Pere Ubu: Terminal Tower, An Archival Collection (Twin Tone)
Given to me by my friend Mark
I once read that Pere Ubu's David Thomas made (or tried to make) a bet with DEVO who would hit the top 40 first.
It's ridiculous that either of the two bands would ever chart, but of course DEVO had a surprise hit with "Whip It". While outwardly more weird than Pere Ubu, DEVO was more theatrical and obviously tongue-in-cheek. And well, catchier, more of a pop sensibility. Plus they managed to get themselves onto Saturday Night Live. And they were savvy with respect to early music videos. They were naturally the more multimedia of the two groups.
But what was Pere Ubu by comparison? Darker, more of a garage band but with the strange, warbly vocals of Thomas, and by their second 7" pushed into stranger territory by Allen Ravenstine's homemade modular synthesizers.
This LP collects their early singles, which amazingly date back to 1975(!), essentially pre-punk rock. From Ohio. Ohio! What the hell was going on in Ohio in that era? Maybe it was the chemicals dumped into the Cuyahoga. Or more likely...the Kent State shooting. People who were attending Kent State during the shooting, if not present at the shooting itself: Mark and Gerald from DEVO, Joe Walsh, Chrissie Hynde, and Chris Butler from Tin Huey/The Waitresses. Did this add a sense of urgency to the region? Or am I attaching meaning to an ultimately meaningless incident?
I recommend you seek out Derf Backderf's graphic novel Kent State: Four Dead in Ohio. Be warned: you're either going to wind up in tears or hair-tearingly angry at the government, or both. Derf himself was a kid (about my age) when it happened near his home. Oh, AND he attended high school with Jeffrey Dahmer, which he depicts in his graphic novel My Friend Dahmer.
Ohio now is considered the the central moderate/conservative heartland of America. When you start to consider the above, Ohio seems like a far more bizarre place in general, though maybe that's the US in general.
I was born in Akron. Read into that as you will. My father was from Sandusky and attended Kent State.
The record. It traces the development of Ubu as a kind of pre-punk, proto-metal Peter Laughner-led ensemble to a lighter, more surreal sound. Fewer power chords, more space, more vocals, more modular synth. Pre-LP, to The Modern Dance, onto Dub Housing, onto New Picnic Time and Songs of the Bailing Man. Dub Housing is my favorite. It's memorable, but also a straight-forward rock band pulled into alien territory.
I went to see whoever Pere Ubu was at the Club Cafe, I don't know, 7-8 years ago? David was the only original member.* They were touring on the repertoire of the original Ubu recordings, the Hearthen Records singles (the original singles here) and the first two LPs. David sat the entire time, bottle of wine nearby. He walked offstage at one point, frustrated, but returned. People loved it. The band sounded great, by the way.
I talked with Tom Moran while I was there. Tom was the guitarist for The Five, arguably the best band from Pittsburgh to emerge from the punk scene.** I'd had little interaction with Tom previously, but we knew who each other was, and we live in the same neighborhood. He told me how Larence Goodby played him Pere Ubu's The Modern Dance and that they declared, "We want to be this band!" and The Five was initiated. I can see the influence, once he mentioned it.
Ubu didn't play everything off this album, most significantly lacking "Final Solution". In retrospect it's an unfortunate title for a song about teen angst, was Thomas himself would note. Too bad, it's a good song.
This album works as a document of the development of Pere Ubu in its initial years. As such, you hear how the sound changes with the changes in personnel. In other words, it's a great document but not a cohesive album statement.
My friend Mark saw David Thomas perform in the late 80s, bought this LP from him, and had him sign it. David asked, "What do you want? A dog, a dinosaur?" Mark asked for a dinosaur. David's scribbling image looks like just that, a scribble. He gave it to me later.
David Thomas died this week at 71. I would have guessed older. I was once mistaken for David, the account of which you can read on my Facebook page. Sorry you're gone David; if there's an afterlife, I hope you're happy. "It's just a joke, man!"
* It has occurred to me that I've seen at least three bands with only a single original member: Pere Ubu, Yes, and most recently Kraftwerk. If I think of others, I'll write about it
** Tom said to me, "We heard Pere Ubu and we wanted to be that band. Then we moved to Boston and we wanted to be Aerosmith!"