Underneath their noise and weirdness, the 
Pixies had a thorough knowledge of rock history, spanning '50s and '60s' surf-rock, '70s punk's menacing energy and '80s college rock's quirkiness. After dismantling the band, 
Black Francis inverted his name, collaborated with 
Captain Beefheart / 
Pere Ubu sideman 
Eric Drew Feldman and let his inner rock historian loose on 
Frank Black. Much of the album nods to 
Black's inspirations, but his own gifts still shine through. The chugging 
Iggy Pop homage "Ten Percenter" borrows the 
Stooges' primitive grind, while the arty, dissonant UFO convention tale "Parry the Wind High, Low" recalls 
Bowie's Berlin era. However, "I Heard Ramona Sing" -- a 
Ramones tribute -- is an airy, jangly pop number that sounds nothing like its subject; the 
Beach Boys' "Hang On To Your Ego" gets a new wave makeover with crunchy guitars and shiny keyboards. Despite his efforts to escape the 
Pixies' sound, many of 
Frank Black's songs would have fit on 
Trompe Le Monde. "Los Angeles" builds on that album's spacy, metallic feel; with its thrashy choruses and dreamy coda, it almost caricatures the 
Pixies' extreme dynamics. However, whimsical vignettes like "Brackish Boy" and "Two Spaces" sound more like 
They Might Be Giants -- one of 
Black's favorite groups -- than his old band, while softer songs like "Adda Lee" and "Every Time I Go Around Here" reveal more emotional depth. 
Frank Black also boasts an unabashedly big, polished sound; keyboards and brass embellish "Places Named After Numbers" and the epic surf-rock instrumental "Tossed." Just a few years later, new wave-inspired punk-pop bands like 
Weezer, 
the Rentals and even 
No Doubt ruled alternative rock, proving that even if his solo career wasn't as influential as his 
Pixies years, 
Frank Black was still ahead of his time.