PIXIES
BIO
The Pixies centred around
vocalist/guitarist/songwriter Black Francis. Born Charles Thompson, he was
often an outsider at school as his father moved between pub
jobs.
Contrary to the themes of some of their songs,
he was never much into the actual beach-surf-sun lifestyle of
California.
As Charles grew up, he learned how to play rock
n roll - learning piano, drums and guitar, and finally taking
bass lessons from an uncle.
He learned to sing from the cousin of his employer
at the time - a rock star in his native Thailand, who told him, Scream
it, Charles recalled in a Sounds interview, scream it like you
hate that bitch!
Charles and Joey had both gone to college with
the intention of joining bands, and were fortunate enough to be roommates
together at University of Massachusetts, the U-Mass from Trompe Le
Monde.
Prior to this, Charles listened mainly to Beatles
and Doors records. Joey introduced him to punk, Iggy Pop and Spiders-era
Bowie.
Much of their first year was spent listening
to music, smoking dope and messing about with guitars.
During one year at U-Mass, Charles' roommate
objected to the way Charles' feet smelled and asked to be moved to a new
room. His new roommate turned out to be none other than J. Mascis. He decided
that Mascis and Thompson should meet as he thought both of them were weird.
Charles talked mostly about the Bible and becoming a rock and roll hero and
Mascis said nothing and left unimpressed. Neither of them at this time were
in bands.
In the second year of his Economics course,
Charles jumped at the chance to go on an exchange programme to a Puerto Rico
university. He had the opportunity to go to Cork University in Ireland, but
preferred to improve his Spanish.
But the Tropics werent all that he had
hoped.
There are probably far worse places in
the world,he told Irelands Hot Press, but Puerto Rico is
weird... because its American!
Its a welfare state so the people
are really screwed up. Theyve got a really bad identity
problem.
Theyre a Spanish-Indian race, but
some of them want to be Indian. More think of themselves as American, and
theyve been, like, on the dole for something like five hundred years...
Man, its just so fucked up!
And because its essentially a Catholic
place - that fucks things up even more. the serious alcohol problems
dont help much either.
Im not trying to put the people
down or anything, but it is definitely a strange and screwed up
place!
The intention of the exchange, as I had said,
was to have developed his Spanish, but he starved for a week as he didnt
have adequate knowledge of the language to open a bank account and cash his
cheque.
His dorm was fifty storeys high, with a majority
of the students being gays and queens. His gay roommate was immortalised
in the song Crackity Jones.
By the following May, 1986, he had returned
to Boston. He had given up on his studies in Puerto Rico, spending more time
in bars that class, and had come to a decision.
He would either go to New Zealand to observe
the passing of Haleys Comet or get around to forming that rock
band.
Joey chose the name of the band. Pixies in Panoply.
Being originally from the Phillipines, Joes native language was Tagalog
and looking at dictionaries for words that sounded good had become
one of his hobbies.
The name eventually became The Pixies and their
drummer was replaced by David Lovering at the suggestion of Kim Deal - herself,
the only person to reply to an advert they placed in a Boston paper... and
she didnt even have a bass!
As a gesture of good faith, Charles gave Kim
$50 towards fare to Dayton, Ohio, to borrow a bass from her twin-sister,
Kelley, who she had played truck-stops with for a time, singing country tunes,
called The Breeders.
Prior to David joining, though, Charles had
thought it a neat idea if Kelley could join as drummer. She didnt want
to play drums.
In July, after only a month of rehearsing in
the Lovering garage, the band began to play out and soon supported Throwing
Muses.
An eight song demo was recorded that year and
comprised of the songs Build High, Down to the Well, Here Comes Your Man,
Ed is Dead, Brick is Red, Weird at My School, Rock A My Soul and Im
Amazed.
All songs, bar Rock a My Soul, would eventually
get rerecorded and released by 4AD.
Here Comes Your Man has a countryish feel and
Ed is Dead is backed by some Jerry Lee Lewis-style piano playing. Im
Amazed has the middle bit that they also performed it live with, but Albini
edited out of the Surfer Rosa recording.
Down to the Well was written shortly after David
joined, and was, in fact, the first song that the four of them rehearsed
together.
At a soundcheck for a gig were they would be,
again, supporting Throwing Muses, they were approached by Gary Smith, a producer
at Fort Apache Studios, who was awed by their performance.
Gary invited Charles around for dinner one night,
and recorded him singing several songs. Gary has done this with other musicians,
and refers to it as his Sing For Your Supper sessions.
He recorded a set of demos with the Pixies on
rented equipment in a few days at Fort Apache during March 1987 and these
are affectionately called The Purple Tape.
Few copies were sent to record companies, one
being 4AD in England, because, they believed what the Muses told them, that
they paid on time.
Eight songs were lifted directly from the tape
and released as Come on Pilgrim that October.
Down to the Well and Rock a My Soul appeared
on the Sounds Waves 3 EP, given with Sounds in March 1988.
I sometimes think we should have worked
on them some more, Joe told Guitar Magazine after the release of Death
to the Pixies, when asked if he would have preferred to have rerecorded the
tracks that eventually made up Come on Pilgrim. But, in a way, its
better as a snapshot. The thing was that we didnt think we were making
an album when we recorded the songs - we were just trying our
best.
Surfer Rosa was released the same month as the
Sounds freebie. It was produced by Big Black/Rapeman Steve Albini at the
suggestion of 4ADs Ivo Watts-Russell.
Albini works on a straight fee, rather than
a cut of a records profits, very often doesnt like the bands
he records and hates doing the vocals (especially the ri ri ri
harmonies on River Euphrates!)
The music on Surfer Rosa was recorded in about
two weeks and the vocals took an additional two days!
The following month they toured the UK and Europe
as support act to the Muses, and were often seen as a double-bill. Sounds
Machine 1 EP, again given free with Sounds, contained a song by each band
recorded from the tour.
The Pixies next recording, The Gigantic
EP, also contained live cuts from the same tour as well as rerecordings of
Gigantic and River Euphrates with Gil Norton.
It was released one month after their first
session for Radio Ones John Peel show.
They toured UK and Europe for a second time
that year, headlining above My Bloody Valentine, with Perfect Disaster making
it a threesome at the Mean Fiddler show.
Several songs from Doolittle were previewed
on the tour, and Surfer Rosa won Album of the Year in Sounds and Melody Maker
Readers Polls.
Gil was the king of overdubbing,
Joey said of Nortons production. He wouldnt just stick
on a bunch of guitars just to get a wall of sound, on Here Comes Your man,
he made me do five overdubs with Mustangs, Teles and Les Pauls. They
werent all going at the same time - they were dropped in very carefully
at the precise moment. It wasnt easy, but it sounded
cool.
Whether it was the better quality of recordings
or just, simply, better songs, Monkey Gone to Heaven as a single and the
Doolittle album were released a month apart in the Spring of 1989 and were
commercial and critical successes for the band.
That Summer I played a tape of Doolittle (backed
with a Stooges compilation) solidly in my car - the album contained the
stupid-pop of Surfer Rosa and the religion of Come on Pilgrim.
Charles was brought up in the Pentecostal Bible-belt
of California. Brought up a Christian only by his parents choice, he
attended Sunday school were he loved the stories of the Old Testament, telling
NME about it in October 1988 he said, Bible stories are great! Everything
you want - sex, violence - its all there... brutal too. The hardcore
stuff would make spicy movies!
It was from seeing folk singer Larry Norman
at a Christian Summer Camp when he was 13 that inspired Charles to quote
him in Levitate Me - Come on pilgrim, you know he loves
you!
I believe that each successive record
release, be it a single or an album, should not only be an exercise in satisfying
all the bands existing fans, Norton told Melody Maker in September
1990, but also attracting a whole bunch more besides.
When we came to doing the Doolittle album,
we consciously gave it a dry, American hardcore sound, which was a step on
from Surfer Rosa.
A 50+ date tour began almost as son as the album
was released. The first show opened with Into the White, a then-unreleased
track, and continued in a similar fashion with some of the shows being played
with songs in alphabetical order of the songs performed, and a London show
in reverse-alphabetical order!
Gigs included a few on the European festival
circuit, playing Glastonbury more for the exposure than the politics of CND
awareness that it raised money for.
Up to this time, Joey had actually been playing
a Les Paul guitar that belonged to Kim. He had originally wanted to play
a Fender Telecaster, but was beaten to the punch by Charles.
In Athens, Greece, Joey, David and Kim took
to riding mopeds, as Charles and his girlfriend, Jean, preferred to see the
sights at a more pedestrian pace.
David and Joey refused to ride with Kim after
she crashed three times in one day!
The American tour followed immediately and was
a terrible strain on the band, being a great relief when it ended in New
York.
A year previously, Kim and Tanya Donelly from
Throwing Muses were in a nightclub and, while terribly drunk, decided to
record the ultimate disco song and retire from the profits.
This was the seed of The Breeders, known sometimes
as The Breeders MkII because Kim and Kelley had played under that name
before.
Breeders is a slang term used by gays for
heterosexuals.
I believe Leslie Langston and David Narcizo,
bass and drums with the Muses, were to have helped out originally, but Josephine
Wiggs, bassist at the time with UK band Perfect Disaster, was brought in.
Kim knew Josephine from supporting the Pixies on a few UK and European shows.
I think David Lovering played drums on Breeders demos at Fort
Apache.
Steve Albini was brought in to produce the record,
bringing Brit Walford of Kentucky band Slint (and later the likes of Palace
Brothers) to play drums.
He was given the deceiving handle of Shannon
Doughton - creating the impression of the band being an all-girl
thing.
The album and a four-song John Peel session
were recorded in Scotland during January 1990.
The album was finished a week ahead of schedule
and they played two surprise shows in London - seen in the audience was Chris
Acland (drummer from Lush), who was claimed to have been Breeders sticksman
at one time.
Josephine shocked everybody when she left Perfect
Disaster. She announced that she would form a band, probably called Naked
Bosom, joined Ultra Vivid Scene for a while, eventually recording with drummer
Jon Mattock of Spiritualised as Honey Tongue.
Sara Worley reviewed their album in RAMS#3 alongside
her interview with Josephine and said, This is the most compelling
album my ears have been graced with for ages. Its nothing really
like Perfect Disaster or The Breeders.
When The Breeders Pod was finally released
it received many positive reviews. The obvious comparison was with the Pixies
material as Tanya was unable to write or sing a lead vocal due to contractual
obligations with Sire, Muses US record label. The plan was that she would
write the following album.
Pod was the perfect followup to
Doolittle.
In early 1990, Charles and Jean drove towards
the US west Coast in a canary yellow Cadillac. He played the occasional show
to pay to furnish his new LA home, and got hooked on the Bill Goodman Radio
Show as featured in Bossanovas The Happening.
Dave was thinking real hard in Jamaica
and Joey went to the Grand Canyon to find
himself.
Bossanova was rehearsed and recorded in LA,
where Charles drove Norton around Hollywood Hills at night, playing him surf
music, trying to get him into the feel of what he wanted to album to be
about.
During one rehearsal the band had to leave their
building do to a minor earthquake.
Velouria was released as a single, then the
Bossanova album, then the Dig for Fire single (the latter being another early
song).
As with all Pixies singles, they entered the
Top 40, stayed for a week, then vanished without a trace.
They again played the European festival circuit,
headlining Reading 1990. They were supported in Europe and Ireland by Pale
Saints and the UK with Barkmarket.
Kim remained in England after the tour to work
on stuff with Josephine, while Charles played three sell-out shows in London
to pay for his return journey to the States on the QE2 (he has had a fear
of flying since the 1989 European tour).
Trompe le Monde was recorded in LA, Paris and
London and was overdue and over-budget.
The song Distance Equals Rate Times Time is
an extended version with new words of the bridge bit from the original version,
recorded back as early as the first demo in 1986, of Subbacultcha, which
also appeared on the album. Build High from the same demo was rerecorded
and put on the B-side of Planet of Sound, which preceded the
album.
Eric Drew Feldman, who has played with Captain
Beefheart and Pere Ubu, played keyboards on the album and became Charles
musical partner, playing keyboards and bass on the Frank Black
albums.
The following Spring they supported U2 on an
American tour.
Bowies Tin Machine covered Debaser and
Tonys Theme in their live set around this time.
Kelley Deal joined The Breeders on guitar with
the Safari EP, where drums were provided by Brit Walford and Jon Mattock.
Kim Deal produced it.
In January 1993, on the eve of the release of
the first Frank Black album, Charles announced the Pixies split. There
had been rumours a few months previously that Kim had left or was threatening
to leave the band.
Frank Black was to have been an album of covers,
but, apart from a Beach Boys tune, ended up being a collection of songs that
Charles had amassed since Trompe le Monde, and, although critically slammed
by the music press, and seen by Charles, himself, as a change of direction,
to me was more of a follow-on of ideas from the last Pixies
album.
Joey Santiago guested on the first two Frank
Black albums and is currently playing with The Martinis with his wife and
David Lovering. David also worked with Nitzer Ebb on an aborted album and
played with Cracker.
Joey and his brothers Bob and Lou played on
Mangled, Steve Westfield's first album with The Slow Band, and Joey also
produced an album for Westfield's original band, Pajama Slave Dancers, who
come from Northampton, MA, and helped give a lot of the U-Mass bands of the
time (Buffalo Tom, Dinosaur, Pixies, etc) their first breaks.
The British music press Pixies attention was
diverted to the Breeders who, with a new drummer, Jim MacPherson, and without
Tanya, who had formed Belly at this time, released The Last Splash album
and the classic Cannonball single.
Apart from tracks such as Cannonball and I Just
Want to Get Along, I thought that Pod was a much stronger
album.
Frank Black has since released a John Peel session
where he did a set of covers, backed by Teenage Fanclub, a live album, appeared
on Top of the Pops with Men in Black (originally a B-side to the classic
Headache from his second 4AD album, Teenager of the Year) and released The
Cult of Ray on Sony/Epic Records in Europe and American Recordings in North
America. I believe he may have actually left American
Recordings.
A Breeders/Amps biography appears in The Breeders Section of this
site.
Reprinted from Rock a My Soul #1 (with amendments and
alterations)
Email me
if you have any other ammenments.