Prior to its release, the working title for the album was Sign of the Beefcarver, named after a restaurant in Detroit.[8]
The album was released by Metropolis Records on October 20, 2009.[9] A music video for the album's opening track, Body Shot, was released earlier in the same month.[10]
The cross-stitch cover art for KILL was produced by Detroit artist/writer Shannon McCarthy.[11]
"The Newark Airport Boogie" was included on a charity fund-raising album, The Haiti Project, which was released to raise money to aide relief efforts related to the 2010 Haiti earthquake.[13] Other artists on this release included The Wildhearts and Eureka Machines.[14]
A demo version of "White Eyes" was subsequently made available online via the band's SoundCloud page after, initially, being announced for inclusion on their Mimicry and Memories album but later being omitted.[15][16]
Dick Valentine recorded an acoustic version of "Steal Your Bones" for his solo album Quiet Time.[17]
Demos of "Waste of Time and Money", "Rubbin' Me the Wrong Way" and "I Belong in a Factory" were subsequently released on The Dick Valentine Raw Collection.[18]
The band performed a stripped-down version of "Steal Your Bones" on their third live album Chill Out!.[19][20]
^Kill is no great departure, but their sense of mischief and their genuine, Killers-esque power ensures staleness is kept at bay, while The Newark Airport Boogie (not their first airport tribute, incidentally) is bouncier than a spacehopper. [Feb 2010, p. 104]
^Modell, Josh (October 7, 2009). "Electric Six, 'Kill' (Metropolis)". Spin. Archived from the original on October 9, 2009. Retrieved March 23, 2025.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)