Motherlode manna
The Pixies live on in Death
by Ted Drozdowski
The double bill looked great on paper: the Pixies and Throwing Muses at Avalon.
Actually the Lansdowne Street club was called Metro then, back in '88 or '89.
And the Pixies had released their Surfer Rosa album a few months before.
Produced by ace noisemaker Steve Albini (who's since worked with Nirvana and PJ
Harvey), Surfer Rosa was a jolt even by post-punk standards. Singer
Black Francis came off as a knotty little spuzzball of rage and tiger wisdom on
tunes like "Where Is My Mind"; the music fused a love of classic pop with a
wall-of-dirt guitar sound that connected the dots from Sonic Youth to John Cage
to the Ventures. It was cool shit.
In fact, the new double-disc Death to the Pixies (4AD/Elektra) still
packs jolts: ghostly backing vocals, sounds that rip through the mix like
passing ambulance sirens, and black-lunged screams that overpower the
microphones into rumbles of submissive distortion. The Pixies' music remains a
perfect soundtrack for a turbulent world in which those coming of age have
fewer opportunities than their parents did. And this collection of 17 of the
Pixies' best studio tracks and a 1990 concert recorded, aptly enough, in the
Netherlands (though "nether regions" is more descriptive of the Pixies turf) is
still cool shit.
But that Metro show -- which should have been a jubilant homecoming for both
Boston bands -- was a nightmare. The muses weren't with the Muses, who put on a
lackluster performance for the 50 or so people that came out. And with so few
bodies in the hall, the Pixies' set was an indistinguishable blood clot of
sound. The too-loud guitars and drums and Black Francis's howls bounced around
the empty room like exploding pinballs. It didn't help that neither band had
really yet learned to control their instruments.
A few years later, the Pixies were on stage and in control at a sold-out
Boston Garden, playing for at least 14,000 more people than had been at the
Metro. Sure, they were opening for U2. But they were playing songs that were
psychic hits, if not exactly the fodder of Top 40. By then "Gigantic,"
"Debaser," "Here Comes Your Man," "Dig for Fire," and "Monkey Gone to Heaven"
had become part of the gray matter of indie-label-rock culture. Those tunes had
gotten airplay in Boston, on college radio, and at the handful of modern-rock
stations that were scattered across the country like a few desert watering
holes.
That was enough. Enough to spark the breeding of hundreds of smart little
twisted bands across the world, including an outfit from Washington named
Nirvana. Kurt Cobain's trio embraced the same soft-verse/loud-chorus dynamics,
skewed personal viewpoint, and sonic dirt that Black Francis, bassist Kim Deal,
lead guitarist Joey Santiago, and drummer David Lovering wallowed in. But
Nirvana tempered the formula with more accessible vocals and a cannier way with
hooks. Nirvana claimed the world the Pixies created in the same way the Pixies
made Sonic Youth's big bang go pop. And for rock, things haven't been the same
since. When you hear Bush, Catherine Wheel, or any number of sleek-and-noisy
modern bands, you're hearing the Pixies' gleeful debris.
If you missed the motherlode, or if you simply miss it, plug into Death to
the Pixies. On the studio disc, you'll hear how the scrubby young
visionaries wove their nightmares into anguished howls like "Tame" and applied
their strychnine wit to the college culture satire "U-Mass." On the live disc
too you'll hear the echoes of their fate, when Kim Deal steps to the microphone
to sing "Gigantic," the song she wrote with Black Francis. Her melodic
instincts part the sea of sound better than Francis's passionate yelps,
foreshadowing how much farther than the Pixies her pop sensibilities would
carry her next band, the Breeders.
Indie bible thumpers may insist it's sacrilege to say that the Pixies, who
dumped fresh fuel on the bonfire that punk started, embraced the classic-pop
past as strongly as they bum-rushed the future. But consider: is Black
Francis's gentle croon through the verses of "Waves of Mutilation" so far from
Johnny Ray? Why didn't the band reject hooks or pound them into a mechanical,
redundant pastiche like Prodigy? (Who aren't half as smart and won't prove
anywhere near as influential.) And why the hell is Joey Santiago copping the
guitar melody from "Purple Haze" as Kim Deal sings the live "Into the White,"
or picking "Pipeline" in the jam-out on "Vamos"?
The reason is that the Pixies knew a good thing when they heard it. As did
Nirvana. What made both bands great is that they knew how to improve upon what
they heard by recasting it in a way that made sense for themselves and for
their time. And, for that matter, still does today.