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CAPTAIN
BEEFHEART - MASK
Captain
Beefheart, the only true dadaist in rock, has been victimized repeatedly
by public incomprehension and critical authoritarianism. The tendency has
been to chide C.B. and his Band as a potentially acceptable blues band who
were misled onto the paths of greedy trendy commercialism. What the
critics failed to see was that this was a band with a vision, that their
music, difficult raucous and rough as it is, proceeded from a unique and
original consciousness.
This became dramatically apparent with their
last album. Since their music derived as much from the new free jazz and
African chant rhythms as from Delta blues, the songs tended to he rattly
and wayward. clattering along on weirdly jabbering high-pitched guitars
and sprung rhythms. But the total conception and its execution was more in
the nature of a tribal Pharaoh Sanders Archie Shepp fire-exorcism than the
ranting noise of the Blue Cheer strain of groups.
Thus it's very gratifying to say that
Captain Beefheart's new album is a total success; a brilliant, stunning
enlargeme and clarification of his art. Which is not to say that it's in
any sense slick, "artistic" or easy. This is one of the few
bands whose sound has actually gotten rawer as they've matured - a
brilliant and refreshing strategy. Again the rhythms and melodic textures
jump all over the place (in the same way that Cecil Taylor's do).
Beefheart singing like a lonesome werewolf screaming and growling in the
night. The songs clatter
about - given a superficial listening they seem boring and repetitious.
It's perhaps the addition of saxophones (all played by the five men in the
band) that first suggests what's really happening here and always has been
happening in this group's music.
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On "Hair Pie Bake
One," for instance, the whole group gets into a raucous wrangling
horn dialog that reveals a strong Albert Ayler influence. The music truly
meshes, flows, and excites in a way that almost none of the
self-conscious, carefully crafted jazz-rock bullshit of the past year has
done. And the reason for this is that while many other groups have picked
up on the trappings of the new jazz, Cap and the Magic Band are into its
essence, the white-hot stream of un-"cultured" energy, getting
there with a minimum of strain to boot. This is the key to their whole
instrumental approach, from the drummer's whirling poly- and even a-
rhythmic patterns (compare them to Sonny Murray's on Ayler's Spiritual
Unity or Ed Blackwell's on Don Cherry's Symphony For Improvisers), to the
explosive, diffuse guitar lines, which (like Lou Reed's for the Velvet
Underground or Gary Peacock's bass playing on Spiritual Unity) stretch,
tear, and distend the electric guitar's usual vocabulary with the aim of
extending that vocabulary past its present strictly patterned limitations
- limitations that are as tyrannically stultifying for the rock musician
today as Charlie Parker's influence was for the jazzmen of the late
Fifties.
l mustn't forget the lyrics. You
certainly won't; the album on a purely verbal level is an explosion of
maniacal free-association incantations, eschewing (with the authentic
taste that assassinates standards of Taste) solemn 'poetic’ pretensions
and mundane, obvious mono-syllabic mindlessness. Where, for in stance,
have you heard lyrics like these; "Tits tits the blimp the blimp /
The mother ship the mother ship / The brothers hid under the hood / From
the blimp the blimp…. all the people stir / ‘n the girls' knees
tremble / 'n run 'n wave their hands / 'n run their hands over the blimp
the blimp…".
The double record set costs as
much as two regular albums, hut unlike most of these superlong
superexpensive items it's really sustained, and worth the money, which is
perhaps not so much to pay for 27 songs and what may well be the most
unusual and challenging musical experience you'll have this
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