The longtime frontman of the seminal art-punk band
Pere Ubu, David Thomas was born June 14, 1953 in Moss Point, MS. A one-time music journalist, he first attracted attention as a performer during the mid-'70s while leading the Cleveland-based cult favorites
Rocket from the Tombs; in 1975, he and fellow rock scribe Peter Laughner formed
Pere Ubu, debuting later that year with the single "30 Seconds Over Tokyo." With their noisy, anarchic sound and Thomas' wailing, scattershot vocals,
Ubu emerged as one of the key underground acts of the punk era, issuing a series of classic LPs including 1978's
The Modern Dance, 1979's
Dub Housing, and 1980's
The Art of Walking to critical applause and commercial indifference before dissolving in 1982. Thomas had already begun a solo career a year earlier with The Sound of the Sand (And Other Songs of the Pedestrians), a collaboration with guitar virtuoso
Richard Thompson, and in 1983, he released both Variations on a Theme and Winter Comes Home. Efforts including More Places Forever and Monster Walks the Winter Lake followed before Thomas released 1987's Blame the Messenger, recorded with a backing band dubbed the Wooden Birds; the group's lineup included fellow
Pere Ubu alums
Allen Ravenstine and
Tony Maimone, and when another onetime bandmate, drummer
Scott Krauss, sat in for a Cleveland live date, the decision was made to begin working as
Ubu again. The re-formed lineup debuted in 1988 with The Tenement Year, and despite a series of roster shifts, continued on throughout the decade to follow; in 1996, Thomas also released a new solo LP,
Erewhon, with new backing band the Two Pale Boys, which also featured avant trumpeter
Andy Diagram (also of
the Diagram Brothers, the Honkies, and
the Spaceheads) and sonic manipulator Keith Molene. His musical theater project, Mirror Man, debuted in London two years later and was released on CD in 1999; Bay City followed on Thirsty Ear a year later. The second Pale Boys album, Surf's Up, appeared in 2001. ~ Jason Ankeny