Long Live Père Ubu!

Long Live Père Ubu!
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 15, 2009 (2009-09-15)
GenrePunk rock
LabelHearpen Records[1]
Pere Ubu with Sarah Jane Morris chronology
Why I Hate Women
(2006)
Long Live Père Ubu!
(2009)
Lady from Shanghai
(2013)

Long Live Père Ubu! is an album by the American band Pere Ubu, released on September 15, 2009.[2][3] It is a soundtrack to a musical adaptation of the play from which the band took its name.[4] The band performed its adaptation at (Le) Poisson Rouge.[5] David Thomas referred to Long Live Père Ubu! as the first "true" punk album to be released in 30 years.[6]

Sarah Jane Morris played the part of Ubu's wife.[7]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Clash8/10[8]
Record Collector[9]
Spin[10]
PopMatters7/10[2]

The Independent wrote: "Reflecting the original play's deliberately repugnant manner, the accompaniment is full of martial, rat-a-tat drum fusillades and pompous marches, synth whines, washes of white noise and colossal bouts of belching, perfectly embodying the childish antagonism of Jarry's irrepressible urge to 'epater la bourgeoisie.'"[11]

Record Collector called the album "a hall-of-mirrors audio play with a linear narrative, scronking, squalling rhythms and melodic snippets undulating round a pulsating soundscape."[9]

Track listing

  1. "Ubu Overture" - 2:42
  2. "Song of the Grocery Police" - 1:46
  3. "Banquet of the Butchers" - 2:55
  4. "March of Greed" - 3:34
  5. "Less Said the Better" - 2:31
  6. "Big Sombrero (Love Theme)" - 4:06
  7. "Bring Me the Head" - 3:39
  8. "Road to Reason" - 3:55
  9. "Slowly I Turn" - 4:25
  10. "Watching the Pigeons" - 3:21
  11. "The Story So Far" - 7:57
  12. "Snowy Livonia" - 1:20
  13. "Elsinore & Beyond" - 1:35

Personnel

Pere Ubu

References

  1. ^ Rylance, Stephen (November 30, 2009). "Pere Ubu: Long Live Pere Ubu!, PopMatters".
  2. ^ a b Rylance, Stephen (November 30, 2009). "Pere Ubu: Long Live Pere Ubu!". PopMatters. Retrieved March 3, 2026.
  3. ^ Terrell, Steve (October 2, 2009). "The king and I". Albuquerque Journal. PASATIEMPO. p. 22.
  4. ^ "Pere Ubu Biography, Songs, & Albums". AllMusic.
  5. ^ "Live: Pere Ubu's One Night Only Performance of "Long Live Père Ubu!" at Le Poisson Rouge". The Village Voice. March 29, 2010. Archived from the original on September 14, 2018.
  6. ^ Adams, Sam (September 20, 2009). "Rockers Pere Ubu explore namesake". Los Angeles Times. p. E14.
  7. ^ Shepherd, Fiona (February 19, 2010). "'It's just one big mess without any boundaries between things and that's sort of what we like'". The Scotsman. p. 38.
  8. ^ "Pere Ubu - 'Long Live Père Ubu!'". Clash Magazine.
  9. ^ a b "Long Live Pere Ubu - Record Collector Magazine".
  10. ^ Menconi, David (December 2009). "Reviews". Spin: 78, 80.
  11. ^ Gill, Andy (September 11, 2009). "NEW RELEASES". The Independent. p. 24.