1) Caribou; 2) Vamos; 3) Isla De Encanta; 4) Ed Is Dead; 5) The Holiday Song; 6) Nimrodʼs Son; 7) Iʼve Been Tired; 8) Levitate Me.
General verdict: Short as heck, but already contains every single seed of the greatness to come.
If Come
On Pilgrim fails to immediately establish the Pixies as one of the most
major acts of their generation, then we have no one to blame but Ivo
Watts-Russell, the president of 4AD, who was given the entire «Purple Tape» —
the results of the bandʼs first major recording session, with 17 tracks in all
— but cautiously decided to cherry-pick only a sample of it and release it in
mini-LP format, with a UK-only release that was, allegedly, fairly strange for
a US-based band, but apparently little had changed in the way of things over
those twenty years since Jimi Hendrix had to prove his worth by jumping across
the Atlantic.
Even so, the ridiculously short length is just
about the only major complaint I could raise against the Pixiesʼ debut —
because even these eight short songs suffice to let you know that here was
another band all set to change the world. The first thing that comes to mind is
that it is all but impossible to put a label on the kind of music they are
playing. It seems to be equal parts «pop» and «rock», but it is certainly not
«power pop» in a Cheap Trick sense — the guitars have none of that thick arena crunch
which can sound so uplifting in skilled hands and so plebeian in not so skilled
ones. More apt is the often heard assessment of the music as a hybrid of «surf
rock» and «punk rock», but that, too, might give one unwarranted visions of the
Ramones playing ʽSurfinʼ Birdʼ when in reality the Pixies sounded nothing like
that.
Why donʼt we go straight to the source
material? ʽCaribouʼ opens with a thrice repeated flashy little guitar flourish
that would not have sounded out of place on some late Sixtiesʼ Californian folk
rock album — except this one is lo-fi and distorted in prime underground
Eighties fashion. From there, the guitar goes into epic folk-blues mode (think
ʽHouse Of The Rising Sunʼ), except it keeps staggering and stuttering around in
pseudo-drunk DIY mode. When the vocals kick in, they come in short, simple,
minimalistic bursts, evoking the old beatnik spirit both in form and essence
("I live cement / I hate this street / Give dirt to me / I bite
lament" is almost Allen Ginsberg, though it probably rhymes a bit too much
for him) — and the wobbly man-woman unison between Black Francis and Kim Deal
gives the song an oddly universalist atmosphere despite only featuring two
people. Itʼs a mournful dirge that can easily turn into rebellious anthem, a
creepy mystical incantation that can mutate into prime anger — and it never takes itself too seriously,
like the Birthday Party or something like that.
That last part is actually essential, as is the
bandʼs infatuation with elements of surf music. The Pixies introduced a level
of «meta» into rock and pop music that few, if any, other Eighties acts had
dared to, or even thought to introduce. When you think back to all the
non-mainstream music from those days, what comes to mind is probably the hardcore
punk scene, the industrial and experimental noise bands, the starry-eyed or
bitter-cynical college rockers, all or most of them bent on stressing the
sincerity and immediacy of their sound as opposed to the artificial gloss of synth-pop,
hair metal, and power balladry. But what makes Come On Pilgrim so awesome is that it has a little bit of it all —hardcore,
noise, idealism, cynicism — yet always leaves you a way out so you do not end
up pledging all your life and all your values to any single one of those
elements. Serious and playful,
sincere and ironic at the same time,
all the while pursuing crazier and crazier ideas of musical synthesis that are
valuable inside and outside their social context.
Thus, ʽVamosʼ is at the same time a bitter
satire on stereotypes of Hispanic immigrants in New England ("estaba
pensando sobreviviendo con mi sister en New Jersey" — no way this song
wouldnʼt get these guys «canceled» in modern times if they had a million dollars
and a million Instagram subscribers), and
an innovative and exciting experiment in guitar playing. Amusingly, its
structure reminds me of that old Amboy Dukesʼ reinterpretation of ʽBaby Please Donʼt
Goʼ: like Ted Nugent in his psychedelic period, Joey Santiago here is all bent
on making his guitar go as wild as possible over a very basic, very fast, very
headbanging rhythm track, and even though this early version is shorter and
less efficient than either the extended variant on Surfer Rosa or their even more extended and crazy legendary live
performances, itʼs still a lot of fun — and, of course, that «bumblebee siren»
bended riff coming in at key points in the song is easily the most
unforgettable single moment of the entire mini-LP.
Perhaps most of the things attempted on these
songs would be done better later, on the Pixiesʼ first two full-length LPs, but
this should not detract from the fact that there is not a single bad song here —
and by «bad» I actually mean «not containing at least one or two fresh musical
ideas, let alone the lyrical content». ʽIsla De Encantaʼ mixes a hardcore punk
riff with crazy Angus Young-style guitar solos, stop-and-start techniques, and
more of Francisʼ hilarious Spanglish (all those Puerto Rican experiences paying
off). ʽEd Is Deadʼ would later be reshaped into the much more memorable ʽWaves Of
Mutilationʼ, but Joeyʼs use of sustain still makes it into a gaping psychedelic
monster in its own rights. ʽThe Holiday Songʼ has one of the bandʼs happiest
punk-pop riffs shadowing lyrics full of references to such happy themes as masturbation
and incest. ʽNimrodʼs Sonʼ, I believe, actually steals the melody of Motörheadʼs
ʽAce Of Spadesʼ, but plays it in a more
retro, almost Fifties-like fashion, with another
story of an «incestuous union» tacked on top of the crazy beat (does Black Francis
know something about his family history, I wonder, that he has not explicitly
shared with the public?). And while ʽIʼve Been Tiredʼ is more of a spasmodic
indictment of brainless radicals ("sheʼs a real left-winger ʼcause she
been down south and held peasants in her arms") than a musical
breakthrough, it still ends the record on a ska-punk note with lots of fun interplay
between bass, rhythm, and lead.
In my humble opinion, the historical
significance of Come On Pilgrim is easy
to define: simply put, it was the last time in the known history of pop / rock
that a small band with a classic, traditional Beatlesque lineup (rhythm guitar,
lead guitar, bass, drums) was able to come up with a sound completely its own and completely
overturning existing models and stereotypes. Itʼs all simple as heck, really, but
for some reason nobody else had that kind of genius simplicity in 1987, and
nobody — to the best of my knowledge — has been able to come up with another
kind of genius simplicity with the same bunch of instruments ever since. In
this way, you could argue that this
music set the stage for the last important pop/rock revolution in known history
— and even if I may be pushing it, I donʼt care, because the more people try to
hear this record from this angle of view, the better.
Damn, I didn't even know about this. If it is this good, it is time to go listen to it! Thanks George!
ReplyDeleteAs someone who witnessed Seattle's music make its international splash, from the very epicenter of that scene, I can attest that the Pixies exerted a Velvet Underground-like influence on just about everyone circa '87-8. Punk bands, psychedelic bands, power-pop bands, and (uh-oh) grunge bands all found inspiration in what the Pixies were doing early on. Cobain himself famously described Smells Like Teen Spirit as just a Pixies rip-off.
ReplyDeleteObviously the Seattle scene wasn't alone.
I'm trying to think of another sub rosa influence (no pun intended) on rock that had as strong and as broad and impact since then, but I can't. Someone help me out if you have any ideas. Just don't say Portishead or Neutral Milk Hotel, please.
@Carlo Dave
ReplyDeleteI'd say Jesus and Mary Chain are a fairly contemporaneous band that had a similar across-the-board influence on rock. Who had more influence depends on what one considers rock in the 90s. They both were huger than their sales would indicate.
Masterpiece. Introduces Frank Black's aesthetic and every song is great.
ReplyDeleteI heard the EP, and yeah, it is fantastic. Love pretty much every song on it. However, I want to briefly comment on the fact that it really isn’t the very last totally unique BAND in history. For that, I point to 16 Horsepower, who pretty much invented a sound that not a single artist in history before their debut has ever come close to. I am not a country fan by any means, but I will say it is exactly fitting what George says: taking regular instrumentation and coming up with a completely new sound that did overturn all existing norms of the genre. George, if you haven’t heard it, hear it. I stay away from most country, but 16 horsepower’s debut is really out of this world.
ReplyDelete