Frank Black (album)

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Frank Black
Frank Black cover
Studio album by Frank Black
Released March 9, 1993
Recorded 1992
Genre Alternative Rock
Length 46:29
Label 4AD/Elektra
Producer(s) Eric Drew Feldman, Frank Black
Professional reviews
Frank Black chronology
Frank Black
(1993)
Teenager of the Year
(1994)


Frank Black is Frank Black's first solo album. It was released in 1993 after the breakup of the Pixies. It is quite similar in theme and style to the last '80s/'90s Pixies recordings found on the album, Trompe le Monde, featuring, as they both do, a large amount of synthetics and a focus on themes such as UFOs/science fiction.Like the Pixies discography, the album was released by 4AD.

Contents

[edit] Recording and production

While the Pixies' 1991 album Trompe le Monde was being recorded, Black, known as Black Francis at the time, had discussions with the album's producer, Gil Norton, about a possible solo record.[1] He told Norton he was keen to record again, even though he had no new material; as a result, the two decided on a cover album. However, by the time Francis visited a recording studio again in 1992, he had "plenty of tunes and musical scraps".[2]

He collaborated with Feldman to record new material; they began by trimming down the number of covers to one, The Beach Boys' "Hang On to Your Ego".[3] Feldman became the album's producer, and played keyboard and bass guitar on several songs,[4] with Santiago featuring on lead guitar.[5] Francis recorded the album during the hiatus and breakup of the Pixies in late 1992 and early 1993. He then adopted the stage name "Frank Black" (inverting his old persona "Black Francis") and released the results as Frank Black in March 1993.[6]

The album features lead guitar by former Pixies Joey Santiago and extensive production and keyboard work from Eric Drew Feldman, who also played keyboards on the Pixies' Trompe le Monde. Fans have variously referred to the self-titled album as the "orange" or "yellow" album.

[edit] Music

[edit] Content

Frank Black was characterized by a focus on UFOs and science fiction, although he explored other eclectic subjects, such as in "I Heard Ramona Sing", a song about the Ramones.[7] The album was similar in style, both musically and lyrically, to the Pixies' albums Bossanova and Trompe le Monde. Feldman later said that the first record connected his solo career with Trompe le Monde, "but at the same time it is an island, like nothing else he [Black] did".[8]

[edit] Critical reception

[edit] Track listing

  1. "Los Angeles"
  2. "I Heard Ramona Sing"
  3. "Hang On to Your Ego"
  4. "Fu Manchu"
  5. "Places Named After Numbers"
  6. "Czar"
  7. "Old Black Dawning"
  8. "Ten Percenter"
  9. "Brackish Boy"
  10. "Two Spaces"
  11. "Tossed" (Instrumental Version)
  12. "Parry the Wind High, Low"
  13. "Adda Lee"
  14. "Every Time I Go Around Here"
  15. "Don't Ya Rile 'Em"

[edit] Musicians

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ Gil Norton was the producer of the Pixies' records from Doolittle onwards.
  2. ^ 4AD. 4AD - Frank Black. Retrieved on 2006-11-29.
  3. ^ Rolling Stone: Frank Black: Frank Black : Music Reviews. Rolling Stone (1993-04-01). Retrieved on 2006-11-29.
  4. ^ The Captain Beefheart Radar Station - Eric Drew Feldman Discography. Retrieved on 2006-11-29. “Eric Drew Feldman (bass, keyboards, synthetics)”
  5. ^ Frank, Ganz, 2006. p. 187-8
  6. ^ 4AD - 1993 Releases - Frank Black. Retrieved on 2007-01-06.
  7. ^ 4AD - Frank Black (page 2). 4AD. Retrieved on 2006-12-02.
  8. ^ Frank, Ganz, 2006. p. 188

[edit] External links