Guy Charles Picciotto is an American singer, songwriter, guitarist, musician, and producer from Washington, DC. He is best known as the guitarist and vocalist in Fugazi and Rites of Spring.
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. Picciotto's early musical resume includes the bands One Last Wish, Happy Go Licky, Brief Weeds, and The Black Light Panthers, 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, hetook up 2nd guitar duties, playing characteristically trebly Rickenbacker guitars. After seven albums, and several tours, Fugazi went on "indefinite hiatus" in 2003.
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, Misery Is a Butterfly, The Blood Brothers final album, Young Machetes, and Downtown Boys' Cost of Living. Picciotto has produced four albums by the duo Xylouris White: Goats, Black Peak, Mother and The Sisypheans Picciotto played on the Vic Chesnutt albums North Star Deserter and At the Cut, and accompanied him on a 2009 Fall/Winter North American Tour. He co-produced the films Chain and Museum Hours with Jem Cohen. In 2012 Picciotto was interviewed on stage at the Pop Montreal festival by Howard Bilerman about his experiences in the music industry.. On Jan 24th, 2020 Guy appeared on an episode of Live From the Barrage 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.
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 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.
Amplification
Park 100 Watt heads
Marshall JCM 800 2203 heads
Red or Black Marshall JCM 800 4x12 cabinets fitted with 75-watt celestion speakers