For Respect


title: "For Respect" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["don-caballero-albums", "1993-debut-albums", "touch-and-go-records-albums", "albums-produced-by-steve-albini"] topic_path: "arts/music" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/For_Respect" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox album"]

FieldValue
nameFor Respect
typeAlbum
artistDon Caballero
coverForRespect.jpg
releasedOctober 10, 1993
recordedJanuary 1993
genreIndie rock
length37:48
labelTouch and Go
producerSteve Albini
next_titleDon Caballero 2
next_year1995
::

| name = For Respect | type = Album | artist = Don Caballero | cover = ForRespect.jpg | alt = | released = October 10, 1993 | recorded = January 1993 | venue = | studio = | genre = Indie rock | length = 37:48 | label = Touch and Go | producer = Steve Albini | prev_title = | prev_year = | next_title = Don Caballero 2 | next_year = 1995 For Respect is the debut album by Don Caballero, a Pittsburgh-based band. For Respect was released on Touch and Go Records in 1993.

Though Ian Williams is credited on guitar for this album, he only joined the band shortly before *For Respect'''s recording and had little substantial creative influence. As a result, this album is much less orchestrated and complex than Don Caballero's later work. In a 2006 interview with the e-zine *Space City Rock'', Damon Che revealed that he played guitar on some Don Caballero songs, including the choruses of "Well Built Road".

''SCTV''

The album contains several allusions and references to the Canadian sketch comedy show Second City Television:

  • The band took its name from an episode of SCTV in which TV station manager Guy Caballero became a Corleone-esque mob boss called Don Caballero. "For respect" is Guy Caballero's justification for using a wheelchair.
  • On the back cover of the CD insert, drummer Damon Che is photographed sitting in a wheelchair dressed as Guy Caballero.
  • The audio samples in "Got a Mile, Got a Mile, Got an Inch" are all from SCTV. In one, someone asks Guy Caballero "I thought you rode a wheelchair?", to which he responds "Oh, I just use that for respect."
  • "Subdued Confections" is yet another quote from SCTV.

Critical reception

| rev1 = AllMusic | rev1Score = Trouser Press wrote: "Dynamic, driving, distorted and entirely free of indulgent improvisation, the eleven tracks — from the Melvins-like title cut to the ambling spareness of 'Subdued Confections' and the frenzied vectors of 'Belted Sweater' — underscore the value of talent in producing rugged instrumental music that’s really saying something."

Track listing

| title1 = For Respect | length1 = 2:43 | title2 = Chief Sitting Duck | length2 = 2:21 | title3 = New Laws | length3 = 5:54 | title4 = Nicked and Liqued | length4 = 2:41 | title5 = Rocco | length5 = 2:47 | title6 = Subdued Confections | length6 = 2:29 | title7 = Got a Mile, Got a Mile, Got an Inch | length7 = 5:06 | title8 = Our Caballero | length8 = 2:07 | title9 = Bears See Things Pretty Much the Way They Are | length9 = 3:26 | title10 = Well Built Road | length10 = 6:05 | title11 = Belted Sweater | length11 = 2:06 | total_length = 37:45

Personnel

References

References

  1. "For Respect".
  2. "Don Caballero".
  3. Fine, Jon. (May 3, 2016). "Your Band Sucks: What I Saw at Indie Rock's Failed Revolution (but Can No Longer Hear)". Penguin.
  4. (Feb 25, 1994). "Soundcheck". Dayton Daily News.
  5. Earles, Andrew. (September 15, 2014). "Gimme Indie Rock: 500 Essential American Underground Rock Albums 1981-1996". Voyageur Press.
  6. "For Respect Don Caballero".

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