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Reviewer:
Iluvthe80s
Combining
jagged, roaring guitars and stop-start dynamics with melodic pop
hooks, intertwining male-female harmonies and evocative, cryptic
lyrics, the Pixies were one of the most influential American alternative
rock bands of the late '80s. The Pixies weren't accomplished musicians
— Black Francis wailed and bashed out chords while Joey Santiago's
lead guitar squealed out spirals of noise. But the band were inventive,
rabid rock fans that turned conventions inside out, melding punk
and indie guitar rock, classic pop, surf rock, and stadium-sized
riffs with singer/guitarist Black Francis' bizarre, fragmented
lyrics about space, religion, sex, mutilation, and pop culture;
while the meaning of his lyrics may have been impenetrable, the
music was direct and forceful. The Pixies' busy, brief songs,
extreme dynamics and subversion of pop song structures proved
one of the touchstones of '90s alternative rock. From grunge to
Brit-pop, the Pixies shadow loomed large — it's hard to imagine
Nirvana without the Pixies' signature stop-start dynamics and
lurching, noisey guitar solos. While the Pixies were touted as
the band to bring indie rock into the mainstream, they simply
laid the groundwork for the alternative explosion of the early
'90s. MTV was reluctant to play their videos, while even modern
rock radio didn't put their singles into regular rotation. Furthermore,
tensions between leader Black Francis and bassist/vocalist Kim
Deal, who wanted to incorporate her songs into the band's repertoire,
crippled the band's progress. By the time Nirvana broke the doors
down for alternative rock in 1992, the Pixies were effectively
broken-up.
The Pixies were formed in Boston, Massachusetts in 1986 by Charles
Thompson and his roomate, Joey Santiago. Born in California, Thompson
began playing music as a teenager, before he moved to the East
Coast during high school. Following graduation, he became an anthropology
major at the University of Massachusetts. Half way through his
studies at the college, he went to Puerto Rico to study Spanish,
and after six months he decided to move back to the US to form
a band. Thompson dropped out of school and moved to Boston, managing
to persuade Santiago to join him. Advertising in a music paper
for a bassist who liked "Husker Du and Peter, Paul & Mary," the
duo recruited Kim Deal (who was billed as Mrs. John Murphey on
the group's first two records), who had previously played with
her twin sister Kelly in the folk-rock garage band the Breeders
in her hometown of Dayton, Ohio. On the advice of Deal, the goup
recruited drummer David Lovering. Inspired by Iggy Pop, Thompson
picked the stage name Black Francis and the group named themselves
the Pixies, after Santiago randomly flipped through the dictionary.
By the fall, the Pixies had played enough gigs to land a supporting
slot for their fellow Boston band, Throwing Muses. At the Muses
concert, Gary Smith, an artist manager and producer at Boston's
Fort Apache studios, heard the group and offered to record the
group. In March 1987, the Pixies recorded 18 songs over the course
of three days. The demo, dubbed The Purple Tape, was given to
key players within the Boston musical community and the international
alternative scene, including Ivo Watts, the head of England's
4AD Records. Impressed with the cassette, Watts signed the band
and released eight of the demo's songs as the EP Come On Pilgrim
in 1987.
The Pixies convened to record their first full-length album, Surfer
Rosa, with producer Steve Albini, who had pioneered the thin,
abrasive indie-guitar grind with Big Black. Albini gave the band
a harder-edged, abrasive guitar sound, yet the group retained
their melodic hooks. Released in the spring of 1988, Surfer Rosa
earned enthusiastic reviews from the British weekly music press
and became a college radio hit in America; in the UK, the album
made inroads on the pop charts. By the end of the year, the buzz
on the Pixies had become substantial, and the group signed to
Elektra Records. At the end of 1988, the group re-entered the
studio, this time with British producer Gil Norton. Released in
the spring of 1989, Doolittle boasted a cleaner sound and received
excellent reviews, which led to greater exposure in America. "Monkey
Gone to Heaven" and "Here Comes Your Man" became Top 10 modern
rock hits, clearing the way for Doolittle to peak at number 98
on the US charts; in the UK, it entered the charts at number eight.
Throughout their career, the Pixies were more popular in Britain
and Europe than America, as evidenced by the success of the "Sex
and Death" tour. The band became notorious for Black Francis'
motionless performances, which were offset by Deal's charmingly
earthy sense of humor. The tour itself became infamous for the
band's in-jokes, such as playing their entire set list in alphabetical
order. By the completion of their second American tour for Doolittle
at the end of 1989, the group had begun to tire of each other,
and decided to take a hiatus during the beginning of 1990.
During the hiatus, Black Francis went on a brief solo tour and
Kim Deal formed a group with Tanya Donnely from the Throwing Muses
and bassist Josephine Wiggs of Perfect Disaster, naming it after
her teenage band, the Breeders. The Breeders recorded the Albini-produced
Pod which appeared on 4AD in early summer 1990, shortly after
the Pixies reconvened to record their third album with Gil Norton.
More atmospheric than its predecessors, and relying heavily on
Black's surf-rock obsession, Bossanova was released in the fall
of 1990; unlike Surfer Rosa or Doolittle, it contained no songs
by Deal. Bossanova was greeted with decidedly mixed reviews, but
the record became a college hit, generating the modern rock hits
"Velouria" and "Dig for Fire" in the US. In Europe, the record
expanded the group's popularity, hitting number three on the UK
album charts and paving the way for their headlining appearence
at the Reading Festival. Though the supporting tours for Bossanova
were successful, tension continued to grow between Kim Deal and
Black Francis — at the conclusion of their English tour, Deal
announced from the stage of the Brixton Academy that the concert
was "our last show."
While the Pixies did cancel their planned American tour, due to
"exhaustion," the band reconvened in the spring of 1991 to record
their fourth album, again with Gil Norton. Hiring former Captain
Beefheart and Pere Ubu keyboardist Eric Drew Feldman as an auxilary
member, the band moved back towards loud rock, claiming to be
inspired by the presence of Ozzy Osbourne in a neighboring studio.
Upon its fall release, Trompe Le Monde was hailed by some as a
welcome return to the sound of Surfer Rosa and Doolittle, but
closer inspection revealed that it relied heavily on sonic detail
and featured very few vocals by Deal and none of her songs. The
band embarked on another international tour, playing stadiums
in Europe but theaters in America. During the spring of 1992,
the Pixies opened for U2 on the opening leg of the Zoo TV tour;
it would be their last trek through the United States. Upon the
conclusion of the Zoo TV tour the Pixies went on hiatus, with
Deal returning to the Breeders, who releasing the EP Safari later
that spring. Black Francis began working on a solo album.
As he was preparing to release his solo debut, Black Francis gave
an interview on BBC's Radio 5, announcing that the Pixies were
disbanding. He hadn't yet informed the other members; later that
day, he faxed them his statement. Inverting his stage name to
Frank Black, Black Francis released his eponymous debut that spring
to mixed reviews; over the next few years, Frank Black's audience
gradually shrank to a small cult following. The Breeders released
their second album, Last Splash, in the fall of 1993. The album
became a surprise hit, going gold in the US and spawning the hit
single, "Cannonball." Santiago and Lovering formed the Martinis
in 1995; as of 1997, the group had only appeared on the soundtrack
to Empire Records. — Stephen Thomas Erlewine
SOURCE:
AllMusic.com
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