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Wave of Mutilation: The Best Pixies
Barnes and Noble
Wave of Mutilation: The Best Pixies
Current price: $17.99


Barnes and Noble
Wave of Mutilation: The Best Pixies
Current price: $17.99
Size: CD
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4AD
tries, tries again with
Wave of Mutilation: The Best of the Pixies
, the second
Pixies
best-of they've released since the band broke up in 1992 and the companion piece to the long-awaited, simultaneously released DVD
. Lessons have been learned from 1997's half-baked
Death to the Pixies
: this compilation's track listing is in more or less chronological order (although
Surfer Rosa
's
"Where Is My Mind?"
pops up in the middle of the album, after a string of
Doolittle
tracks), which helps the flow of the collection; since each of
the Pixies
' albums had its own distinctive feel, the cut'n'paste approach of the previous best-of didn't always serve the songs it collected. More importantly,
Wave of Mutilation
boasts 23 songs, as opposed to the 17 on the best-of disc on
. While, theoretically, 23 tracks should be enough to capture most, if not all, of the band's definitive moments, that's not quite the case here. The collection does a good job of compiling the band's singles, two excellent B-sides (
"Into the White"
and
"Winterlong"
), and many of their key album tracks, but those are so numerous that, for the second time, more than a few of
' best songs have been left off of their best-of album. The picks from
are more or less perfect (although including the wonderfully creepy
"I Bleed"
certainly would've earned some extra credit), but several near-essential songs from each of their other albums are missing in action.
"Cactus"
"River Euphrates
are at the top of that list.
Come On Pilgrim
"I've Been Tired"
"Levitate Me"
are missed nearly as much, even though including them would bring the total songs from the eight-song mini-album that appear on
to five (making a case for
to be considered
' most consistent -- if not best -- work).
Not coincidentally, the albums that get the shortest shrift on the collection,
Bossanova
Trompe le Monde
, have also been downplayed in the set lists of
' reunion concerts. Yes, those two albums aren't quite as strong or immediate as what preceded them. And yes,
"Velouria,"
"Allison,"
"Dig for Fire,"
"U-Mass,"
"Alec Eiffel,"
"Planet of Sound"
are good selections from
. However, the best moments from these albums (that don't already appear on the compilation) reflect the atmospheric sound that made them so unique in
' catalog.
"The Happening"
or
"All Over the World"
would've been apt nods to the band's sci-fi fetish, while
"Letter to Memphis,"
"The Sad Punk,"
"Motorway to Roswell,"
or the title track from
also would've worked well on the collection. One final, more minor flaw is the collection's bright, shiny artwork, which recalls the mid-'90s work that the design studio v23 did for
artists like
Belly
the Breeders
. It's attractive, but a little faceless and lacking the dramatic surrealism of
Simon Larbalastier
's photos, which clothed
' albums in what seemed like stills from the dreams and nightmares unspooling in the band's songs. In some ways, for die-hard
fans it's easier to miss what isn't here than to appreciate what is; then again, fans can (and probably have) made their own master mixes of what they consider
' greatest hits. Even though the best way to experience the band is still devouring each of their albums,
is intended as a primer to their work, and -- fannish nitpicking aside -- it's a far better overview than what was available before. ~ Heather Phares
tries, tries again with
Wave of Mutilation: The Best of the Pixies
, the second
Pixies
best-of they've released since the band broke up in 1992 and the companion piece to the long-awaited, simultaneously released DVD
. Lessons have been learned from 1997's half-baked
Death to the Pixies
: this compilation's track listing is in more or less chronological order (although
Surfer Rosa
's
"Where Is My Mind?"
pops up in the middle of the album, after a string of
Doolittle
tracks), which helps the flow of the collection; since each of
the Pixies
' albums had its own distinctive feel, the cut'n'paste approach of the previous best-of didn't always serve the songs it collected. More importantly,
Wave of Mutilation
boasts 23 songs, as opposed to the 17 on the best-of disc on
. While, theoretically, 23 tracks should be enough to capture most, if not all, of the band's definitive moments, that's not quite the case here. The collection does a good job of compiling the band's singles, two excellent B-sides (
"Into the White"
and
"Winterlong"
), and many of their key album tracks, but those are so numerous that, for the second time, more than a few of
' best songs have been left off of their best-of album. The picks from
are more or less perfect (although including the wonderfully creepy
"I Bleed"
certainly would've earned some extra credit), but several near-essential songs from each of their other albums are missing in action.
"Cactus"
"River Euphrates
are at the top of that list.
Come On Pilgrim
"I've Been Tired"
"Levitate Me"
are missed nearly as much, even though including them would bring the total songs from the eight-song mini-album that appear on
to five (making a case for
to be considered
' most consistent -- if not best -- work).
Not coincidentally, the albums that get the shortest shrift on the collection,
Bossanova
Trompe le Monde
, have also been downplayed in the set lists of
' reunion concerts. Yes, those two albums aren't quite as strong or immediate as what preceded them. And yes,
"Velouria,"
"Allison,"
"Dig for Fire,"
"U-Mass,"
"Alec Eiffel,"
"Planet of Sound"
are good selections from
. However, the best moments from these albums (that don't already appear on the compilation) reflect the atmospheric sound that made them so unique in
' catalog.
"The Happening"
or
"All Over the World"
would've been apt nods to the band's sci-fi fetish, while
"Letter to Memphis,"
"The Sad Punk,"
"Motorway to Roswell,"
or the title track from
also would've worked well on the collection. One final, more minor flaw is the collection's bright, shiny artwork, which recalls the mid-'90s work that the design studio v23 did for
artists like
Belly
the Breeders
. It's attractive, but a little faceless and lacking the dramatic surrealism of
Simon Larbalastier
's photos, which clothed
' albums in what seemed like stills from the dreams and nightmares unspooling in the band's songs. In some ways, for die-hard
fans it's easier to miss what isn't here than to appreciate what is; then again, fans can (and probably have) made their own master mixes of what they consider
' greatest hits. Even though the best way to experience the band is still devouring each of their albums,
is intended as a primer to their work, and -- fannish nitpicking aside -- it's a far better overview than what was available before. ~ Heather Phares