The Borneo Post

Pixies return as full band with heads in absurd

-

NEW YORK: They used to sing about slicing up eyeballs; now they’re carrying severed heads. The Pixies, pioneers of alternativ­e rock, have returned as a full band and with a renewed surrealism.

“Head Carrier,” which comes out on Friday, is only the sixth studio album by the undergroun­d icons who went on hiatus at their height in the early 1990s.

Yet the Pixies’ reunion was marred by the departure in 2013 of bassist Kim Deal who had long had a tense relationsh­ip with frontman Black Francis.

On “Head Carrier,” the Pixies bring back their earlier energy levels — and also fi nd a missing element, a female voice, in the form of Argentine-born bassist Paz Lenchantin who has formally joined the band after temporaril­y replacing Deal on tour.

Lenchantin interjects the occasional dulcet vocal line on “Head Carrier,” balancing the harder- edged Black Francis as the Pixies unleash their signature rapid-fi re bursts of surfer rock.

“Three dudes and a girl — that has always been our presentati­on emotionall­y and we’ve got back to that now,” Black Francis told AFP.

He indirectly acknowledg­ed criticism of the band’s last album, 2014’s “Indie Cindy,” which came after Deal’s departure and a full decade after the Pixies reunited to tour, raising massive expectatio­ns over whether the band still had the same creative spark.

“I stand by it. I think ‘ Indie Cindy’ is a good record. It represents what was happening to the band at the time,” said Francis, who performed as Frank Black during the Pixies’ downtime.

“We could have tried to stuff some woman in there and said, ‘Okay, we have a new Kim Deal,’ but that would have been so artificial because we didn’t have our Kim Deal at the time,” he said.

Rocking about decapitate­d saint

Originally from Boston, the Pixies initially found their strongest following in Britain and continenta­l Europe — where they will start their tour for “Head Carrier.”

But the band also laid the groundwork for the US alternativ­e music boom in the early 1990s as Nirvana in particular took inspiratio­n in the Pixies’ rough- around-the- edges guitar and lyrical abstractio­n.

“Debaser,” one of the band’s most famous songs, drew from Salvador Dali’s surrealist fi lm “Un Chien Andalou” with its imagery of slicing an eyeball with a razor.

On the title track of “Head Carrier,” Francis references Saint Denis, the patron saint of Paris, a Christian martyr who according to legend would still preach after execution by carrying his severed head. “A threeh e a d e d monster cut D e n ny ’ s head right off / You can’t be too chill, you can’t be too zen / I’m going down the drain again,” Francis sings.

Saint Denis tangential­ly ties the album together with the later track “Plaster of Paris,” with Francis drawn by how plaster was fi rst manufactur­ed in the neighborho­od of Montmartre -where Denis met his death.

Let the surrealism flow

Letting the music drive the songs, Francis turns to an onomatopoe­ia- driven neologism on the album’s fi rst single “Um Chagga Lagga.” “Um chagga lagga on the side of the road / Um chagga lagga in the La ng ue do c ,” he sings, referring the winegrowin­g region of southern France.

Francis steps back from the surrealism at times on “Head Carrier” as on “All I Think About Now.” With a guitar calling to mind the Pixies’ classic “”Where Is My Mind?”, the song is a lyrical thank-you to Deal, also known for her band The Breeders.

Francis said he found the lyricism most “magical” when the imagery flowed freely.

“Sometimes when I’m writing a song I really feel so strongly about the poetry, in the sense that it is supposed to follow a surrealist, subconscio­us kind of thread, that I’m not fi ghting it, I’m going along with it,” Francis said.

He said the key was to keep the subject in focus — but only just.

“You have to say the song that you’re dealing with here deals with Saint Denis of Paris,” he gave as an example.

“And even though we may not understand the song instantly when it goes by, empiricall­y anyway, there has to be an attempt to kind of go — See, one plus one plus one plus one sort of equals four. “Maybe it only adds up to three because it’s too damn crypt ic. But there’s an attempt there.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Joey Santiago ( left to right), Francis and David Lovering of the Pixies pose after an interview on Nov 9, 2013. — Reuters file photo
Joey Santiago ( left to right), Francis and David Lovering of the Pixies pose after an interview on Nov 9, 2013. — Reuters file photo
 ??  ?? Harry Styles
Harry Styles

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia