Kill Tunes

Kill Tunes is the second album by the American indie rock band Leaving Trains. It was released in 1986 via SST Records. The band supported the album with a North American tour.

Production
"Private Affair" is a cover of a song by the Saints. Kill Tunes is the last album on which the Hofer brothers played. "10 Generations" addresses themes of authenticity and selling out.

Critical reception
Trouser Press wrote that frontman Falling James Moreland "displays his boozehound-next-door humor for the first time on “A Drunker Version of You,” and it provides a welcome respite from the vitriol sprayed elsewhere." The Los Angeles Times thought that "it's one narrow line between convoluted and eclectic, and Leaving Trains walks it, bends it and ties it into knots." The Reno Gazette-Journal determined that "the guitar attack is reminiscent of the Clash in their heyday."

Robert Palmer, in The New York Times, declared: "The album title is apt; Mr. Moreland writes the songs, then the band assaults them with well-placed jabs, hard riffing, chaotically celebratory vocals and sheer energy"; Palmer later listed Kill Tunes as the third best album of 1986. The Providence Journal opined that "Kill Tunes does smack of revival, but not of stale rehash."

AllMusic wrote that "the album mixes soft ballads, high-octane rave-ups, and furious rock played with endearing jangle, roaring bar chords, and catchy pop hooks." Spin listed the album as one of the 80 "excellent" underground rock albums of the 1980s.