0 'Pere burp feeding off the lifelines of its many industries and its port on Lake Erie, it is a city which understands terrifically the importance of establishing circuits of communication. They are like a cat's cradle that stretches taut over the city, and binds it together into an in- dustrialized colony, a dense and uniform lump of pavement and people that reflec- ts'-as much as anything else does-where we're all going. ND IN THE MIDDLE of it all you can find four of the five members of PiereUbu. Keyboardist and saxo- t Allen Ravenstine, bassist Tony Maimone, drummer Scott Krauss, and vocalist David Thomas all were raised within Cleveland city limits. New guitarist Mayo Thompson, a Texan and former member of the sub-underground group Red Crayola for many years now, joined them a few months ago, replacing Clevelander Tom Herman. With a pair of poor-selling albums released in this country, and a new one, New Picnic Time, available only as an import because their record company has refused to release it in America, Pere Ubu today is something less than a household term. Partly, this is the fault of their record company, Chrysalis Records, for they have been far from adamant iritheir push of the group's music; in fact when I called the company to arrange for an inter- view with Pere Ubu, Chrysalis high-ups swore the group didn't even exist on the label! But the main reason for Pere Ubu's ob- scurity is rooted in their music, which is some of the most godawfully upsetting cater- wauling you could ever hope to hear. Though on the other hand, it's also some of the most imaginative caterwauling you could hope to hear. The group takes its name from turn-of-the-century French playright Alfred Jarry's play Ubu Roi, which helped inspire the surrealist movement. Although the group members say they are not surrealists, they have undeniably captured the same feeling of bloody, gleeful fantasy that Jarry was in- terested in. The first time I heard Pere Ubu it was 3 a.m., and I was playing their second album, Dub Housing, in my room. Almost as soon as I started on side one, it began: the moans of the boy in the next room as he over- dosed of heroin. I stayed awake all night, although I couldn't say if the shrieks or the record kept me up. It was a natural introduc- tion to the funhouse world of Pere Ubu. One can hear a lot of rock and roll in the guitar lines on their records, and the rhythm section often strikes up driving reggae and soul beats. These are guys with a whole lot of experience working with pop music-they mock surf songs, fracture broken-heart teen ballads, and constantly create an aura of mid- sixties garage band slop rock.. UT PERE UBU ain't exactly your average rock and roll band; they're not "new wave" (it's all boring-... whit comes next??), and they're not "punk" (call them that and they might hit you). There's as much John Cage serendipity, Chinese folk music, sci-fi flick sound effects, and Brecht in their music as there is a four- four beat or heavy metal guitars. Their ab- sorption of countless sounds is reflected in Ravenstine's synthesizer and its capacities; Jbu's chemical rom Cleveland 19 1a to C 3~ O A' t0 nowadays, who offer a selective, and thus narrow, approach. Pere Ubu doesn't seem to care too much about music. They're a lot more interested in sound.. But also, Pere Ubu is like an ant colony. (Not the kind your kid brother had between two sheets of glass and kept on the window sill until the ants fried in the heat .. . the sort you see between the cracks in the sidewalk.) When they make music, there's collective ac- tivity, and although there are often solos in their songs, everybody improvises much of the tine. 'The band has always depended greatly on intuition," emphasizes keyboard player Allen Ravestine. "If there's any band philosophy, it's-that if we need something it'll turn up." And that's how it is at the Cleveland-based ant heap from which the group functions: orchestrated improvisation and spontaneous jerry-rigging are constants. And, most importantly of all, there is this: nobody is a star. With Pere Ubu, everything-personality, solo space, clear, defineable sound-is resolutely secondary. What they want is something analogous to the networks of tunnels and burroughs beneath the.ground that is the legacy of countless hours of ant-work: they want a concretion of sound. Consider Cleveland-a concretion of a city. Although it has the unfortunate requisite blood-sucking suburban regions squeezing it, it's an urban dynamo, a flexed muscle of businesses and people pinned down on the Ohio landscape. If Mondrian had lived in Cleveland he wouldn't have needed to work so hard to come up with his universe of geometry: the city's a nexus of angles, struc- tures, and frameworks. In Cleveland there are damn few skyscrapers-mostly, there are just big, box-like buildings that push up against each other. Ribbed with highways, RJ Smith is co-editor of the Sunday Magazine. from it, Ravenstine commands an arsenal of keyboard sounds, synthetic percussion of all sorts, tapes of conversations, animal noises, and'countless other sounds. It's over a Sargasso Sea of all the things I have mentioned and many more that comes the eerie warblings of David Thomas. There is an unfortunate convention in rock and roll of worshipping of the lead singer as the creative center of the group. This is not so with Pere Ubu, but it is an easy mistake to make. Pegging Thomas' exact role with the group is tricky business, because, innate star appeal aside, he posesses a voice that many consider the most distinctive instrument in the group. Part of the attention may be due to the wor- ds he sings: surreal stream-of-consciousness rattle that makes only intuitive sense. But undeniably, it's also because of Thomas' delivery, which comes across like the queasy mumblings from a tomb on the outskirts of town the day all the corpses come back to life. When he sings the now-immortal lines from "Dub Housing"-"The windows rever- berate!/The walls have ears ! /A thousand saxophone voices call! "-it's enough to make the hairs on the back of your neck wriggle. Hearing some of Pere Ubu's songs is like listening to the gears of all the cars in some big city intersection heave a collective groan, or skyscrapers quavering and creaking ever so slightly in a gale. For the music of Pere Ubu is the music of the big city-specifically of their hometown. There is about it some special flavor that makes it distinctively Cleveland, like the tangy scent of the sulphur dioxide clouds there that nip your nose in the wintertime. " HIS IS A TOWN undergoing a gradual transformation from being an indus- trial town to being a computer town," Ravenstine explains. "The actual industrial end of it is dropping off rapidly, which is kind of ironic because the massive section of the city that is industrial is not suited for anything else other than what it is now; it's either going to have to become a ruins, or like some big industrial park where people walk around and see how these things used to be done, or they're going to have to tear it down," he said. "I think Cleveland is a real good microcosm of what the rest of America has yet to go through. Detroit is another one, and so is Buffalo. The nothern industrial cities are un- dergoing a demise and are having to be rebuilt." But it's not everything about the urban ex- perience those in Pere Ubu are trying to distill with their mechanical gritty approach. What they are really interested in is a certain glorious underbelly of the city, an outlook on our urban existence that is as kinetic and scary as a nice, peaceful tumble in a cement mixer. To understand the Ubu view of city life, we have to go on a field trip. We're on our way to the maligned banks of the Cuyahoga River, to a scenario that's one part Dr. Caligari and ten parts chemical hallucination-a cartoon set- ting for toxic gas warfare. Welcome to The Flats, buckaroos! It is really late at night now, and the cold layer of ash, lime and enough chemicals to make Mr. Wizard's eyes puff like a pair of eight balls billows up, and mixes in the wind. Kkrrunchh goes everyone's tennis shoes on the dust. Some of the chemicals leak into the holes in your shoes as you .walk over the powder. You're making the rounds with any number of Ubu members, on a typical evening of fun- speking in their playground. HE FLATS IS AN institution in Cleve- land-it's many, many acres of iron foundaries and factories, and more star ,angular warehouses than the mind can handle at first. When you drive into Cleveland from Ann Arbor, a central route takes you right by The Flats, and even during the brightest day a Nagasakian mushroom cloud of chemical dust and smoke hangs over the industrial vista. Here, the greenhouse effect has been in force for years. Kkreeeeechhhh!, and this time it's a beer bottle one of them has thrown at the base of one of the many bridges to be found there (more kinds of bridges in one area than are to be found anywhere else on earth). They might be taking pictures of some drainage pipes' leading out to the river, or they might be ac- ting out some impromptu theatre by the exhaust fins of an underground coal burner. Or else they might just be drinking in someone's car and laughing a lot. But whatever they are doing, they are erl- joying the hard, cold facts of city life that most of us at best ignore, and more often despise. When I asked Ravenstine about The Flats, he began to talk about the interesting angles to be found in many of the bridges there. "Pere Ubu has always believed that you don't have to go to some museum in France to see a painting from a cathedral that was destroyed centuries ago to see art," he said. Some may worry about the safety and healthiness of The Flats, but Pere Ubu takes the hazards of the place as an obvious given (for various reasons,, they say, they don't hang out there as they used to). What we have around us now, what we have made with our hands for whatever purpose, is as much "art" to them as anything is. And if walking through the urban desert of The Flats and all the chemicals that get into your shoes results in genetic defects that lead to big, twittering flippers for their children, then on some level that is a price that is worth paying, Pere Ubu would say. " ON'T EXPECT ART." It's been the motto of Pere Ubu ever since it got started, as The Rocket From the ombs, in the mid-seventies. Begun by some of the current members and the late Peter Laughner, the group took what gigs it X could for several years, breaking up at one c point, until it landed a record contract and 5 released This is the Modern Dance in 1978. In Q 1979 Pere Ubu came out with Dub Housing, K the album which established them with the critics-if not the public. Throughout their existence Pere Ubu has aimed, and succeeded, in creating music that is the result of work-hard work-and not some mystical product of an art-making that only those "chosen" can enact. "We have a lot of friends that are artists. And I think that a common theme that runs through us and a lot of them is the most artists are bullshit," deduces Ravenstine. "It's like when you are doing plumbing, and you're trying to break an old fitting, you don't know how long it's going to take before it breaks, how much pressure you're going to have to exert," Maimone says. "You just keep at it and sometimes it breaks easier than other times. "I think we're pretty much of the opinion that art is bullshit when it endeavors to 4/ separate itself from everything else. From reality! I go out there and I do what I do in the studio the exact same way I do plumbing when I work here, which is the absolute best way I know how to doit, given the tools I've got." Don't expect art-expect plumbing. Now that's a motto we all should be living by. What we need is to make the most of the stuff we have now, to hear it in new ways, to listen to and then understand it as we never have bothered to before. We don't need more songs, ads, or symphonies.. . and besides, we can only stand so many more. What we need is to be able to hear out the air hammer's rattle as it strikes the pavement, and the wheezing of the old person next door. It will be a few decades before we outgrow our knee-jerk need for more of this art stuff. But until then, one of the few things that we should hold onto dearly is Pere Ubu, for they are preparing us for the inevitable cross-over. These musicians don't create new sounds ... they take sound as a found object, be it a recorded conversation, a piano lick from Satie, the squeal of a squeeze toy, or a standard blues chord structure, and they turn it back on us. Make that throw back on us-they are aggressive and harsh, because we live in a world where death by bland-out is a constant threat. Pere Ubu makes a gesture of non-art, one that tries to make us all artists as surely as it rules out any use for art. Theirs is a vision of our world through a robot-child's eyes. And it is that gesture, and that vision, that will some day be greatly appreciated. ww { r F f l r.f'*' ~ ' 1 ~ ,;;vMfr- o s t' 7 r 0 0 0l 0 I