Catholic taste
Frank Black gets pissed
Cellars by Starlight by Brett Milano
If you're in Los Angeles and hit the Rhino store on
Westwood, you can probably still grab some of the Pixies collection that Frank
Black used to own. "I traded in
everything I had -- all the boxed sets, the 4AD promotional ones in the wooden
box, all the stuff that I never listened to. I didn't do it for cash, I just
wanted some store credit." Did they at least give him a good deal? "Not really.
Mostly they were trying their best not to embarrass me."
That's about as close as Black's gotten to his former band since their demise,
in 1993. But the real news about his current tour, which hits the Middle East
on Saturday, isn't that he's doing Pixies material again -- which he is, in
limited doses -- but that he's got a new band worth seeing and new material
worth getting behind. That's especially true if you think that he sounds best
working with a guitar band and keeping his songs relatively simplified -- in
which case, you got alienated by the first two post-Pixies albums, Frank
Black and Teenager of the Year. Despite some good tracks, those
showed his songs getting wordier and more obscure, and a certain computer-nerd
sensibility was starting to prevail.
Judging from those albums, you would have expected Black to become a David
Thomas or a Captain Beefheart type, getting deeper into irony and
time-signature changes. Which is why his most recent albums, last year's
Frank Black & the Catholics and the current Pistolero (both
spinART), have been a pleasant surprise. Some fans have griped that he's grown
more conventional; but to these ears, what Black's doing now is a rarer thing:
classic/garage rock for thinkers, music whose wit doesn't get in the way of the
cheap thrills. And it doesn't hurt that he's rediscovered catchiness in a big
way. The first Catholics album has the slight edge songwise, but the new one
benefits from having Boston guitar hero Rich Gilbert replace LA session hotshot
Lyle Workman. In recent years, Gilbert's played tastefully with
singer-songwriters (Steve Wynn, Tanya Donelly) and artfully with his own bands
(Concussion Ensemble, Cornet Premiers). But more than any band he's been in
since the Zulus, this one gives Gilbert room to crank up and go berserk.
"He's an angrier guitarist than Lyle. He's got a messed-up interpretation of
rock, and a lot of the Pixies diehards like that," says Black, who's also eager
to deflect some of the critical knocks Workman got. "Lyle was very California
with a lot of chops; having him was like playing with Eddie Van Halen -- I'd
never played with anyone like that, so we loved it. Some guitar players draw a
lot on '70s metal guitar, and a lot of people are turned off by that, because
that time in rock is forever blacklisted -- people hear that style and say,
`It's bad, it's bad!' Having said that, Rich is great. He's a more East Coast
type; every time he plays a note he's rebelling. He even rebels against us in
our own material. Even when his guitar goes out of tune, he's got that attitude
-- `If you don't like this note, fuck you.' We love that, and the fans do as
well."
"That's a good way of putting it; very insightful of the guy," says Gilbert in
a separate conversation. "I don't know what I'm rebelling against, though --
maybe just the norm. Charles [Thompson, Black's birth name] was a Zulus fan, so
he knew what he was getting. When I play with someone like Tanya, it's more
like playing parts -- her compositions are very solid, so you're working in
that framework. But this is more like having your own band; everybody comes up
with his own parts, and I personally feel that my playing's jumped up a notch
lately."
The two Catholics albums were recorded live in the studio, which explains both
the immediate sound and the fact that they're not on a major label. "Everybody
wanted me to redo it, from my manager on down," Black admits. "People at record
labels have a kneejerk reaction about marketing to radio -- even with somebody
like myself who obviously isn't going to get on the radio." Although he's since
linked up with spinART, he's not inclined to wave the indie-rock flag. "I never
had that attitude about indie-versus-corporate; to me they're all corporate.
There's not much distinction in terms of philosophy -- the philosophy is about
making the most money, which is fine. Certainly, right now a lot of artists
don't want to be anywhere near a major label. They're all caught up in buying
each other out."
Perhaps the biggest surprise on both albums is the number of relatively
straightforward relationship numbers. Unless you count the twisted-sex songs
Black wrote for the Pixies, it's the first time he's approached that topic.
"That's been a conscious move of mine for a few years. I hate to use a phrase
like `development of my songwriting skills,' but you get more comfortable with
certain clichés and parameters and get more confident about stepping
into that well-trod territory. I would have been afraid to do that a few years
ago. It probably started when my girlfriend encouraged me to write a song from
an angry or pissed-off point of view, à la [Buzzcocks leader] Pete
Shelley. There's something about that negative aspect that she felt was
important in terms of connecting with the audience. Some people relate to that;
that's why they feel so good when they listen to a Buzzcocks record."
Still, it hasn't all been negativity: on the first Catholics album, "Do You
Feel Bad About It" was a pretty surprising flash of warmth from the guy who
wrote "Debaser" 10 years earlier. "Right, but look at Meet the Beatles
and the `White Album' -- same band, not that many years apart. They're my first
rock-and-roll reference point anyway, and if they can say `I want to hold your
hand' and then say `Yellow matter custard,' that covers the gamut."
As for Pixies songs, he's now playing two: "Wave of Mutilation" (the "surf"
version from a B-side, not the rocking one from Doolittle) and an
obscure one, "Holiday Song." Both were added on the last tour, after he'd spent
years refusing to play any Pixies. "I was probably just making a mountain out
of a molehill. To be honest, I was afraid of being snubbed by the press or
whoever for daring to do one of my own songs. Especially in England, they think
there's a magic line-up, a magic time, and a magic album, and you can't mess
with that. They didn't want the band to break up, and now they didn't want it
somehow taken away or watered down by me. Obviously, in some people's minds my
entire solo career is this watering down of what I used to do. So for a while I
just avoided it in order not to piss anyone off." When he finally relented, it
turned out to be an anticlimax. "I did it in London, where the Pixies were most
popular, and I had built it up in my mind so much that I was nervous -- here I
am, finally unveiling a Pixies number in my set. And when I played it, the
reaction was like, `Oh.' Half the kids in the audience didn't know what it
was."
SANDMAN TRIBUTE
How many Boston and Cambridge people loved and admired
Mark Sandman? Easily too many to fit into the Lizard Lounge. Sandman was one of
the regular jammers at Club d'Elf, the Thursday-night session hosted by bassist
Mike Rivard. And when word got out that last Thursday's gathering would be an
impromptu tribute, enough people showed up to sell the place out before doors
had even opened. Many of those closest to Sandman were in attendance, along
with a few handfuls of local-music figures and Morphine fans.
Most of the two-dozen-odd musicians who wound up on stage had played in one of
Sandman's various bands; in the audience there were some tears shed and
memories shared. And like all good improvisers, the people on stage drew from
the emotions in the room. Rivard and his core band -- including violin, sax,
tablas, and guest keyboardist John Medeski -- opened the evening with a
lengthy, requiem-like piece that built out of a haunting violin drone. But the
essential spirit of Sandman's music reared its head before long, as Morphine
members Billy Conway, Dana Colley, and original drummer Jerome Deupree found
their way to the stage -- Conway anchored a mighty funk workout that had
Medeski stepping out on Hammond organ. Members of another of Sandman's outfits,
the Hypnosonics, provided the most high-spirited grooves of the night -- like
the man said, a cure for pain. Many of the same players will appear in a more
formal memorial concert that will take place on Sunday the 25th, outdoors in
Central Square, near T.T. the Bear's Place on Brookline Avenue.
ROCKED LIKE A HURRICANE
Local artist, Splashdown manager, and Women of
Sodom leader Cynthia von Buhler got an interesting bit of fan mail lately. Her
Castle von Buhler Web site includes sound clips as well as live photos of the
Women of Sodom doing their B&D thing, and these were much appreciated by
some folks from Germany. "I heart your tapes thru the internet at the first
time -- and it's really graet music -- I know what I mean 'cause I play in
German hard rock band," read the mail. "It's not the way we play Rock but it's
another way to our understanding what life could be and life can tell. Please
go on in your way -- I like it. I hope I can see your band in a while, have a
graet time." And it was signed, "The Scorpions."
COMING UP
Buffalo Tom play a free WFNX show at the Hatch Shell this
(Thursday) evening at 6. Later, Austin eclectics the Asylum Street Spankers are
at Johnny D's, Devo-tees Duty Now for the Future are at Bill's Bar, Dave Alvin
hits the House of Blues, Weeping in Fits & Starts and the Boy Joys are at
the Linwood Grille, and 16 Horsepower and Swizzle are at the Middle
East . . . The Fleshtones, who now apparently include former
Hoodoo Gurus leader Dave Faulker, are at T.T. the Bear's Place tomorrow
(Friday), Mistle Thrush and the Moors are at the Linwood, Roadsaw, Quintaine
Americana, and Honkeyball level the Middle East, Flexie are at Club Bohemia,
Jennifer Kimball is at the Lizard Lounge, and rockabilly's Ronnie Dawson is at
the House of Blues . . . Count Zero is upstairs at the Middle
East Saturday, My Favorite Relative are at T.T.'s, Rick Berlin's new band the
Shelley Winters Project are at the Lizard, and School of Assassins are at the
Sky Bar in Somerville . . . The Belle and Sebastian spinoff
project Looper are at the Middle East Tuesday . . ., and North Carolina songwriter
Danielle Howle opens for Mary Lou Lord at the Middle East.