
In the vein of alternative rock, few bands carry the weight of the Pixies, the cerebral project started by Black Francis just over 30 years ago. The Bostonian four-piece released some of the biggest rock hits at the tail end of the last millennium, including their instantly recognizable track โWhere Is My Mind?,โ inspiring a countless number of younger acts along the way, perhaps most notably an anger-fueled grunge trio from Seattle who admitted to ripping off one of the bandโs songs for their own track, a little tune called โSmells Like Teen Spirit.โ After going on hiatus in 1993, wiped out from touring and the pressure of the worldโs desire for continued creative output, the band reunited in 2004 for a few poorly received albums before parting ways with bassist Kim Deal in 2013. The bandโs most recent release, Head Carrier, turned that streak of bad luck around; the album is the bandโs strongest full-length release since going on hiatus and is full of well-written, well-played tracks.
The Pixiesโ return to greatness may have had something to do with how they made Head Carrier, which marked a significant change in the Pixiesโ recording process. On each of their previous albums, that process was short as could be; the band would spend a few days getting ready to record, hop in the studio, get the job done and get back on the road as soon as possible. On Head Carrier, the band โ who, for the first time, had nothing else to focus on but making the best record they could โ spent six weeks in pre-production, which gave singer Black Francis and co. time to iron out the kinks and figure out what worked and didnโt work. โBy the time we got into the studio, we knew the songs inside and out and were ready to play,โ Francis says. โIt made the entire process a lot smoother for us.โ
Time canโt take all the credit for the bandโs rediscovered genius, of course; most of whatโs good about Head Carrier lies in how it reminds us that Black Francis remains one of modern rockโs strongest and most unique talents. Keeping things fresh gets a bit more challenging over the years, he says, but the key lies in staying focused on all the musical spaces you havenโt yet been to. โYou find youโve already been down a lot of avenues, so you have to find new places to go,โ he says. โOtherwise you keep doing the same thing again and again.โ
The band walks the line between old spaces and new on โAll I Think About Now,โ where they mourn the musical loss of Deal, issuing one final and proper goodbye to the creative force essential to crafting their early sound. โRemember when we were happy?” sings โ ironically enough โ Dealโs replacement, Paz Lenchantin, who joined the band as a full-time member prior to the writing of this record. โThatโs all I think about now/ If you have any doubt/ I want to thank you anyhow.โ Itโs a peaceful sendoff to an old friend, a refreshing way to usher in the new era of the Pixies, and a gentle reminder that this band has come a long way, covering a lot of ground in the their three-decade-and-counting career. Reflecting on the legacy the band has left so far, Francis seems to feel good about the mark heโs left. Though his own kids donโt yet appreciate his music โ theyโre still at the age where theyโre rejecting what Dad thinks is โcool,โ he says โ he has hope that fans will reflect fondly on what the band has been able to accomplish.
โI think people will look back and think we were a smart band,โ Francis says. โSmart about the way we were writing songs and what we were saying. At least I hope they will.โ
With all the perspective heโs gained from writing dozens of songs and touring the world over, Francisโ advice to the next generation of rockstars is simple: play what you want to play and your path will unwind before you. โDonโt dwell on [finding your own sound] too much,โ he says. โDonโt get in your own head about it.โ
Itโs hard to say whatโs next for The Pixies. At this juncture, itโs impossible to tell if theyโll crank out another album or return to hiatus, perfectly apropos for a band that has consistently proved themselves to be unpredictable at best. Either way, if thereโs a lesson to be learned from Head Carrier, itโs that we canโt count the Pixies out just yet: they certainly arenโt giving fans any promises for the future, but theyโre not necessarily hanging up their hats, either.
