Monday, September 19, 2011

Pere Ubu - The Modern Dance and Dub Housing

With outside interest in the Ohio scene reaching its peak, Blank Records released Ubu's debut album, The Modern Dance, in March 1978, while in April U.K. label Radar Records put out Datapanik in the Year Zero, an EP that made widely available for the first time the best tracks from the first three singles released on Hearthan Records.



At the eight of both their acclaim and artistic power, Pere Ubu sealed the impression of their creative floodgates having been hurled wide open by unleashing a second, even more impressive album only seven months after the debut.  


Dub Housing got its evocative name not from any reggae leanings, but a stoned eye's view of Baltimore as the band drove through the city in their tour van. "In Baltimore they had these row houses, and somebody said, 'Oh, look, dub housing'", says drummer Scott Krauss. The vistas echoed endlessly, paralleling the way that drum hits, guitar chords, and horn licks were turned into reverb trails by dub producers like King Tubby.

Pere Ubu - Ubu Dance Party 1978


The Modern Dance and Dub Housing both contained absurdist sound collages and exercises in pure Dada like "The Book Is on the Table" and "Thriller". These now became the blueprint for Ubu's third album, New Picnic Time.


"Our problem is that we never wanted to repeat Dub Housing", Thomas once said. "That desire to never repeat became as much of a trap as trying to repeat formulas the way some bands do". "We were on the edge of being popular but we were fundamentally incapable of being popular", Thomas admits, "because we were fundamentally perverse".

No comments:

Post a Comment