Youth Against Fascism Explained

Youth Against Fascism
Cover:Syyouthagainstfascism.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Sonic Youth
Album:Dirty
B-Side:"The Destroyed Room", "Purr" (Mark Goodier version), "Youth Against Fascism (LP Version)"
Released:December 1992
Genre:Alternative rock, noise rock
Label:DGC
Prev Title:100%
Prev Year:1992
Next Title:Sugar Kane
Next Year:1993

"Youth Against Fascism" is the second single from Sonic Youth's 1992 album Dirty. It was released in 1992 on DGC.

Track listing

  1. "Youth Against Fascism (Clean-Ex Mix)"
  2. "The Destroyed Room"
  3. "Purr (Mark Goodier Version)"
  4. "Youth Against Fascism (LP Version)"

The semi-acoustic "Purr" was taken from a Mark Goodier BBC session from July 20, 1992. A live version of "The Destroyed Room" was previously released on the "Dirty Boots" single under the title "The Bedroom".

Ian MacKaye of Minor Threat and Fugazi contributed additional guitar parts to the title track.

The line "I believe Anita Hill" referred to the controversy surrounding the 1991 appointment of Judge Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court over allegations of sexual harassment from Hill, a former subordinate.

Music video

The music video for "Youth Against Fascism" was directed by Nick Egan. The video was shot in the concrete flood control channel of the Los Angeles River, with the band playing while FMX bikers ride around. Imagery of fascism, Nazism and communism was spliced into the video.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sonic Youth single charts . . August 1, 2014.