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THERE'S SOMETHING ABOUT 1970... - Exceptional CD Remasters
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Featuring the album "Lick My Decals Off, Baby" from 1970
Featuring the album "Lick My Decals Off, Baby" from 1970
"Sun Zoom
Spark" takes its title from a track on the wonderfully bat-shit "Clear Spot" album from 1972.
But by my calculations - the last time CD remasters were applied to Captain Beefheart's hugely sought after trio of Seventies albums listed below was over 20 years ago (in 1993 I believe). So this 2014 4CD reissue box set by Rhino with its truly fabulous sonic overhaul has been long overdue and is made all the more exciting by Previously Unreleased goodies on Disc 4. Makes me want to booglarize my big toe right quick and grow fins. But before we get all metaphysical on yo ass - here are the Smithsonian Institute Blues, Golden Birdies and Big-Eyed Beans from Venus...
But by my calculations - the last time CD remasters were applied to Captain Beefheart's hugely sought after trio of Seventies albums listed below was over 20 years ago (in 1993 I believe). So this 2014 4CD reissue box set by Rhino with its truly fabulous sonic overhaul has been long overdue and is made all the more exciting by Previously Unreleased goodies on Disc 4. Makes me want to booglarize my big toe right quick and grow fins. But before we get all metaphysical on yo ass - here are the Smithsonian Institute Blues, Golden Birdies and Big-Eyed Beans from Venus...
UK released
Monday 17 November 2014 - "Sun Zoom Spark: 1970 to 1972" by CAPTAIN
BEEFHEART on Rhino R2 541728 (Barcode 034979055) is a 4CD Box Set of New Remasters that breaks down as follows:
Disc 1 (38:48
minutes):
1. Lick My
Decals Off, Baby
2. Doctor Dark
3. I Love You,
You Big Dummy
4. Peon
5. Bellerin'
Plain
6.
Woe-Is-Uh-Me-Bop
7. Japan in A
Dishpan
8. I Wanna Find
A Woman That'll Hold My Big Toe Till I Have To Go [Side 2]
9. Petrified
Forest
10. One Red Rose
That I Mean
11. The Buggy
Boogie Woogie
12. The
Smithsonian Institute Blues (Or The Big Dig)
13. Space-Age
Couple
14. The Clouds
Are Full Of Wine (Not Whiskey Or Rye)
15. Flash
Gordon's Ape
Tracks 1 to 15
are the album "Lick My Decals Off, Baby" - his fourth album first
released October 1970 in the USA on Straight/Reprise RS 6240 and January 1971
on Straight STS 1063 in the UK.
Disc 2 (35:59
minutes):
1. I'm Gonna
Booglarize You Baby
2. White Jam
3. Blabber 'n
Smoke
4. When It Blows
Its Stacks
5. Alice In
Blunderland
6. The Spotlight
Kid [Side 2]
7. Click Clack
8. Grow Fins
9. There Ain't
No Santa Claus On The Evenin' Stage
10. Glider
Tracks 1 to 10
are his 5th studio album "The Spotlight Kid" - released February 1972
in the USA on Reprise Records RS 2050 and Reprise K 44162 in the UK
Disc 3 (37:30
minutes):
1. Low Yo Yo
Stuff
2. Nowadays A
Woman's Gotta Hit A Man
3. Too Much Time
4. Circumstances
5. My Head Is My
Only House Unless It Rains
6. Sun Zoom
Spark
7. Clear Spot
[Side 2]
8. Crazy Little
Thing
9. Long Neck
Bottles
10. Her Eyes Are
A Blue Million Miles
11. Big Eyed
Beans From Venus
12. Golden
Birdies
Tracks 1 to 12
are his sixth studio album "Clear Spot" - released November 1972 in
the USA on Reprise MS 2115 and February 1973 in the UK on Reprise K 54007
Disc 4
"Out-Takes 1970 to 1972" (46:39 minutes):
1. Alice In
Blunderland (Alternate Version) [3:55 minutes]
2. Harry Irene
[3:33 minutes]
3. I Can't Do
This Unless I Can Do This/Seam Crooked Sam [2:00 minutes]
4. Pompadour
Swamp/Suction Prints [4:23 minutes] - see NOTE
5. The Witch
Doctor Life (Instrumental Take) [5:27 minutes]
6. Two Rips In A
Haystack/Kiss Me My Love [2:38 minutes]
7. Best Batch
Yet (Track) Version 1 [2:18 minutes]
8. Your Love
Brought Me To Life (Instrumental) [3:11 minutes]
9. Dirty Blue
Gene (Alternate Version 1) [2:52 minutes]
10. Nowadays A
Woman's Gotta Hit A Man (Early Mix) [3:59 minutes]
11. Kiss Where I
Kain't (Instrumental) [2:44 minutes]
12.
Circumstances (Alternate Version 2) [3:23 minutes]
13. Little
Scratch [2:57 minutes]
14. Dirty Blue
Gene (Alternate Version 3) [3:03 minutes]
All Tracks
Previously Unreleased. Note: "Pompadour Swamps" appeared on the
Virgin Records LP "Bluejeans And Moonbeams" LP in November 1974 - but
the music is an early version of "Suction Prints" which later
appeared on the Virgin Records LP "Shiny Beast (Bat Chain Puller)" in
February 1980.
The Box Set
(using his own paintings as cover art) is shaped a little like a 7" single
set with the sepia-printed 20-page booklet inside and four 5" Card Repro
Sleeves inlaid into a centred hollow with a red ribbon to pull them out with
ease. The fourth disc not surprisingly utilizes one of his paintings as its
artwork - a pastel from 1970 called "Button Down Fashion Bow". Each
of the three album repro sleeves is of a very high quality with clear
facsimiles of the colour artwork front and rear (no gatefolds). A real nice
touch is that "The Spotlight Kid" has the lyric insert that came with
original copies of the vinyl album and "Clear Spot" has its outer
plastic envelope (I'd put the naked CD in a protective to avoid scratching).
The Box has been
produced by STEVE WOOLARD and BILL INGLOT (a long time associate remaster
engineer for Rhino) and inspired by TIM FRASER-HARDING. The hugely experienced
DAN HERSCH carried out the remasters at D2 Mastering in LA with the
"Out-takes" done by BRIAN KEHEW at Timeless Studios in North
Hollywood. The remasters are sensational to my ears - full of life and presence
- both men are to be praised for their work on this.
The booklet I'm
glad to say is a classy affair. The size of a 7" single - it foregoes
track lists and time-wasting for an essay called "The Sky Ran Down My
Pencil" by RIP RENSE which features extracts from Beefheart interviews,
Magic Band Trombonist Fowler, Guitarist Morris Tepper, Eric Feldman -
celebrities and admirers like Matt Goening of The Simpsons, David Hidalgo of
Los Lobos, the famous reviewer Lester Bangs from The Rolling Stone and there's
even a wicked poem on Don by none other than TOM WAITS on Page 11. There's a
witty quote on the side of the box too. But let's get to the real deal - the
sonic wallop...
I'm probably
going to elicit the wrath of legions, mental health enquiries and many sharp
instruments rammed up the softer parts of my elderly person's flabby behind by
saying that I've always found the 1969 double-album "Trout Mask
Replica" 'hard going'. I say this because the 1971 single-album follow up
"Lick My Decals Off, Baby" (after Replica quite possibly the best
album title ever in the Universe) feels like "Trout" Part 2. And for
this (spurious I know) reason - its fifteen short 'n' gangly discordant
vignettes frankly do my brain in. But - and this is not up for debate or grabs
- fans who've been listening to the 1993 "Decals" CD version are
going to have their grey matters fried this time around because the new DAN
HERSCH remaster sounds unbelievable - fantastically detailed and vibrant -
bringing new layers to the music that simply wasn't there before. Comparing the
new remaster of say "Woe-Is-Uh-Me-Bop" to its previous version is
like comparing a Derby Car wreck to a James Bond's Aston Martin Vanquish - the
mad Tom Waits rhythms of "Smithsonian" is the same.
Things go from
great to frigging stratospheric on "The Spotlight Kid". There is
slight hiss around the opening guitars of "I'm Gonna Booglarize You"
for sure - but Mother-of-God when they kick in - the power of the riffage is
just HUGE. And then his fantastic voice comes out of the speakers and I'm gone
baby gone. The clarity of the pitter-pattering drums and vibes on "Blabber
'n' Smoke" is fantastic and his vocals just 'there' like never before. The
same applies to the instrumental "Alice In Blunderland" with that
manic Winged Eel Fingerling guitar solo. And I've waited near four decades to
hear the harmonica/piano/guitar battle of "Click Clack" sound this
good - and that harmonica wailing on "Grow Fins" ("I'm gonna
take up with a mermaid...") - wowser!
Then it's on to
my favourite album of his and one of the great-unsung masterpieces of the
Seventies - the fabulous "Clear Spot". "Nowadays..." sounds
amazing - full of life - while you see why people like Everything But The Girl
covered the beautiful "My Head Is My Only House Unless It Rains". The
title track rocks and Zoot Horn Rollo's guitar on "Big Eyed Beans From
Venus" slides across your speakers like a snake with a Gibson strapped on
(lyrics from it title this review). The lovely vibe "Too Much Time"
has is now amplified and not over trebled for the sake of it. Great.
The
"Out-Takes 1970 to 1972" disc opens strongly with a kicking version
of the instrumental "Alice In Blunderland" - wonderful clarity too
(no crappy demo feel). He then gets tender on "Harry Irene" and
Harmonica Boogie on the short but cool "obscene cookie Sam" song "I
Can't Do This..." There's fantastic opening guitar riffing on
"Pompadour Stomp" while we get some "right on" dialogue at
the beginning of mid-paced instrumental "The Witch Doctor Life". It's
Tom Waits time again with "Two Rips In A Haystack" which features his
trademark growl vocals sounding not unlike a white Howlin' Wolf. Because I'm so
familiar with the realised song - the early mix of "Nowadays A Woman's
Gotta Hit A Man" is utterly brilliant to me - that chug of the brass and
guitars have subtle differences - so damn cool. The instrumental "Kiss
Where I Kain't" is a fast boogie number that could so easily have been on
either "Spotlight" or "Clear Spot". In fact listening the
whole of Disc 4 - it feels like the album that should have maybe followed
"Clear Spot".
The word genius
is liberally bandied about in music - but in truth there's only been a few
out-and-out genuine contenders - and the mighty Don Van Vliet was/is one of
them. And isn’t it so good to see Rhino return to reissue form and give Captain
Beefheart's recorded legacy such a tasty makeover. "Dawned on me
man..." - what a winner - and for me a clear reissue of the year 2014.
Rest with the
angels and your paintbrushes you anarchic peach...
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