🔊
This album is everything—raw, urgent, and packed with some of the sharpest post-hardcore ever recorded. From the punchy opener "Turnover" to the anthemic "Merchandise", every track is pure energy. The dual vocals, tight basslines, and relentless drumming make it impossible to sit still. Plus, the DIY ethos? Unmatched. No major labels, no overpriced merch—just pure, uncompromising music. 30+ years later, Repeater still sounds fresh, still makes you wanna move, and still reminds you why Fugazi was different. If this is your first look into the realm of punk/post-hardcore scene, have fun.
Feb 5, 2025

Comments (0)

Make an account to reply.
No comments yet

Related Recs

recommendation image
Almost grunge. Really good. Sounds like i'ts from the mid 90s. Playing is tight, production sounds better than pretty much anything punk from the era. Worth a listen if you wanna feel like punching a wall repeatedly for 30 minutes. MJ Lenderman has em playlisted I think.
recommendation image
🎣
It pains me to say it but I was into Ska Punk, I blame it on the Tony Hawk‘s Pro Skater soundtracks. When I found this CD in a discount bin of my favourite record store I thought I had unearthed some forgotten artifact. It stayed in my disc-man until it would no longer play. I’ve long moved on from this type of party boy, unnecessarily upbeat, and often time misogynist music, but sometimes the opening bars of Beer will play out in my brain and for just a moment I allow myself to slip back...
Mar 5, 2025
recommendation image
Such a fun album! One of the albums which sold me on easycore as a genre and I love coming back to it every once and a while. The transition from the song Dead Men Tell No Tales into Mutiny! is epic. Highlight tracks: Mutiny!, Old Book Misread
Apr 16, 2024

Top Recs from @Tako

🏰
Idk, I want to see more expression on the street
Feb 11, 2025
recommendation image
🌭
Feb 13, 2025
recommendation image
💿
Wilco’s Yankee Hotel Foxtrot is an experience. It is a beautifully messy, heart-wrenching, experimental masterpiece that somehow feels even more relevant twenty-plus years later. I have recently found that Radiohead fans tend to enjoy this album thoroughly, and adding Wilco to your arsenal of Spotify playlists is always a good move. Rejected by their label, self-released online, and now considered one of the greatest albums of all time—talk about a comeback story. If you haven’t given this one a deep listen (or if it’s been a while), now’s the time.
Feb 10, 2025