Pere Ubu: Classic Or Dud

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he sings like a cross between David Byrne and Tiny Tim.

scott, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

one month passes...
Classic.

Ubu are at their best recording "avant-garage" (late early period) than "pop/rock songs" (mid late period). That was a bit confusing. Let's just say 'New Picnic Time-Song Of The Baling Man' = "avant-garage". While 'The Modern Dance' or (mid late period) 'Story Of My Life' = "pop/rock songs". Yes, even 'The Modern Dance' plays to this weakness for song form, where Ubu are clearly best without song form = the point.

However, David Thomas (singer/leader) is as good (if not slightly better - let's just say different than Ubu, but in a good equal way) solo than as Pere Ubu. With his box set 'Monster' as proof.

But, certainly if one wants truly "classic" and truly interesting art-rock or art-punk...look no further. Some might go with Wire or The Fall. I'll take Pere Ubu, anytime.

*Also, Pere Ubu are one of the greatest live rock bands ever (yes, ever)...I've seen them twice - in support of 'Story of My Life' opening for They Might Be Giants (sort of like Public Enemy and how they used to open for the Beastie Boys) and again at a smaller club as headliner in support of 'Raygun Suitcase'. Both times, great. Second time, incredible. David Thomas is a natural on stage (oddly enough - in that, one could see him as some sort of "anti-social" if they didn't know better, with some of the lyrics and mumbling voice, etc).

michael g. breece, Sunday, 1 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

five months pass...
boy this one died a fast death, didn't it? come on, i know -some- of you haf an opinion on ubu...mark s? tom? andrew? andy? dave? ANYONE??

my take: two classic albums, followed by a string of spotty-to- terrible ones, lost (to paraphrase i think mark) up their own arse of determined non-repetition. the singles collected on terminal tower, however, are a handful of the most towering documents in the history of this rock music thing. made all the more powerful by the fact that they were scrawled in black magic marker by wights from collapsing ohio factory backwaters.

jess, Thursday, 27 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Seems to be a consensus that everything after The Modern Dance was spotty. I might agree with that - although I think there were some absolutely great moments on all of the later LPs. The Art of Walking - I believe it's "Misery Goats" I'm thinking of... (Can anyone fill me in on the that reference.. "Misery Goats" is an homage to something that I recognized a few months back... now I forget what it means...) and "I Will Wait" from Dub Housing, if I remember correctly, is one of Ubu's finest moments.

When I heard the Wooden Birds' last album (name escapes me..) I thought, Wow! That sounds a lot like typical Ubu... (Ref. "A Fact About Trains") I wonder if they'll change back into Ubu.... Sure enough, they did. But I must admit, I wasn't blown away when The Tenemement Year came out. I thought it was too "Rock & Roll". Cloudland was even more so... Great albums in their own right & kicking U2 and REM's asses at the time... so no reason to slouch. I'll take "Why Go It Alone" over "Stand" any time.

But it wasn't until Ray Gun Suitcase came out that I thought they had returned to what makes/made Ubu great - which was a heavy bassline behind some erratic guitar and some ranting (which is the same reason I like Saccharine Trust.)

I've seen Ubu many times over the years, starting with the warm-up tour for The Tenement Year. (The new songs were much better live than they were when the record was released.) - and I think Scott Krauss, Tony Maimone, Alan Ravenstein & Jim Jones (as a very suitable stand-in for Peter Laughner) brought amazing energy to the group - BUT, the last time I saw Ubu was about 2 years ago... the only member remaining was David Thomas .. The show was incredible. They played hard, they beat the shit out of their back catalogue. The only turn-off was that David Thomas seems to have developed into a bit of a dictator & a perfectionist - which is his perogative because it's now his band... but there's something to be said for the DIY sound... and that's why we love the Fall.

Dave225, Thursday, 27 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

FYI - That Wooden Birds LP was "Blame the Messenger". Highly recommended.

Dave225, Thursday, 27 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Jess lists me last, and expects me to comment? You have SOME BALLS, boyo.

I owned thee boxset a while back, & sold it, of course, duh. The music was fine, but the cram-happy aesthetic ruined everything past Disc 2. (And I never gave the Ubu-related music much of a spin, and including live Ubu did nothing for me.) That said, I agree w/ Jess on Modern Dance & Terminal Tower. Rock & roll drunk on the couch with Pretentious Art, making out and drooling all over the place. Pass the funnel, woo!

Dub Housing might be a grower, though I can't recall it well because of the CRAP SEQUENCING on the boxset CDs, damn it. I have a tape copy of Cloudland, which sounds just fine (if a bit happy-go-lucky, which I don't expect from DT, despite his kiddie-clown voice). The newer stuff (on Tim Kerr & Thirsty Ear) scares me because of all the conflicting comments.

And what's this I hear about the 5-disc David Thomas boxset being unbelievably awesome? Is this the truth?

David Raposa, Thursday, 27 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

New Picnic Time = terrific; a concept alb about life in heaven

mark s, Thursday, 27 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

three weeks pass...
I listened to The Wooden Birds' "Blame The Messenger" yesterday. (This was the record that reunited Ubu - 1986? ) Absolutely brilliant, more so than I remembered. If you have the means, I highly recommend picking it up. It's better than most Ubu records and almost as good as some of the best Ubu records.

Dave225, Monday, 21 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

seven months pass...
I haff rethink. Have recently repurchased Tenement Year, Cloudland, Worlds in Collision and Story of My Life, and am enjoying them all now. Will probably go back to the earliest stiff, too, which I never really gave fair shakes to...Always loved "Final Solution" but have discovered the glories of "30 Seconds Over Tokyo" and "The Modern Dance".

Sean Carruthers (SeanC), Saturday, 24 August 2002 20:31 (twenty-one years ago) link

the earliest stiff is "the art of walking" haha (actually i wuv every note they ever played)

mark s (mark s), Saturday, 24 August 2002 21:55 (twenty-one years ago) link

first four albums and the attending singles from their first period = classic.

The Tenemant Years is good but not classic.

Cloudland is half classic (the last Paul Harman engineered half), and half crap (the Stephen Hague produced first half).

Worlds In Collision and Story Of My Life are not so hot all -- especially Eric Drew Feldman on synth -- his cartoony work is terrible to these ears -- completely lacking Ravenstine's touch or Wheeler in the later period. Completely POP in a cut out all the good parts way. (also, I don't think Cutler was a good fit with the band either).

Raygun Suitcase through St. Arkansas are a return to form, the resurrection of a band that almost sank during the Eric Drew Feldman period. Especially great is the return of Tom Herman. Also to be noted is the underrated playing of Jim Jones, a man who has done many excellent things but hasn't got the kudos he deserves.

jack cole (jackcole), Saturday, 24 August 2002 22:07 (twenty-one years ago) link

If you're going to harp on my typo, mister s, I want sales figures outta you. ;)

Sean Carruthers (SeanC), Saturday, 24 August 2002 23:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Classic, of course. Another one in a long list of bands that I saw in the '70s and insist on mentioning on ILM in the vain hope that people will worship me, while knowing that the info really translates in people's heads into "he's really old".

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Sunday, 25 August 2002 08:20 (twenty-one years ago) link

Only have a modern dance. Love it of course but nevah got round to anything myself. Nice to know sean is enjoying a lot of their other stuff as when I met him he was just buying some of those recs.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 25 August 2002 09:28 (twenty-one years ago) link

Just wondering how you pronouce the name.

I've never been too sure whether it's 'peh-ray ooboo' or 'pear ooboo' or possibly even another way, any helpers?

Chewshabadoo (Chewshabadoo), Sunday, 25 August 2002 12:57 (twenty-one years ago) link

pear (it is dad punk haha)

mark s (mark s), Sunday, 25 August 2002 13:04 (twenty-one years ago) link

isn't "misery .. " just the unlucky masonic goats, the "misery guts" of the circus bleating like kids from the harem ?

yeah picnic, walking where were i got dropped right in it, so dub was a bit too much popping dub and the guitar records too much guitar records like sonic youth

the late period stuff, well it's more measured austere and yet part of the continuum of not over till after the fat man's stopped singing that is pere ubu

these guys are carrying the torch for wacky alfred jarry and people complain about silly ok != surreal or sensible but maybe absurdist -- yet absurdism points fingers, reminds us we are the bourguiese (is that correct spelling ? just couldn't resist)

my gripe would be how easy to map to real world via absurdism (which in jarry's case mapped so well) is peter thomas ? anything to say ? (great effects dept.)

all credit to them though for being first to the millenium bug though via "Data Panic in the Year ..", so ahead of their time as much now as then someways -- do not C/D until, y'know, uh, loses some weight ??

george gosset (gegoss), Sunday, 25 August 2002 13:38 (twenty-one years ago) link

Those early singles are my favorite Pere Ubu music. After the first two LPs, there music is just too much all over the place for me, except for "The Tenement Year" which is a pretty good record and seems to be a return to the sound of those earlier recordings.

"The Tenement Year" may be a bit harder to find, as I do not think it was ever reissued. I've had a vinyl for a long time and got it before I found the first two LPs and the reissue of the early singles.


earlnash, Sunday, 25 August 2002 19:22 (twenty-one years ago) link

I found The Tenement Year on CD in one of my regular used shops, for relatively cheap...weird, because I thought they'd have realized how rare it was. At any rate, I now have a copy of that on vinyl that is up for grabs, if anyone wants it...email me.

Sean Carruthers (SeanC), Sunday, 25 August 2002 22:14 (twenty-one years ago) link

eleven months pass...
After giving all of the early Pere Ubu records a couple of listens over the past few weeks, I find that I think they really didn't drop off as much as I used to think. "Songs of the Bailing Man", "The Art of Walking" and "New Picnic Time" are maybe a notch below "Dub Housing", but not much more.

I think listening to quite a bit of electronic music in the past three or four years has changed my perspective of some of the more abstract/ambient/free form sounding songs.

I've never heard anything after "Pennsylvania" or the "St. Arkansas" albums, are they any count?

earlnash, Monday, 28 July 2003 18:18 (twenty years ago) link

Was just driven around in a red convertable by a punk girl blasting (I think) The Tenement Year. Shit cool.

Pete Scholtes, Monday, 28 July 2003 20:26 (twenty years ago) link

Classic, obviously - stupid question.

So is all Mr Thomas's solo / other stuff, especially Blame The Messenger, Mirror Man and the live CD with the "Monster" boxset.

"I've never heard anything after "Pennsylvania" or the "St. Arkansas" albums, are they any count?"

I don't believe you've missed any official releases since St Arkansas Earlnash, although there were a couple of live albums in between them: Apocalypse Now (which, as others have said above, is an excellent album) and The Shape Of Things (semi-official, dodgy 1976 live recordings, for completists only).

Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Tuesday, 29 July 2003 07:18 (twenty years ago) link

got the 'terminal tower' singles comp since then. wonderful though i'm not sure what that live version of 'Humor me' is doing there. a bit unecessary.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Tuesday, 29 July 2003 07:23 (twenty years ago) link

I believe I'm right in saying that the last few tracks on that CD were mopping up some oddments that would otherwise have been unavailable on CD because they had to missed off the Datapanik In The Year Zero box-set due to restrictions of CD length etc.

Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Tuesday, 29 July 2003 07:53 (twenty years ago) link

... I think that's incorect - Terminal Tower was released 10 years prior to the Datapanik box. Seems more like it was just a release of a bunch of stuff they could get their hands on at the time. (Being Twin Tone & all.) While it's a great listen, it doesn't seem to have much of a reason to exist - other than there was no Pere Ubu record in print at the time. And Not Happy is cut short.

dave225 (Dave225), Tuesday, 29 July 2003 10:36 (twenty years ago) link

well if you don't have the boxset its useful collection of the early singles. suerly that's a good enough reason for it to exist.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Tuesday, 29 July 2003 10:41 (twenty years ago) link

.. Yeah - well, I have it and yeah, I recommend buying it.. But I mean, it's a bit of a hodgepodge .. some of it is the Datapanik EP, some of it is singles, some of it is rarities. It's not a collection of all the singles. It's not a rerelease of Datapanik. It's not really a collection of rarities. It's just "stuff". Again, probably the only stuff Twin Tone could get their hands on in 1985. Buy "no reason to exist" I meant from an Artist or record company perspective... As a fan, I was damn excited to have it and quite glad it existed.

dave225 (Dave225), Tuesday, 29 July 2003 10:50 (twenty years ago) link

If you don't have the boxset the (final) solution is obvious....

Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Tuesday, 29 July 2003 10:51 (twenty years ago) link

so what are they missing bcz this is a collection of singles up to 1980. is there another comp i could get hold of that has what's missing?

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Tuesday, 29 July 2003 10:53 (twenty years ago) link

I think the only single that isn't there is Street Waves.. And I don't even know if it's different from the one on The Modern Dance. But the version of Not Happy cuts out a big section in the middle. .. So it's not a huge loss - it's just not a totally complete compilation of the singles. ..

Actually, I just checked the Ubu web site & found this:
The left & right channels are reversed and the tape transfer left all songs running at a slower speed. All Rough Trade / Twin Tone cd & vinyl releases are affected. These faults were corrected by the 1994 digital transfer & eq. The 1998 cd reissue features the Mayo Thompson / Geoff Travis mixes of "Not Happy" and "Lonesome Cowboy Dave" as released on the 1981 Rough Trade single. The 1985 Twin Tone / Rough Trade releases use the David Thomas mixes done at Suma.

.. So I guess the CD is better than the LP.

dave225 (Dave225), Tuesday, 29 July 2003 11:05 (twenty years ago) link

I suppose I could use an editor, what I meant to say was:

I've never heard anything after "Raygun Suitcase" are the "Pennsylvania" or the "St. Arkansas" albums any count?

At least from the reviews, it seems if you like Pere Ubu, the last two albums will be to your liking. They are on my list and I probably will look for them when I go up to Bloomington/Indianapolis at the end of August.

earlnash, Tuesday, 29 July 2003 13:32 (twenty years ago) link

two years pass...
I'm surprised to see no consensus here that Dub Housing is by far their peak. It was dark, eerie, powerful, experimental but still totally engaging. Quite a feat for an album with an obsessive focus on paranoia and mental instability. I have to admire their determination with New Picnic Time to avoid repeating themselves, but it seems they tried too hard, and it comes off forced and awkward.

Fastnbulbous (Fastnbulbous), Thursday, 8 September 2005 03:23 (eighteen years ago) link

Man, this made me dig out Dub Housing. It's one of those woozy albums that I think you either like or don't. I remember when I first heard it, it wasn't like anything else I'd ever heard...
Of course, I grew up listening to Waiting For Mary on an old Certain Damage sampler, so maybe I was predisposed...

js (honestengine), Thursday, 8 September 2005 04:28 (eighteen years ago) link

Love the Datapanik box, but is buying anything else neccessary?

Sasha (sgh), Thursday, 8 September 2005 04:51 (eighteen years ago) link

Consensus? ILM? Uh.. why aren't there a ton of threads on this band?

Dub Housing is so classic. Total paranoid schizo vibe. I suppose buying more albums of theirs isn't strictly necessary but surely if you like the box set you'd like others?

dar1a g (daria g), Thursday, 8 September 2005 05:26 (eighteen years ago) link

Last time I tried to listen to Dub Housing, I just thought the songs weren't really there. I like early Pere Ubu, especially the singles.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Thursday, 8 September 2005 05:32 (eighteen years ago) link

I'm off to see them on Saturday, wonder how they'll be. Don't have great expectations, but hoping they're going to catch me by surprise. No idea who's in the band now. Chris Cutler perhaps?

NickB (NickB), Thursday, 8 September 2005 07:15 (eighteen years ago) link

Cloudland must be reissued/remastered. Now.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Thursday, 8 September 2005 10:24 (eighteen years ago) link

I preferred them as a rock band than as an art band, so:

Modern Dance > Dub Housing >>>>>>>>> everything else

Raymond Douglas Dadaismus (Dada), Thursday, 8 September 2005 10:26 (eighteen years ago) link

Love the Datapanik box, but is buying anything else neccessary?

The Wooden Birds - "Blame the Messenger"
Rockets from the Tombs
& the Peter Laughner disc.

-David Thomas solo records are also great, if you like 'Sentimental Journey'
-Home and Garden records are spotty, but I really love some of em.

when something smacks of something (dave225.3), Thursday, 8 September 2005 11:36 (eighteen years ago) link

I have The Day the Earth Met... and Rocket Redux. What's Laughner's solo stuff like?

Sasha (sgh), Thursday, 8 September 2005 11:47 (eighteen years ago) link

Laughner = classic. His style was schizophrenic -- Beefheart here, Thompson there, punk here, folk there - but I think he was mainly just interested in channeling his various interests. Rock It Down, Ain't It Fun, Sylvia Plath, and Baby's on Fire are all classic!

TRG (TRG), Thursday, 8 September 2005 12:00 (eighteen years ago) link

It's low-fi, bedroom recordings, but it's an insight into the early pere... Everyone seems to think it's fucking genious around here ... I don't hold it up that high. Laughner was a great guitarist, and it really shows in some of these recordings, but I still see it as more of a historical relic than some kind of masterpiece.

xpost...

when something smacks of something (dave225.3), Thursday, 8 September 2005 12:04 (eighteen years ago) link

gilmore? do I know you? do any of these things mean anything to you: toledo? go-betweens? mike rep?

when something smacks of something (dave225.3), Thursday, 8 September 2005 12:06 (eighteen years ago) link

Yes, they all mean something to me, some more than others. I also think Laughner's solo version of Life Stinks is more than just a historical relic. I can't do anything but listen when that comes on!

TRG (TRG), Thursday, 8 September 2005 12:21 (eighteen years ago) link

Used to be I couldn't really get into Dub Housing, but Pete and I were listening to it the other day and you know, it finally just clicked. It's probably the equal of MD, although my preference for rawk will probably still lead me to pick up that one most of the time. And those early singles are some of the most perfect things ever crafted.

Pere Ubu = teh classik.

Zack Richardson (teenagequiet), Thursday, 8 September 2005 12:46 (eighteen years ago) link

Dub Housing was one of those eye openers for me: This is punk rock?!? WHOA. I think's it's my favorite Pere Ubu album as well, ("Drinking Wine Spodyody", "Codex", "Navvy", "Dub Housing", "Ubu Dance Party" = CLASSIC) though I love the Modern Dance, esp "Humor Me".

mcd (mcd), Thursday, 8 September 2005 12:58 (eighteen years ago) link

I forgot to mention the 'newer' ubu records ... Raygun Suitcase comes to mind as a particularly great one.. The others, quite honestly, I just don't listen to enough to have an opinion. Cloudland, of course is great, but maybe not typical ubu. Also, th u-men at club wow/interstate mall is a great bootleg...

when something smacks of something (dave225.3), Thursday, 8 September 2005 13:06 (eighteen years ago) link

Never really understood why Dub Housing usually gets singled out as THEE masterpiece when it's largely a rehash of Modern Dance. To my ears anyway, at least 2/3 of the songs have a clear sonic predecessor on the debut ("Laughing" = "Dub Housing", "Life Stinks" = "Navvy", etc.), with only the two weird instrumentals for uncharted territory. But that only makes Dub Housing NEARLY as essential as the debut, even tho sometimes I prefer New Picnic Time, with some of David Thomas' most hilarious rantings. In fact, ALL their '70s stuff is a must if you ask me. (Catch me in the right mood, and I'm liable to proclaim Disc One of the "Datapanik" box the single finest compact disc in existence!)

The later stuff varies from meh (Cloudland) to very good (Ray Gun Suitcase), with The Tenement Year being a personal favourite, even tho nobody else seems to like it much - too prog or something, with the doubled drums and accordion and all.

Myonga Von Bontee (Myonga Von Bontee), Thursday, 8 September 2005 15:16 (eighteen years ago) link

I really enjoy Story of My Life.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Thursday, 8 September 2005 15:20 (eighteen years ago) link

I'm not particularly a fan of live albums by anyone, but the late 70s live compilation 390 Degrees Of Simulated Stereo is really a worthwhile appendix to those early albums.

Halfway there but for you, Monday, 12 October 2020 18:42 (three years ago) link

I'd say you need the first three and Terminal Tower and Cloudland.

Patriotic Goiter (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 12 October 2020 18:44 (three years ago) link

my ubu poV

terminal tower (or the hearpen singles or anything that has the early 45s on it)
modern dance
dub housing
the tenement year
st arkansas

covidsbundlertanze op. 6 (Jon not Jon), Monday, 12 October 2020 19:51 (three years ago) link

four months pass...

The Tenement Year continues to grow on me, this might be my favorite Ubu record (that I've heard)

nothing like it

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 17 February 2021 17:52 (three years ago) link

It's an excellent but sadly neglected quasi-commercial quasi-comeback.

Halfway there but for you, Wednesday, 17 February 2021 18:12 (three years ago) link

Yeah, that whole string of Fontana records were kind of taken for granted and/or neglected, at least outside of cut-out bins.

Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 17 February 2021 18:22 (three years ago) link

quasi commercial def., like i can tell that there's the impulse to be more "commercial" without changing the fundamental strangeness of pere ubu...so you get these skewed pop songs percolating with percussion and ravenstine squiggles and thomas being thomas...might be my favorite ubu album now

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 17 February 2021 18:23 (three years ago) link

Are the later remasters of the Fontana records preferable? I know they made some changes to those albums, but I wasn't sure if it was supposed to restore what they would have liked or what.

birdistheword, Wednesday, 17 February 2021 19:22 (three years ago) link

haven't heard, picked up an original vinyl. sounds really good to me

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 17 February 2021 20:27 (three years ago) link

What changes did they make?

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Wednesday, 17 February 2021 20:38 (three years ago) link

I love The Tenement Year, adore Cloudland, think Story of My Life boasts several worthwhile cuts.

meticulously crafted, socially responsible, morally upsta (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 17 February 2021 20:41 (three years ago) link

What changes did they make?

I only found info for the first two:

Tenement Year:

Director's Cut 2007
The original 1988 Fontana release does not seem to have been mastered. David Thomas and Paul Hamann mastered it January 22-23 2007 at Suma. An alternate mix of Dream The Moon from 1987 was substituted in the running order and five bonus tracks were added...As well, the sound of thunder that was found on the original Suma mix of the tracks was added - there was clearly some intention of including this somewhere for some reason.

Cloudland:

Director's Cut 2007
The album was originally mixed by Paul Hamann at Paisley Park Studios, Minneapolis MN. Subsequently four tracks were re-recorded in London and the others remixed for the 1989 Fontana release. This reissue substitutes in the running order the following Paisley Park mixes by Paul Hamann: Monday Night, Lost Nation Road, Nevada!, The Wire, The Waltz, and Pushin. Five bonus tracks were added.

birdistheword, Wednesday, 17 February 2021 21:45 (three years ago) link

Not a fan of revisionist history, but sometimes it does produce better (or at least interesting) results. I'm not familiar enough with the material, has anyone A'Bed those albums and evaluated the differences?

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Wednesday, 3 March 2021 04:31 (three years ago) link

I've only heard the two versions of The Art of Walking that came out in 1980, and all those tracks are on the most recent CD. Since the alternate versions are the weaker tracks on their weakest album, it's interesting but hardly vital to hear both.

Halfway there but for you, Wednesday, 3 March 2021 15:29 (three years ago) link

I can say that I prefer the LP mixes of some of the tracks on More Places Forever to the ones he did for the CD version in the Monster box set

covidsbundlertanze op. 6 (Jon not Jon), Wednesday, 3 March 2021 16:51 (three years ago) link

But that could just be imprinting, having ‘learned’ the LP version pretty throughly first

covidsbundlertanze op. 6 (Jon not Jon), Wednesday, 3 March 2021 16:51 (three years ago) link

two years pass...

Due to the Draconian US visa policies the line-up for the two US Pere Ubu shows this summer will be Thomas, Michelle Temple, Jack Jones plus Brother Wayne Kramer & Eric Drew Feldman and Tony Maimone and Allen Ravenstine in NYC and Mayo Thompson (!) in LA

http://www.ubuprojex.com/

chr1sb3singer, Friday, 28 April 2023 14:23 (eleven months ago) link

Also the two new songs sound very Moon Unit-y which is very good to me, ymmv

chr1sb3singer, Friday, 28 April 2023 14:32 (eleven months ago) link

Agh, really wish I could make it to that NYC show.

The last few albums never really clicked with me, but I'm excited about this new one. I guess Ubu has fully absorbed Two Pale Boys at this point, which is definitely what it sounds like on "Love Is Like Gravity."

Vaguely Threatening CAPTCHAs, Friday, 28 April 2023 14:53 (eleven months ago) link

Man I would like to see them on stage with maimone and ravenstine!!!

realistic pillow (Jon not Jon), Friday, 28 April 2023 18:55 (eleven months ago) link

Fuck me none of them sound like bad lineups

Hello I'm shitty gatsworth (aldo), Friday, 28 April 2023 23:19 (eleven months ago) link

Eric Drew Feldman, a secret secret weapon.

tylerw, Friday, 28 April 2023 23:21 (eleven months ago) link

https://www.discogs.com/release/6592285-Pere-Ubu-The-Pere-Ubu-Moon-Unit

Sounds like this sort of thing

Mark G, Saturday, 29 April 2023 08:54 (eleven months ago) link

Per the Patreon livestream today Thomas teased "maybe a super-secret mind-blowing guest" in LA, which I'm guessing is Van Dyke Parks, he also mentioned he hasn't asked this person yet, so...

chr1sb3singer, Monday, 1 May 2023 20:37 (eleven months ago) link

four weeks pass...

New album is even farther out there than the last one...

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Wednesday, 31 May 2023 00:59 (ten months ago) link

seeing them tonight - in fact DT has just malevolently watched me parking my bike in front of the venue - and i will pick up the album.

the musical elements are increasingly attenuated, closer to the moon unit approach than anything else you might call pere ubu. DT’s well worn symbols and tropes sit in a sparse landscape, without much propulsion or dynamic intensity around them. q a lot of wailing. *mood* as they say. i quite like it, but it doesn’t take much for it to become a bit boring or overstay its welcome. when it works it’s great.

the group seem very enthused about the album, other responses seem a bit more muted.

Fizzles, Friday, 2 June 2023 18:14 (ten months ago) link

I listened to about half of it earlier this week after having not listened to a new Ubu album since ...Women. I liked what I heard a lot and plan to check out the second half soon.

but also fuck you (unperson), Friday, 2 June 2023 19:52 (ten months ago) link

my post above was largely nonsense, probably due to the fact that the main times i've seen David Thomas recently have been in the experimental Moon Unit format, and an utterly disastrous Pere Ubu gig in Canterbury (Chris Cutler's drumming had fallen apart from someone obscure reasons).

This gig was really good, David Thomas, looked for all the world like some sort of grizzled Gendo, his glasses reflecting the lights, leaning forward and pointing to emphasise obscure but dictatorial pronouncements. He got himself in a pother, as is frequently the case, after a very good actually version of Crocodile Smile off the latest album. He got cranky, and the gig looked like it might turn sour, but he had a cigarette, took his hat off, and suddenly seemed as benign and warm as a sort of punk GK Chesterton. Malevolent, self-destructive to sympathetic and humorous – not a terrible summary of Pere Ubu, and as theatre it was a-grade.

Music was as the album, and the album is really good I think. I had a bit of trouble structuring it, and I think it works best if you impose the side a/side b of the vinyl onto the cd main tracks. I haven't got to the extra tracks yet. Love, death and departure, death and eternity, US delta blues and highway symbolism are all present. It's the mood of the music that is most compelling though. The group shifts the tempo and mood of the music in strange, rich ways, never the same thing twice, recombining continually throughout tracks and through the album. It does have the sort of dynamism I'd associate with a lot of Pere Ubu, but mixed with the exploratory methods of Moon Unit, and the effect is like... well, what's it like? I've got an unhelpfully hackeneyed image in my head of a painter improvising a painting as part of the performance, with exuberant brush strokes expressive of emotional shifts in the moment, but contributing to a completed, final piece of work that captures the freedom of composition as it does the original intent. Sorry that's terrible - i'm awful at writing music.

Alex Ward's guitar and clarinet adds a *lot* imo. Full disclosure, he's a friend so i would say that wouldn't i, but it adds a substantial new element governed by his own creative wellsprings in improv and rock, and his playing. The whole group is now well used to playing pere ubu material together in more improvised scenarios now anyway, and it really comes together on the album. will repay repeated listens I think. i may not listen to enough music, but it's hard to find music - at least in the post-punk tradition - that has this level of invention to it imo.

Fizzles, Sunday, 4 June 2023 11:23 (ten months ago) link

Shame they're against tape sharing, at least on dime etc. Would love to hear this lot live. I thought Ward was pretty great with the Flying Luttenbachers when I saw them a few years ago.

Stevo, Sunday, 4 June 2023 11:32 (ten months ago) link

though there are bits of them appearing on youtube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=83xzLp_YSsU

Stevo, Sunday, 4 June 2023 11:55 (ten months ago) link

Will have to check out those bits, thanks.
Fizzles, your description is perfectly valid, going toward the xpost rock & improv, also jazz, ideal: "The song turning into itself," as the poet Al Young puts it.

dow, Sunday, 4 June 2023 19:52 (ten months ago) link

And your report on the album is even more appealing.

dow, Sunday, 4 June 2023 19:55 (ten months ago) link

Yeah good write-up Fizzles. I like the new album too. There are moments that remind me of specific elements from past Ubu/DT projects: "Love Is Like Gravity" starts off sounding exactly like something from one of the DT + Two Pale Boys albums, "Crocodile Smile" makes prominent use of an actual sample of "Drive" from Pennsylvania, the creepy whispered vocals on "Let's Pretend" make me think of Mere Ubu from Long Live Pere Ubu, and "Nyah Nyah Nyah" almost feels like a darker take on some of the goofier stuff from the early 80s Ubu and David Thomas albums, but at the same time it does seem like this is a new era of the band -- I keep thinking of it as "The Pere Ubu Big Band." In that regard it's almost the opposite of The Long Goodbye, which to me felt more like an actual solo album from David Thomas than maybe anything else he's done, with Pere Ubu or otherwise. (Pretty sure it's the only album he's been involved with where's got the sole writing credit on every song.) I wasn't really able to get into that album, so this is a welcome change-up.

Vaguely Threatening CAPTCHAs, Tuesday, 6 June 2023 21:13 (ten months ago) link

Found this last night while I was trying to find the current tour footage from Rich Mix
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNG4QHHvOPE

Stevo, Tuesday, 6 June 2023 21:23 (ten months ago) link

Incidentally watched the Rich MIx footage last night and does the Face in the video behind the band during Worried Man Blues morph into a load of Gerry Anderson puppet faces from Stingray and Thunderbirds or is that me? Probably a number of other notable popular culture sci fi faces too from Dr Who and Star Trek among others.

Stevo, Tuesday, 6 June 2023 21:27 (ten months ago) link

three weeks pass...

Man I would like to see them on stage with maimone and ravenstine!!!


Did anyone see them?

Naive Teen Idol, Thursday, 29 June 2023 01:30 (nine months ago) link

Don't sleep on the recent live album, "By Order Of Mayor Pawlicki (Live In Jarocin)". It's relentlessly great.

Blood On The Knobs, Friday, 30 June 2023 06:14 (nine months ago) link

Oh yes. And highly good-natured.

Dave T is *funny*

(Always knew this)

Mark G, Friday, 30 June 2023 08:28 (nine months ago) link

There is a guy that's PISSED on my tl about seeing a show on their current tour and calling it "creativity bankrupt"!!

kurt schwitterz, Friday, 30 June 2023 09:43 (nine months ago) link

Don't sleep on the recent live album, "By Order Of Mayor Pawlicki (Live In Jarocin)". It's relentlessly great.

― Blood On The Knobs, Friday, 30 June 2023 06:14 (ten hours ago) link

Great record, greater stage banter

"I'm not yelling at you...yet"

chr1sb3singer, Friday, 30 June 2023 16:22 (nine months ago) link

been enjoying the album on this swampy uk morning. i’d been feeling it takes a worried man got in the way of the album, sucked the energy into a not particularly outstanding track, but this morning it worked. the bass provided the swampy feeling appropriate to the mood - the chains around the heart, ‘i asked the judge what might be my time’, death and love again, thomas’ psychic landscape overlaid onto the music and geographic spaces of the south.

in general tackling this album i’d been turning round the view that the music is better than the DT element. A precondition or implication of this is that the music is separable from the DT element, which is ofc RONG. the interplay is complicated though, it’s almost like a (very successful) extrapolation and interpretation of the DT’s mental landscape.

Anyway, good listen.

Fizzles, Saturday, 8 July 2023 09:15 (nine months ago) link

oh and the last seven tracks really add some murk and strangeness, as a sort of side 3 coda. i don’t think they’re really intended to perform that function as such, but they feel pretty essential tbh. odd, intriguing album.

Fizzles, Saturday, 8 July 2023 09:17 (nine months ago) link


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