Pere Ubu

Pere Ubu is a rock group formed in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1975. Despite many long-term band members, singer David Thomas is the only constant. The group's name is a reference to Ubu Roi, a play by French writer Alfred Jarry. While Pere Ubu have never been widely popularthey are usually categorized as "underground rock"they have a devoted following and have received critical acclaim.

History

1970s

Rocket from the Tombs was a Cleveland-based group that eventually fragmented: some members formed The Dead Boys, and others The Saucers, while David Thomas and guitarist Peter Laughner joined with guitarist Tom Herman, bass guitarist Tim Wright, drummer Scott Krauss and synthesist Allen Ravenstine to form Pere Ubu in 1975. At the time the band formed, Herman, Krauss, and Ravenstine lived in a house owned by Ravenstine.

Pere Ubu's debut single (their first four records were singles on their own "Hearthan" label) was "30 Seconds Over Tokyo" (inspired by the "Doolittle Raid" and named after a film depicting the raid), backed with "Heart of Darkness"; followed by "Final Solution" in 1976. One review noted that "30 Seconds" "was clearly the work of a garage band, yet its arty dissonance and weird experimentalism were startlingly unique."

Pere Ubu (disambiguation)

Pere Ubu is an experimental rock music group from Cleveland, Ohio.

Père Ubu (or father Ubu) may also refer to:

  • Ubu, the enigmatic central figure of a series of French plays by Alfred Jarry, including Ubu Roi, and subsequent plays Ubu Cocu (Ubu Cuckolded) and Ubu Enchaîné (Ubu Enchained)
  • See also

  • Ubu (disambiguation)
  • Miss You

    Miss You may refer to:

    Music

    Albums

  • Miss You (album), a 2003 compilation album by The Stranglers, or the title song (see below)
  • Songs

  • "Miss You" (1929 song), a song written in 1929, recorded by Bill Haley
  • "Miss You" (Aaliyah song), 2002
  • "Miss You" (Feeder song), 2008
  • "Miss You" (M-flo song), 2003
  • "Miss You" (The Rolling Stones song), 1978
  • "Miss You" (Westlife song), 1999, covered as "I Miss You" by Basshunter (2008)
  • "Miss You" (Yuna Ito song), 2008
  • "Miss You", song by Nickelback from No Fixed Address
  • "Miss You", song by The Crows
  • "Miss You", song by Dream from It Was All a Dream
  • "Miss You", song by Enrique Iglesias from Insomniac
  • "Miss You", song by Kashmir from The Good Life
  • "Miss You", song by MYMP from Soulful Acoustic
  • "Miss You", song by Manfred Mann's Earth Band from Soft Vengeance
  • "Miss You", song by Mariah Carey from The Remixes
  • "Miss You", song by Mirwais Ahmadzaï
  • "Miss You", song by The Stranglers from Written in Red
  • See also

  • Miss You, a play by David Auburn
  • I Miss You (disambiguation)
  • Miss You (album)

    Miss You is a compilation album by The Stranglers.

    Track listing

  • "Silver into Blue"
  • "No More Heroes" (live)
  • "Blue Sky"
  • "Joy De Viva"
  • "Coup de Grace"
  • "God is Good"
  • "No Reason"
  • "Miss You"
  • "Little Blue Lies"
  • "Golden Brown" (live)
  • "Valley of the Birds"
  • "Lucky Finger"
  • "Strange Little Girl" (live)
  • "Always the Sun" (live)
  • "Summer in the City"
  • "Lies and Deception"
  • Miss You (Aaliyah song)

    "Miss You" is a song by American recording artist Aaliyah. Written by Johnta Austin, Ginuwine and Teddy Bishop in 1998 and initially recorded in the fall of 1999 for her self-titled third studio album (2001), the track remained unreleased. Instead, it was later included on the posthumously released compilation album, I Care 4 U (2002), serving as its leading single during the last quarter of 2002.

    The ballad received positive reviews from contemporary music critics and achieved a strong charting throughout Europe and other worldwide regions, reaching the top twenty in Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, and Switzerland. On the US Billboard charts, the song peaked on top of the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart and reached number three on the Hot 100, becoming Aaliyah's highest-charting single after her 2000 number-one hit "Try Again" featuring Timbaland.

    The music video for the song was directed by Darren Grant and featured tributes by Aaliyah's friends and collaborators, including DMX, Missy Elliott, and Static Major. It received a nomination for Best R&B Video at the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards. Rapper Jay-Z made a tribute to Aaliyah using the "Miss You" instrumental and chorus for its official remix version in Summer 2003.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Misery Goats

    by: Pere Ubu

    Don't fret now.
    Don't be so tired.
    No mope, mope, mope-a-dope!
    No, it's not as bad as all of that.
    Don't be no misery goat!
    "How are ya?"
    "How are ya?"
    "How are ya?"
    I could cry.
    I could just cry.
    Oh, the tears fall down.
    (I've got one bright hope.)
    (I've got one ride home.)
    I sang three songs and marched around,
    marched around,
    marched around.
    I sang three songs and marched around.
    Looka here.
    Here comes the poetry!
    "I'm a cave with the wind inside."
    "I'm a shell with the sound of the surf inside!"
    What?!
    What's the point, hunh?
    Don't be no misery goat!
    (I've got one bright hope.)




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