July 5th, 2004 3:00pm
A Letter In Your Writing Doesn’t Mean You’re Not Dead
Frank Black Francis & Two Pale Boys “Cactus” – This is a selection from the forthcoming Frank Black Francis project, which finds Frank Black reworking several Pixies classics with David Thomas’ side men, Two Pale Boys. The record is mostly quite mellow, recasting familiar tunes with low-key, atmospheric arrangements. The best of the new versions play up ideas and themes which were already present in the material: “Monkey Gone To Heaven” is stripped of its bombast, and is set to music which would not sound out of place on an underwater documentary soundtrack; “The Holiday Song”‘s lead guitar hook is replaced with festive horns; and “Caribou”‘s chimey keyboards and woozy horns sound like a Beach Boys record played at half speed. Nothing on the record is an outright failure, but Black’s version of the Kim Deal song “Into The White” does not sound particularly inspired by anything other than novelty, and the jazz/dub fusion on “Where Is My Mind?” already feels dated in spite of being quite pretty.
“Cactus” is the obvious highlight of the album for me, building on the skeletal arrangement of the original with looped backing vocals, a menacing bass chug, and occasional horn stabs. It captures the basic essence of the song, but feels even more desperate in its yearning and masochistic desire. The arrangement evokes a sense of vertigo and delirium, stomach churning neuroses and sweltering heat. It’s the closest anything from this record comes to besting the original Pixies recording, and hints at a promising new direction for Black when he resumes his solo career after the current Pixies reunion.









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