Guy Picciotto
Guy Charles Picciotto (born September 17, 1965) is an American singer, songwriter, guitarist, musician, and producer from Washington, DC.[2]
Guy Picciotto | |
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Picciotto performing in 1995 | |
Background information | |
Born | [1] Washington D.C.,[1] U.S. | September 17, 1965
Genres | |
Occupation(s) | Songwriter, musician, producer |
Instruments |
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Years active | 1984–present |
Labels | Dischord |
Associated acts |
He is best known as the guitarist and vocalist in Fugazi and Rites of Spring.[3]
Career
Rites of Spring and early projects
Picciotto's musical career began in 1984, with the group Rites of Spring. A part of the D.C. post-hardcore scene, Rites of Spring increased the frenetic violence and visceral passion of hardcore while simultaneously experimenting with its compositional rules. Picciotto, as the band's lyricist, as well as singer and guitarist, shifted hardcore into intensely personal realms and, in doing so, is generally credited with creating emo.[4]
Picciotto's early musical resume includes the bands One Last Wish (1986), Happy Go Licky (1987–1988), Brief Weeds (EPs released circa 1991–1992), and The Black Light Panthers (ongoing sporadic project since 1982), the last two bands both being projects with Brendan Canty. He created a record label called Peterbilt Records, which released limited-quantity vinyl record albums for the bands Rain, Happy Go Licky, and Deadline, then years later was involved in releasing the album 1986 by One Last Wish, along with Dischord Records.
Fugazi
Though not in the original lineup of Fugazi, Picciotto joined very early in the group's career, singing with them by their second show and appearing on all the band's studio recordings.
From the Margin Walker EP on, he took up 2nd guitar duties, playing characteristically trebly Rickenbacker guitars. After seven albums (13 Songs, Repeater, Steady Diet of Nothing, In on the Kill Taker, Red Medicine, End Hits, The Argument), and several tours, Fugazi went on "indefinite hiatus" in 2003.
Side projects and production work
Picciotto has collaborated and performed with Mats Gustafsson, Vic Chesnutt, and members of the Ex among others. He has produced numerous albums including the Gossip's breakthrough record Standing in the Way of Control as well as Blonde Redhead's Melody of Certain Damaged Lemons (2000), Misery Is a Butterfly (2004), The Blood Brothers final album, Young Machetes, and Downtown Boys' Cost of Living (2017).
Picciotto has produced four albums by the duo Xylouris White: Goats (2014), Black Peak (2016), Mother (2018), and The Sisypheans (2019)
Picciotto played on the Vic Chesnutt albums North Star Deserter (2007) and At the Cut (2009), and accompanied him on tours of Europe and North America.[5] He co-produced the films Chain and Museum Hours with Jem Cohen (who made the Fugazi film Instrument).
In 2012, Picciotto was interviewed on stage at the Pop Montreal festival by Howard Bilerman about his experiences in the music industry.[6] On Jan 24th, 2020 Guy appeared on an episode of Live From the Barrage[7] for a wide-ranging discussion that was his first long form interview in quite some time.
Equipment
Guitars
- Rickenbacker 330 – Picciotto's main guitars are a sunburst Rickenbacker 330 and 2 identical black Rickenbacker 330's all equipped with RIC HB1 humbuckers. He has occasionally been seen playing a natural-finish 330. The characteristically trebly Rickenbackers allowed Picciotto to make use of sonic space not taken by MacKaye's chunkier, rhythmic guitar playing in Fugazi.[8]
- Rickenbacker 370 – Picciotto's main guitar when he fronted Rites of Spring, One Last Wish and in the first few years with Fugazi was a Mapleglo Rickenbacker 370. It eventually ended up in a state too fragile for live use, but he still used it in the studio right up to The Argument.
- Gibson Les Paul Jr. – During Picciotto's time with Rites of Spring and during the early days of Fugazi (photos show until at least as late as 1993),[9] he could also be seen playing a white, Gibson Les Paul Doublecut Jr with a single P90 pickup. In an NPR interview done in 2011, Picciotto is quoted as having had a Gibson SG Jr. stolen in NYC. The NPR article may be incorrect about it being an SG and it was likely the same Les Paul JR guitar.[10][11]
Amplification
- Park 100 Watt heads
- Marshall JCM 800 2203 heads
- Red or Black Marshall JCM 800 4x12 cabinets fitted with 75-watt celestion speakers
- Fender Twin reverb (studio)[12]
Personal life
Picciotto holds a BA degree in English from Georgetown University and is a graduate of the Washington, D.C. private school, the Georgetown Day School.[13]
Picciotto married musician Kathi Wilcox from the band Bikini Kill and the Frumpies; as of September 2020 the two were living in Brooklyn with their 14-year old son.[14][15]
Discography
Rites of Spring
- Rites of Spring (1985)
- All Through a Life (1987)
- End on End (complete discography) (1991)
One Last Wish
- 1986 (1999)
Happy Go Licky
- 12" (1988)
- Will Play (1997)
Black Light Panthers
- Peterbilt 12" 82-97 (1997)
Brief Weeds
- A Very Generous Portrait 7" (1990)
- Songs of Innocence and Experience 7" (1992)
Fugazi
- 13 Songs (September 1989)
- Repeater (March 1990)
- Steady Diet of Nothing (August 1991)
- In on the Kill Taker (May 1993)
- Red Medicine (June 1995)
- End Hits (April 1998)
- Instrument Soundtrack (1999)
- The Argument (October 2001)
References
- "Fugazi Biography." Worldoffugazi.org. Last accessed January 27, 2012.
- "Picciotto's first name is French, while his last name is Sicilian". Archived from the original on December 31, 2008. Retrieved July 15, 2009.
- Prato, Greg. "Biography: Guy Picciotto". AMG. Retrieved May 15, 2010.
- DeRogatis, Jim (1999). "Emo (The Genre That Dare Not Speak Its Name)". Guitar World. Future US, Inc. Retrieved November 16, 2008.
- Fresh Air. "In Memoriam: Sweet, Sad Rocker Vic Chesnutt," January 7, 2010.
- "Guy Picciotto in Conversation with Howard Bilerman Quartiers Pop, Montreal, QC, September 19". Exclaim!, By Ralph Elawani, Sep 20, 2012
- "Ep: 284 - Guy Picciotto = Guy Picciotto of Fugazi & Rites of Spring joins us LIVE in the studio!". livefromthebarrage.nyc. Retrieved June 22, 2020.
- "FUGAZI: A guitar gear summary". Effects Bay. September 2010. Retrieved February 10, 2011.
- Grow, Kory (November 14, 2014). "Stream Fugazi's Raw 'First Demo' Cassette From 1988". Rolling Stone. Penske Business Media, LLC. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- West, Patrick (July 8, 2011). "Fugazi live, DC, 1990 or so". Flickr. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- Tyler-Ameen, Daoud (December 1, 2011). "Full Disclosure: Fugazi's Best Live Moments, Remembered". NPR. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- Smith, Marceline (2010). "Fugazi: Guy Picciotto". Hee Haw Magazine. Retrieved August 1, 2018 – via Diskant.
- Andersen, Mark; Jenkins, Mark (December 1, 2009). Dance of Days: Two Decades of Punk in the Nation's Capital. Akashic Books. p. 33. ISBN 9781933354996.
- Savage, Emily (January 22, 2013). "Rebel girls". San Francisco Bay Guardian. 48hills. Archived from the original on February 15, 2013. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- Bobbitt, Melissa (January 22, 2013). "Interview - Kathi Wilcox of Bikini Kill". About Entertainment. About.com. Archived from the original on September 20, 2014. Retrieved September 19, 2014.
External links
- Interview from 2001 at Welcome to Flavor Country
- January 1998 interview with Picciotto in Diskant
- Nude as the News interview with Guy Picciotto (October 2001)
- Pitchfork interview with Picciotto
- Picciotto interview on the Morphizm site
- Exclaim.ca September 2007 interview with Guy Picciotto
- Picciotto's 1999 Fugazi Guitar Rig. GuitarGeek.com