Book Review: Fool the World: The Oral History of a Band Called Pixies by Josh Frank and Caryn Ganz
Published June 02, 2006
Back in 2001, there was still mystery left in the Pixies. Frank Black (not, as he seems to call himself now, Charles Thompson) had only just reached the point where he could say the name of his former band out loud; he still hadn't spoken to his ex-bandmate Kim Deal in almost a decade. Whispers of a reunion were growing louder, sure, but certainly nobody I knew was ready to believe them. And when an article appeared in Mojo that March, it was still something of a surprise to see all four members in print, geographically separated but united on the page for the first time since their breakup.
Is it strange to feel nostalgic for those days? Don't get me wrong - just like every other rock nerd too young to have caught the Pixies in their original run, the alternative rock legends' reunion made my 2004. And while I'm not holding my breath, in moments of weakness the idea of a long-awaited fifth Pixies album still makes me salivate a little. But after a seemingly endless tour, a handful of stray studio tracks, a glut of cash-in compilations and DVDs, and more cover stories than you could shake a sliced-up eyeball at, isn't the Pixies' biography becoming as well-worn and overdone as...well, the Beatles?
If your answer to that question was a resounding "yes," then you might want to approach Fool the World, a new "oral history" of the band in the tradition of their 2004 Spin cover story, with caution. Or rather, you should approach it with the right intentions. There are no big revelations about the Pixies to be found here; it's still the same story Mojo ran way back in 2001. Thompson meets guitarist Joey Santiago at the University of Massachussets. Thompson and Santiago drop out of school and decide to form a band. They meet bass player Deal through a want ad citing Husker Du and Peter, Paul and Mary; drummer David Lovering is introduced by Deal's husband. And the rest is all spaceships, debasers, kicked guitars, ladies in the radiator and Steve Albini. There are no juicy tidbits about Thompson's alleged relationship with Deal - at least none more substantial than the usual teasing suggestions. And if you're looking for some great, dramatic "Reason" for the infamous breakup, you might as well forget it: the "Reason" is that they got tired, and Thompson/Black is as honest and understated about that fact as ever.
Fortunately, however (for the book and for our patience), big revelations aren't why we read oral histories. What makes Fool the World such a fascinating and worthwhile read, in fact, has to do with the exact opposite: namely, the minutiae it sees fit to chronicle, from the specifics of the Pixies' ill-fated tour with U2 to the photo session which produced the "Gigantic" 7" sleeve. Mastermind Josh Frank, who bills himself as a "pop culture dramatist" - yes, he's the guy who's working on the Frank Black/Pixies musical you might have heard about a few years back - approaches his project with the zeal of a playwright and a fanboy, peppering the narrative with interview excerpts from a 61-strong "cast of characters." That includes major players like longtime producer Gil Norton, Deal's ex-husband John Murphy, and of course the band themselves, but we also get to hear from such peripheral figures as the band's agent, the founders of Fort Apache Studios (where the Purple Tape/Come On Pilgrim was recorded), and a whole bevy of music-world contemporaries and torch-carriers alike. The picture we get isn't always pretty - Lovering's decline into depression and near-suicide in the years leading up the reunion is actually downright bleak - but it just might be the most complete telling of the Pixies story yet.
- Book Review: Fool the World: The Oral History of a Band Called Pixies by Josh Frank and Caryn Ganz
- Published: June 02, 2006
- Type: Review
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Entertainment, Books: Biography, Books: Arts, Music: Alternative Rock
- Writer: Modern Pea Pod
- Modern Pea Pod's BC Writer page
- Modern Pea Pod's personal site
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