A lot of you folks not getting or not impressed by or altogether not something the Pixies actually do kind of get it: they were both challenging and abrasive and perverse and catchy and accessible. Which is what made them the perfect bridge act from the college rock/Amerindie scene to the mainstream. It's not a coincidence that their relatively cultish career (at least in the US; they were pretty huge in the UK) coincided precisely with what may have been the nadir of American pop, and that mere months after their breakup Nirvana had become the new pop.
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 24 October 2011 21:47 (fourteen years ago)
in the US, it's not like your mom knows who they are. at least not my mom. i don't know, even with the mystique-deflating reunion, the pixies' records still seem to me to among the best american rock records ever.
― tylerw, Monday, 24 October 2011 21:49 (fourteen years ago)
Their whole career was squashed into about 15 months for me. Someone taped Doolittle for me in about May or June 1990, then I bought Bossanova when it came out a couple of months later, then I went backwards to Surfer Rosa in late 1990, then I taped Come On Pilgrim off another mate in early 1991, then got Trompe Le Monde when it came out (Aug? Sep? 91) and didn't like it as much as the others. Then they suddenly split up.
― Mister Potato shares Manchester United’s commitment to (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Monday, 24 October 2011 22:12 (fourteen years ago)
It's not a coincidence that their relatively cultish career (at least in the US; they were pretty huge in the UK) coincided precisely with what may have been the nadir of American pop,
sez you!
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 24 October 2011 22:14 (fourteen years ago)
Says me, yeah, Not one, not two, not three, but four number one Paula Abdul singles!
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 24 October 2011 22:15 (fourteen years ago)
Four!
two of which were terrific!
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 24 October 2011 22:16 (fourteen years ago)
One with an animated cat!
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 24 October 2011 22:16 (fourteen years ago)
(was that a terrific one?)
two steps forward
― do not wake the dragon (DJP), Monday, 24 October 2011 22:16 (fourteen years ago)
there's a great outtake of black francis/kim deal doing "opposites attract"
― tylerw, Monday, 24 October 2011 22:16 (fourteen years ago)
I think my challop-meter is on the fritz.
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 24 October 2011 22:17 (fourteen years ago)
people would have really understood the subversive current of that song if they'd gone with the original name of MC Shit Snatch
― do not wake the dragon (DJP), Monday, 24 October 2011 22:18 (fourteen years ago)
Also: the Brit charts were not by any stretch at their nadir.
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 24 October 2011 22:18 (fourteen years ago)
I said American pop, dude. No broadening the pool.
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 24 October 2011 22:19 (fourteen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1W6-ErrHls
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 24 October 2011 22:21 (fourteen years ago)
Actually, that one's OK. Sounds like Cheap Trick.
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 24 October 2011 22:22 (fourteen years ago)
Exactly. There's far worse examples.
Anyway, the Pixies song I'm always in the mood to play is "Hey."
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 24 October 2011 22:25 (fourteen years ago)
woops -- I meant "Tame."
― tylerw, Monday, October 24, 2011 6:16 PM (12 minutes ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
are you fucking with me?
― frankly bringing dragons into this equation is wrong (rustic italian flatbread), Monday, 24 October 2011 22:30 (fourteen years ago)
ha, yes
― tylerw, Monday, 24 October 2011 22:31 (fourteen years ago)
but can't you just hear it
oh dammit, I was going to rickroll
― do not wake the dragon (DJP), Monday, 24 October 2011 22:31 (fourteen years ago)
is she weird is she wackcuz OPP-O-SITTES AT-TRACT!
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 24 October 2011 22:33 (fourteen years ago)
I first heard the Pixies well after they broke up. I think I was 15, which means it was '96; I had to search them out, which I did because they were constantly being mentiomed in Nirvana and Breeders articles. My grandma took me on a shopping spree and I had her buy me Bossanova on cassette, mostly because of some derogatory comment on a review of Last Splash about how "No Aloha" sounded like an outtake from that album. I instantly loved Bossanova and a few weeks later the school druggie approached me asking to borrow it. He had a copy of Doolittle (one of maybe five irl ppl I've met that were into the Pixies; we're actually still good friends) which he lent me. I wasn't as big a fan of that one, though I like it more now.
But it wasn't long after that that I somehow procured Surfer Rosa on CD, and THAT hooled me. Still one of my all-time favourite albums...
― ge0rge (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 01:32 (fourteen years ago)
Hooled = hooked
― ge0rge (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 01:33 (fourteen years ago)
I love reading vintage ILM threads like this front-to-back, it's like examining the rings of a redwood trunk
― the jazz zinger (s1ocki), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 02:35 (fourteen years ago)
"Every cute girl knew the Pixies" is totally OTM, and I initially was persuaded to like them by a cute girlfriend. Trompe Le Monde was where they lost the cute girls, and is probably the only album of theirs that I still play from time to time. Wasn't there an indie-schmindie song back in the 90's where someone (probably female) was berated for liking the Pixies? Dead Milkmen? Or someone else?
― dlp9001, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 02:47 (fourteen years ago)
Ok, now I'm going crazy trying to remember that song. I think there was a lyric like, "You love the Pixies!" but I may be making that up....
― dlp9001, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 03:00 (fourteen years ago)
Now I'm thinking it was, "You like the Pixies," and maybe it was an Irish/Scottish band. Fuck, this is killing me....
― dlp9001, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 03:12 (fourteen years ago)
sounds like Noise Addict/Ben Lee imho
― citation needed (Steve Shasta), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 03:15 (fourteen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V7BE6t2CxYs
― citation needed (Steve Shasta), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 03:18 (fourteen years ago)
I think that may be it. Unless I can remember something else, I'm going to go with it.
― dlp9001, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 03:20 (fourteen years ago)
I'm sure I didn't know any cute girls who liked the Pixies until I started hanging out in the outloud room.
― ge0rge (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 03:37 (fourteen years ago)
Are you thinking of Pop Queen by Ben Lee, that has the line "you love the Pixies" in it?
― The Eyeball Of Hull (Colonel Poo), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 09:37 (fourteen years ago)
Yeah, that's it, thanks! (Though I was probably kind of mushing that together with the other video in my memory). I should probably go back and listen to that Ben Lee album again, 'cause it's sounding pretty good in these videos...
Anyway, I definitely remember Pixies as having slightly surprising girl appeal in the early 90's.
― dlp9001, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 12:34 (fourteen years ago)
What's so surprising about it? It's not like Killdozer or something.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 14:02 (fourteen years ago)
Not exaggerating in the slightest, 95% of my female friends in high school and college were Pixies fans. Not just "I like that one song" but fans. To this day that is probably still true, but only 3-4 of them went to the reunion tour.
― Art Arfons (La Lechera), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 14:14 (fourteen years ago)
Well, them's the advantage of growing up middle of nowhere, I guess...
I always thought starting a Pixies cover band and playing high school dances would be a fun way to earn money.
― ge0rge (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 15:01 (fourteen years ago)
This thread is making me want to listen to "No. 13 Baby" on repeat. That song is my jam!
― ge0rge (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 15:22 (fourteen years ago)
Lots of people are mentioning Nirvana, but I checked out the Pixies because Blur used to talk about them a lot too! Possible girl connection? *shrug* They have catchy songs, we like catchy songs.
― she started dancing to that (Finefinemusic), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 15:24 (fourteen years ago)
xp - well, not only that, but i also think it's a certain age of person (at least in my case with my friends, see also example above) i went to high school 89-93 -- in the beginning the 80s were still happening and by the end everyone -- eeeeveryone, not just the weirdos -- was playing nirvana at their graduation bonfires and whatnotdifferent times. my friends who liked pixies were identifying as not-casual-nirvana people too.
― Art Arfons (La Lechera), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 15:27 (fourteen years ago)
They have catchy songs and KIM DEAL who is awesome.
And I reached them by going "hey I like Belly, I should check out this Breeders band" / "hey I like the Breeders, I should check out this Pixies band", which I guess is a pretty girl-friendly route for those of us catching up after the event, too.
I mean I sort of want to be all "can't girls just like bands too w/o it being a thing which needs special underlining and explanation" but on the other hand I do admit that sometimes it seems more unusual than maybe it should
(paragraph of inept sociology on this point removed on realising it was half nonsense and half tautology)
― how do i shot slime mould voltron form (a passing spacecadet), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 15:46 (fourteen years ago)
xp see LL, that's part of it; I knew LOTS of not-casual-Nirvana fans (tho most of them were metalheads)
― ge0rge (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 15:53 (fourteen years ago)
never knew any girls into the Pixies until I got to college (ie after they broke up). got Doolittle when it came out, worked backwards from there. Didn't really like Bossanova apart from a couple songs, and never listened to Trompe Le Monde. nowadays... it's weird, I enjoy their stuff when I hear it but I am never really in the mood for it, I don't put it on. They were fun but they were not emotionally engaging really, definitely very heavy on the irony.
― unorthodox economic revenge (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 15:55 (fourteen years ago)
Feel like I have more of an attachment to the Breeder's Last Splash tbh - Black Francis' writing seems very opaque and gimmicky, very much a constructed "act" that doesn't require any emotional engagement.
― unorthodox economic revenge (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 15:56 (fourteen years ago)
^ OTM, except I'd replace Last Splash with Pod.
― Tarfumes The Escape Goat, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 16:00 (fourteen years ago)
i don't know whether it's totally my own imagination, but i identified heavily w/ a lot of black francis' songs because they seemed to capture a distinctly southern california experience, which is where i grew up. which i know is weird -- they're thought of as a boston band, i guess. but he grew up out there and there are some tunes that just *sound* like socal to me.
― tylerw, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 16:03 (fourteen years ago)
I can see that (surfers + pollution = yep that's socal all right!) but there's sort of nothing there to identify with...? like there's no emotional content to Black Francis' writing, his songs have this odd POV that is bereft of thoughts and feelings and is more just a surrealist cascade of imagery. it's like he's more of a medium than a human being.
― unorthodox economic revenge (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 16:14 (fourteen years ago)
Do you have a similar problem with poetry, Shakey?
― he carried yellow flowers (DJP), Tuesday, 25 October 2011 16:16 (fourteen years ago)