Showing posts with label Captain Beefheart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Captain Beefheart. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band: Los Angeles 1980 (VG++ Aud) FLAC

by request
c6
1980-12-20 LATE SHOW
WHISKEY-A-GO-GO, Los Angeles, CA.

01. Apes Ma
02. Hair Pie Bake III ( Bass/Sax )
03. Don on Tape
04. Hair Pie Bake III ( Bass/Sax )
05. Nowaday's A Woman's Gotta Hit A Man
06. Hot Head
07. Ashtray Heart
08. Dirty Blue Gene
09. Best Batch Yet
10. Safe As Milk
11. A Carrot Is As Close As A Rabbit Gets To A Diamond
12. Don and Crowd
13. One Red Rose That I Mean
14. tuning
15. Doctor Dark
16. Bat Chain Puller
17. Sheriff Of Hong Kong
18. tuning - Crowd - Don
19. Suction Prints
-total time approx. 67:27

The Band . . . .
Captain Beefheart Don Van Vliet vocals, tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, chinese gongs
Eric Drew Feldman bass guitar, synthesizer, mandolin, mellotron, electric piano
Robert Williams drums, percussion
Richard Snyder guitar, slide guitar, bass guitar
Jeff Moris Tepper guitar, slide-guitar

2nd Gen Aud. Maxell XLII-S Tape > Onkyo Deck > TDK DA-3826 > CD-R > PC > .wav > Audacity 1.3
( for speed correction ) > .wav > Traders Little Helper Flac level 8
transfer - mcchocchoc / jbk

OU: This is the Late Show from the second night (two nights in a row, two shows each night). The recording is a bit "hot", but the sound is still pretty excellent. I hadn't listened to this tape for many years because my copy ran very, very fast. I am happy to share this speed corrected version, as this is a great show. The band is raging and Don is also really "on" here. The vocals are awesome. Don is intense in his delivery, getting more into it as the show progresses. The vocal fade out at the end of 'Doctor Dark' here is incredible. The room is silent and Don really kills it ! Following that amazing, fading finish quickly Don starts 'Bat Chain Puller' with a roar. Very cool. The band intros follow Bat Chain Puller.
After 'Sheriff Of Hong Kong' Don wishes everybody a Merry Christmas and even shouts a "Ho Ho Ho Ho Ho"! This is another show in which Don is very chatty and quite funny.
Interesting start here, Eric plays the Hair Pie Bass solo all the way through and then he starts it up again as Don joins in on Sax. They finish that and eventually Don plays a tape recording of himself through the mic. After that they play Hair Pie again ( bass and sax only ) !
Last year the Late Show from the first night was shared out here. Let's hope the Early shows do the same.
Aside from the occasional out of tune guitar, this is one of the better performances by the 80/81 band! A very enjoyable listen. Have fun. Much thanks to the taper and all of my old trading friends. March 06, 2011.
NEVER FOR SALE / FREE TRADE ALWAYS and ONLY. THANKS.

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band: Rochester 1977 (VG++ Aud) FLAC

by requestc22
November 3, 1977
Red Creek Inn, Rochester, New York LATE SHOW

01. Crowd - Tuning - Introduction
02. Hair Pie Bake III ( Bass Solo )
03. Suction Prints
04. Low Yo Yo Stuff
05. Don Talks - Band Introductions >
06. > Band Intros Cont'd > Nowaday's A Woman's Gotta Hit A Man
07. Electricity
08. A Carrot Is As Close As A Rabbit Gets To A Diamond
09. China Pig / Hoboism
10. On Tomorrow
11. -Crowd-
12. -Crowd-Tuning-
13. Owed T' Alex ( cut/tape flip )
14. My Human Gets Me Blues
15. Veteran's Day Poppy > Outro
16. Orange Claw Hammer
17. Golden Birdies
Total Time Approx. 63 minutes

The Band . . . . . . .
Captain Beefheart Don Van Vliet vocals, tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, bass clarinet
Eric Drew Feldman bass guitar, keyboards, synthesizer
Robert Williams drums, percussion
Jeff Moris Tepper guitar, slide-guitar
Denny Walley guitar, slide guitar

Also performing on the bill this night were Sunnyland Slim and DeLyon (magician, mentalist as special guest).

2nd or 3rd gen cassette Aud Recording. Excellent sound.
Maxell XLII-S Tapes > Onkyo Deck > TDK DA-3826 > CD-R > PC > .wav > Audacity 1.3 (for speed correction) > .wav > Traders Little Helper Flac level 8
transfer - mcchocchoc aka JBK Feb. 2011.

OU: Another super show here. One of my favorites. I have two sets of both the Early and Late Shows for this night. According to a notebook I kept back in the mid-90's one set was 2nd gen the other 3rd gen. For whatever reason I did not mark the actual tapes. I compared the tapes and picked what I think is the better sounding version. They ran a bit fast, so I corrected the speed. After many sessions messing around with the recording I am now very happy with the end result. It sounds great ! A very even mix of all players and Don. The bass sounds very nice here. (Keeping in mind that I listen to music on stereos most all of the time. Then again, I am listening to this show now on my pc as I type all this and it sounds sweet.) Easily among the best sounding of the 1977 tapes.
This was the first tour that Robert Williams was playing drums in the band. Denny Walley is still in the band and the version of " China Pig / Hoboism " here is amazing. Among the best live performances I have heard. The way Don throws his voice all around is just crazy. This is another show in which Don is in what seems to be a very good mood. Relaxed. Also very chatty. The banter throughout is really great and often funny. When an audience member asks where is ( what happened ) to Drumbo, Don offers up an interesting answer. Don also really enjoyed the chocolate pie at this club. Hahaha. Nice.
"On Tomorrow" was cut a bit short due to an electrical malfunction. The ending of "Owed T' Alex" is cut short due to a tape flip.
ENJOY THE SHOW. NEVER FOR SALE. FREE / TRADE ALWAYS & ONLY.

rar files packed with a (winrar) recovery record -
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Thursday, March 10, 2011

Captain Beefheart: Various Studio Outtakes (FLAC)

front
Hoboism
Liberated Bootleg
Silver CD -> EAC -> WAV -> FLAC level 8
Artwork (such as it is) has been included.

Studio outtakes 1970:
01. Little Scratch
02. Dirty Blue Gene
03. Funeral Hill
04. Flash Gordan's Ape
Studio rehearsal 1972:
05. Sun Zoom Spark
06. Key To the Highway
Saturday Night Live Nov 1980:
07. Hot Head
08. Ashtray Heart
Live-The Country Club, Reseda CA Jan 28 1980:
09. Safe As Milk
10. China Pink
11. Sheriff of Honk Hong
12. Kandy Korn
13. Veterans Day Poppy
14. Big Eyed Beans From Venus
Studio demo:
15. Hoboism

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Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Captain Beefheart and the Magic Band: Boston 1980 (VG+ Aud) FLAC

cb19801205dvda-front
Captain Beefheart- vocals
Richard "Midnight Hatsize" Snyder- guitar, slide guitar
Jeff Morris Tepper- guitar, slide guitar
Eric Drew Feldman- keyboards and mandolin
Robert Williams- drums and percussion
Paradise Rock Club
Boston, Mass.
December 5, 1980
from master audience recording
(1st of 2 nights, the Suade Cowboys opened)
runtime: 101:42

disc 1 58:14
1: apes ma (30 second spoken intro) > sax and bass duet 5:30
2: nowadays a woman's gotta hit a man 4:05
3: Abba Zaba 4:54
4: hot head 3:46
5: a carrot is as close as a rabbit gets to a diamond 2:08
6: ashtray heart 4:21
7: dirty blue Gene 4:25
8: Smithsonian institute blues 3:33
9: best batch yet 5:55
10: safe as milk 4:12
11: flavor bud living 2:09
12: her eyes are a blue million miles 3:45
13: one red rose that I mean 2:05
14: untitled 3:43
15: Dr. Dark 3:35

disc 2 43:28
16: bat chain puller 5:37
17: band introductions 1:29
18: my human gets the blues 3:36
19: improvisation 3:15
20: sugar and spikes 2:57
21: Sheriff of Hong Kong (tape flip after song) 7:30
22: Kandy Korn 5:08
23: encore break 2:49
24: suction prints 5:47
25: big eyed beans from Venus 5:16

lineage: Realistic twinhead stereo mike > Technics cassette deck (dolby off) > Maxell XL-I master cassettes (normal bias) > played on Nak. 125 into soundforge 4.5 WAV (into Realtek soundcard) > flac 6 > torrentially yours. first seeded in 2008.
reseeded in 2011 with full setlist and a flac > wav > flac (sb's aligned) reconversion to remove the sbe's.
It's not a "masters of rock", or jazz, but a Masters of Whatever Production.
Do not sell this recording. Share freely, losslessly and gaplessly. gaps are so 80's, Beefheart is always.
More OU Comments: this was a rather busy time for concerts. Captain Beefheart played 2 nights (one show each night). I think this is the 1st of the 2 nights but not sure. This was the only time I went to see a Beef show. It is an acquired taste, and I don't agree with some of what he says (like track 2 title) but there are some folks who love this guy. not really sure why, but nobody can accuse Captain Beefheart of being too restrained in his expressionism. this was about 6 years after he teamed up with Frank Zappa. I've heard a few rather marginal sounding Beefheart recordings. This one came out quite well, and it is the whole show except the 1st second or two of track 22 (it's not too noticable) and the 1st few seconds of the spoken intro (also not too noticable). the 1st flip was between songs and nothing's missing there.
I don't know what the heck kind of music this can be called. It's fusion, but I wouldn't call it normal jazz (even though it has a sax in it). Avantgarde spazz in parts, bluesy folk rock in others. It's different. That's one thing I like about this music. It's not superficial either. this is music from and about the real world (not seen on MTV).
another thing I like about it is all the instruments can be heard clearly. the between song talk is very quiet, but it can be heard. the vocals, when there are vocals, are also easily heard and come through well.
Well enough so even though I didn't HAVE to do a new transfer of this master recording, because my 1st CD of it sounded okay,
I did one anyway. the 1st one was never posted. this one may be a little better but I mainly did the new transfer to keep "CD" and "CD extractor" out of this lineage, and to make sure there would be a few good choices for a disc break in case you don't like this one (or have the other night and want to make them a 3 CD set.). there's alot of not much going on between songs, but I left it all in there because it wouldn't fit on 1 disc anyway (if I edited out all the nothing going on parts) and it's a 1st time post from the master so I wanted to put it up as completely as possible.
Classic? Maybe, sorta, for some of us it is. Tough times call for some Beefheart. And these are tough times. do not sell this recording.

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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Captain Beefheart & The Magic Band: Portland 1981 (Soundboard) FLAC

Beefheart and beefheart art
1981-01-18
Europhia Tavern
Portland, OR.

01. / / Nowaday's A Woman's Gotta Hit A Man
02. Abba Zaba
03. Hot Head
04. Crowd and Don
05. Ashtray Heart
06. A few words from Don
07. Dirty Blue Gene
08. Best Batch Yet > intros (cut)
09. intros ( cont'd ) > Safe As Milk
10. Don talks some more
11. A Carrot Is As Close As A Rabbit Gets To A Diamond
12. One Red Rose That I Mean
13. tuning - Don
14. Doctor Dark
15. Crowd
16. Bat Chain Puller
17. My Human Gets Me Blues
18. Sugar 'N Spikes
19. tuning > Sheriff Of Hong Kong
20. Kandy Korn
21. Suction Prints
22. Big Eyed Beans From Venus
total time approx. 73:25

The Band . . . .
Captain Beefheart Don Van Vliet vocals, tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, chinese gongs
Eric Drew Feldman bass guitar, synthesizer, mandolin, mellotron, electric piano
Robert Williams drums, percussion
Richard Snyder guitar, slide guitar, bass guitar
Jeff Moris Tepper guitar, slide-guitar

Soundboard Recording ( unknown ( low ) gen ).
Maxell XLII-S Tapes > Onkyo Deck > TDK DA-3826 > CD-R > PC > .wav > Audacity 1.3
( for speed correction ) > .wav > Traders Little Helper Flac level 8
transfer - mcchocchoc aka JBK Feb. 2011.
OU: This may not be too heavily circulated. It will be an upgrade to most everyone. I know of an incomplete audience source that many people likely have. I do not have that version. That tape cuts off after Sheriff Of Hong Kong. That is the tape listed at the old Beefheart Database ( thanks D. I still use the site for research ! ). Assuming that the information from the old database is correct, the "aud" version also begins with "Nowaday's . . . ".
Considering that nearly all of ( if not all ) of the shows from the 80/81 DOC TOUR began with a Bass Solo, the "Bass Solo / Hair Pie" may be missing from this recording.
The first couple of beats of "Nowaday's . . ." are missing and it cuts in. No big deal, we are talking a few seconds.
I have two copies of the Soundboard version here in the Archives. The better copy out of the two was missing the encores. They were very close in overall quality, but I went with the first source for the main show. Lucky for me ( and you ! ) my second source had the encores. The main portion of the show ( tracks 01-20 ) ran very, very fast. The second source ran very slow. After I transferred the cassettes I used Audacity to correct the speed. I think it sounds pretty right on. This was the first time I had bothered with(tried) speed correction. I am happy with the results and I think most will agree. I'm pretty good at this point with video and authoring dvds. As far as audio, I just do what I can. Considering that I have had no complaints after many shares, I guess I am doing ok. Heh heh heh.
Much thanks to the person that traded me this tape many years ago and also thanks to my local buddy Greg for the second source (for the encores). Also, much thanks to the original taper who got a board patch ! Awesome.
It's funny, the trading world, the better copy I have here was sent to me from Europe and the other copy from Greg (who was at the show) came from where we live, in Portland ! Neat-o !
I think the overall sound quality here is very good / great. The mix is well balanced and all instruments are heard clearly, including the vocal. Don seems relaxed here and having some fun. His mood seems rather playful on this evening. His only complaints are about the stage lighting and people smoking clove cigs ( he also mentioned that at the Seattle show a few days before ). If you listen closely and follow the lyrics he makes a few funny remarks here and there. He is also very chatty throughout the show. Several funny remarks and he also mentions the volcano eruption that happend up here around that time. Pretty cool ! I've been listening to this show as I am creating this text file . . . great set and it sounds super ! I hope you all enjoy the show.
NEVER FOR SALE / FREE / TRADE ALWAYS & ONLY.

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Friday, February 4, 2011

Captain Beefheart Tribute Article

6
A very nice article with some vintage photos such as the one above.

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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Captain Beefheart and The Magic Band: 2 G+/VG- Aud Shows 1971 and '72

rock&roll_047_captain_beefheart
Aragon Ballroom, Chicago, IL 1972-10-13

DISC 1 (48:35)
01 Low Yo Yo Stuff (CUT)....................(1:42)
02 Nowadays A Woman's Gotta Hit A Man (CUT).(1:21)
03 Clear Spot (CUT).........................(3:02)
04 Old Black Snake (CUT)....................(2:47)
05 Sugar 'N Spikes (CUT)....................(1:04)
06 Too Much Time (CUT)......................(1:52)
07 Crazy Little Thing.......................(3:14)
08 One Red Rose That I Mean.................(2:04)
09 I'm Gonna Booglarize You, Baby...........(5:01)
10 Click Clack..............................(4:08)
11 Alice In Blunderland.....................(3:36)
12 Circumstances (CUT)......................(3:54)
13 Big Eyed Beans From Venus................(4:24)
14 Golden Birdies...........................(3:00)
ENCORE
15 Bass Solo................................(3:21)
16 Steal Softly Through Snow................(3:53)

LINE UP
Captain Beefheart/Don Van Vliet: vocals, harmonica
Rockette Morton/Mark Boston: bass guitar, guitar
Oréjon/Audi Hon/Roy Estrada: bass guitar
Zoot Horn Rollo/Bill Harkleroad: guitar, slide guitar
Ed Marimba/Art Tripp: drums, percussion

Stereo AUD trade tape
Trade tape > Computer WAV > Cool Edit 2000 > TLH v2.4.1 > FLAC 8

The right channel was low on the source tape, and I tried to balance things out a bit.
Beyond that, the only thing I did on the computer was place track marks before each piece.
This FLAC fileset comes from WAVs from this dub, which only needed SBE corrections in TLH; no CD-Rs or EACs.

NOTES: It is stereo, but if you're looking for high fidelity, this ain't the one to pick.
The first 3-4mins are dodgy / heads misaligned (no adjustment to my tape would help), but improves a bit after that.
And as you see, the first 5 titles have cuts all over the place. There's a couple'a cuts early in track 6, and from then on it's largely uninterrupted save for between songs near the end.
Most of the gaps related to the cuts were left as is, because they left very small short gaps.
During the last 1/4th of the show, the gaps had long silence stretches & I cut out a total of 30sec of silence from them.
Part of Circumstances was overlapped over my source tape's sides, the sound was much less hissy on Side B.
Tho pace-wise it was a seamless edit, you can hear the hiss step down right at that edit point.
- - - -
If you can get by all the above issues, what's here is a fine show.
Alice In Blunderland is sweet, and you get a taste of Too Much Time / Clear Spot / Crazy Little Thing.
And who opens an encore with a bass solo? :) Just like, who opens a show with one, no one but El Capitan.

There's some debate as to the actual date of this performance.
Per Detlef's site, this is best dated as being 1972-10-13.
Some other references include a date of 1972-10-19 or (my tape) 1972-10-30.
Whatever the date, it's a nice capture from long long ago.
I dunno about you, but when I hear stuff this old, I am REALLY grateful that people went and recorded things like this. And I'm glad traders kept them going around long enough so I could get a copy many years later.

+++
1971-10-09
Tuft's University - Boston, MA
24Bit Transfer

Captain Beefheart: vocals, tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, harmonica
John "Drumbo" French: drums
Zoot Horn Rollo: guitar
Art Tripp III: marimba
Rockette Morton: bass guitar, guitar
Elliot Ingber: guitar, slide guitar

Low Gen Maxell XLIIS cassette > Tascam Professional Cassette Deck Model 130 analog out > Apogee
Mini-Me @ 24/48 Hz spdif out > Digigram VX Pocket V2 (in data mode = no resampling of bits) > Samplitude
Professional 8 @ 24/48 Hz > resampled to 16/44.1 Hz w/ Samplitude > FLAC Frontend Encode level 6
No EQ or hiss reduction has been used. Only minor edits and fades to remove tape flip clicks and crowd noise.
Freely Traded - Never For Profit

1. Hair Pie Bass Solo
2. When It Blows It Stacks
3. Japan In A Dishpan
4. Click Clack
5. Grow Fins
6. I'm Gonna Booglarize you
7. Black Snake Blues
8. Peon
9. Abba Zabba
10. Frownland (bass solo/sax solo)
11. Woe Is Uh Me Bop (contains a small passage of noise from the master reel to reel)
12. Alice In Blunderland
13. Spitball Scalped Uh Baby

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Friday, December 24, 2010

Captain Beefheart and The Magic Band: Unreleased 1976 Studio LP (FLAC)

This is NOT the same as the similarly entitled official release (album or tracks)
cbbcp2
Captain Beefheart & The Magic Band
Bat Chain Puller (Unreleased LP)

1. Bat Chain Puller
2. Seam Crooked Sam
3. Harry Irene
4. Poop Hatch
5. Flavor Bud Living
6. Brickbats
7. Floppy Boot Stomp
8. A Carrot Is As Close As A Rabbit Gets To A Diamond
9. Owed T'Alex
10. Odd Jobs
11. The 1010th Day Of The Human Totem Pole
12. Apes-ma

PERSONEL:
DON VAN VLIET - vocals/tenor sax/soprano sax/bass clarinet
DENNY WALLEY - guitar/slide guitar
JEFF MORIS TEPPER - guitar/slide guitar
JOHN THOMAS - keyboards
JOHN FRENCH - drums/percussion/guitar

QUALITY: A+ Stereo Studio Recording

NOTES: This album was recorded in early 1976 but never released. This particular dub was made from an ANA(1) copy given to a record company employee by Beefheart himself. This same tape has been bootlegged on CDR with excessive noise reduction, but this fresh new transfer is completely free of NR. Don't be fooled by the European bootleg "Dust Sucker" which comes from a very poor quality tape, and not the "Captain's original tapes" as the liner notes claim. This copy is the real deal!

LINEAGE: ANA(2) -> CDR -> WAV -> FLAC

rar files packed with a (winrar) recovery record -
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Sunday, October 17, 2010

Captain Beefheart and the Magic Band: Huntington Beach 1978 (G Aud) FLAC

easyteeth_front
The Golden Bear, Huntington Beach, California
1978-02-18
Liberated Bootleg: Easy Teeth (audience recording)

This is a relatively abysmal sounding recording; it's shocking that anyone thought it was good enough to press an album from, given how many other much better recordings of the band exist. But hey, I bought it...long ago. And in any case it's still a very interesting show with lots of great banter; Bruce Fowler is in the audience and Don tries to find him a trombone to play, among other things.
And after listening to it it's quite likely that the Easy Teeth album moves the song selection around so it probably does not reflect the actual flow of the show.
Apologies for all the remaining album noise; all I can say is thank goodness technology has finally advanced past records and tapes.

Lineage: album -> Tascam DR-1 @ 44.1KHz/16b -> Audacity 1.3.12 (speed correction - it was way off needing around 11% speed increase, click removal, normalize) -> CD Wave -> FLAC

1. Hair Pie Bake III
2. Suction Prints
3. Electricity
4. Click Clack
5. A Carrot Is As Close As A Rabbit Gets To A Diamond
6. Floppy Boot
7. Bat Chain Puller
8. Nowadays A Woman's Gotta Hit A Man
9. Crazy little Thing
10. When I See A Mommy I Feel Like A Mummy
11. Owed T'Alex (with a nice intro about Alex and his motorcycle)
12. Low Yo Yo Stuff (with an "I Love You Big Dummy" intro)
13. Pachuco Cadaver
14. Abba Zaba -> "The last time I saw Roland Kirk"
15. Grow Fins -> "Bruce Fowler"
16. Dali's Car
17. China Pig
18. Sure Nuff 'n' Yes I Do
19. Sun Zoom Spark
20. Big Eyed Beans from Venus
21. Golden Birdies
Total time: 1h 32m 51s

Captain Beefheart/Don Van Vliet, Vocals, Harmonica, Saxophone
Eric "Black Jew Kitabu" Feldman - Bass, keyboards, synthesizer, the cleanest man in rock and roll
Jeff Moris Tepper, Guitar
Denny Walley, Guitar
Robert Williams, Drums

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Sunday, October 10, 2010

The Magic Band: Demo Tape 1974 (FLAC)

bdwmktcrscd3-front
DEMO TAPE ( Fall of 1974 )

song list ( as written by John "DRUMBO" French )
1. A Piece of Me -- (we changed it from Deja Vu) Harkleroad music / French Lyrics.
2. Let That Child Live -- Music and Lyrics French
3. Reign of Pain -- Dan Moore -- Lyrics / French, Harkleroad -- Music
4. One Day Once -- Harkleroad, Music / French, Lyrics
5. Hot Ice ( Instrumental) Harkleroad
6. Hot Ice (Vocal) Harkleroad, Music / French, Lyrics.
total time approx . . 22:33

band members
Bill Harkleroad...Guitar
Alex Snouffer.....Guitar
Mark Boston.......Bass
John Thomas.......Keys
John French.......Drums & Vocals

Maxell XLII > Sony TC-WE805S > TDK DA-3826 Stand Alone Burner > CD-R > PC > Wav > Traders Little Helper Flac level 8 > dimeadozen

OU: Wow. This one is really special. . . . .
Digging through the Archives here I found this tape, which I had totally forgotten about. It was labeled " Mallard Demo ". I was soon to find out that it was not actually a Mallard demo, but instead THE MAGIC BAND Demo ( ! ! ) . . . recorded shortly after the guys all left CAPTAIN BEEFHEART & THE MAGIC BAND in 1974. The music here is really great and I am thinking that it will be "new" to many folks. Enjoy !
The following notes about this tape were written by John French. August/September 2010.
**( This first paragraph was written after I sent an email to John asking about this tape.
I also asked about the riffs I heard on this demo that I knew were used on Captain Beefheart's " You Know You're A Man " ). . . .
That demo was recorded in two places. The instrumentals were recorded in Bill's "shed" house in Arcata. He had a loft bed, and the drums were underneath. That was the "drum booth." The vocals were added in Malibu at the beach house of some famous DJ ( can't recall which one, but it could have been Casey Kasem). Ted Alvy, as I recall, did the technical stuff using the DJ's tape decks. I think the shower was my vocal booth!
The personnel was Bill Harkleroad, Alex Snouffer, Mark Boston, John Thomas (keys) and myself. We were planning on getting a drummer and I would just sing, but it never happened. BTW -- we were never called Mallard then. That was a name they chose after re-forming without me. We were "The Magic Band."
I noticed that "Hot Ice" riffs were later used on "You Know You're a Man." Probably, Don just used a riff of Bill's and claimed it as his own. I know Bill would never do that.
It must have been the Fall of 1974. We rapped it a couple of months later. I came back to Lancaster from Northern California on November 21. I was 26.
**( The following two paragraphs were written in two different messages after I sent John a copy of this tape ). . . .
I've never been much on lyrics and would have much rather played instrumental music, but I think that the music ( mostly Bill's) really was the shining moment in that music. I had been in theater for three years when they called me to play and so had to start over with the singing. I can't remember much about this, but will give a listen on my iPod while working and see what comes back.
We recorded this music in Bill's shed -- where he was living with his girlfriend at the time. We borrowed a Teac 3340 -four-track tape recorder and begged a bunch of mics and a mixer off some friends. Bill was the main impetus of the group when I showed up. The first thing I heard was "One Day Once" and I went outside and wrote lyrics in about 10 minutes. Art Tripp was still playing drums at that point but he left shortly after -- burned out from the music business. Most of the stuff was in the wrong key for me. All the stuff that says "Harkleroad, Music" was written before I arrived with the exception of "Reign Of Pain" which was a song I did with another band . Bill added the middle section.
Hot Ice may have been a collaboration on the lyrics.
That's about all I know. Just don't call it a "Mallard Demo." It was The Magic Band then. Mallard was something they came up with after I left.
* End of John's notes.
There is also a short paragraph about this tape on page 602 in John's recent book
" Beefheart : Through The Eyes Of Magic ". Copies of this amazing book can be purchased directly from John. Find him on myspace.
Much thanks to John for taking the time to write some notes and provide the proper
track listing. I can not express how much I appreciate that. Much love and respect to Mr. John " Drumbo " French.
. . . also thanks to "blackpage" for his ears & eyes.

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Monday, October 4, 2010

Captain Beefheart: Kansas City 1974 (Soundboard) shn

captain beefheart dbl cover
Cowtown Ballroom, Kansas City
4/22/74
Soundboard

01 Mirror Man
02 Upon the My Oh My
03 Crazy Little Thing
04 Full Moon, Hot Sun
05 Sugar Bowl
06 This Is The Day
07 Keep On Rubbing/It's Mighty Crazy (Lightnin' Slim)
08 Be Your Dog
09 Sweet Georgia Brown
10 Abba Zaba
11 Peaches 1
12 Peaches 2

From Home Page Replica Website - www.shiningsilence.com
Cover says "Source: Recorded at Cowtown, Kansas City, April 22 1974 - A rare early FM broadcast" - this was a QUAD broadcast of the Missouri concert. Sound is pretty good stereo. Performance, like all the 1974 tour with the Buckwheat backing band, is not great but Beefheart's singing and apparent good mood compensate for that. Features a blues jam with "Keep On Rubbing" and "Be Your Dog". Over an hour long at 64:53.
From Captain Beefheart Timeline - http://www.beefheart.de/index.html
Magic Band #29: Tragic Live Band
Unconditionally Guaranteed Promo Tour

Don Van Vliet: Five days before the tour - a tour all over the world, starting in America - they just dropped me. It was terrible, awful; I learned them the music note by note at the time, and just before such a big tour they cut the collaboration because they think they are essential. I like this new band very much. these guys already could play from the start, that's important.
[Bert Jansen: THE CAPTAIN! Captain Beefheart: Magie Voor Eenzamen Of Voor Het Volk? OOR, June 19, 1974]
Barry Alfonso: Scrambling to put a group together in time for a tour only a few weeks away, DiMartino hired a lounge-circuit rock combo down in Hollywood to be an ersatz Magic Band. Among these musicians was keyboardist Michael Smotherman, who, like his bandmates, had little or no idea who Captain Beefheart was. "Talk about worlds colliding," he remembers. "We started practicing these songs of Don's, things like Big Eyed Beans From Venus, and they seemed totally alien, totally foreign to our ways of thinking. At the time, we were all guys in leather jackets and tight jeans, and we treated Don with this slightly patronizing attitude. He was, like, this old kook to us. We truly didn't know shit."
Somehow, Beefheart managed to teach these musicians his songs, and they toured together in Europe and the U.S. into the fall of '74.
[The Dust Blows Forward booklet]

Magic Band #29: "Tragic Live Band"
* Captain Beefheart Don Van Vliet vocals, harmonica, saxophone, clarinet
* Fuzzy Fuscaldo guitar
* Ty Grimes drums
* Del Simmons tenor saxophone, flute
* Dean Smith guitar
* Michael Smotherman keyboards
* Paul Uhrig bass

Roger Ames: So there's a New Magic Band with a keyboard player from Buckwheat, a drummer from Ricky Nelson's band (Ty Grimes), a bass player from Bobbie Gentry's old band (Paul Uhrig), and a throwback sax player who led his own band in Dixieland days. Dean Smith is on lead, Fuzzy Fuscaldo on rhythm.
[Roger Ames: CaptainBeefheart. People Weekly. September 1974]
Steve Lake: These people being 54-year-old ex-Charlie Parker clarinet and-all-other-reeds-man Del Simmons, guitarist Dean Smith and Fuzzy Fuscaldo (the latter recently with Curtis Mayfield), keyboard player Michael Smotherman from the now defunct Buckweat, bassist Paul Uhrig from Bobbie Gentry's group (!), and drummer Ty Grimes, fresh from Rick Nelson's Stone Canyon Band. Impeccable enough credentials for the average Los Angeles session, one imagines, but hardly the boys to get to grips with Big Eyed Beans From Venus or Ah Feel Like Ahcid.
[Steve Lake: Music is A Poor Second Every Time. Melody Maker. June 1974]

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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Captain Beefheart: Reseda 1981 (Soundboard) FLAC

captain beefheart-1981-01-29-outside front cover
Live at the Country Club in Reseda, California
January 29, 1981

1.Eric’s bass and the Captain’s horn Jam
2.Nowadays A Woman’s Gotta Hit A Man
3.My Lat Sweet Potato
4.Hot Head
5.Ashtray Heart
6.Dirty Blue Gene
7.The Big Dig (Smithsonian Institute Blues)
8.Best Batch Yet
9.Safe As Milk
10.One Red Rose That I Mean?
11.China Pig
12.Sue Egypt (incomplete) (tape flip)
13.Doctor Dark (incomplete)
14.Bat Chain Puller
15.My Human Gets Me Blues
16.Sugar and Spikes
17.Sheriff of Hong Kong
18.Candy Corn
19.Veteran’s Day Poppy
20.Big Eyed Beans From Venus
[79:44]

Source: Mono soundboard recorded on a Nakamichi Dragon Cassette Deck. Copied from the master cassette to a Revox B-77 using Maxell UD35-90 7” sound recording tape @ 7 1/2 ips.
Digitized using the Audigy 4 Pro soundcard at a 24 bit and 44.1 KHz sample rate.
Editing with NERO wave editor and dithered to 16 bits with Audacity
Tracks cut using CD Wav
Converted to Flac (Level 8) with Traders Little helper.

John French - drums, vocals, harmonica
Gary Lucas - guitar
Mark Boston - bass
Michael Traylor
Eric Feldman: Bass and keyboards
Robert Williams: drums
Jeff Moris Teper: guitar
Denny Walley - guitar
Captain Beefheart: Vocals and Horns

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Monday, September 27, 2010

Frank Zappa with Captain Beefheart: Providence 1975 (Dan Lampinski Aud Master) FLAC

FZ 1975-04-26-fr
Providence College
Providence, RI
26 April 1975
Master audience recording taped by Dan Lampinski

CD1
01 Improvisations
02 Camarillo Brillo
03 Muffin Man (instrumental)
04 Stinkfoot
05 I'm Not Satisfied
06 Carolina Hard-Core Ecstasy
07 Velvet Sunrise
08 A Pound For A Brown (spliced)
09 Why Doesn't Someone Give Him A Pepsi? (AKA The Torture Never Stops)

CD2
01 Montana
02 Improvisations (incl. Sam With The Showing Scalp Flat Top)
03 Penguin In Bondage (spliced)
04 Poofter's Froth Wyoming Plans Ahead
05 Echidna's Arf (Of You)
06 Drums
07 Advance Romance
08 E: Willie The Pimp

Sony TC-152SD Tape Recorder
Sony ECM-99 Stereo Microphone
Maxell cassettes
Mastered and FLAC'ed by Carl Morstadt

Master Cassette -> Nakamichi CR-3A cassette deck with azimuth correction -> M-Audio Firewire Audiophile 2496 -> CDWAV 24-bit/96-KHz wav files -> Goldwave (normalizing and crossfades) -> CDWAV (track breaks) -> dBpowerAMP Audio Converter (24-bit/96-KHz wav files converted to 16-bit/44.1 KHz wav files) -> FLAC Front End (FLAC 8 with sector boundary alignment)
FLAC files tagged with Foobar2000 Live Show Tagger
No EQ'ing.

Hey There, Hi There, Ho There....you're as welcome as can be.....L-A-M, P-I-N, Team Lampinski...
For all you Zappateers out there, we will now have our roll call:
Dan.....Carl.....Eric.....Kevin.....
Team Lampinski is all present and accounted for, we are glad you dropped by for today's show!!!
This offering is very special, there were only a handful of shows done with Captain Beefheart in the spring of 1975. As far as I can tell, there is no circulating recording of this show, so the databases are all gonna have to be updated.
Even though in traditional Lampinski fashion, this is an amazing recording, I know the fine folks over at Zappateers will do a fabulous job making it "just exactly perfect" for all to enjoy in perpetuity. I am personally very thankful for their hard work and dedication, not only for what they have done for Dan's recordings, but for the Zappa community in general. It strikes me that their fine website should be a model for any band's fanbase to get their much needed ROIO fix.
So here ya go boys and girls, the final Dan Lampinski Zappa Master Recording and I think it's a doozy....

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Like today, there will be 6 boots (or more) posted each day until month's end.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Captain Beefheart and The Magic Band: Frankfurt 1972 (VG- Aud) FLAC

by request!
1972-04-14-unknownphotographer03
Jahrhunderthalle, Frankfurt, Germany - 1972-04-14

Lineage: AUD>tape 3rd gen>Wavelab>WAV>sound improvement using Freefilter and Timeworks Mastering EQ>Flac Frontend>FLAC (level 8)>Trader's Little Helper>WAV>Wavelab>sound improvement using Freefilter, Equalizer>Trader's Little Helper>FLAC (level 8)

Tracklist:
01. Hair Pie: Bake III (1:35)
02. The Mascara Snake (0:39)
03. The Mascara Fake (0:26)
04. The Mascara For God's Sake (1:09)
05. When It Blows Its Stacks (3:54)
06. Click Clack (3:48)
07. Band Intro (0:47)
08. Hobo Chang Ba (2:35) instrumental
09. I'm Gonna Booglarize You Baby (5:06)
10. Old Black Snake (2:45)
11. Peon (3:50)
12. Abba Zaba (2:48)
13. Spitball Scalped A Baby (12:21)
14. My Human Gets Me Blues (3:40)
15. Steal Softly Thru Snow (2:40) instrumental
16. Golden Birdies (1:44)
Total time: 48:49

Quality: 7.5/10

Line-Up:
Captain Beefheart/Don Van Vliet: vocals, saxophone, harmonica
Rockette Morton/Mark Boston: bass guitar, guitar
Orejon-Audi Hon/Roy Estrada: bass guitar
Zoot Horn Rollo/Bill Harkleroad: guitar, slide guitar
Winged Eel Fingerling/Elliot Ingber: guitar, slide guitar
Ed Marimba/Art Tripp: drums, percussion

Werner Neumann: Fun For Fans - Captain Beefheart at the Hoechst Century Hall.
When someone should ask about the strangest rock concert of the season: it took place in the 'Hoechster Jahrhunderthalle'. Only a handful of insiders had lost its way into the hall, and a kind of familiar atmosphere reigned as 'Captain Beefheart' and his 'Magic Band' started with their work.
'Captain Beefheart' alias Don Van Vliet (a Zappa comrade from the land of the unlimited chances), on the outside a bear, an unicum with a voice of four-and-a-half octaves, makes rock theatre in an unusual way. His vocal cord acrobatics begin somewhere low down in the basement, roar impassioned from the stereo walls, practice as pneumatic crackling and shrieking drag - and finally end at circular saw pitch, a sort of torture rack for harmony loving ears, a thing like a synthesizer.
The 'Magic Band' works against the atonal, un-melodic anarchy of his voice: drums, two basses, two guitars that tear up rock devices in a wild mix - but skilled - and create an unheard tensile, polymetric music out of the remaining fragments. As solo players the musicians are accomplished: they know their manual between blues and free jazz.
All together: a total anti-music, a bombastic hubbub. The lyrics Van Vliet produces and recites (complete unintelligible - but you can't have all) range - eye-blinking like the man himself - between mystic twaddle, much kitsch and beautiful nonsense.
Whether Beefheart takes himself serious or not - it's funny anyway. Thus - as also known from Zappa's Mothers - his show makes a clear distance to the hectic of the commercial pop music through irony and satire.
(Werner Neumann: Darmstädter Echo. April 18, 1972. A reprint of this review appears in 'Garantiert Ungewöhnlich', the German translation of Colin David Webb's 'Captain Beefheart'. Thanks to Theo Tieman for providing the gorillacrow translation from 1995)
more here: http://bootlegzone.com/album.php?name=cb19720414§ion=242

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Bonus included: March 1972 Interview Radio London, England by Andy Hall (FM).

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band: Los Angeles 2 Shows from Jan 1973 (VG and VG+ Aud) FLAC and shn

by request and I can put many more CB shows/studio stuff up if requested
Artwork - front

1973-01-03 The Troubadour L.A., California.
01. Hair Pie
02. Suction Prints
03. Low Yo Yo Stuff
04. Old Black Snake
05. Nowaday's A Woman's Gotta Hit A Man
06. band introductions >
07. > band intros > Sugar 'N Spikes
08. Crazy Little Thing
09. I'm Gonna Booglarize You
10. Click Clack
11. Alice In Blunderland
12. Golden Birdies
13. More
total time approx 41 min

Captain Beefheart / Don Van Vliet - vocal, harp
Rockette Morton / Mark Boston - guitar, bass
Zoot Horn Rollo / Bill Harkleroad - guitar
Alex St. Claire / Alex Snouffer - guitar
Orejon / Roy Estrada - Bass
Ed Marimba / Art Tripp - Drums

Unknown (low) Gen Maxell XLII-S Tape > Sony TC-WE805S Deck > TDK DA-3826 > CD-R > PC > Wav > Traders Little Helper Flac level 8 (transfer-mcchocchoc)

This is a great show. Overall sound is very good + for a 72/73 Magic Band show. There is a cut during Old Black Snake. If your a Zoot Horn Rollo fan you'll enjoy this recording, his guitar is clear and upfront. The band is tight and Don's vocals are really swell. He also says some pretty funny things throughout the set. Enjoy.
Much thanks to the taper/s of this fine, fine, super fine show.

+++
Captain Beefheart
What's All This Booga Booga Music?
Live at the Troubadour 5 January 1973
Los Angeles, CA
mint vinyl bootleg lp (first play) > HD > Cooleditpro > CDR > EAC > shn

I got this at another site a couple of years ago, but I suspect it originally came from here and is now going full circle...

1. Suction Prints
2. Golden Birdies
3. Black Snake Blues
4. I'm A King Bee
5. Jimmy Bill's In Town
6. Band Introduction
7. Alice In Blunderland
8. Abba Zabba
9. Big Eyed Beans From Venus
10. I'm Gonna Booglarise You Baby

Rockette Morton - bass & guitar
Alex St. Clair - guitar
Ed Marimba (Art Trip) - drums
Orejon (Roy Estrada) - bass
Zoot Horn Rollo (Bill Harkelroad) - guitar

Some artwork included.
more info: http://www.shiningsilence.com/hpr/albums/booga.php

rar files packed with a (winrar) recovery record -
links require copy and paste to browser
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I also added a little bonus: a Don Van Vliet interview 1973-04-24 BBC Radio London, England 1 by John Peel (FM).

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Captain Beefheart and The Magic Band The Spotlight Kid Outtakes 3rd Revision

by request
cbtsko3rd1-fatbox_front
The Spotlight Kid & Pompadour Sessions
October-early November 1971
Record Plant Studios, Los Angeles, CA

Acoustic Blues Session
early 1972
probably Amigo Studios, Sherman Oaks, North Hollywood, CA

OU: A very friendly DIME fellow who wants to stay anonymous sent his collection of Spotlight Kid outtakes. Thank you very much for your generosity! Every Beefheart fan has its own version, but this time we are talking about a known 2nd gen!
A former band member received the tapes on getting the gig, they were made for him in order to learn the tunes. Our guy got them directly from him, he transferred the tapes to CDR using a stand alone CD burner, no editing or mastering in this step.
What I got are FLAC files directly ripped from the CDR. The sound quality of the tracks is astonishing, my english isn't good enough to describe the details. You have to hear them!

Some statistics:
- 41 tracks overall. Length: 198:33
- 33 tracks from the 2nd gen in excellent sound quality (1)
- 8 tracks from 3rd gen with improved sound quality (2), (3), (4)
- 2 new tracks: Circumstances and a new version of Semi-Multicoloured Caucasian
- 2 tracks uncut: Funeral Hill (Version 1), Low Yo Yo Stuff (Instrumental)
- 1 stereo upgrade: Dirty Blue Gene (Version 1) before only available in mono

Lineage:
(1) studio->tape 2nd gen->stand alone CD burner->CDR->flac->TLH->wav->Wavelab 5.0: sound editing->TLH->flac
(2) studio->tape 3rd gen?->Spotlight Kid DVD (from puzzleoyster)->wav->Wavelab 5.0: sound editing->TLH->flac (2nd revision)->TLH->wav->Wavelab 5.0: sound editing->TLH->flac
(3) studio->tape 3rd gen?->The Spotlight Kid Outtakes CDR (from perebeef)->wav->Wavelab 5.0: sound editing->TLH->flac (2nd revision)->TLH->wav-> Wavelab: sound editing->TLH->flac
(4) studio->tape 3rd gen?->Beefheart Studio Sessions 1970-72 (flac torrented on DIME)->TLH: wav->Wavelab 5.0: sound editing->TLH->flac (2nd revision)->TLH->wav->Wavelab 5.0: sound editing->TLH->flac

Tracklist:
1-01 Drink Paint Run Run (7:28:977) (1) excellent sound quality
1-02 Seam Crooked Sam (Version 2) (2:18:290) (1) excellent sound quality
1-03 Dirty Blue Gene (Version 1) (2:54:642) (1) stereo, excellent sound quality
1-04 Sun Zoom Spark (Version 3)(4:12:283) (1) excellent sound quality, 4,5% slower
1-05 Kiss Me My Love (2:38:779) (1) excellent sound quality
1-06 Funeral Hill (Version 1) (6:46:236) (1) excellent sound quality, 2% slower, 0:50 longer (coda uncut)
1-07 Harry Irene (2:51:164) jazzy guitar version, (1) excellent sound quality
1-08 Open Pins (5:41:854) (3) improved sound
1-09 Dual & Abdul (2:44:970) (1) excellent sound quality, 5% faster
1-10 Semi-Multicoloured Caucasian (Version 2)(3:05:670) (1) new version, excellent sound quality (different guitar outro)
1-11 Balladino (2:27:607) (1) excellent sound quality
1-12 Clear Spot (Instrumental) (4:46:150) (2) improved sound
1-13 Circumstances (9:09:407) (1) new track, excellent sound quality (marimba, harmonica, different to Clear Spot o/t)
1-14 I'm Gonna Booglarize You, Baby (Instrumental)(5:54:142)(1) excellent sound quality
1-15 Low Yo Yo Stuff (Instrumental) (6:08:188) (1) uncut, excellent sound quality
1-16 Semi-Multicoloured Caucasian (Version 1) (4:11:118) (1) excellent sound quality, 4,5% faster
1-17 Little Scratch (Version 2) (2:53:510) (4) improved sound

Pompadour Session (1) excellent sound quality, 3,8% slower
2-01 Pompadour I (13:54:520) 2 takes
2-02 Pompadour II (12:41:308) 5 takes
3-01 Suzy Murder Wrist (3:47:285) (1) excellent sound quality
3-02 U Bean So Cinquo (2:51:291) (1) excellent sound quality
3-03 The Witch Doctor Life (3:51:869) (1) excellent sound quality
3-04 Little Scratch (Version 1)(4:48:648) (1) excellent sound quality
3-05 Flaming Autograph (4:44:098) (1) excellent sound quality
3-06 Love Grip (4:48:176) (1) excellent sound quality
3-07 No Flower Shall Grow (5:44:902) (1) excellent sound quality
3-08 Best Batch Yet (Version 1)(3:40:819) 3 takes (1) excellent sound quality
3-09 Your Love Brought Me To Life (4:10:338) 2 takes (1) excellent sound quality
3-10 That Little Girl (5:18:342) (1) excellent sound quality
3-11 Campfires (5:47:664) (1) excellent sound quality
3-12 Well Well Well (1:57:587) (1) excellent sound quality (Lick My Decals Off Baby o/t)
3-13 Funeral Hill (Version 3) (3:55:744) (1) excellent sound quality
3-14 Seam Crooked Sam (Version 1) (2:15:360) (2) improved sound
3-14 Alice In Blunderland (3:55:727) (2) improved sound
3-15 Funeral Hill (Version 2) (3:17:453) (2) improved sound
3-16 Best Batch Yet (Version 2) (2:14:814) (2) improved sound
3-17 Dirty Blue Gene (Version 2) (3:14:470) (2) improved sound

The Acoustic Blues Session (mono) (1) excellent sound quality, less bass, 2,1% faster
4-01 Sun Zoom Spark (Version 1) (8:03:536)
4-02 Scratch My Back (1:51:574)
4-03 Blues Medley (7:16:838)
4-03a Down In The Bottom (Howlin' Wolf, 1961)
4-03b Key To The Highway (Big Bill Broonzy, 1941)
4-03c Grandpa Don't Love Grandma No More
4-04 Sun Zoom Spark (Version 2) (8:28:741)

Further notes about sound edits included in the download.
None of the tracks is released officially.

Don Van Vliet: I was thinking warm and nice when I did that one (The Spotlight Kid) and I feel that it has all come through. Actually, though there are only ten tracks on the album, we recorded thirty-five songs altogether.
(Roy Carr: Svengali Zappa And A Horrible Freak Called Beefheart. New Musical Express. January 12, 1972)
Mike Barnes: Bill Harkleroad explains the genesis of the mass of unfinished material from this era: "We had a blocked amount of time (for The Spotlight Kid) and we had an cache of tunes. We just went in there in the typical way that we worked. Just take it, keep it, move on. Don was trying to use the studio more. (He thought) here we are, they're paying for it, let's get the most out of it and put some things down - unfinished licks and riffs that he thought were songs. It was a very incomplete, uncontrolled situation, like "What the hell's going on, what are we playing and where does this go?" Even with tunes that were "done", and that people think are great, a lot of them were unfinished ideas with a part missing here and there."
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)
Dave Lynch: An incredible quantity of various takes in semi-annotated form, many given different titles; everybody seems to have a different set of these. All in all, they're interesting demos, but not particularly cohesive, with lots of loose jamming and repetition. Quality is mostly clean, although a significant amount of tape hiss mars some spots.
(Captain Beefheart Tapes)
Pete Mulvey: There are more out-takes for Spotlight Kid than any other album. Well, more to my knowledge, but you're right, that might just be sloppy controls for a brief period in history. There must have been a large number of demo tapes flying around as Beefheart sought to get out from under Zappa, and as Warners tried to capitalize on their investment. Beefheart regularly used to claim that none of the first three albums recouped their recording costs sufficiently to pay royalties, a wonderful allegation gleefully repeated in acolyte interviews, yet the Captain also claims that the album was recorded in under five hours. Let's say that two and a half days is a more rational estimate. The Record Company would also pay for rehearsals, and the band was note perfect on arrival, but rehearsal space is not the big expense. No, if the man has not been accounted for royalties on 'Trout Mask', it is because there are large cash advances to be deducted, keeping the band in meals, women, socks, drugs and rock 'n' roll. Don't blame them, myself, but there's no substitute for a happy band on the road, getting their material straight in front of people who cannot hear the detail of the difficulties they are experiencing.
So, the band completed the sixties and started touring the more accessible blues approach that would be The Spotlight Kid. The out-takes of the period are an extraordinary bunch. I have heard two C90s, the first of which contains a range of material most of which does not make the album, but gets resurrected on a future release. The second is more extended, instrumental-based stuff, reminiscent of those tapes of backing tracks that are around for some of the albums. Some are rambling runs, seven minutes of 'Drink Paint, Run, Run' and twenty-five of a blues-based jam which contains the words 'Sun Zoom Spark', along with 'Key To The Highway' and 'Baby Scratch My Back'. Beefheart can be heard referring to the number as 'Sun Zoom Spark', but he kept very little of this Bill Harkleroad performance, the emphasis shifting to that extraordinary rhythm. Hard to hear such work-outs without thinking that if anyone came up with the key phrase, new sound, or decent rhythmic touch, then Beefheart would incorporate it. If not, they take place simply to loosen fingers. If so, the musicians' claims to have had more than a hand in the writing could carry a little weight. Of course, if they can't prove it with their tape collection, then maybe Beefheart wrote the lot. It is just so hard to believe because it is such a varied but excellent body of work, and so hard to imagine someone describing what they want from an instrument they cannot play. There are instrumentals that are part of the development of backing tracks that will one day carry lyrics, 'Best Batch Yet' and 'Clear Spot', and there are instrumentals that will be honed into, well, instrumentals, 'Alice In Blunderland' and 'Pompadour' (which became 'Suction Prints'). These last four are intact, have their key passages all mapped out for them even at this stage. 'Harry Irene' appears for some reason in a spacious, lilting, delicate version, close to the final answer, yet a decade away from release. Also sounding very similar to the version that appears in the Shiny Beast sessions, Bill's work presumably considered well worthy of repetition. The boring 'Funeral Hill' is also well represented; if the tapes are anything to go by, they played that more often than anything else. Baffling. As so often, Beefheart has retained the number, certain that it can be something worth having, and has resurrected it in these sessions. It is just possible to believe that it metamorphosed into 'There Ain't No Santa Claus On The Evenin' Stage', but I can put together an argument for 'Glider' as well. He obviously has great faith in both that and 'Little Scratch', although the latter at least changed cosmetically, becoming 'Natural Charm' before it finally achieved release as 'The Past Sure Is Tense', in a much changed format.
While on the subject of alternate titles, I have seen 'Funeral Hill' listed as 'Flat On Your Back', and 'Seam Crooked Sam' as 'Can't Do This Unless I Can Do That'. 'Little Scratch' can come across as 'Sure Had A Real Good Time', and 'Kiss Me My Love' as 'Two Rips In A Haystack'. I could make up a load of them; they have a certain logic, normally the first line of the song. The blues dominate the tapes, though. The acquisition of Winged Eel Fingerling must have been a shot in the bluesman's arm, his guitar blues education competing with his view of the unstructured potential of the blues and complementing Don's desires to veer off the mainstream blues path. The songs were obviously not created in long jams, but Elliot Ingber must have been taken with Don's music to extend anything to that length. Having said that, there are certain pictures of Ingber that suggest he would have had trouble finding an end to a tune that day at least.
The unreleased instrumentals are intriguing as work in progress. They contain classic sounding Beefheart figures, some just played to death in the absence of further instructions; the musos do not dare to express more than was required of them. Some of the backing track tapes are produced without him, but here one has the feeling of a controlling presence in the booth.
The band's line-up identifies the instrumentals anyway; they are Beefheart. His is a unique voice in composition, bringing a different sound out of familiar instruments and writing in a distinctive rhythmic style, colored with that marimba. If only he or Jan could have bolted some lyrics onto these, there would be an unreleased album fighting to get out. As it is, the potential of this twenty-five year old material will never be realized: it will tantalize forever. There are the beginnings of 'Clear Spot' and 'Low Yo Yo Stuff', 'Seam Crooked Sam' and 'A Carrot Is As Close'. The harmonica is featured on 'Seam Crooked Sam' in a terrific introduction to the track. The 'Spotlight Kid' LP is only 36 minutes long; you'd have thought some of these would not have disgraced the finished album. One fears that he is providing a minimum to satisfy a contractual requirement rather than producing value for the fans. Just listening to the twenty-five minutes of Pompadour you can hear pleasure in the band's playing that does not stay the course to the 'Shiny Beast' version. Also you can hear the Rockette Morton bass riff from 'Blabber 'n Smoke' and the Zoot Horn Rollo guitar from 'Booglarize'. Were they created for 'Pompadour'? By whom? This would have edited into an excellent track for the album, and with the references to other tracks, perhaps would have made an overture; revise a few lyrics and stick in a few self-referential solos and we could have had a concept album, and called it Conservation Act 1.
Where is the recognition that Beefheart deserves? His music demands and repays regular listens. Do Blues fans appreciate his work? I suspect not, yet cannot explain their indifference, given his obvious influences. No-one did it like that before him, and no-one could do it like that even after. Only Pere Ubu come near enough to nod in recognition, yet one would anticipate a school of composers exploring the rooms whose doors Don opened. There is no better introduction than the twofer CD Spotlight Kid/Clear Spot. Cheap to the point of gift, it contains a consistent range of glorious songs, culled from what we now know to be a much bigger bank of material. It may not please the purist, leaning as it does towards accessibility, but it is some of the fruit of a year of hard creative work.
(The Spotlight Kid Outtakes. Steal Softly Thru Snow #6)
Steve Froy: As far as I'm aware during 1971 Don had unprecedented access to studio time, presumably courtesy of Reprise, and so a lot of the rehearsals, jams etc. seem to have been recorded. We're talking about the preparations and recording of The Spotlight Kid, Brown Star and Clear Spot albums all within the space of a year. Many of the out-takes appear to come from the Spotlight and Brown Star sessions. They appear (to me at least) to have the same 'downer' feel as Spotlight (if you remember Bill Harkleroad spoke about the band being physically and emotionally drained at this time). I think Don realised that Brown Star wasn't happening and aborted it; had a rest and then had another go which Ted Templeton moulded into Clear Spot. There does exist another bunch of out-takes and backing tracks that are definitely from Clear Spot.
Without knowing exactly when each one was recorded it's difficult to give definitive answers about the origins of these tracks. So much of what I've said is speculative. Most of the Spotlight/Brown Star stuff are instrumental jams although there are a couple of early vocal versions of some well known songs. This was a very productive period and Don would return to plunder it for his last three albums. Although familiar titles are used for many of the out-takes/jams it can get very confusing because Don would reuse the same title for another song at a later date.
(Fire Party)

Henry Kaiser: Everything is from one session. I have seen all the master tapes and the dates> i know this> John French can confirm. But you will have to wait for his book. The are finished masters for 'funeral hill' and 'Harry Irene' - they were pulled at the last minute. No other traks are complete because the $$$ & time ran out for the studio.
Only one session for all. Elliot just comes in for the last few days. All songs except 'alice', 'pompador swamp' and 'ballerino' ('carrot is as close'>>) were meant to have vocals overdubbed. They are all basic tracks for songs> there are no sketches _ it's just that many songs were never finished> all is late 1971 maybe oct or early nov. - i would need to go in my vault to check the tapes for precise dates. All is one session. One session>

Who was/could have been the drummer? What's about John French? IT"S ALL JF.

Gary Lucas: Don told me the correct spelling of #6 was 'U Bean So Cinquo'--"You've been so FIVE! Hey, Gary, isn't that HIP?" Just what it all meant he never actually said...
I believe also it should be 'Your Love Brought Me to Life', 'Balladino', 'Two Rips in a Haystack' (definitely, recycled as "two tears" (as in tearing a piece of paper, not tears of joy) "in a haystack" in the 'Ice Cream for Crow' lyrics--sublime yonic and anal symbolism here combined, boys and girls.
I got most of this music courtesy of Ted "Hey" Laffey, who "liberated" these tracks (with Kaiser I'm told) from the Warner Vaults in '80--Laffey used to be a special projects guy there--also of interest on these tapes is the fantastic 'I Can't Do This, Unless I Can Do This', which features the mic'ed up percussive thump of John French tap dancing as the rhythm track, Don wheezing through his harp in great 'White Jam' ("it's about some white people jamming, Gary"--right, not about cunning lingual mucous mules twat trala trala) style, then reciting the opening lines of Odd Jobs before it thumps to a halt.
I totally agree with that previous remark about Don's feedback harp solo on 'Funeral Hill' being an analog to Hendrix's guitar, exactly what I thought when I first heard this 22 years ago, amazing performance, unbeatable track- "Man, we cut that on angel dust" --also: "Y'know, Hendrix came to me one time and said 'Hey Don...' (dramatic pause)...'Your Voice' (pointing to throat)...'My Guitar (miming air guitar)...he actually wanted me to join him in a new group! Isn't that silly?".
I never knew whether to take him seriously about alot of this...but occasionally, it did check out. sometimes not...
"Man that poor little Marianne Faithfull, did you see her on Saturday Night Live last night? You know, she never wanted to be with JAGGER (disdainful drawn-out sarcastic pronunciation here)...she wanted to be with ME!!"
I scanned Marianne's memoirs once for a mention of this torrid infatuation... but no Don...(he does figure rather comically in Pamela des Barres book, which was actually alot more convincing a tale).
(Fire Party)

--------------------------------------------------
The Spotlight Kid Sessions
October-early November 1971
Record Plant Studios, Los Angeles, CA

1-01 Drink Paint Run Run (7:28:977) alternate 'Run Paint Run Run' (released on Doc At The Radar Station)
Line-up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals, harmonica
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass guitar
John French: drums
Comments:
Colin David Webb: He also experimented with early versions of 'Drink Paint Run Run' (totally different lyrics, the tune was to be used later as the basis for 'Ice Cream For Crow').
(Captain Beefheart. The Man And His Music, 1989)
Mike Barnes: 'Run Paint Run Run' (from Doc At The Radar Station) propagates a germ of an idea from 'Drink Paint Run Run' from the 1971 Spotlight Kid sessions, although the semantic overlap is about the only thing they have in common. ... The guitar line of ('Ice Cream For Crow') originates from 'Drink Paint Run Run' from the Spotlight Kid sessions from 1971, and a few ideas for the lyrics from its contemporary, 'Two Rips In A Haystack'.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)

1-02 Seam Crooked Sam (Version 2) (2:18:290) AKA 'Can't Do This Unless I Do That' (recorded for Bat Chain Puller)
Line-up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals, harmonica
Art Tripp?: maracas
John French: tap-dance
Comments:
Colin David Webb: a ripping blues version.
Pete Mulvy: The harmonica is featured on 'Seam Crooked Sam' in a terrific introduction to the track.
(The Spotlight Kid Outtakes. Steal Softly Thru Snow #6)
Gary Lucas: Also of interest on these tapes is the fantastic 'I Can't Do This, Unless I Can Do This', which features the mic'ed up percussive thump of John French tap dancing as the rhythm track, Don wheezing through his harp in great 'White Jam' ("it's about some white people jamming, Gary"--right, not about cunning lingual mucous mules twat trala trala) style, then reciting the opening lines of 'Odd Jobs' before it thumps to a halt.
(Fire Party)

1-03 Dirty Blue Gene (Version 1) (2:54:642) different version released on Doc At The Radar Station
Line-up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals, harmonica
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Comments:
Scott Hand: This thing about the later albums being drawn from old material comes up a lot, so I thought I would give my take on it. While there were songs with the same titles and some of the same lyrics laying around for years, they really aren't the same songs. Right off the top of my head, I can remember first hearing the old blues version of 'Dirty Blue Gene', no way i would have if not for looking at the title.
(alt.fan.capt-beefheart)
Mike Barnes: 'Dirty Blue Gene' is another example of material released at last after a lengthy metamorphosis. Its thirteen-year transmutation saw it progress from a good title (which Van Vliet obviously loved) for an instrumental piece recorded in 1967, to completely different music complete with lyrics in 1971 and then a version close to this one (released on Doc At The Radar Station) from the 1972 Clear Spot sessions. With a few minor changes it became the thunderous song on 'Doc At The Radar Station'.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)

1-04 Sun Zoom Spark (Version 3)(4:12:283) electric version, different version released on Clear Spot
Line-up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: guitar
Roy Estrada: bass
Art Tripp: drums, percussion

1-05 Kiss Me My Love (2:38:779) AKA 'Two Rips In A Haystack' (like the painting) AKA 'Two Lips In A Haystack'
Line-up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals, harmonica
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass guitar
John French: drums
Art Tripp: marimba
Comments:
Don Van Vliet: "I've gotta hear that thing, man".
Mike Barnes: The guitar line of ('Ice Cream For Crow') originates from 'Drink Paint Run Run' from the Spotlight Kid sessions from 1971, and a few ideas for the lyrics from its contemporary, 'Two Rips In A Haystack'.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)

1-06 Funeral Hill (Version 1) (6:46:236) AKA 'Don't Get Chicken Blues' 'wild version' AKA 'Flat On The Back'
Line-up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals, harmonica
Elliot Ingber: guitar
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass guitar
John French: drums
Comments:
Pete Mulvey: The boring 'Funeral Hill' is also well represented; if the tapes are anything to go by, they played that more often than anything else. Baffling. As so often, Beefheart has retained the number, certain that it can be something worth having, and has resurrected it in these sessions. It is just possible to believe that it metamorphosed into 'There Ain't No Santa Claus On The Evenin' Stage', but I can put together an argument for 'Glider' as well. He obviously has great faith in both that and Little Scratch.
(The Spotlight Kid Outtakes. Steal Softly Thru Snow #6)
Gary Lucas: I totally agree with that previous remark about Don's feedback harp solo on 'Funeral Hill' being an analog to Hendrix's guitar, exactly what I thought when I first heard this 22 years ago, amazing performance, unbeatable track- "Man, we cut that on angel dust".
(Fire Party)
David Lynch: absolutely killer version of 'Funeral Hill'.
Steve Froy: As if these 'blues' are not enough Don rubs our noses in it with 'There Ain't No Santa Claus On The Evenin Stage'. I have already discussed this track. I don't see how this fits in with the "warm and nice" feel Don described he had for this album. It is interesting to note that there is one out-take from this time which is very similar in feel to There Ain't No Santa Claus On The Evenin Stage but is even more depressing. It is called 'Funeral Hill' and it is just as well this didn't make it onto the released version or it would have been a real downer of an album.
(Captain Beefheart. At the Crossroads with The Spotlight Kid. Perfect Sound Forever, 1999)
Mike Barnes: The only tracks that were mixed down to two-track for possible inclusion on The Spotlight Kid but were discarded were 'Harry Irene' ... and 'Funeral Hill'. This uncromisingly grim tune is as slow as the slowest tracks on the album. The railing against mortality, the fist in the face of death that hallmarked 'Fallin' Ditch', is itself ditched as the protagonist of the song is actually deceased. The only advantage of this state is that it avoids life. The boss man of Plastic Factory is again recast as the "fat man", the oppressor, but he can no longer "spat [sic] in your eye", as you've finally "paid your bill". There are two versions of the track: a shorter, tighter one and an elongated version where Ingber sets off a berserker-style fretboard foray.
(Captain Beefheart. 2000)

1-07 Harry Irene (2:51:164) jazzy guitar version, different version recorded for Bat Chain Puller, another version released on Shiny Beast
Line-up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals, whistling
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: guitar
Art Tripp: drums, percussion
Comments:
Pete Mulvey: 'Harry Irene' appears for some reason in a spacious, lilting, delicate version, close to the final answer, yet a decade away from release. Also sounding very similar to the version that appears in the Shiny Beast sessions, Bill's work presumably considered well worthy of repetition.
(The Spotlight Kid Outtakes. Steal Softly Thru Snow #6)
Mike Barnes: The only tracks that were mixed down to two-track for possible inclusion on 'The Spotlight Kid' but were discarded were 'Harry Irene' ... and 'Funeral Hill'.
(Captain Beefheart. 2000)

1-08 Open Pins (5:41:854)
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums
Art Tripp: marimba

1-09 Dual & Abdul (2:44:970)
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums

Comments: The Rollin' Webb: 'Dual & Abdul' has been floating around for at least 20 years but always associated with the Decals Outtakes. If it was actually recorded during the Spotlight Kid takes, as seems likely ... (it has a similar feel to many of the above) then there is also ... 'Open Pins' to re-locate to this period.
(Steal Softly Thru Snow #7)

1-10 Semi-Multicoloured Caucasian (Version 2) (3:05:670) different version than released on Ice Cream For Crow
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums
Art Tripp: marimba
Comments:
The Rollin' Webb: Featuring guitar and inevitably, marimba.
(Steal Softly Thru Snow)
Mike Barnes: The instrumental 'Semi-Multicoloured Caucasian' is, titlewise, a take on one of Van Vliet's oft-repeated quotes: "Everyone's coloured or you wouldn't be able to see them". It dates back to the Spotlight Kid era and dances like 'Suction Prints', although it is slower and more melodic.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)

1-11 Balladino (2:27:607) AKA 'Ballerino', early version of 'A Carrot Is As Close As A Rabbit Gets To A Diamond'
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Comments: Gary Lucas: I believe also it should be ... 'Balladino'. (Fire Party)
Paul Brown: the original title of the piece that was later re-arranged to become 'A Carrot Is As Close As A Rabbit Gets To A Diamond'. (Steal Softly Thru Snow #8)
Mike Barnes: The instrumental ('A Carrot Is As Close As A Rabbit Gets To A Diamond') is a tightened-up version of an earlier piece entitled 'Ballerino'. (Captain Beefheart, 2000)

1-12 Clear Spot (Instrumental) (4:46:150) different instrumental version of the song later released on Clear Spot
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass guitar
John French: drums
Art Tripp: marimba, piano (?)
Comments:
Early instrumental version of 'Clear Spot' based on Bill Harkleroad's guitar.

1-13 Circumstances (9:09:407) new track, different to the 'Clear Spot Outtakes', coming with marimba and different harmonica
Line-up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals, harmonica
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass guitar
John French: drums
Art Tripp: marimba, piano (?)

1-14 I'm Gonna Booglarize You, Baby (Instrumental) (5:54:142) 2 takes AKA 'Booglarize Jam'
Line-up:
Elliot Ingber: guitar
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass guitar
John French: drums
Comments:
The Rollin' Web: Instrumental Jam. The tape kicks off with a rehearsal/jam that is the basis of 'I'm Gonna Booglarize You Baby'. Yet it is not a backing track awaiting Beefheart's vocals - but it it's 80% there!!! (even if parts of it are a little tentative) Also it has the 1974 'pick-up band's' introduction to 'Mirror Man'. If you listen to the V-Virgin Sampler of the Drury Lane '74 version - there it is!! Not exactly 'note for note' but as near as 'damn-it!!'
(Steal Softly Thru Snow #7)

1-15 Low Yo Yo Stuff (Instrumental) (6:08:188) slow instrumental version of the song later released on Clear Spot
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass guitar
John French: drums, (overdubbed?)
Art Tripp: marimba
Comments:
Early instrumental version of 'Low Yo Yo Stuff'. Different start, slow.

1-16 Semi-Multicoloured Caucasian (Version 1) (4:11:118) different version released on Ice Cream For Crow
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums
Art Tripp: marimba
Comments:
The Rollin' Webb: Featuring guitar and inevitably, marimba.
(Steal Softly Thru Snow)
Mike Barnes: The instrumental 'Semi-Multicoloured Caucasian' is, titlewise, a take on one of Van Vliet's oft-repeated quotes: "Everyone's coloured or you wouldn't be able to see them". It dates back to the Spotlight Kid era and dances like 'Suction Prints', although it is slower and more melodic.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)

1-17 Little Scratch (Version 2) (2:53:510) AKA 'Natural Charm' AKA early 'The Past Sure Is Tense'
Line-up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals, harmonica
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston or Roy Estrada: bass
Art Tripp: drums, percussion
Comments:
Mike Barnes: The material from the Spotlight Kid era work-in-progress sessions was left aside, apart from 'Little Scratch', which was re-recorded and mixed down for inclusion (on Clear Spot), but again discarded.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)

--------------------------------------------------
Pompadour Sessions
October-early November 1971
Record Plant Studios, Los Angeles, CA

2-01 Pompadour I (13:54:520) 2 takes
2-02 Pompadour II (12:41:308) 5 takes
Line-up:
Elliot Ingber: guitar
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass guitar
John French: drums, percussion
Art Tripp: marimba
Comments:
David Lynch: Loose jamming on themes that would become 'Suction Prints', 'Grow Fins', 'Flaming Autograph'.
Colin David Webb: The way in which 'Suction Prints' evolved is also an insight into the way in which the band worked. Bootleg tapes have Winged Eel playing a twenty five minute loose version about 1971. Whether it was specifically written by Beefheart at that length or is Winged Eel experimenting with the basic theme is unclear. The live tours of the post 1972 period begin with a bass introduction that is a variation on the theme. By 1975 it had become a guitar and trombone showcase and by live shows in 1980 it featured guitar and saxophone. Clearly some material did allow for improvisation or change over time.
(Captain Beefheart. The Man And His Music. 1989)
Pete Mulvey: Just listening to the twenty-five minutes of 'Pompadour' you can hear pleasure in the band's playing that does not stay the course to the 'Shiny Beast' version (of 'Suction Prints'). Also you can hear the Rockette Morton bass riff from 'Blabber 'n Smoke' and the Zoot Horn Rollo guitar from 'Booglarize'. Were they created for 'Pompadour'? By whom? This would have edited into an excellent track for the album, and with the references to other tracks, perhaps would have made an overture; revise a few lyrics and stick in a few self-referential solos and we could have had a concept album, and called it Conservation Act 1.
(The Spotlight Kid outtakes. Steal Softly Thru Snow #6)
Mike Barnes: The lengthy 'Pompadour Swamp' is a mixture of strictly composed sections with some looser passages, with Ingber again given the nod to blow his own stacks in extemporization.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)

--------------------------------------------------
The Spotlight Kid Sessions
October-early November 1971
Record Plant Studios, Los Angeles, CA

3-01 Suzy Murder Wrist (3:47:285) AKA 'Instrumental #3'
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums
Comments:
Paul Brown: another instrumental sometimes performed live pre 1974.
(Steal Softly Thru Snow #8)

3-02 U Bean So Cinquo (2:51:291) AKA 'Instrumental #4' AKA 'Obenso Cinco'
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: percussion
Art Tripp: marimba
Comments:
The Rollin' Webb: 'Obenso Cinco' was more commonly known as 'Instrumental #4' featuring a 'guitar and marimba' in unison at the forefront. Again it's a 'stopper and a starter' but this time, a much more 'repetitive riff' and lacking the subtleties we have come to expect from Captain Beefheart. (probably, was work-in-progress?).
(Steal Softly Thru Snow)
Gary Lucas: Don told me the correct spelling of #6 was 'U Bean So Cinquo'--"You've been so FIVE! Hey, Gary, isn't that HIP?" Just what it all meant he never actually said...
(Fire Party)

3-03 The Witch Doctor Life (3:51:869) AKA 'Instrumental #5'
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums, percussion
Comments:
The Rollin' Webb: 'Witch Doctor Life' kicks in next. Starting with a distinctive riff and a more up-tempo piece, very firmly 'a drums, bass and lead guitar piece, this seems to have been the middle period of the tune.
Paul Brown: Drumbo recalls playing it in the 'late 60s' and of course it was to appear in a very different format at the end of Captain Beefheart's career.
(Steal Softly Thru Snow #7)
Mike Barnes: A piece dating back to the Brown Wrapper Sessions. ... 'The Witch Doctor Life' was a long time in the pipeline, Van Vliet working on it then abandoning it over fifteen years. At last it made the grade.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)

3-04 Little Scratch (Version 1)(4:48:648) AKA 'Natural Charm', early 'The Past Sure Is Tense'
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums
Art Tripp: marimba
Comments:
Pete Mulvey: (Beefheart) obviously has great faith in ... 'Little Scratch', although the latter at least changed cosmetically, becoming 'Natural Charm' before it finally achieved release as 'The Past Sure Is Tense', in a much changed format.
(The Spotlight Kid Outtakes. Steal Softly Thru Snow #6)
The Rollin' Webb: 'Little Scratch' follows, always known as 'Little Scratch' and the instrumental version of the out-take 'Natural Charm'. The guitar has a slight 'echo'y effect with a marimba helping out in the background.
(Steal Softly Thru Snow #7)
Mike Barnes: 'Little Scratch', discarded from both 'The Spotlight Kid' and 'Clear Spot' sessions, resurfaces as 'The Past Sure Is Tense', a much tougher version than its predecessors.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)

3-05 Flaming Autograph (4:44:098)
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums
Art Tripp: marimba
Comments:
The Rollin' Webb: 'Flaming Autograph' is next up, and is the shorter version without the fault on 'one of the channels.' (Fairly familiar stuff, but nice to have the name confirmed!) It's another 'marimba and guitar' piece, fairly languid in performance and also fairly repetitive. It was as yet still at a development stage. The end section of the repeated guitar riff has some 'nifty' marimba work.
(Steal Softly Thru Snow #7)
Mike Barnes: ... the serene 'Flaming Autograph'.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)

3-06 Love Grip (4:48:176) AKA 'Instrumental #6' "Amen!!"
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: fuzz guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums
Comments:
The Rollin' Webb: 'Love Grip' used to masquerade as 'Instrumental #6' with bass introduction followed by a 'fuzz-' lead guitar onto amiddle section with some nice climbing 'guitar' notes. Presumably a 'second guitar' over-dubbed, would have made this a rather tasty completed piece!? (It is difficult to tell if these were intended for more work or not, but the band versions don't feel as complete as the duet on 'A Carrot' or the 'Semi-Multicoloured Caucasian' take - maybe because we know the final versions of them, or maybe because the band pieces tend to be much longer and more in the nature of a jam!?
Paul Brown: Beefheart speaks from the control room at the end "Amen!!" - (sarcastic?) Are they taking too much studio time?
(Steal Softly Thru Snow #7)

3-07 No Flower Shall Grow (5:44:902) AKA Instrumental #7, jamming on a section of 'Petrified Forest'
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums
Comments:
The Rollin' Webb: 'No Flower Shall Grow' is again no stranger, previously 'Instrumental #7' and known by this title, having sprung from that line of the Decals track 'Petrified Forest'. Now if a single line of one song can create a whole new song, what could he have eventually come up with? Basically - lead, bass and drums, fairy jaunty in tempo but again a lot of repetitive riffs. The likelihood that this was more of a jam; comes at the end when a grumpy Captain Beefheart says from the control room "Ahl right ... I don't want you to have anymore fun on that ... That's it!!!"
(Steal Softly Thru Snow #7)

3-08 Best Batch Yet (Version 1) 3 takes (3:40:819)
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums
Comments:
The Rollin' Webb: 'Best Batch Yet' is the well-known 'early 1970s-version,' with two 'alternate guitar breaks' recorded, (just in case!?). But it was to be some years before the song actually made it to vinyl. This sounds as if it could be the backing track plus two 'possible' solos! ('ready for Captain Beefheart to sing over?')
(Steal Softly Thru Snow #7)
Mike Barnes: Another song originating from the 1971 sessions is 'Best Batch Yet'. Again, the rearranged version blows holes in the original rough sketch.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)

3-09 Your Love Brought Me To Life (4:10:338) 2 takes AKA 'Instrumental #8', somebody saying "let's take it from there, let's take it from your soul ... and touch it in" "alright".
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums
Art Tripp: marimba
Comments:
The Rollin' Webb: 'Your Love Brought Me To Life' features 'guitar and marimba' in a much slower piece. A laboured guitar, with the marimba in-filling, then there's a faster brighter section, with the drums more prominent, then back to the laboured 'guitar and marimba' duet. Again difficult to see it standing as a finished piece? Also, difficult to see it standing as an instrumental - on its own ...!? (but with some cutting down and a second guitar overlay ... ??) It stops abruptly in mid-phrase, then picks up again.
(Steal Softly thru Snow #7)
Paul Brown: This is one of the 'guitar and marimba' slower pieces, probably unfinished.
(Steal Softly Thru Snow #8)
Mike Barnes: Tepper looks back with particular fondness on some earlier pieces that never got past the rehearsal stage, which were, in his opinion, some of Van Vliet's most tender and most affecting musical moments: 'Your Love Brought Me To Life' - originally from 1971 - and later pieces like 'Rhino In The Redwoods' and 'Child Ecologist'. The time needed to realize his more complicated pieces, together with the loss of momentum in his career, had left a lot still stuck on the drawing board.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)

3-10 That Little Girl (5:18:342) AKA 'Instrumental #9'
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums
Art Tripp: marimba
Comments:
The Rollin' Webb: 'That Little Girl' starts with some neat guitar picking then continues as a slow-paced number with guitar to the fore again and the marimba occasionally heard in the background. In the middle there's some tentative guitar, trying to find the correct phrase, suggesting another 'work-in-progress,' rather than a finished piece.
(Steal Softly Thru Snow #7)

3-11 Campfires (5:47:664) AKA 'Instrumental #1'
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums
Comments:
The Rollin' Webb: 'Campfires' was previously known as 'Instrumental #1' (Brown-Star-fast-ish!). It's a lively piece with a strong drums, bass, and lead guitar line-up again. The guitar has a slightly sleazy feel to it, but again it's the repeated riffs that suggest - It is not a finished piece.
(Steal Softly Thru Snow #7)

3-12 Well Well Well (1:57:587) Lick My Decals Off, Baby Outtake
Line-Up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals, tenor sax, soprano sax, bass clarinet, harmonica
Mark Boston: bass, vocals
John French: drums
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Art Tripp: marimba
Comments:
Mike Barnes: I still can't find that original fax from Henry Kaiser but he had said that 'Well Well Well' was the only thing from that Decals session which was mixed down for inclusion (onto 2 track from 8 I think) but was rejected. I don't know if this was a rough mix or finished mix but I'm wondering if it was the former. The reason being that there was often a big discrepancy between rough mixes and the finished ones which Don OK'd.
Just think of all the Spotlight Kid outtakes (none of which were properly mixed down) and how they differ from the sound of the finished album. They all sound sharper and less muddy and gloomy than the album. Don was notorious for going for a dry, flat sound with little or no reverb and, in my opinion, wasn't too good behind the mixing desk. And all the Decals instrumental dubs sound a lot different to the album, as we said.
The only two tracks mixed down for possible inclusion on SK were 'Funeral Hill' (short) and an early version of 'Harry Irene'. Again this comes from Kaiser who I can't think would be anything less than ultra-diligent.
Who knows - could Kaiser be wrong? Heaven forbid!
(Fire Party)

3-13 Funeral Hill (Version 3) (3:55:744) abrupt finish
Line-up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals, harmonica
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston or Roy Estrada: bass
Art Tripp: drums, percussion, piano (?)

3-14 Seam Crooked Sam (Version 1) (2:15:360)
Line-up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals, harmonica
Art Tripp?: maracas
John French: tap-dance
Comments:
Mike Barnes: a rough sketch... dating back to 1972. The only instrumentation on the spartan original was maracas, harmonica and the clattering of French doing his tap-dancing routine.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)

3-14 Alice In Blunderland (3:55:727) instrumental, different version with Ingber's guitar mixed low
Line-up:
Elliot Ingber: guitar
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass guitar
John French: drums
Art Tripp: marimba
Comments:
David Lynch: Ingber's guitar is mixed unreasonably low in this version.

3-15 Funeral Hill (Version 2) (3:17:453) faded
Line-up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals, harmonica
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston or Roy Estrada: bass
Art Tripp: drums, percussion, piano (?)

3-16 Best Batch Yet (Version 2) (2:14:814) different version released on Doc At The Radar Station, begins with, "that is three"
Line-up:
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston: bass
John French: drums
Art Tripp: marimba
Comments: Sounds like take #1 of 'Best Batch Yet (Version 1)' with marimba overdubbed.

3-17 Dirty Blue Gene (Version 2) (3:14:470)
Line-up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals, harmonica
Bill Harkleroad: guitar
Mark Boston or Roy Estrada: bass
Art Tripp: drums, percussion
Comments:
Mike Barnes: 'Dirty Blue Gene' is another example of material released at last after a lengthy metamorphosis. Its thirteen-year transmutation saw it progress from a good title(which Van Vliet obviously loved) for an instrumental piece recorded in 1967, to completely different music complete with lyrics in 1971 and then a version close to this one (released on Doc At The Radar Station) from the 1972 Clear Spot sessions. With a few minor changes it became the thunderous song on Doc At The Radar Station.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)

--------------------------------------------------
The Acoustic Blues Session: Don and Bill doing 'Sun Zoom Spark'
probably Amigo Studios, Sherman Oaks, North Hollywood, CA
early 1972
mono

4-01 Sun Zoom Spark (Version 1) (8:03:536)
4-02 Scratch My Back (1:51:574)
4-03 Blues Medley (7:16:838) AKA Pork Chops 'n Beans
a. Down In The Bottom (Howlin' Wolf, 1961) AKA Going Down To The Border AKA Going To The Bottom
b. Key To The Highway (Big Bill Broonzy, 1941)
c. Grandpa Don't Love Grandma No More
4-04 Sun Zoom Spark (Version 2) (8:28:741)
Line-up:
Don Van Vliet: vocals, harmonica
Bill Harkleroad: acoustic guitar
Comments:
Colin David Webb: The musical direction at this time is confusing. Bootleg tapes indicate a range of different approaches - straight blues in three gutsy takes of a totally different 'Sun Zoom Spark'; a ripping blues rendition of 'Seam Crooked Sam'; two heavy blues versions of 'Funeral Hill'; and a medley of non-originals featuring 'Scratch My Back', 'Going To The Bottom (Border or Brazos)', 'Keys To The Highway' and 'Grandpa Don't Love Grandma No More'.
(Captain Beefheart. The Man And His Music. 1989)
Mike Barnes: 'Sun Zoom Spark' first came into being on a rambling rehearsal demo, with Van Vliet improvising the words over Harkleroad's guitar lines.
(Captain Beefheart, 2000)
Henry Kaiser: The above is just a blues jam for fun with El and Don. Maybe they thought to get a blues duo jam tune out of 'Sun Zoom Spark' to us as they played it - but they got nothing finished...
--------------------------------------------------
Done!
Enjoy!
art and more info:
http://www.bootlegzone.com/album.php?name=cbtsko3rd1§ion=242

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