Rites of Spring
Rites of Spring was an American punk rock band from Washington, D.C., formed in spring 1984 and disbanded in winter 1986.[1] The band, consisting of vocalist and guitarist Guy Picciotto, guitarist Eddie Janney, bassist Mike Fellows, and drummer Brendan Canty, is widely regarded as a pioneer of the emo and post-hardcore genres due to their emotionally charged lyrics, dynamic song structures, and intense live performances.[2] Active during the mid-1980s D.C. hardcore scene, Rites of Spring played a key role in the 1985 Revolution Summer movement, a series of shows organized to revitalize punk's energy and inclusivity.[2] They released a self-titled debut album and the EP All Through a Life on Dischord Records, performing only about 37 shows before breaking up.[1] The band's name was inspired by Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring. Despite their short tenure, Rites of Spring influenced subsequent acts in emo and post-hardcore, with members later forming bands like Fugazi and One Last Wish.[2]Formation
Origins
Rites of Spring formed in 1984 in Washington, D.C., emerging from the local hardcore punk scene as a collaboration among musicians seeking to evolve beyond the genre's established norms.[1] The band was initiated by vocalist and guitarist Guy Picciotto, bassist Mike Fellows, and drummer Brendan Canty, who had previously played together in the short-lived hardcore group Insurrection; Canty had earlier drummed in Deadline, while Fellows contributed to various D.C. outfits including Government Issue.[2] Guitarist Eddie Janney, recruited soon after, brought experience from earlier bands such as Skewbald/Grand Union and Faith.[2][3] The mid-1980s D.C. punk scene, centered around Dischord Records and influenced by pioneering acts like Minor Threat, had fostered a vibrant but increasingly rigid hardcore community characterized by aggressive mosh-pit dynamics and confrontational energy.[2] Rites of Spring's founders were motivated by a desire to transcend this violence and machismo, drawing on the scene's DIY ethos while exploring more emotional and melodic expressions that prioritized personal introspection over physical antagonism.[2] Initial rehearsals took place among this tight-knit group of friends, focusing on crafting songs that captured themes of renewal and emotional urgency. The band's name was inspired by Igor Stravinsky's 1913 ballet The Rite of Spring, evoking ideas of rebirth and seasonal transformation in the context of punk's potential for positive change.[1] The group debuted live on January 28, 1985, at the Wilson Center in Washington, D.C., marking their entry into the local circuit and contributing to the momentum of Revolution Summer, the 1985 movement they helped catalyze through innovative performances.[4]Revolution Summer Involvement
Revolution Summer emerged in June 1985 as a pivotal initiative within the Washington, D.C. punk scene, organized by Amy Pickering, a Dischord Records employee, along with Chris Thomson and others through fliers distributed via the Neighborhood Planning Council.[5][6] The movement sought to transform hardcore punk by promoting less violent, more positive expressions of the genre, emphasizing all-ages shows to broaden accessibility and greater female involvement to counter the scene's prevailing machismo and exclusionary tendencies.[5][2] This shift aimed to foster emotional vulnerability and political activism, moving away from the aggression that had dominated earlier iterations of D.C. hardcore.[7] Rites of Spring played a central role in igniting Revolution Summer's momentum, emerging from the broader D.C. scene with their formation in 1984.[1] Their breakthrough performance on June 14, 1985, at the Chevy Chase Community Center exemplified the movement's nascent energy, where the band's intense, fervent set culminated in an audience sing-along to their closing song, creating a profound sense of shared renewal.[5][6] Over the course of the summer, Rites of Spring delivered approximately 15 shows characterized by explosive passion and equipment-destroying fervor, which helped redefine punk's emotional core and inspired a wave of communal intensity.[1][2] The band collaborated closely with fellow Dischord acts like Embrace and Beefeater, sharing bills that amplified Revolution Summer's collective spirit and promoted a punk ethos centered on emotional depth rather than aggression.[5][7] These events embodied the movement's manifesto-like call for "truth and communion," as articulated by participants, emphasizing authentic connection and possibility over superficial entertainment.[6] Through such efforts, Rites of Spring contributed to a more inclusive scene that encouraged vulnerability and activism, influencing subsequent bands and sustaining the D.C. punk community's evolution.[2][1]Career
Live Performances
Rites of Spring performed a total of 19 shows between 1985 and 1986, with the vast majority—16—taking place in their hometown of Washington, D.C., and only three occurring outside the area in New York and Philadelphia.[8] This limited touring schedule stemmed from the band's short lifespan and lack of a robust national punk infrastructure at the time, preventing any full U.S. tour.[2] The scarcity of performances enhanced the band's mythic reputation within the D.C. punk scene, where their appearances became highly anticipated events that embodied the emotional intensity of Revolution Summer.[8] The band's live shows were characterized by a signature chaotic energy, driven by vocalist and guitarist Guy Picciotto's raw, impassioned delivery and frequent stage dives into the crowd, creating an atmosphere of urgent catharsis.[9] Audiences often responded with profound emotional engagement, including communal sing-alongs and instances of weeping, as the performances served as public purges of personal turmoil reflected in the lyrics.[10] This visceral interaction distinguished Rites of Spring from earlier hardcore acts, fostering a sense of shared vulnerability rather than aggression.[2] Key venues in D.C. included the iconic 9:30 Club, where the band delivered multiple high-energy sets, such as their June 21, 1985, performance featuring tracks like "Drink Deep" and "End on End," and the Wilson Center, a hub for the local punk community.[11][12] They frequently shared bills with fellow D.C. acts like Gray Matter, amplifying the collaborative spirit of the scene during shows at spaces such as Food for Thought.[13] These performances, though brief in number, solidified Rites of Spring's influence through their raw execution and the devoted reactions they elicited from fans.Recordings
The Rites of Spring's initial recording effort was a six-song demo taped in April 1984 at Inner Ear Studios in Arlington, Virginia, engineered by Don Zientara and produced by Ian MacKaye, shortly before the band played its first live show.[14] Intended to generate interest from potential labels, the demo featured early versions of tracks that would later appear on the band's official releases, capturing the group's nascent intensity in a raw, unpolished form without commercial distribution at the time.[15] The band's self-titled debut album, released in June 1985 on Dischord Records, consisted of twelve tracks recorded in February 1985 at Inner Ear Studios, with production handled by Ian MacKaye and Mike Hampton.[16] The sessions emphasized a minimalist approach, with the four members positioned in a single small room facing one another, no isolation between instruments, and the music tracked live in one take in the dark under a strobe light to foster an authentic, unadorned sound that mirrored the visceral energy of their live performances.[17] MacKaye's involvement, drawing from his experience with Minor Threat, prioritized capturing the band's emotional immediacy over polished production techniques.[18] Following the album's release, the band returned to Inner Ear Studios in January 1986 to record what became their final studio output, the All Through a Life EP, issued on Dischord in 1987 after the group's disbandment.[19] Co-produced by the band and Ian MacKaye, the EP maintained the same stripped-down ethos as the debut, focusing on direct, emotive performances that extended the themes of urgency and introspection explored in their prior work.[20]Disbandment
Breakup
Rites of Spring disbanded in January 1986, after a brief but intensely creative period spanning roughly 20 months since their formation in spring 1984. The band's dissolution came amid growing internal exhaustion, stemming from the unrelenting emotional demands of their performances, which required full cathartic release each time to meet the high expectations set by their revolutionary sound and Revolution Summer ethos. Bassist Mike Fellows quit the band, citing a lack of desire to continue, which precipitated the breakup; there were no dramatic interpersonal conflicts beyond this natural burnout from the rapid pace of their artistic output and the unsustainable intensity of maintaining such vulnerability on stage.[1][21][2] Their final show took place on December 20, 1985, at the 9:30 Club in Washington, D.C., a venue central to the local scene, though it reportedly felt lackluster compared to their peak moments. As vocalist and guitarist Guy Picciotto later reflected on the band's dynamic, the relentless need for "massive, killer catharsis" in every performance left little room for sustainability, likening the experience to one that burned brightly but could not endure long-term. This sentiment underscored the group's short lifespan, during which they played only about 15 shows despite their profound influence.[6][21][2] The timing aligned closely with the completion of recording sessions for their EP All Through a Life in January 1986, which experimented with cleaner production but ultimately felt anticlimactic to the members, exposing vocal rawness without the usual distortion buffer.[21] This project marked the end of their collective work, prompting a pivot toward individual explorations as the musicians sought fresh outlets for their energies. Picciotto has described this phase as an inevitable transition, where the band's explosive creativity naturally fragmented into new directions.[21]Immediate Aftermath
Following the band's dissolution in early 1986, driven by the physical and emotional exhaustion from their intense live performances and the weight of high expectations within the D.C. punk community, Rites of Spring quickly saw a posthumous release that capped their recorded output.[2] The EP All Through a Life, featuring two tracks recorded in January 1986 at Inner Ear Studios, was issued in 1987 by Dischord Records as catalog number 22.[19] Produced by Ian MacKaye and the band, it served as a final statement of their raw, emotive sound, with songs like the title track exploring themes of introspection and continuity amid personal turmoil.[22] In the immediate wake of the split, core members Guy Picciotto, Eddie Janney, and Brendan Canty pivoted to new collaborations that echoed Rites of Spring's experimental ethos. Formed in mid-1986, One Last Wish—comprising those three members, with Janney shifting to bass—debuted with a handful of shows and recorded a full album in November 1986 at Inner Ear Studios, though it remained unreleased until 1999 due to the group's swift disbandment after mixing. By spring 1987, all four original members reunited under the name Happy Go Licky, a short-lived project that emphasized improvisation and tape loops over punk structures, performing a limited run of shows in the D.C. area before dissolving later that year. These endeavors reflected the musicians' drive to evolve beyond burnout while retaining the vulnerability and intensity that defined their prior work.[23] Dischord Records played a pivotal role in safeguarding the band's legacy from the outset, archiving master tapes and live recordings that fueled early fan circulation. The band's 1985 Six Song Demo, initially shared informally among D.C. punks, became a notorious bootleg in the late 1980s, circulating on cassettes and fostering a sense of mythic lore around their ephemeral existence.[2] This preservation effort, led by label founder Ian MacKaye, ensured that unreleased material like live sets and demos remained accessible to the community, preventing total obscurity despite the lack of commercial distribution.[1] The breakup exacted a notable emotional toll on the Washington, D.C. punk scene, where Rites of Spring had been a cornerstone of the 1985 Revolution Summer—a period of heightened activism, inclusivity, and emotional depth in hardcore music. Fans and peers mourned the loss of their visceral energy, which had symbolized a shift away from aggression toward personal revelation, leaving a void in local venues like the 9:30 Club.[2] Yet, the momentum of Revolution Summer persisted without them, as Dischord-supported acts such as Beefeater and Fire Party carried forward the emphasis on lyrical honesty and communal support, sustaining the scene's evolution into more diverse expressions of punk.[5]Musical Style and Themes
Sonic Elements
Rites of Spring's sonic palette fused the blistering speed of hardcore punk with melodic flourishes and abrupt dynamic shifts, creating a volatile intensity that distinguished them from their peers. Tracks like "Spring" exemplify this approach, surging at around 124 BPM with rapid-fire guitar riffs that alternate between frenetic aggression and brief, evocative pauses, building tension through sudden accelerations and decelerations.[24] This interplay of pace—fast and furious in verses, lush and atmospheric in bridges—evoked a sense of urgency without relying on relentless uniformity, marking a pivotal evolution in post-hardcore sound.[25] Central to their innovation was the dual guitar work of Guy Picciotto and Edward Janney, whose lines wove together in complex, dissonant patterns, often incorporating feedback to heighten emotional tension. In songs such as "For Want Of," their interplay features droning, bittersweet major-key riffs that clash against minor harmonies, producing a ragged yet melodic texture that avoids straightforward punk simplicity.[26] This experimentation with dissonance and layered guitars departed from the minimalism of straight-edge hardcore, embracing post-hardcore's emphasis on structural complexity and sonic depth.[27] Brendan Canty's drumming provided a propulsive backbone, characterized by precise, busy patterns that infused punk rhythms with an uncommon groove and textural variety. His style featured intricate breakdowns and fills, as heard in the All Through a Life EP tracks, where drum accents punctuate guitar shifts to maintain forward momentum without overwhelming the arrangement.[28] Complementing this, Mike Fellows' bass lines drove the music with booming, danceable low-end emphasis, prioritizing rhythmic drive over virtuosic flourishes—evident in "Spring," where his steady pulses anchor the guitars' chaos and underscore dynamic transitions.[29] Together, these elements crafted a sound of controlled intensity, influencing post-hardcore's shift toward experimentation while retaining punk's raw energy.[30]Lyrical Content
The lyrics of Rites of Spring, primarily penned by vocalist and guitarist Guy Picciotto, center on confessional and introspective explorations of personal renewal, loss, and vulnerability, marking a departure from the more outward-focused aggression of contemporary hardcore punk. These themes often delve into the emotional turbulence of relationships and self-discovery, providing a raw outlet for inner turmoil that resonated deeply with listeners seeking catharsis amid personal struggles. For instance, the track "For Want Of" captures the ache of isolation and unfulfilled desire, portraying the protagonist's futile attempts to escape haunting memories through imagery of choking on the past and yearning for connection.[31][32] Picciotto's lyrical style employs abstract and metaphorical language, frequently drawing on seasonal motifs like spring to symbolize rebirth and transformation, while steering clear of explicit political commentary in favor of personal introspection. This approach infuses the words with poetic ambiguity, allowing universal emotional truths to emerge without didactic specificity, as seen in lines evoking cyclical change and emotional awakening across songs like "Spring" and "End On End." By prioritizing subjective experience over societal critique, the lyrics foster a sense of intimate revelation, inviting audiences to project their own vulnerabilities onto the narrative.[2][32] In rejecting the macho tropes prevalent in punk and hardcore scenes, Rites of Spring's lyrics emphasize empathy and emotional openness, challenging norms of stoic masculinity through admissions of fragility and mutual dependence. This focus on cathartic release through shared human frailty—such as grappling with grief or the impermanence of bonds—positioned the band as pioneers in expressing unguarded sentiment, influencing a shift toward more humane punk expression. Picciotto's words thus serve as a bridge to collective healing, underscoring the transformative power of vulnerability in art.[2][31] The lyrical arcs are amplified by Picciotto's vocal delivery, which transitions from screamed, desperate verses to more melodic choruses, mirroring the progression from turmoil to tentative resolution in the themes themselves. This dynamic interplay heightens the emotional intensity, with the raw urgency of the screams conveying isolation and the soaring melodies evoking glimmers of renewal.[32]Legacy
Genre Influence
Rites of Spring pioneered the subgenre known as "emo" or emotional hardcore, introducing raw emotional vulnerability, introspective lyrics, and melodic structures to the hardcore punk framework, despite the band's explicit rejection of the "emo" label as reductive and misrepresentative of their intent. Their 1985 self-titled album became a blueprint for this style, emphasizing personal turmoil and dynamic shifts between aggression and harmony that diverged from the era's prevailing mosh-pit machismo. This approach directly shaped the 1990s emo wave, with bands like Sunny Day Real Estate citing Rites of Spring as a foundational influence for their atmospheric, confessional sound on albums such as Diary, and Jimmy Eat World incorporating similar emotional depth and pop-inflected melodies into tracks like those on Static Prevails.[8][2] The band's innovations also propelled the evolution of post-hardcore, particularly through Fugazi, formed in 1987 by Rites of Spring members Guy Picciotto and Brendan Canty alongside Ian MacKaye and Joe Lally. Fugazi built upon Rites of Spring's melodic experimentation by integrating funk grooves, dub effects, and intricate rhythms with punk's urgency, creating a more expansive and socially conscious variant of the genre that influenced acts from At the Drive-In to The Mars Volta.[8][2] Rites of Spring garnered admiration from mainstream rock figures, including Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam, who has cited the band as a key influence in bridging hardcore intensity with broader emotional resonance.[33] As a cornerstone of the 1985 Revolution Summer movement in Washington, D.C., Rites of Spring helped shift the local punk scene from violent, exclusionary norms toward inclusive variants that prioritized feminist perspectives, emotional openness, and collective activism, a legacy that extended to riot grrrl and queercore communities in the following decades.[2][7]Critical Acclaim and Reissues
Upon its formation and activity in 1985 and 1986, Rites of Spring garnered initial underground acclaim within the Washington, D.C. punk scene for their bold, emotionally charged performances and recordings that helped define the "Revolution Summer" movement, a period of artistic and social renewal in local hardcore.[1] Their self-titled album, released in June 1985, was praised for blending raw intensity with vulnerability, marking a shift from traditional hardcore aggression toward introspective expression.[2] In the 1990s, as emo evolved from its underground roots, Rites of Spring's work was retrospectively hailed as foundational, with critics crediting their melodic dynamics and personal lyrics for inspiring the genre's second wave.[34] This acclaim intensified with the 1991 release of the End on End compilation on Dischord Records, which collected the band's entire recorded output—including their 1985 LP, the 1987 All Through a Life EP, and an unreleased track—significantly boosting their visibility beyond D.C. circles and solidifying their role in emo's origins.[16] The compilation's re-mastered tracks highlighted their enduring appeal, contributing to rankings such as #2 on LA Weekly's 2013 list of the top 20 emo albums.[35] The band's influence on emo's emotional core was further underscored in post-2000 critiques, where their music was lauded for its timeless innovation in punk.[8] In 2012, Dischord issued the Six Song Demo, a collection of early 1984 cassette recordings mastered from the original tapes and presented with authentic tape collages, offering insight into the band's formative sessions at Inner Ear Studios.[36] This release, featuring raw versions of tracks later refined for End on End, received widespread praise as a vital historical artifact, earning a perfect 10/10 rating from PopMatters for capturing the group's nascent energy and evolution.[37] By the 2010s, retrospective analyses continued to emphasize the band's lasting impact, ranked second on Rolling Stone's 2016 list of the 40 greatest emo albums for its raw passion and genre-defining blueprint.[38] In 2023, a remastered vinyl edition of the self-titled album was released, further cementing their legacy. As of November 2025, no additional major reissues have followed, but Rites of Spring maintains a dedicated cult following among punk and emo enthusiasts, with their brief discography routinely cited in discussions of the genre's emotional and melodic foundations. Their influence persists into the 2020s, as seen in discussions of emo's adaptation into mainstream pop, with outlets crediting Rites of Spring as originators of its emotional core.[39][2]Personnel
Band Members
Rites of Spring consisted of a stable quartet throughout its brief existence from spring 1984 to winter 1986, with no lineup changes during its active years.[1] The core members were all part of the Washington, D.C. punk and hardcore scene, drawing from prior experiences in local bands that shaped their approach to the group's intense, emotive sound. Guy Picciotto served as lead vocalist and guitarist, emerging as the band's primary songwriter, particularly for lyrics that captured raw emotional introspection. Born on September 17, 1965, in Washington, D.C., Picciotto had earlier involvement in the D.C. scene through bands like Deadline and Insurrection, where he began developing his vocal style and riff contributions.[40][21] As frontman, he drove the band's dynamic performances, often pushing boundaries with his anguished delivery and stage presence.[41] Eddie Janney handled guitar and backing vocals, adding melodic layers to the group's post-hardcore framework through intricate, soaring lines that contrasted the raw energy. A D.C. native active in the scene since the late 1970s, Janney brought experience from earlier bands like Faith, which informed his role in enhancing the harmonic depth during Rites of Spring's jamming sessions.[42][3][21] Mike Fellows provided bass and occasional backing vocals, offering a steady rhythmic foundation that anchored the band's tempo shifts and emotional builds. Born on September 20, 1965, in Washington, D.C., Fellows shared early scene ties with Picciotto, having played together in Deadline and Insurrection; his understated yet driving bass lines were essential to the album's live-recorded intensity.[43][21] Brendan Canty rounded out the lineup on drums, propelling the music with propulsive rhythms that facilitated abrupt dynamic changes and built tension. Born on March 9, 1966, in Teaneck, New Jersey, but raised in the D.C. area, Canty had prior experience in local hardcore acts including Deadline and Insurrection, which honed his precise, energetic style before joining Rites of Spring.[44][21] Collectively, the members contributed to songwriting through collaborative jamming, where all provided riffs and ideas, while Picciotto handled the lyrics; this process resulted in the band's self-titled album being recorded mostly live with minimal overdubs to preserve its visceral quality.[45][21]Post-Band Careers
After the dissolution of Rites of Spring in 1986, vocalist and guitarist Guy Picciotto and drummer Brendan Canty co-founded the influential post-hardcore band Fugazi in 1987 alongside Ian MacKaye and Joe Lally.[46] Fugazi achieved significant global success through an unwavering commitment to the DIY ethos, releasing six studio albums on the independent Dischord Records label, conducting extensive worldwide tours, and reportedly selling over two million records while rejecting multimillion-dollar offers from major labels.[46] The band remained active until 2002, when it entered an indefinite hiatus, during which Picciotto pursued production work and occasional collaborations, including engineering for artists like Vic Chesnutt and the Black Heart Procession.[47] Canty, meanwhile, expanded into film scoring and production, co-founding Trixie Studios in 2004 with director Christoph Green to compose music for documentaries, television, and feature films such as Instrument (a Fugazi documentary) and live scores for silent films.[48] His soundtrack contributions have included work for projects like the Emmy-nominated series The New Americans and independent films, blending his punk roots with experimental and orchestral elements.[49] Guitarist Eddie Janney continued exploring experimental and post-hardcore music immediately after Rites of Spring, co-forming the short-lived but critically regarded band One Last Wish in 1986 with Picciotto and Canty, which recorded the album One Last Wish (released posthumously in 1995).[8] Janney's subsequent projects included stints with bands like Happy Go Licky and Skewbald/Grand Union, where he contributed guitar and production, emphasizing angular, noise-inflected sounds rooted in the D.C. scene.[42] Over time, he established himself as a respected producer and engineer, working at Inner Ear Studios on recordings for artists including Fugazi and recent collaborations such as a 2025 session with Henry Rollins and Ian MacKaye.[50] Bassist Mike Fellows co-founded the post-hardcore band Girls Against Boys in 1988, playing bass on their debut album Goddam (1989) before leaving the group.[51] He maintained a lower-profile trajectory thereafter, launching his solo project Miighty Flashlight in the 2010s, releasing albums like Ooh Look at Me Go-Go Dancing (2016) that fused garage rock, psychedelia, and lo-fi aesthetics.[52] His work as Miighty Flashlight has been praised for its raw, eclectic energy, drawing on his Rites of Spring experience while venturing into independent releases and occasional performances.[8] Despite occasional interest from fans and the enduring influence of Rites of Spring, the band has never reunited, with its members' diverse pursuits in music, production, and media perpetuating the group's innovative ethos within indie rock and beyond.[8]Discography
Studio Albums
The Rites of Spring released only one studio album during their active period, the self-titled Rites of Spring, issued in June 1985 on Dischord Records as catalog number 16.[53] This 12-track LP, running 37 minutes and 32 seconds in total, marked the band's primary full-length statement and captured their intense, emotive post-hardcore sound.[54] Produced by the band alongside Ian MacKaye, the album featured raw, confessional lyrics exploring personal turmoil and emotional renewal, drawing inspiration from the seasonal themes implied in the band's name.[53] Recording took place in February 1985 at Inner Ear Studios in Arlington, Virginia, with engineer Don Zientara overseeing the sessions.[53] The process emphasized the band's live intensity, with many tracks—particularly the vocals—completed in single takes to preserve urgency and authenticity, reflecting their short-lived but fervent performances during the Revolution Summer movement.[55] The initial vinyl pressing was limited and quickly became a cornerstone of the Dischord catalog, distributed primarily through mail-order at $5 per copy.[56] The album's track listing is as follows:| Side | Track | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 1 | Spring | 2:18 |
| A | 2 | Deeper Than Inside | 2:17 |
| A | 3 | For Want Of | 3:09 |
| A | 4 | Hain's Point | 2:09 |
| A | 5 | All There Is | 2:51 |
| A | 6 | Drink Deep | 2:41 |
| B | 1 | Theme | 2:07 |
| B | 2 | Nudes | 2:51 |
| B | 3 | End on End | 2:40 |
| B | 4 | By Design | 3:06 |
| B | 5 | Remain | 2:51 |
| B | 6 | The Insides | 3:07 |
EPs and Singles
The band Rites of Spring did not issue any official singles during their existence. Their sole extended play release, All Through a Life, functioned in a manner akin to a single, serving as a compact, standalone 7-inch vinyl following their preceding full-length album.[19][57] Released in 1987 by Dischord Records as catalog number Dischord #22, the EP features four tracks recorded in January 1986 at Inner Ear Studios in Arlington, Virginia.[19][20] The sessions were produced by Ian MacKaye alongside the band members, maintaining a raw, direct sound consistent with their earlier work.[19] With a total runtime of approximately 10 minutes, the EP was initially pressed in limited quantities, reflecting Dischord's standard practice for punk releases at the time.[58][20] The tracklist includes:- "All Through a Life" (2:27)
- "Hidden Wheel" (2:31)
- "In Silence/Words Away" (3:00)
- "Patience" (2:02)