Showing posts with label Pere Ubu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pere Ubu. Show all posts

Thursday, 30 May 2019

Pere Ubu ‎– Carnival Of Souls (2014)

Style: Alternative Rock, Art Rock, Experimental
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Fire Records

Tracklist:
1.   Golden Surf II
2.   Drag The River
3.   Visions Of The Moon
4.   Dr Faustus
5.   Bus Station
6.   Road To Utah
7.   Carnival
8.   Irene
9.   Brother Ray

Credits:
Bass Guitar – Michele Temple
Clarinet – Darryl Boon
Electronics– Gagarin
Guitar – Keith Moliné
Synth, Theremin, Computer – Robert Wheeler
Drums, Percussion, Electronic Drums, Backing Vocals – Steve Mehlman
Producer, Vocals, Synth – David Thomas

Very few bands display such dedication to constant self-reinvention as Pere Ubu, whose highly methodological madness always seeks new ways of evolving their sound, whilst paradoxically keeping their DNA essentially unchanged. Perhaps only The Fall (who John Peel once famously described as "always different, always the same") can be said to have walked such a similarly fine line over such a lengthy career arc. 
Ubu began performing live soundtracks to classic black-and-white cult films starting in 2002 with Jack Arnold's 1953 science-fiction epic It Came From Outer Space and moving on two years later to Roger Corman's X: The Man With The X-ray Eyes. Given David Thomas's often stated acknowledgement of the influence of Ghoulardi (the anarchic fictional persona of Ernie Anderson, presenter of late night B movies and father of the film maker PT Anderson) in imparting a sense of 'otherness' to Cleveland bands of the 70s, such films could hardly have found a more apt band to underscore them. Indeed, Pere Ubu's inherent sense of inner darkness and use of widely ranging electronic textures–including the classic sci-fi instrument the theremin–made them the perfect B movie house band. The soundtracks were performed with such attention to detail and with such respect for the films in question that they were always hugely successful. 
As an Ubu fan, however, as much as I enjoyed them, I always wanted to hear the band play more than the spaces in the film allowed for–as great as their soundtracks were, I wanted to hear songs. Happily, with the release of the new album, the dichotomy has been solved. The live score for the film Carnival Of Souls was first performed at the London East End Film Festival in 2013, and ideas taken from the soundtrack were further developed and mutated whilst the band were on tour. The album takes the more electronic direction of 2013's Lady From Shanghai further still, towards what Thomas describes as a mixture of Suicide and Kraftwerk, and accentuates the prominence of newcomer Darryl Boon's clarinet in the mix. The result is a beautifully eerie song cycle whose pulsing analogue heart is even darker than the penumbral territories the band usually inhabit. 
In many ways, Herk Harvey's 1962 low-budget shocker Carnival Of Souls is the perfect Pere Ubu source material - a spectral road trip undertaken by an outsider into an increasingly alienating landscape. The other element in the album's stated intent, the "fixing of prog rock" is not immediately apparent, although the 1971 Van der Graaf Generator album Pawn Hearts (which Thomas claims as an inspiration prior to beginning the recording process) is certainly one of the darkest and most tortured sounding examples to be found in the genre, equal parts punk and krautrock in spirit and an avowed favourite of both John Lydon and Julian Cope. Opener 'Golden Surf II' - easily the most direct and rocking track on the album - is something of a red herring in terms of the songs that follow. It's as though the band are saying 'see how well we can still do this', before heading off on another tack entirely. 'Drag The River' contrasts doom-laden bass and booming drums with clarinet and theremin, the woodwind instrument rising crystal clear above the otherwise murky atmosphere. It's a startling combination, a simultaneous evocation of ancient and modern that is used to great effect throughout the album. 'Visions Of The Moon' shimmers and twinkles like starlight over a steady heartbeat pulse before dissolving into chaotically oscillating swathes of electronic sound. 'Dr Faustus' is one of the most far-out tracks on the album, a spooky spoken word piece which finds Thomas screaming 'I am damned' in a way that surely echoes Peter Hammill's 'I know I'm not a hero [...] I hope that I'm not damned' from 'Man-Erg' on Pawn Hearts. 
By the time we get to 'Bus Station', 'Road To Utah' and 'Carnival,' the band are really hitting  their stride. Propulsive, dark and hypnotic, its easy to see these tracks being inspired by the road scenes from the movie, as is aptly demonstrated by the video to 'Road To Utah.' Taken together, these three songs are for me, the highlight of the album and as compellingly powerful as anything Ubu have ever done. Following on from the intense climax of 'Carnival,' which showcases the band at their most driving and machinelike, 'Irene' changes direction once again with a lovely, serenely atmospheric melody. Given all that has gone before, the effect is like coming out of a dark tunnel into a spacious, calm night with a clear open sky. 
'Brother Ray,' the final track, available only on the CD version, is a 12-minute long improvised piece that Thomas describes as a prelude to Nathanael West's 'Day Of The Locust.' An epic exercise in delayed climax, it really hits home when the payoff finally arrives. The vinyl version omits the final track, instead opting for a series of minute-long 'strychnine interludes' made up of stretched out guitar notes, shortwave interference, Thomas reading from 'Last Of The Mohicans' and Morse code spelling out 'Merdre Merdre', thereby referencing both the infamous first word of the Alfred Jarry play from which the band took their name, 'Ubu Roi', and their song 'The Modern Dance'. 
Sean Kitching / The Quietus

Pere Ubu ‎– Cloudland (Remastered & Expanded) (1989)

Style: Art Rock, Experimental
Format: CD, Vinyl, Cass.
Label: Fontana, PolyGram

Tracklist:
01.   Breath
02.   Race The Sun
03.   Cry
04.   Why Go It Alone?
05.   Waiting For Mary
06.   Ice Cream Truck
07.   Bus Called Happiness
08.   Monday Night
09.   Love Love Love
10.   Lost Nation Road
11.   Fire
12.   Nevada!
13.   The Wire
14.   Flat
15.   The Waltz
16.   Pushin'
        Extras
17.   Breath (Alt Mix)
18.   Wine Dark Sparks
19.   Bang The Drum
20.   Bus Called Happiness (Live)
21.   Love Love Love (Cajun House Mix)

Credits:
Bass, Vocals – Tony Maimone
Drums – Chris Cutler, Scott Krauss
Guitar, Vocals – Jim Jones
Keyboards – Stephen Hague
Synthesizer, Vocals – Allen Ravenstine
Vocals – David Thomas

In a press handout that accompanied the original release of Pere Ubu's Cloudland, David Thomas quipped "We'd never been asked to write a pop record before. I guess it never occurred to anyone." Given the sonic Dadaism of much of Pere Ubu's work, what's most startling is not that it took so long for someone to suggest they make a pop record but that they were able to comply so successfully. Stephen Hague, who had previously worked with the Pet Shop Boys, Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark and New Order, produced these sessions, and Cloudland boasts a glossy surface that was unprecedented for Pere Ubu's work; the drums sounded crisp and tight, the songs included traditional melodies and melodic keyboard lines, Allen Ravenstine's noisy punctuations were pushed to the back of the mix, and the harmonies sounded as if they were performed by actual professionals. However, beneath the hipster friendly production, Cloudland remained a Pere Ubu record -- David Thomas' yelping vocal style was as unrestrained as ever, and while the tunes here lack the sharp angles of Pere Ubu's first era, the lateral sway of the melodies is still cheerfully off kilter. Lyrically, Cloudland finds Ubu moving cautiously from their passionate defense of the Midwest's industrial wastelands to a look at the broad plains that lurked elsewhere, as if they were looking for sunnier climes like many other denizens of the Rust Belt and finding many strange, troubling and wonderful things in their new surroundings. Ultimately, Cloudland showed that however much you dressed up Pere Ubu's music, their heart and soul would show through, and that is a very good thing. [In 2007, Mercury Records reissued Cloudland in a new remastered edition created with the input of the band. The new disc includes two non-LP B-sides, "Wine Dark Sparks" and "Bang the Drum," as well as a live BBC recording of "Bus Called Happiness" and alternate mixes of "Breath" and "Love Love Love." David Stubbs' liner notes describe the circumstances behind the making of the album as well as Thomas' lyrical themes on this material.
Mark Deming / AllMusic

Thursday, 16 May 2019

Pere Ubu ‎– Dub Housing (1978)

Style: New Wave, Art Rock
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Chrysalis

Tracklist:
A1.   Navvy
A2.   On The Surface
A3.   Dub Housing
A4.   Caligari's Mirror
A5.   Thriller!
B1.   I, Will Wait
B2.   Drinking Wine Spodyody
B3.   (Pa) Ubu Dance Party
B4.   Blow Daddy-o
B5.   Codex


Credits: Engineer – Ken Hamann Mastered By – Porky Producer – Ken Hamann Producer, Written-By – Pere Ubu Performer – Allen Ravenstine, David Thomas, Scott Krauss, Tom Herman, Tony Maimone


Each time I listen to music, I hope to discover sparkling new sounds. I, therefore hardly ever go back to an older album, and, when I do, it is usually at the request of mates who have dropped in and want me to shut up whatever new crap I'm playing.  
Whether Pere Ubu, the Congos and Television prove to be life long favourites, I can't tell, but since approximately 1978, when I was 17,I have enjoyed listening to their music. Comparing 'Marquee Moon' to 'Heart of The Congos' and 'Dub Housing' only makes sense when you've spent days listening to them. Pere Ubu and Television are contemporaries from the same field, but share with the Congos an eerie, airy feel to their music. 'Dub Housing', Pere Ubu’s second album, is the album of the three that I have listened to the most intensely.  
The opening track 'Navvy' brought back to me when I first heard it memories of Devo , and later on a dance developed out of this this odd ball funk splash. 'On The Surface' , the second song, has always made me sit up and pay full attention as its 60's psycho beat slows down the whole pace of 'Dub Housing'. The foggy mystery and the nocturnal atmosphere of the title track creates and tailors the ultimate straightjacket for Pere Ubu's haunting music.  
Bearing in mind the glitsch music that is made with the 21st century in computers, 'Thriller!', the last track on the first side, was pretty far ahead of its time. Standing next to the turntable,as that young man of 17 or so, waiting for the last scratch of 'Thriller!' to be over, I felt compelled to sway to its distorted beats. After having quickly flipped the LP over, I would then settle down and start sipping a beer or scotch. At that time I couldn't possibly think of anything more pleasant than listening to the second side of 'Dub Housing'.  
Occasionally I would feel sorry that Pere Ubu never invited Captain Beefheart along to their recording sessions.I would try to imagine Pere Ubu doing those skizzo Ubu dances on a stage. On stage Pere Ubu were the next Magic Band, and frontman and singer David Thomas would put up a show that would need several cameras to catch it all.  
Yet, as I was at home, alone or with friends, 'Dub Housing' always forced me into the grey zone of indecisiveness. Should I stay or should I go? '(Pa) Ubu Dance Party' would give me the necessary push to go to the front door, but then I’d have go back to check the next track after it. 'Blow Daddy-o', which follows, was a slice of disorientation that in contrast pinned me down to my chair.  
I tried to imagine Captain Beefheart proclaiming 'Blow Daddy-o' , before ending up bewildered by 'Codex', the final track, which has David Thomas backing a Beach Boys style track at 16 rounds per minute.  
Even when I played many records at the wrong speed - by intention - I never did so with 'Dub Housing' by Pere Ubu. Respect due. 
Maarten Schiethart / Penny Black Music

Tuesday, 24 July 2018

Pere Ubu ‎– 20 Years In A Montana Missile Silo (2017)

Style: Alternative Rock, Avantgarde, Art Rock
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Cherry Red

Tracklist:
01.   Monkey Bizness
02.   Funk 49
03.   Prison Of The Senses
04.   Toe To Toe
05.   The Healer
06.   Swampland
07.   Plan From Frag 9
08.   Howl
09.   Red Eye Blues
10.   Walking Again
11.   I Can Still See
12.   Cold Sweat

Credits:
Bass – Michele Temple
Clarinet – Darryl Boon
Drums – Steve Mehlman
Guitar – Gary Siperko, Keith Moliné
Mastered By – Nick Watson
Steel Guitar – Kristof Hahn
Synth, Theremin – Robert Wheeler
Synth – Gagarin
Vocals – Roshi (tracks: 11)
Vocals, Producer – David Thomas
Written-By – Pere Ubu

The fact that Pere Ubu has been flying under the radar for the majority, if not the entirety, of the band's career is at the same time surprising and somewhat expected. Retaining an excellent balance between the sound that defined the late '70s to mid-'80s, in new wave and post-punk, and at the same time layering that foundation with avant-garde augmentations, Pere Ubu is not a very easy band to follow. Aspects of musique concrete and krautrock notions living beside blues and garage rock is a strange mix, no matter how successful Pere Ubu was in nailing the bizarre cocktail. 
Revolving around main man, vocalist David Thomas, the line-up of the band has constantly been changing, but that is not something that has slowed the band's prolific output. Since its inception back in the mid-'70s, Pere Ubu has remained active and is about to release its 16th full-length in 20 Years in a Montana Missile Silo, following the highly bizarre, even by the band's standards, Carnival of Souls. The band's 2014 album was a tour de force of experimental rock, diving headfirst into the avant-garde depths and unearthing a terrifying gem of a record. Tracks like the mysterious “Doctor Faustus” and the colossal “Brother Ray” are some of the most compelling material the band has ever released. 
In that respect 20 Years in a Montana Missile Silo does not share the same dark, exploratory sense of its predecessor. Still elements of that quality exist, as in “Plan From Flag 9”, which is based on samples and minimal instrumentation accommodating a spoken word-like performance by Thomas. Always retaining this off-kilter essence, alongside an almost sadistic view towards structure, as the track reaches the promise of a crescendo that never arrives, Pere Ubu still display this intricacy when it comes to compositions. The mysterious and mesmerizing tonality of “I Can Still See” is another moment of this hypnotic experimentalism, as it slowly puts you under Pere Ubu's spell and drags you in the band's realm. 
The majority of the record, however, focuses on establishing Pere Ubu's vision of its original influences. The manner in which the record kicks things off with “Monkey Bizness” is an astounding example of the act's surf rock mutation. The tone is vibrant, and there is something electrifying about Pere Ubu when the band explores the standard rock form and interprets it through hooking choruses and bombastic verses, as they appear in “Red Eyes Blues” and the '70s rock-influenced “Swampland”. Similar is the scope of the blues influence, in the garage driven “Funk 49” and the typical blues progression of “Howl” and “Walking Again”. All these moments are reinterpreted by Pere Ubu, crafting a psychedelic driven, experimental take on each genre, where the background is altered by projecting avant-garde notions, through the strange synth sounds. That is particularly effective in the album's “power ballad”, the fantastic “The Healer” which through its surreal context brilliantly exposes both the adventurous spirit and the sentimental underbelly of Pere Ubu. 
20 Years in a Montana Missile Silo displays a side of Pere Ubu that is more familiar than Carnival of Souls. Taking a step back, the band manages to tangle all the aspects that make its music so enticing and driven, may it be surf rock riffs and blues rhythms, or experimental sonic manipulation and avant-garde thinking. The short duration of the tracks, about three minutes on average, and the fantastic guitar performances enhance the experience, enriching the various twists and turns Pere Ubu travels.
Spyros Stasis / popMATTERS