link Track1:27
10Little Debbie1:49
11H.B.1:19
121:59
13Rend It (Demo)3:32
14Closed Captioned (Demo)5:50
15Guilford Fall (Demo)3:29
16Swingset1:38
17Shaken All Over0:58
18Slo Crostic2:40

Personnel

The core lineup of , responsible for all performances on Instrument Soundtrack, consisted of on vocals and guitar, with additional piano on the track ""; on vocals and guitar; on bass; and on drums. No guest musicians appear on the album, with all instrumentation and vocals provided by the band's four members. The album was produced and mixed by themselves. duties were primarily handled by the band, with Don Zientara contributing and mixing at Studios for tracks "Link Track" and "Shaken All Over." Artwork credits include photography by Jem Cohen, who provided cover stills from the accompanying , and design assistance from Jason Farrell.

References

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