(en) Adrien Begrand, « Fun & Games: Killing Joke in the mid-‘80s », sur Pop Matters, (consulté le ), « Punk, goth, New Wave, dance, pop, “Love Like Blood” covers all that ground with astonishing grace. ».
(en) « Killing Joke [2003] by Killing Joke », sur metacritic.com (consulté le ) : « Grohl's pounding presence throughout lifts Killing Joke right back to the savage intensity of their early records.... The best punk album in years. » — Mojo, août 2003, p. 106.
(en) Luke Lewis, « Release The Bats - It's The 20 Greatest Goth Tracks », sur NME, (consulté le ), p. 11 — Killing Joke – Love Like Blood : « Aligning love and sex with blood is a standard goth trope, but Jaz Coleman's lyrics always cut deeper than the usual doomed romance cliches. On this 1985 single, one of the few times KJ ever troubled Top Of The Pops, he uses martial imagery to create a sense of apocalyptic struggle. Most gothic moment : Strength and beauty destined to decay ».
(en) Carrie Borzillo-Vrenna, « Nirvana Pay Back Killing Joke : Dave Grohl drums on U.K. band’s first studio album in seven years », Rolling Stone, (lire en ligne, consulté le ).
(en) Robin Murray, « Killing Joke 2010 Uk Shows », sur Clash (magazine), (consulté le ), One of the first bands to be labelled 'gothic' Killing Joke helped inspire a movement that has travelled across the world..
« Guitarist, UK musician's magazine », Guitarist Magazine, (lire en ligne, consulté le ).
worldcat.org
Laura Hightower et Leigh Ann DeRemer, Contemporary Musicians. Profiles of the people in music : Volume 30, Détroit, Michigan, Gale Research, (ISBN0-7876-4641-5, OCLC51547697), « Killing Joke ».