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Big Black

 
Artist: Big Black
  • Formed: 1982, Evanston, IL
  • Disbanded: 1988
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "The Rich Man's Eight Track Tape," "Songs About Fucking," "Atomizer"
  • Representative Songs: "Cables," "Kerosene," "Bad Penny"

Biography

While punk rock was always supposed to be about pushing the envelope, few post-punk bands seemed willing to go quite so far to creatively confront their audience as Big Black. The group's guitars alternately sliced like a machete and ground like a dentist's drill, creating a groundbreaking and monolithic dissonance in the process. Their use of a drum machine, cranked up to ten and sounding a tattoo that pummeled the audience into submission, was a crucial precursor to the coming industrial music scene while creating a sound which was far more challenging and organic than what groups such as Ministry and Nine Inch Nails would achieve with similar ingredients. Big Black's songs, which openly dealt with such topics as mutilation, murder, rape, child molestation, arson, immolation, racism, and misogyny, established them as a group that acknowledged no taboos; and while they didn't seem to be advocating the anti-social or criminal behavior they sang about, there was also a level of familiarity with their subject matter which made more than a few listeners blanch. Big Black was a band that went where few bands dared to go (and where many felt bands shouldn't go), and for good or ill their pervasive influence had a seismic impact on indie rock. At the same time, Big Black was a group who maintained firmly held ideals when it came to doing business; they paid for their own recordings, booked their own shows, handled their own management and publicity, and remained stubbornly independent at a time when many independent bands were eagerly reaching out for the major-label brass ring.

Big Black was the brainchild of Steve Albini, who spent much of his youth in Missoula, MT. A skinny and unimposing kid with glasses and an intense demeanor, Albini was something of loner in his high school days. After reading about the then-burgeoning punk rock scene in the music press, Albini began hunting down records and developed a taste for Suicide and the Ramones. In his senior year of high school, he began teaching himself to play guitar and bass to keep himself occupied after injuring his leg in a motorcycle accident. In 1980, after graduating from high school, Albini moved to Evanston, IL, not far from Chicago, to study journalism and art at Northwestern University. Not unexpectedly, Albini soon immersed himself in the Chicago punk scene, and became a passionate fan of Naked Raygun. Before long, he became interested in starting a band of his own, and briefly played with a new wave outfit called Stations; the band's most lingering influence was that Albini bought a Roland TR-606 drum machine to handle the band's percussion chores. In 1982, frustrated by his inability to get a group off the ground, Albini decided to start a band all by his lonesome; borrowing a four-track tape machine in exchange for a case of beer, he spent his spring break in his room, recording a six-song EP on which he played all the guitar and bass parts, handled all the vocals, and let "Roland" take care of the drumming. Called Lungs, Albini credited the material to the group name Big Black, and a local Chicago label, Ruthless Records, released the record near the end of 1982. Albini also began writing for several fanzines, most notably Matter, and his cantankerous screeds on a variety of topics (but mostly relating to the low ethical and musical standards of those in the music community) coupled with his lyrical obsessions gained him a reputation as the angriest man in rock & roll.

While response to Lungs was mixed, Albini at least had a calling card for his new "group," and he was eager to put together a version of Big Black that could play live. In early 1983, Albini persuaded Jeff Pezzati, from his beloved Naked Raygun, to join the new group, and during a practice session in the basement of Pezzati's home, Santiago Durango, who also lived in the building and was a guitarist with Naked Raygun, came down and offered to jam with the group. The son of a doctor from Colombia who came to America to study at the University of Illinois, Durango was, like Albini, an intelligent social misfit who found solace in the abrasive sound of punk rock, joining a band called Silver Abuse in 1979, and the two quickly hit it off. Durango became a permanent member of Big Black, and his muscular guitar sound was the ideal match of Albini's jagged, metallic tone. The band's next record, 1983's Bulldozer EP, was recorded with the band's new lineup, and this time around Albini had access to a 24-track recording studio and a sympathetic engineer and producer, Iain Burgess. The result was a quantum leap over Lungs, and the first real recorded manifestation of Big Black's trademark bruising, sinister sound. Initially packaged in a specially fabricated steel sleeve, Bulldozer received significantly greater attention in the independent music press than Lungs, and the band's third EP, 1984's Racer-X, coupled with increased touring and better distribution thanks to a licensing deal with Homestead Records, began to break their following outside the Midwest.

In late 1984, Jeff Pezzati, bowing to the demands of his day job and Naked Raygun's increasingly busy schedule, amicably parted ways with Big Black. Santiago Durango, meanwhile, opted to leave Naked Raygun and make Big Black his first musical commitment. Dave Riley, a bassist who had done studio work in Detroit before relocating to Chicago and joining the band Savage Beliefs, was tapped as Big Black's new bass player. Not long after Riley signed on, Big Black began work on their first full-length album, and both musically and lyrically, 1985's Atomizer upped the ante on the musical and lyrical ferocity of Big Black's previous body of work, an unrelenting assault of guitar sounds and imagined violence of all sorts. Atomizer made Big Black the new cause célèbre of the indie rock scene; it was a polarizing work that people either loved or hated, but no one seemed neutral about, and enough listeners were taken with the record's sonic assault that it became a significant underground success. (The album also gave Albini the opportunity to launch the first of many salvos against digital recording technology when Atomizer was released on compact disc, along with several tracks from singles and EPs, as a collection called The Rich Man's Eight Track Tape.) However, the group didn't see as much of Atomizer's profits as they believed was their fair share, and following the release of Big Black's "El Duce" single, they parted ties with Homestead and entered into a new distribution agreement with Touch & Go Records, whose owner, Corey Rusk, was a trusted friend of Albini and the band. (Years later, Touch & Go would reissue the entire Big Black back catalog.)

Big Black's first release for Touch & Go was 1987's infamous Headache EP; an early limited-edition release of the record featured an appalling photo of the victim of an auto accident victim whose head had been split in two (an opaque black-plastic outer bag protected the sensibilities of those shopping for, say, a Smiths import). The music, however, was something of a letdown after Atomizer, and the band seemed to know it; the later mass-market release featured a sticker reading "Not as good as Atomizer, so don't get your hopes up, cheese!" There were also tensions within the band; Albini and Durango reportedly found Riley difficult to work with, and all three had trouble fitting Big Black's increasingly demanding schedule in along side their personal commitments. Santiago Durango decided to return to law school in the fall of 1987, and the group decided this was a sign to call it quits. Big Black announced their breakup as far in advance as possible, and recorded a final album (half recorded in London, half recorded at Albini's new home studio) and mounted well-received farewell tours of Europe and the United States in the summer of 1987; shortly after the band performed their final show in Seattle on August 11 (where they destroyed their gear at the finale), Touch & Go released Songs About Fucking, a scabrous masterpiece that went on to become the group's most successful album. In 1992, after the band's catalog reverted to Touch & Go, Pigpile, a live album and video recorded at the London date of the farewell tour, was released.

Following Big Black's breakup, Albini went on to a celebrated career as a producer and engineer, recording sessions for Nirvana, the Breeders, the Pixies, Superchunk, Bush, and Jimmy Page & Robert Plant, along with (by his own word) 1,000 bands no one has ever heard of, and opening his own recording studio in Chicago, Electrical Audio. He also performed in the acerbic and short-lived Rapeman as well as the more experimental and long-running Shellac. Dave Riley was briefly a member of the group Bull; in 1995, he was incapacitated with a stroke which (due to an early misdiagnosis) was incorrectly reported in some quarters to be a suicide attempt. And Santiago Durango for a time worked with the group Arsenal and recorded with Boss Hog, but his career in music has taken a back seat to his practice as a lawyer; his clients include Touch & Go Records and celebrated groupie and artist Cynthia Plaster Caster. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Big Black
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Big Black
Origin Evanston, IL
Genres Noise punk
Years active 1982-1987, 2006
Labels Touch & Go
Blast First!
Homestead
Ruthless
Former members
Steve Albini
Dave Riley
Santiago Durango
Jeff Pezzati
Patrick Byrne
Roland

Big Black was an American noise punk band founded in Evanston, Illinois, United States, that was active between 1982 and 1987.[1] They were headed by singer, lyricist, guitarist, and co-songwriter Steve Albini.

They sought and found little mainstream success, but the group's piledriver drum machines and brutal, slashing electric guitars were widely influential, especially for industrial rock. Albini's vocal style and provocative lyrics garnered much attention.

They were a formative influence on industrial rock,[citation needed] but the band members have always described the band as punk rock; in the notes for Pigpile, a live recording of their final London performance, Albini explicitly describes Big Black as "punk."

Contents

History

Albini made a name for himself for his controversial "Tired of Ugly Fat?" column in the Chicago zine Matter, as well as irregular contributions to Forced Exposure. At the time, the band consisted of Albini and his drum machine, a Roland TR-606. (All of Big Black's recordings credit "Roland" as if "he" were a member of the band.)

The Lungs EP, the first effort to appear under the Big Black name, was recorded by Albini in his dorm room at Northwestern University.[1] Intended primarily to recruit members to fill out the band, Lungs was released by Ruthless Records. The record is infamous for the variety of inserts, which included a lyric sheet in most copies, plus extras like condoms, dollar bills, stickers, concert tickets, photographs, silverware, razor blades, bloody bandages, and squirt guns. Heavily influenced by Public Image Limited and Killing Joke, Albini describes the amateurish Lungs as one of his few artistic regrets.

Jeff Pezzati and Santiago Durango performing with Big Black in 2006

Guitarist Lyle Preslar, previously and later of Minor Threat, was briefly a member of Big Black during his semester at Northwestern, though after a few tempestuous practice sessions, he and Albini parted ways. In 1983 Jeff Pezzati and Santiago Durango, both of Naked Raygun, joined the band on bass and guitar, respectively, and the drum machine was repleced by Pat Byrne.[1] They recorded two EPs together, switching to Homestead Records, and soon after Pezzati left the band. He was replaced by former Savage Beliefs member Dave Riley, and Byrne also departed to be replaced by a new drum machine.[1]

Steve Albini performing with Big Black in 2006

Riley was a longtime funk fan and had worked at a Detroit recording studio frequented by Sly Stone and George Clinton. His bass guitar work with Big Black was, to a degree, influenced by funk—not to suggest that he played like Bootsy Collins or Larry Graham, but he did bring a sinuous quality to the music. Even before Riley joined, there was evidence of an interest in funk: Big Black had already covered James Brown's "The Payback".

The band made a name for itself nationally with its first album Atomizer, which featured more controversial lyrics by Albini, and strong contributions by Durango and Riley to the songs and arrangement—a working scheme the band had settled on because it took advantage of each member's strengths. Some listeners did not understand that their songs were either social commentary or sarcastic jokes (often both), and assumed that the band was sexist and racist. Albini responded to these accusations by making his lyrics even more offensive than before. Michael Azerrad writes that, to Albini, irritating "squares" was no challenge, but offending "hipsters" was more intriguing.[2]

Albini drew much lyrical inspiration from misadventures and escapades he observed during his teen years in rural Missoula, Montana: for example, "Cables" was inspired by acquaintances who would visit a slaughterhouse to watch cattle get killed..

In 1987 the band switched labels again, this time to the cult Chicago-based indie label Touch and Go Records, when the band became disenchanted with Homestead Records after the label illegally released promotional-only copies of some of limited-edition recordings. Big Black then released the Headache EP, which bore a sticker reading, "Not as good as Atomizer, so don't get your hopes up, cheese!" This was not a gimmick; the band truly thought Headache was inferior, and wanted to warn fans. The EP's original sleeve art, based on a photograph of an accident victim's head, was so controversial that it was released in a black sleeve.[1]

Shortly after, Durango announced that he was leaving the band to attend law school.[1] Figuratively replaced by "Melvyn Belli" (a parodic pseudonym for Durango in light of his impending attendance of law school, referencing the famous lawyer Melvin Belli), and after recording a final album, Songs About Fucking, Albini disbanded Big Black.[1]

Big Black's career is chronicled in Our Band Could Be Your Life, a study of several important American underground rock groups.

After Big Black

Steve Albini went on to become a successful recording engineer (he dislikes the term "producer") for bands including Pixies, Nirvana, The Jesus Lizard, The Auteurs, Slint, Membranes, P.J. Harvey, Joanna Newsom and many others, including Melbourne band, My Disco, who are named after the Big Black song of the same name. In addition to recording engineering, he formed new bands Rapeman and Shellac.

The band is mentioned in the 1988 Dead Milkmen song, Sri Lanka Sex Hotel, in the line: "Let's play Big Black at 3 a.m., And tell the neighbours they can all get fucked".

Dave Riley has largely recovered from a stroke he suffered in 1993[3] and has since released a CD and a book. [1]

Durango released two EPs as Arsenal on Touch and Go, and is still a practicing lawyer. In his first case he helped recover Cynthia Plaster Caster's bronze casts of the genitalia of various rock and roll artists, including that of Jimi Hendrix. He handled some litigation for Touch and Go, and as of April 2008[4] is an Illinois state appellate defender.

Touch and Go acquired the rights to the Big Black back catalog, and reissued these (by this time) hard-to-acquire classics.

Big Black have been posthumously successful, with Q Magazine's August 2007 issue naming Songs About Fucking as the fifth loudest album of all time, just ahead of the Who's Live at Leeds and Public Enemy's It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back.

Reunion

Big Black briefly reunited to play a few songs at Touch and Go Records 25th anniversary celebration on 9 September 2006. The line up was Steve Albini, Santiago Durango and Jeff Pezzati. They played "Cables," "Dead Billy," "Pigeon Kill," and "Racer X," in that order.

"I know what you're all thinking... 'what was all the fuss about?'" Albini said onstage that night. He later said that the reunion would not have happened but for the Touch & Go anniversary, and said the record label is "the most important thing to happen in music in my lifetime." Pezzati and Durango nodded in assent.

Discography

Studio albums

Live albums

Compilations

Bootlegs

  • Tonight We Walked with Giants Live in England 7-24-87 (Unknown, Unknown) (Contains a portion of the pigpile live release in inferior sound quality. also contains an "Exclusive" track also available on the pigpile DVD)

EPs

Singles

Various artist compilations

  • Big Payback (The Middle of America Compilation WNUR 89.3FM Evanston-Chicago, H.I.D. Productions, Ltd., 1984)
  • Hunter's Safety (Tommy Bartlett Dies In Pain) (The Middle of America Compilation WNUR 89.3FM Evanston-Chicago, H.I.D. Productions, Ltd., 1984)
  • Every Man for Himself (Gods Favorite Dog Touch and Go, 1986)
  • Crack Up (Gods Favorite Dog Touch and Go, 1986)
  • Il Duce (The Wailing Ultimate Homestead, 1987)
  • Kerosene (live 1986) (Nothing Short of Total War (Part One) Blast First/Mute, 1989)
  • He's a Whore (Nothing Short of Total War (Part One) Blast First/Mute, 1989)
  • Burning Indian Wife (Happiness Is Dry Pants Chemical Imbalance, Unknown)

Videos

  • Big Black Live 1986 (VHS) (Atavistic, 1987)
  • The Last Blast (VHS) (, 1988)
  • Pigpile (VHS) (Touch and Go, 1992)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Thompson, Dave (2000) Alternative Rock, Miller Freeman, ISBN 0-87930-607-6, p.194-195
  2. ^ Azerrad, Michael (2003) Our Band Could Be Your Life, Little, Brown & Company, ISBN 978-0316787536, p. 324
  3. ^ Riley, Dave. "Synopsis". Worthless Goddamn Cripple. http://worthlesscripple.com/about-2/. Retrieved 2008-01-20. 
  4. ^ March 2008 Criminal Law Digest

External links


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