The solo albums broke up the Pixies way back in the day yada, yada, yada. Well, time proved that Frank could indeed combine both and his band was indeed only on hiatus. It’s hard to believe it’s thirty years since this album dropped just look at the catalogue we have to feast over since eh? This limited edition ‘Teenager of the Year 30th Anniversary Tour Edition’ on double gold vinyl is a joy to (be)hold It is remastered from the original analogue master tapes for all you audiophile geeks out there but it does sound as fresh as the day I first heard it. It was an album I played to death when it came out and got my first shiny Discman it was a constant companion on CD its also cut at 45 rpm for optimum playback and is pressed on double gold vinyl. The album also comes in a gatefold sleeve with liner notes by both Frank Black and producer Eric Drew Feldman, and is his usual lavish affair to be fair.

Its widely regarded as Franks finest solo album and an album maybe, the Pixies should have made but with hindsight maybe he needed to break free to actually record this album in this way and had it had the Pixies baggage it wouldn’t have had the lasting impact or sounded anything like it does.

Sprawling over twenty-two tracks and an hour of music it’s a joy to drop the needle and have the chaos of ‘Whatever Happened To Pong?’ blast out of my speakers. I’ll fess up and say I still think his debut self-titled record is my favourite but this is a pretty awesome follow-up by anyone’s standards. The single off the record was strong, ‘Headache’ had a memorable earworm of a melody that is as strong as anything he’d written previously or since to be fair.

If you are humming and arghing over shelling out on this reissue then let me try to soothe any fears and just encourage you to go and get it. It’s a beautiful thing. christ, The opening side is faultless offering a variety of Blacks styles from the rockin out of ‘Thalassocracy’ to the pop rock of ‘Calistan’ it doesn’t harm a record when it sounds like its captured live and the band are this freakin good. Oh by the way the same band are doing the live shows as well.

The lyrics have aged really well and having been able to play this record for it’s second birth has been a joy and something a thirty years older me has really appreciated more than I thought I would. The Bowie esk ‘Ole Mulholland’ never sounded so good. Viewing it through more mature eyes has thrown up different perspectives and had me leaning to tracks I previously dismissed – songs like ‘Fazer Eyes’ with its twists and turns and ‘SpaceIs Gonna Do Me Good’ with its parping horns and shakers left me hazy but a welcome return to the turntable for sure. Come Join me you won’t regret it and if it’s a first dabble with Frank Black then dive in you won’t regret it the guys a genius. Buy It!

Tickets for the Teenager Of The Year shows are available from here: https://blackfranc.is

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Author: Dom Daley

Frank Black is delighted to announce two very special shows for 2025, where he will be performing the ‘Teenager Of The Year’ album in full.

The Teenager Of The Year shows will see Frank Black play Le Trianon in Paris on Tuesday 4th February and the London Palladium on Thursday 6th February.

Sometime in the early 80s, I’d have to look up the date, I matriculated high school. This school held an awards banquet for some of the departing students at the school. I received an award called the TEENAGER OF THE YEAR award; my brother received the same award the following year. Our award was a 50 dollar credit for textbooks, a TEENAGER OF THE YEAR medallion (my mother still has this), and also the banquet hall dinner, soup to nuts. My brother and I had no complaint about the award (it was given for being all-around-good-guy as best as we could determine). But for such a grand title to be given as TEENAGER OF THE YEAR, I felt the glory had not been amplified enough.

 In 1993, I was doing “solo recording” sessions with Eric Drew Feldman in Los Angeles. We had settled on a core band with Nick Vincent and Lyle Workman, occasionally augmented by Joey Santiago and Moris Tepper. Though we had to change studios numerous times for actual forest fires and earthquakes, the whole process was such an addictive musical buffet that Eric and I couldn’t stop. We did some vocals at a studio rumored to be owned by Sergio Mendes; in the control room was a wall of television screens broadcasting the brush fire which crept toward us. We eventually evacuated to someplace else. We never met Sergio but we saw him perform a few weeks later when we vacated to Las Vegas after the Northridge earthquake, which had trapped the TEENAGER OF THE YEAR tapes in a studio vault for some time.  Our zeal plus empathy from our financiers, they safely observing our travails from London, was enough to keep the money flowing until Eric and I relented and declared “Consummatum est”. 

We tried to make it grand. 22 in 62. I called it TEENAGER OF THE YEAR. It is 30 years old now, and the original band will perform the record at various venues in early 2025. 4AD has remastered the LP for a fresh printing. Enjoy.” Black Francis 2024 Meredith, New Hampshire.

Originally released in May 1994, Teenager of the Year, is now widely regarded as the defining statement of his solo career and the best album the Pixies never made. 

Pitchfork placed Teenager Of The Year in their Top 100 albums of the 90’s saying “beneath its veneer lie the moments brilliant enough to rival any of the Pixies’ 1990’s work, and Black’s greatest lyrical achievement.” The album is also included in the book “ 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die”, while The Quietus in 2014 said “Teenager Of The Year feels like a lost Pixies album in the way Ram feels like a lost Beatles album. It’s colossal, it teems with innovation.”

Initially it was a 14-song album. It was mixed. Eric Idle was staying nearby. He kept telling me to change the songs around. Al (Clay)had to run off and go to his next project. We weren’t completely happy with what we had. The solution: record more songs. Eight more were born. Whole shebang was remixed by David Bianco. The day before we were to start the remix, the 1994 Northridge earthquake occurred. Charles, Jean (Charles’ first wife) and I escaped to Las Vegas, ate many shrimp cocktails, and we saw Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, and Sergio Mendes and Brazil ’99 perform. Sergio was especially good. After about five days we returned to the mixing studio and the deed was done.” Eric Drew Feldman.*

The new re-mastered version of Teenager Of The Year will be released by 4AD later this year.

Along with Frank Black, the band for the tour features Eric Drew Feldman, Lyle Workman and Nick Vincent who originally appeared on the Teenager Of the Year album.

Tickets for the Teenager Of The Year shows are available here: https://blackfranc.is