PIXIES: DOOLITTLE (1989)
1) Debaser; 2) Tame;
3) Wave
Of Mutilation; 4) I Bleed; 5) Here Comes Your Man; 6) Dead;
7) Monkey
Gone To Heaven; 8) Mr. Grieves; 9) Crackity Jones; 10) La La Love You; 11) No.
13 Baby; 12) There Goes My Gun;
13) Hey; 14) Silver; 15) Gouge Away.
General verdict: A Beach Boyʼs brain on Salvador Dali... or should
that be the other way around?
[This is a slightly modified version of an earlier review written for the short-lived Great Album series.]
The major difference between Doolittle, the
bandʼs second and (according to general critical consensus) most perfectly
realised album, and Surfer Rosa, is that it was recorded on a bigger
budget, distributed by a bigger label (Elektra), and recorded and produced after
the Pixies got their first round of warm critical (if not commercial)
reception. This is important, because the scope and general aim of the songs
here is clearly more ambitious, and even if we wonʼt go as far as to say that
it represented Black Francisʼ plan of world conquest, we still must admit that
it goes beyond merely "having fun": for Surfer Rosa, it is not
clear that Francis had any plan at all, but for Doolittle, he most
certainly had one. Very roughly speaking, we have a lo-fi to hi-fi transition
here, so if you are a lo-fi adept, you shall probably want to brand this one a «sellout»,
which is okay by me — if only everybody were capable of selling out this way...
Despite the obvious upgrade in opportunities, the
Pixies largely stick to the tried and true four-piece lineup — only augmented, for
experimental purposes, by a string quartet on ʻMonkey Gone To Heavenʼ. The
recording itself took place in studios in Boston and Stamford over almost a
month in October-November 1988, with Gil Norton (previously associated largely
with Throwing Muses) producing, at a rate of approximately one song per day —
rather curious, in fact, considering how short most of the tunes are; but it
sort of makes sense in the end, when you begin to truly understand the bandʼs
perfectionism and close attention to minute details, no matter how brief the
song. With serious press coverage, MTV videos, decent airplay, and general word
getting out, Doolittle literally put the band on the charts — although
it is instructive to know that they would always be more popular in Europe than
in their native country, with Doolittle stalling at #98 on the US charts
while rocketing all the way to #8 on the UK ones (and all of the bandʼs
subsequent releases, including the 2014 reunion record, would follow the same
pattern): apparently, their brand of intellectual pop was a bit too much for
mass American audiences to take in (stupid Yanks and all that). As of now, it
remains their best-selling record, and the most common answer to the question
"where should I start with the Pixies?", not to mention the one LP to
feature the most memorable sleeve — itʼs not that often, after all, that you
get to see a monkey with a halo trapped inside an octagram.
Only very recently did the album finally see an
expanded edition: Doolittle 25 came out in 2015 (should really be Doolittle
26, but round numbers win over production delays) with two additional CDs
worth of material — one with a bunch of B-sides and live radio sessions, and
one with a whole set of raw demos. Since I have not yet laid my hands on that one,
I am not sure if it is going to be of much interest to anybody except
collectors, but in any case, it is nice to know that the albumʼs classic status
has finally been confirmed with a proper deluxe edition.
So, where should we start? Okay, first and simplest, Doolittle
is just a classy little pop album. Itʼs got enough detours from the generic pop
formula to be eligible for "important artistic statement" status, yet
at the heart of almost each of these songs you will find ear-worms — modestly
repetitive, well-constructed, emotionally resonant instrumental and vocal hooks
that clearly show how «music therapy» was priority number one for the band,
well before any intellectual appraisal of the albumʼs lyrical or symbolic
content. You do not need to go further than the beginning of ʻDebaserʼ: many
bands would not bother to push beyond the opening bars of Kimʼs bass and
Francisʼ droning rhythm guitar, but what really matters here is the
uplifting-romantic pop riff that Santiago throws in at 0:08 into the song,
clearly setting the stage for something brash and heroic. And I do not even
need to mention ʻHere Comes Your Manʼ, with its guitar riff that should proudly
carry the Buddy Holly Seal of Appreciation on it (in fact, itʼs hard for me to
believe that Francis and Santiago did not steal that chord sequence from some
Buddy Holly song, but fortunately for them, I can never think of an actual
source).
For a small bunch of guitar-wielding indie kids with
no Mellotrons or even Jew harps, itʼs quite pleasantly diverse, too: fast, mid-
and slow tempos, melodies ranging from punk to pop to surf-rock to dark folk
(ʻSilverʼ), with enough variety spread across those 15 tracks to prevent easy
pigeonholing. Yet behind all this variety also lies a certain unifying concept,
which is hard to formulate in words, but if roughly approximated, it would
sound something like "Incidental Music For A Culture Overdose". Black
Francisʼ songs are like tiny capsules in which he concentrates and diffuses
gazillions of mini-impressions — musical, literary, cinematic, highbrow and
trashy alike — and which he passes off as the average reactions of a
culture-crazed, or simply an information-crazed Joe driven to inadequate, and
sometimes downright crazy, behaviour by the world pressing down and around on
him. Itʼs very much the same principle that is essential to grasp in order to
understand Talking Heads, but there is also a big difference: Doolittle
does not have that much reflection and introspection, it is not about the
protagonist wallowing in his own paranoia... it simply is.
The anthemic ʻDebaserʼ lays it on the line fairly
quickly — with not-too-obscure references to Un Chien Andalou, itʼs like
a laymanʼs gut reaction to being exposed to the world of artistic strangeness
and unpredictability, something a slightly offset teen could experience and
pronounce upon a fortuitous visit to an arthouse. Like most Pixies song, it is
very tongue-in-cheek, too — you never truly know if the band is celebrating
this attitude or mocking it, and you will never truly know it even when you
reach the end of the album. One thing is for certain: Doolittle is all
about growing up to be a debaser, and most of the time itʼs on, weʼre busy
debasing everyone and everything in sight. Second song, case in point: donʼt you
think that the correct words for the scream-your-heart-out overloud
chorus section of the song is not "Cookie, I think youʼre TAME! TAME!
TAAAAAAME!", but rather "Cookie, I think youʼre wild?" A
very simple, direct, and unforgettable inversion of values.
But as far as I am concerned, the real highlights of Doolittle
are the anthemic songs rather than the cooky-gimmicky interludes. ʻWave Of
Mutilationʼ opens with arguably the albumʼs greatest guitar melody, a wobbly
wave-like trill that resolves into an arena-rock set of power chords, and this
is followed by Francisʼ most inspired bit of vocal arrangement — heʼs not a
great singer at all, but he is a genius artist, and thereʼs nothing quite like
that contrast between the enigmatic breathy whisper of the first two lines
("cease to resist, giving my goodbye / drive my car into the ocean")
and the loud, distant, echoey third line ("you think Iʼm dead, but I sail
away"). Itʼs like during the first two lines they are brushing in a
speedboat across the waterʼs surface, and then the third line shifts their
trajectory 60-70 degrees and propulses them to high heavens, before making
the backwards plunge for the chorus ("on a wave of mutilation"). Let
alone the fact that the second verse unquestionably features the most seductive
manner of pronouncing the noun "crustaceans", the song is like
the perfect ode to narcissism and masochism rolled in one — I only hope that
nobody gave in to its lyrics and atmosphere too easily, because it really
taunts you to hop in your car and drive it off the highest cliff to make the
grandest exit known to mankind. At least itʼs a good thing there ainʼt no cliff
overlooking Mariana.
ʻMonkey Gone To Heavenʼ is often mentioned as an «environmental»
song, due to its mention of the "ten million pounds of sludge" and
"hole in the sky", but it would be too boring for Pixies to simply
write an ecological lament — itʼs really more than that, sort of an apocalyptic
prediction where "this monkey" refers to all of us, and the two
violins and two cellos are added to the mix to help complete the aura of quiet,
but slightly amused sadness already generated by the repetitive chorus (almost
makes it sound like the Electric Light Orchestra, in a way). Again, it is a
pretty unique lyrical and musical take on the end of the world, neither too
angry nor too morbid — although most people will probably remember it for the
silly numerological bit in the middle, which Francis just threw in for some
extra kicks but which does not really mean much of anything on its own (why
does he have to scream "GOD IS SEVEN! GOD IS SEVEN!" at the top of
his lungs as if he were having a sudden epiphany, or getting exorcised? No
idea, but I guess we all love it anyway).
Thereʼs also «light anthemic», in the form of ʻHere
Comes Your Manʼ, which was among the first songs Francis ever wrote — this
explains the Buddy Holly-esque hook and the relative «fluffiness» of the tune
(which was still released as a single, but apparently the band never liked
playing it live in the good old days), yet it fits in very well with all the
rest, even despite its innate optimism. Fact is, you donʼt really know what youʼre
waiting for, you have no idea of who is your man and where he is supposed to
take you to; you might just as well be a monkey waiting for him to take you to
heaven. And a bigger fact is, thereʼs no «optimism» or «pessimism» on this
record — itʼs morally ambiguous as heck. It lives in two basic states: «overdrive»
and «preparing for overdrive», but you got to be prepared to accept that the Doolittle
universe knows not the simple contrast between «happy» and «sad». It does know
the contrast between «loud» and «quiet», and the louder it is, the more chances
you get at getting a great riff, and so ʻHere Comes Your Manʼ
belongs in the same category as ʻDebaserʼ, despite being
superficially more «accessible» to the general population.
And where is this overdrive stemming from? Like I said
— culture overdose. Hyperbolic reaction to Bunuel on ʻDebaserʼ. Vampiric
fantasies on ʻI Bleedʼ. Excitable young man reading the story of Bathsheba and
Uriah on ʻDeadʼ, and then the story of Samson and Delilah on ʻGouge Awayʼ.
Throw in some memories of a crazy Puerto Rican roommate (ʻCrackity Jonesʼ) and
of various types of easy women (ʻTameʼ, ʻNo. 13 Babyʼ), some numerology,
some Greek mythology (at least there are no songs about superheroes named Tony
on this record), and what you have here is a slightly less educated, but much
more easily excitable version of Stephen Dedalus swimming in a chaotic soup of
his charged-up memories and encyclopaedic knowledge. Doolittle makes no
major statements, issues no accusations, and would commit seppuku if it ever
found itself overwhelming us with a much-too-serious attitude — but somehow its
twisted, catchy, humorous, surrealist regurgitations of human experience are
capable of producing a much stronger effect than oh so many Serious Works of
Art.
I do have to say that I have always found the track
sequencing a little uneven: most of the big anthems and strongest hooks are lodged
on its first side, with the first stretch of seven songs pretty much unbeatable
in its onslaught. However, starting with ʻMr. Grievesʼ, whose mock-reggae
verses sound like the recordʼs first serious slip-up to me, the record becomes
shakier: stuff like ʻNo. 13 Babyʼ, while not bad at all on its own, shares the
same tempo and stylistics with ʻMonkeyʼ without being in possession of a
comparably strong hook, and I can never remember much of interest
about ʻThere Goes My Gunʼ or ʻHeyʼ, either. As sacrilegious as it
sounds, I sometimes think they could have taken Gil Nortonʼs advice and make
some of the good songs a tad longer, sacrificing some of the weaker ones at
their expense — for instance, you can say what you want, but two minutes is way
too little for ʻWave Of Mutilationʼ. In other words, Doolittle is not
all perfection, although I reiterate that even the weakest songs here still
have a sense of purpose — itʼs just that most of the highlights are
concentrated in the first half.
You could also say, I guess, that the twin
guitar-bass-drums setup for this music does not fully justify its ambitions;
and considering how well the strings work on ʻMonkey Gone To Heavenʼ, it is
lamentable that more instruments, or at least a larger amount of guitar tones
have not been used on the album (being well aware all the time that its budget,
though significantly larger than for Surfer Rosa, still wouldnʼt allow
for too much whipped cream). Normally, it works, and they are capable of
tapping the instrumentsʼ potential (ʻWave Of Mutilationʼ is a prime example of
how one guitar part fully compensates for the lack of a symphonic arrangement);
but every once in a while, the guitars are just playing «standard» alternative
rock parts (ʻGouge Awayʼ), and thatʼs not ideal if you want to leave behind a
proper masterpiece. This, too, is a little responsible for the excitement
occasionally (very occasionally) dying down. I mean, would it have hurt them
too much to at least drag a piano in the studio? Oh well, forget it. Itʼs not
like the prosecution has much of a case here anyway.
In some small way, Doolittle does sound like every great pop album produced in the 1990s. It paves the road to all sorts of post-modernistic attitudes in music, combining gut-level, poppy enjoyability with gratuituous (or not so gratuitous?) cultural references, an ability to sound tremendously emotionally engaged and morally abstinent at the same time, and a crazy excited whirlwind that can suck in just about anything that happens to make its way past your window. It might be the closest analogy to a Pulp Fiction for modern music — a gate-opening progenitor that presents unlimited possibilities in an easily accessible and humorous manner, and launches a thousand ships while never being bested by anyone. And itʼs still totally cool after all these years, in all its glorious simplicity and innocence.
This is one of my personal favorites (and yes, I didn't know Come On Pilgrim existed so sue me). "Debaser" is one of my favorite songs, but the entire 1st side is arguably one of the greatest strings of songs to ever come out of rock.
ReplyDeleteYeah I feel the same way about the second side. I think the issue is that besides "Crackity Jones" and "La La Love You", they got slightly more serious on the second side, which is not as entertaining as the more light-hearted side of the Pixies. Though, I still like the second side. "Hey" and "Gouge Away" are great songs as are the other two I just mentioned.
The biggest difference is that now the production is adequate for the material and voila, Pixies shine in full glory. But we already heard it on "Come on Pilgrim" EP. Nevertheless, great album.
ReplyDeleteSpot on as usual, the closest the Pixies got to perfectly mixing noise and pop.
ReplyDeleteHonestly I'm curious to see what you think of Trompe Le Monde George. The Pixies fan base is weirdly divided on it, with some calling it their second best after Doolittle and others calling it their worst (I tend toward to former personally)
Yeah, that will be really interesting to see what he has to say
DeleteHey George, why is this review not under the Pixies label?
ReplyDelete