Captain Beefheart - Sun Zoom Spark: 1970 to 1972 (2014) [4CD Box Set Limited Edition] {Rhino}
Rock / Experimental Rock / Psychedelic
On November 11,
Rhino Records will celebrate the music of avant-garde iconoclast Don
Van Vliet, a.k.a. Captain Beefheart, with a new four-CD box set. SUN
ZOOM SPARK: 1970 to1972 focuses on the period following the release of
his career-defining 1969 album Trout Mask Replica. During that
creatively fertile patch, Beefheart released three albums that have long
lingered in the shadow of Trout Mask and even of Beefheart’s Richard
Perry-produced debut Safe as Milk. SUN ZOOM SPARK revisits these three
albums – Lick My Decals Off, Baby, The Spotlight Kid, and Clear Spot- in
freshly remastered editions, and adds a fourth disc containing fourteen
previously unreleased outtakes and alternates from Beefheart and his
Magic Band cohorts. Housed in a 7½ x 7½ picture box - still sealed in
stickered shrinkwrap.
Recorded in summer 1970 for frequent Beefheart collaborator and sparring
partner Frank Zappa’s Straight label in summer 1970, Lick My Decals
Off, Baby was released later that year. Regarded as one of the good
Captain’s personal favorites of his recordings, the title referred to
his desire to see objects for their merits rather than according to
labels (or “decals”) placed upon them. Beefheart was joined by Bill
Harkleroad on guitar, Mark Boston on bass, Art Tripp on percussion, and
John French on drums. Decals continued on Beefheart’s experimental path
fusing psychedelia, blues, rock and jazz-style freeform improvisation.
Decals was followed by The Spotlight Kid, which was recorded at Los
Angeles’ Record Plant during the summer of 1971 and issued in early 1972
on Reprise. The only album credited solely to Captain Beefheart rather
than with his Magic Band, it features Harkleroad, Boston, French and
Tripp, plus Elliot Ingber on guitar and drummer Rhys Clark (on one
track). Produced again by Van Vliet, this time in collaboration with
Phil Schier, the album featured slower, simpler compositions, perhaps in
pursuit of a (slightly) more commercial blues-rock sound.
The third album in this collection, Clear Spot, was recorded in summer
1972 and released that autumn. Produced by Van Vliet with Ted Templeman
(Harpers Bizarre, The Doobie Brothers), Clear Spot might have been his
most accessible album yet with succinct and even somewhat conventional
tracks including love songs (to a fashion), soulful ballads and driving
rock and roll. Harkleroad, Boston and Tripp all played on the album
along with onetime Mother of Invention and Little Feat founding member
Roy Estrada.
The fourth and final disc in SUN ZOOM SPARK premieres 14 previously
unreleased tracks drawn from the sessions for The Spotlight Kid and
Clear Spot. It traces the evolution of the recordings, with the press
release noting among the highlights a sung version of “I Can’t Do This
Unless I Can Do This/Seam Crooked Sam,” which became a spoken-word
performance on 1978’s Bat Chain Puller; an early version of “Dirty Blue
Gene” that pointed the way to the final version on 1980’s Doc at the
Radar Station; and an embryonic instrumental rehearsal of “The Witch
Doctor Life,” completed for 1982’s Ice Cream For Crow.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment