| THE PIXIES -
ALTERNATIVE GODFATHERS |

The
Pixies - Alternative Godfathers
In the late 1980's,
the Pixies unique brand of punk, pop and guitar rock
almost single handedly created the alternative music
movement of the 1990's. Their sound served as the
blueprint for a host of new artists including Nirvana,
and were even cited as a major influence on more
established artists including U2 and David Bowie. Bono
called the Pixies "one of America's greatest bands
ever," and David Bowie was such a fan that he later
covered several Pixies songs, remarking "I thought
they were probably the very best band in America during
the '80s."
When asked by Rolling
Stone magazine the inspiration behind the smash
"Smells Like Teen Spirit," Kurt Cobain stated
"I was trying to write the ultimate pop song. I was
basically trying to rip off The Pixies."
The Pixies were formed
in Boston in 1986 by guitarist / songwriter Charles
Thompson and lead guitarist Joey Santiago, who recruited
bassist Kim Deal and drummer David Lovering. It was at
this time when Thompson took on the pseudonym of Black
Francis and the group assumed their name after flipping
through a dictionary. Francis' often brilliant
songwriting employed extraordinary dynamics (they
practically invented that "soft verse/loud
chorus" technique) and vivid imagery, and his
guitar playing was tight and focused, while Santiago's
inventive and highly unconventional melodies were
refreshing amongst the slew of hair metal players of the
day, making him a sort of "anti-hero" guitar
hero.
After immediately
gaining a cult following on the local level, the Pixies
were signed to 4AD Records and released the EP
"Come On Pilgrim" in 1987. The following year,
the Pixies released their first full-length album,
"Surfer Rosa," produced by Steve Albini. This
international success this album brought the group
caught the attention of Elektra Records, who later went
on to release their three biggest selling albums.
In 1992, after the
group released the hard rocking "Trompe Le
Monde" and opening for U2 on their 1992 Zoo TV
Tour, the Pixies announced their breakup. During this
period, bassist Kim Deal worked with the Breeders, and
Black Francis worked under Black's other assumed name
"Frank Black" and Joey formed "The
Martinis" with his wife Linda Mallari. Drummer Dave
Lovering went on the join the group Cracker followed by
a career as a magician opening up for several rock tours
(including Black's).
Like all good rock and
roll breakups, reunions seem inevitable, and in April of
2004, the Pixies reformed for the first time in over a
decade for a world tour, which was later named as
"Comeback of the Year" by Spin Magazine, and
described by Billboard as "wildly successful."
VG had a chance to
catch up with the Black Francis and Joey Santiago as
they were preparing to continue their reunion tour. Both
Black and Joey are big fans of vintage instruments and
were eager to talk to VG about them.
VG: You recently got
back together for your very successful reunion tour,
playing together for the first time in over 10 years -
How does it feel to be playing together after all this
time?
BF: It feels like it
did before basically. No lie. There's a lot of muscle
memory involved in playing music as you know, and when
you go back to old songs, I think muscle memory looms
larger than poignant thoughts. It's a more gut level
thing going on.
JS: It felt good, the
anticipation was very exciting, and when the actual
playing was happening, I felt pretty much like
"just don't f*ck up" (laughs).
VG: Your guitar styles
really are very different yet work well together. When
you're developing a song, do you consciously plan out
your parts or do you just sort of weave your parts
together?
BF: I hate to dumb it
down too much, but basically I'm the guy who just shows
up with the chord progressions, so obviously I'm going
to play the chords, many times chunky as they typically
are in rock music, and he is the "lead guitar
player" so he is gonna play higher and more single
note stuff. Sometimes he does a solo, and sometimes a
repeated riff, a motif. So we start out from a sort of
Joe Blow place…I'm the rhythm guitar player "chugga
chugga chugga" and he's the lead player "reeneeneeneenee"
you can reduce it all to that. That's not to say that we
play in a conventional way, although sometimes we play a
combination of really conventional stuff and oddball
stuff. That's probably true about the Pixies in general.
It sounds kinda normal, but there are subtle oddities
going on (laughs). I would say that Joey is the
"unsung hero" of the Pixies…maybe not now
but in the earlier days, a lot of magazines were
personality driven and they wanted to talk about the
grouchy lead singer, or the drunk bass player, and
what's going on between those two…so our guitar player
got left on the back burner. I think there are several
things that Joey does though that has made his style
stand out. He'll play something that's seemingly very
simple, and his whole subtle touch just sort of makes it
sounding classy and makes it pop out in the song.
JS: Back in the old
days, I'd just record Charles on his acoustic, or the
practices with a cassette tape, remember those things
(laughs). Then I'd take it home and practice, and come
up with my stuff.
VG: How has your
songwriting changed since you started?
BF: When I started out
I was very much into abstraction and very short songs,
and a certain type of surreal thing in my songs. If I've
changed one thing, I've tried to adopt more styles into
my songwriting, like doing some classic things like love
songs or singer-songwriter kind of stuff, trying to
expand. When you're young, you tend to try to be a more
avant-garde type of guy, and when you do it long enough,
you want to go where others have gone before and hold
your own. You're not as embarrassed to embrace formulaic
or highly stylized things. When you're young you're
trying to avoid horrible cliché's and mediocre music,
so the last thing you want to do is "hey, let's do
a country and western song"…you're all about
breaking everything up. You do things for awhile, and
you're less conscious of people thinking your dorky. I
think you learn respect for some of the forms of music
that will live on.
The first Pixies stuff
represents my earliest songwriting, and as they say, you
have your whole life to write your first album, and six
months to write your second, so the first two Pixies
records represent a lot of the writing that started when
I was a young teenager.
VG: How has your
technique changed since you began playing guitar?
BF: I probably have
changed but can't properly analyze how. Its just that
initially I learned so much on the guitar, and then just
didn't try too hard to break out of that, so I've just
learned little things through time and trying things,
like new fingerings. Especially from watching people
that have original styles. You work hard at things like
songwriting or rehearsing for a tour, but really don't
the effort into the learning curve (of guitar technique)…I
just try to let that happen on its own and that's how
you develop your own style. But I didn't start out by
thinking that "I don't think I'll put much effort
into the learning curve so I can develop my own
style" (laughs). I think that Joey practices
though, but I assume he's in a similar boat as I, as far
as the learning curve thing, but he has his own theories
and thoughts that he pursues, as I've seen him do in the
studio.
JS: It hasn't (laughs)…I'm
trying to change it, but I can't! Technique wise, I hope
I'm a little better now…But Charles he's got a style
of his own too…his rhythm playing is to die for, its
really, really good.
VG: When did you start
playing?
JS: I started playing
in junior high, and never really took it that seriously.
But then, around high school, I started gaining more
interested in it. I used to plug my electric guitar in
at parties and we'd all get sh*tfaced (laughs).
VG: To many, your
music was not like anything that came before it, and
doesn't sound derivative of earlier genres. What type of
music did you listen to as a kid, and if so, who were
some of the artists you enjoyed?
BF: I would say that
probably Neil Young's "Decade" album was a
huge influence on me. That was probably the first record
that I heard as a teenager that made me think about the
artist, it got me into a lot of different types of
material and it gave me a good sense of him. Before
Neil, I would say that I was big into Bob Dylan and The
Beatles when I was really young, and Donovan. I was a
huge Leon Russell fan, and still listen to him. I also
used to listen to a lot of Sixties stuff when I was a
teenager. I wasn't really into the current stuff or the
punk stuff that was going on in the Seventies. In the
Sixties, there were these "rock family trees"
and I used to work my way through them. I listened to
Jimi Hendrix, The Doors, John Mayall's Bluesbreakers,
The Yardbirds, and I used to listen to a Christian rock
guy named Larry Norman, whose heyday was the early
'70's, a folky guy that was too rock and roll for
religious people and too religious for rock and roll
people. Truly a cult guy that I was really into.
JS: Oh, the obvious
players, the usual suspects…Hendrix and all that. I
really liked The Beatles too.
VG: Do you remember
your first good instrument and amp?
BF: I had an EMC amp
that worked okay, and played a Guild acoustic electric
through it, which I started playing in high school. This
became my first setup with The Pixies, and played this
for a lot of the early Pixies gigs. That amp didn't make
it too far though…Joey and I were roommates and it
stopped working, so we got an all-metal butter knife to
open it up to see if we could fix it (laughs). And of
course, we couldn't! So the EMC was not revived (laughs)…
Then Joey and I both
got into the Peavey amplifiers which worked out for Joey
but I never could get a good sound out of mine.
JS: The first good
instrument I had, my mother bought for me. It was an
Ovation Viper, remember those? It was a good guitar too,
I must have been just out of junior high. It had the
full 24 frets, and made for someone with tiny hands, so
it would sit in my hands every night, and I liked it. I
tried a more expensive Les Paul and it didn't fit as
well for my hands. For an amp, I got a Peavey Special.
I got my first Les
Paul when we formed the band in Boston. I actually
initially wanted to be the Tele guy, but Charles already
had one, so not to be redundant, I went with the
humbuckers, something totally opposite of what he was
playing.
VG: There is an old
saying (attributed to Brian Eno) that "only about
1,000 people ever bought a Velvet Underground album, but
every one of them formed a rock and roll band".
This statement also rings true for the Pixies, who
initially didn't sell a lot of albums but had in
incredible impact. What was it about your music that
attracted fans?
BF: Oh I don't know, I
suppose enough people found what they wanted to find in
it. In other words, people were looking for something
that was kind of pop or aggressive were able to find it
in the music. Other people who were looking to find
something humorous and not taking themselves too
serious, even a bit nerdy, were able to find that as
well. Some wanted music that was sort of quirky, arty,
dare I say "avant-garde" were able to find it
in our music. I think different types of people were
able to focus in on different elements of the music.
JS: I would just say
that it was unique at the time. I don't mean to sound
like an old fart, but that was when
"alternative" was actually alternative. We
didn't consciously rebel against the norm or anything
like that; I think it was just a natural thing for us to
be alternative. This was in the days of hair metal. I
remember going through Electra Records offices, and
looking at their posters on their wall, and thinking
"they'll really like us"…
VG: Obviously, Kurt
Cobain was greatly influenced by the Pixies and Frank's
songwriting….Did you ever meet him and what did you
think of his music?
BF: It's unfortunate
for that particular band. They were so hot, so fast,
that everybody wanted them so bad when they "made
it." That's just the sort of thing that makes me
not want to listen to a band or makes me not want to go
see a movie. So there's stuff I've missed out on over
the years, because if it's like "everybody's going
to see THAT movie" guess what I'm not going to see?
So I tend to have an attitude problem with things that
become that popular.
VG: So Frank, do you
consider yourself a contrarian?
BF: Yeah, that's a
good way to describe it. I mean, obviously I hear
Nirvana at places like the grocery store now, and they
were good and they were talented and all that, but it's
hard to talk about something that's such a huge band for
so many people. I kind of hesitate to really analyze
their music.
VG: As far as amps,
The Pixies have used Marshalls for years. When did you
first get into them?
BF: We were opening up
for Soul Asylum at the original Blue Note nightclub in
St. Louis, and they had some Marshalls that sounded
really good, so when we got home from that road trip, we
both went down to the music store and bought brand new
Marshalls, and have used them ever since. When we got
bigger, we went with two Marshalls each. I do have some
old Vox AC-30's that I used in my solo band, but went
back to Marshalls when we got back together.
JS: Yes, from that
point onward, we've always used Marshalls, 50 watt JCM
800. Up until that point, I always liked them, but since
we had to lug our own gear around, I was like "what
are you crazy, I'm not gonna lug that big thing
around" so I stuck with the Peavey until we had
some help (laughs) and I thought…"let them carry
them." I really like the JCM 800's, but don't like
the 900's… For the studio, I have a Fender Vibrolux
reverb, a blackface '60's model.
VG: Do you collect
guitars and what do you have in your collection?
BF: I was really into
60's Teles for awhile, and then a few years back, a
bunch of them got stolen. So to sort of
"celebrate", I went out and bought my first
50's Tele, a 1957, which initially felt weird, but
eventually became my main guitar up until last year,
when my brother showed up at a gig in L.A. at the
beginning of the Pixies tour with a 1953 Telecaster. He
just gave it to me at the gig, and it sounded actually
too intense initially…but eventually I started playing
it, and now that one is my main guitar.
As far as other
guitars, in the early days I played a bunch of these
Japanese Fender Tele Specials which I liked. We had a
well known guitar tech, a Japanese guy by the name of
Toru, who stripped them and took them back to Japan, and
dried them out in some sort of barbeque thing, which
made them lighter. He then put vintage style pickups on
them but kept the whammy bar bridge on them but cut some
old style saddles on it, which I like because I like to
scrape my pick over them. I have four of these and for
guitars originally made in the 80's, and I think they
were made for people who wanted to play metal on a
Telecaster (laughs). It's strange, because I could go
back to the Marshall amps, but couldn't go back to these
Teles for the reunion. Nowadays, I just play the'53
Teles, and if I break a string, I'll pickup my '57. They
are very light guitars…
JS: I typically like
Les Pauls because they the easiest guitars (to play). I
have a bunch of them, and my favorites include a black
custom which sounds like your "run of the
mill" Les Paul, and then a nice old goldtop that
sounds super, super crisp. I just bought a '52 Guild
Aristocrat with soapbars on, a very nice guitar that I
am dying to record with. It's less forgiving than a Les
Paul though. One of our crew, Myles Mangino had a great
super light Gibson Melody Maker that I loved and wanted
to buy, but he just traded it for a drumset and I was
like "why didn't you tell me?" I've also got a
1965 345 with a Gibson tremolo bar, that's a really nice
guitar too. I do prefer vintage guitars, they feel more
worn it, and if it's lasted that long, its must be worth
the money (laughs)…I would like a 50's Les Paul
though.
VG: Joey, on the
"Surfer Rosa" record, you got some pretty
amazing clean tones…What were you using on that
record.
JS: In the studio, I
just plug straight into the amps…On "Surfer
Rosa", I was playing a Fender Twin Reverb on that
that Charles used to own.
VG: How about live,
are you using any effects?
JS: Live I do use
pedals, including ZVex Super Hard-On, a DOD wah, a Boss
Fuzz pedal, a tremolo pedal, and an Electro Harmonix
Memory Man, which I love, but it's noisy on stage
depending on the power of the venue, as some places have
very dirty power, and an SMF Mr. Echo, which is also a
fun pedal. VG: Your style alternated from an almost
updated surf rock to extreme hard rock, as on your final
studio album, Trompe Le Monde, in '91. Was that a
conscious move to a heavier sound? BF: We did listen to
a lot of surf music, and we did play loud, but you just
kind of make up a bunch of songs, and they come out like
they come out. We're not real visionary in that sense.
We don't have a game plan. JS: I will play something a
bit heavier if the song is harder sounding. When I did
those hammer-ons on that album, they were sort of a joke…a
metal joke...everyone was just laughing when I was
recording that. VGBF: You just announced more tour dates
today…Are there plans for the Pixies to record a new
album as well?
BF: We don't have any
plans; we're sort of hesitant on that. I think we'd like
to, but I don't think that's what people are interested
in right now. Maybe some of our "uber-fans"
would be, but the general audience isn't interested in
our new songs, they're interested in hearing
"Monkey Gone to Heaven" and that's fair
enough. If we do, it will come natural and because we're
bored with playing the old stuff.
JS: When the time
calls for it, we'll look at it. If there have been
discussions on recording, they have been very casual.
VG: What is in your cd
player right now?
BF: I'm listening to
Burl Ives (laughs)…I listen to a lot of jazz these
days, we hear a lot of '80s' pop stuff on the radio. I
do like to listen to a lot of folk music these days.
There are new groups I like, but I always forget who
they are…must be a passive aggressive thing.
JS: Right now, I'm
listening to Ennio Morricone, and during this last
break, I just got hired to do the soundtrack for a
Showtime pilot, called "Weeds." It's about a
mother that supports her family by selling weed.
Tom Guerra would
like to thank Myles Mangino of Planet of Sound
Productions for his help in setting up the interview.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Tom Guerra has just finished recording Mambo Sons third
album "Racket of Three." For more info, visit www.tomguerra.com
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