DPRP Magazine Review Opher Goodwin — On Track: Captain Beefheart by Martin Burns

Opher Goodwin — On Track: Captain Beefheart

Opher Goodwin - On Track: Captain Beefheart

info:

 sonicbondpublishing.com

9

Martin Burns

The quote on page 46 from Opher Goodwin’s On Track: Captain Beefheart of the track When Big Joan Sets Up, encapsulates what makes Beefheart special, and at the same time why he remains a niche artist.

“… a great melody that carries it through. It’s meaningless but full of insight, so frenzied that it shouldn’t work, yet it does. It hangs together. That’s what is so great about Beefheart’s music – it pulls you in; the music is complex; the lyrics seem full of meaning, but everything is just beyond one’s grasp. You find yourself hooked. It propels you. It’s visceral. It tugs at the cortex. Rewarding.”

This applies across all of Beefheart’s recordings. Not without the odd exception of course, such as the mid-period ‘commercial’-leaning releases and things like Beefheart’s contribution to Frank Zappa‘s Willie The Pimp on Hot Rats. One of the things I find interesting about these two maverick forces of musical nature (Zappa and Beefheart) is that both went to Antelope Valley High School in the small Californian Mohave desert town of Lancaster. They remained friends on and off after leaving Lancaster; when their monumental artistic egos would allow. With Zappa, being more successful, helping the often-broke Beefheart out.

This is a great addition to Sonicbond Publishing’s ever expanding Every Album, Every Track series. This looks at Captain Beefheart’s studio output as well as the plethora of live releases and bootlegs that have followed since his death in 2010.

Comprehensive and critical where required, self-confessed Beefheart obsessive Opher Goodwin, knows his way around an incisive phrase and sets each of the studio albums into a context of time and place, record company and management shenanigans, and contemporary critical reactions. As well as assessing the various incarnations of the Magic Band, and how well they were able to translate the Captain’s ideas into actual music.

After making his brilliant final album, Ice Cream For Crow (1982), he left music-making on a high point, and turned back to painting. Beefheart, under his own name of Don van Vliet became a renowned abstract expressionist painter, gaining the level of success in the US that had eluded him musically. A happy ending of sorts.

This makes an excellent companion to Mike Barnes’ Captain Beefheart: The Biography (Omnibus Press) where neither shy away from Beefheart’s obsessive and bullying behaviour that were part of his artistic makeup. Opher Goodwin’s On Track: Captain Beefheart is a great guide and companion to this often-challenging artist.

If you’re curious, for me the place to start is with 1978’s Shiney Beast (Bat Chain Puller), but every Beefheart fan will have a different gateway release to recommend.

https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/17cr_WVdWmo

Album Reviews

Anti-Semitism is not…

Anti-Semitism is prejudice, hatred or hostility towards Jewish people.

Criticism of the extreme right-wing Israeli government with their policy of genocide towards Palestinian people is not anti-Semitic. It is no different to criticising Trump. Criticism of Trump is not anti-American.

BTW – criticising Netanyahu and the genocide of Palestinians is not showing support for Hamas.

Hamas is a dirty terrorist group whose actions are repugnant to all civilised people.

Netanyahu and his government are evil bastards whose actions (of starving women and children and blowing up civilians) are repugnant to all civilised people.

Review by Mark Hughes for DPRP Mag – Opher Goodwin — Roy Harper: On Track… Every Album, Every Song book

Thanks Mark!

I do enjoy reading the reviews for the book. Gives me a boost! Thank you to all who leave reviews on Amazon and Goodreads. Means a lot!!

Opher Goodwin — Roy Harper: On Track… Every Album, Every Song

Opher Goodwin - Roy Harper: On Track... Every Album, Every Song

info:

 sonicbondpublishing.co.uk

Mark Hughes

Another title in the rapidly growing list of books published by SonicBond, this time featuring original maverick and friend to a guitar rock god or two, Roy Harper.

As a long-standing Harper fan I know that tackling his discography is not a task for the faint-hearted. With albums going in and out of print, reissues, alternative versions and limited editions, there is a lot to get to grips with. Thankfully Goodwin handles everything with aplomb, clarifying where extra tracks on various re-releases originally stemmed from and where they fit into Harper’s recording chronology. It makes it easy to disentangle the frequently messy and confusing slew of releases from a prolific writer.

Of course, it helps that Goodwin has been friends with Harper since 1967, just after the release of Harper’s surprising debut album Sophisticated Beggar; surprising in that it eschewed the folk and blues numbers that Harper had gained a reputation for from his busking and folk club performances and comprised all-original material. Perhaps more startling was that it also featured a full band in places, not what the folk crowd that had primarily been his audience up to that point had been expecting. These were the first signs that Harper would stick to his own plans and not be pushed into doing what others necessarily wanted or expected.

What will be alien to modern bands is the fact that Harper’s first two albums, released on different labels, were both commercial failures. Yet the musical environment of the time meant that it was the music that mattered and the lack of commercial appeal was not considered a black mark against the artist. He found a longer-lasting home on Harvest Records for his third album, Flat Baroque And Berserk, the first of seven essential albums he recorded for the label over the next decade.

Goodwin’s personal memories and analysis of the songs and albums adds a lot to the book and offer insights that keep things interesting, more than some other titles in the series in being a sterile list of songs. Harper was never an artist that was likely to trouble the singles chart but he did consistently release such items. Although a lot of the songs unique to the format, particularly from the earliest years, have been compiled and re-issued, his b-sides remain some of the hardest items to locate for the collector. In that respect this book is a valuable guide to what was released, and in some cases what has not been released, both of which can be quite frustrating for the searching completist!

I would have liked to have seen a bit more on the live Roy Harper as, despite the brilliance of the studio output, it was on stage that Harper excelled. As at least a couple of the official live albums were assembled from a multitude of recorded concerts, there is potentially a lot of recorded material that remains locked in the vaults. However, considering that recording details and locations were omitted from Inbetween Every Line as all the tapes were mixed up and it wasn’t deemed necessary to sort them out, it could be a major task sorting them out if, indeed, they still exist.

Despite his long recording career, there doesn’t appear to be much studio material left languishing in the vaults and it seems increasingly unlikely that Harper will return to the studio to record a new album, despite how well his last album, 2013’s Man And Myth was received. So it is from these putative live archives that any future releases will presumably be drawn.

As such, this volume can be assumed to be as complete a record of the musical legacy of one of Britain’s finest and most idiosyncratic singer-songwriters as you are likely to find. Written in a relaxed and enjoyable style, it is an easy-to-read volume that will introduce, and re-introduce, the reader to the delights of the Harper catalogue. I certainly dug out a few of his lesser-played albums from my collection and listened to them in a new light after reading the book. And if that is not recommendation enough, I don’t know what is.

Now, back to searching for the missing items. Anyone know where I can find Goodbye Ladybird?

Great Martin Burns Review of Bob Dylan book for DPRP Magazine.

Great Martin Burns Review of Bob Dylan book for DPRP Magazine.

Opher Goodwin — Bob Dylan 1962 to 1970

country:  UK

year:  2023

Opher Goodwin - Bob Dylan 1962 to 1970

info:

 sonicbondpublishing.co.ukInstagramophersworld.com

8

Martin Burns

Another in the Sonicbond’s On Track series; this time looking at Bob Dylan’s work from his beginnings as a Woodie Guthrie acolyte, through the media-driven frenzy of the “Voice of a Generation” (an epithet that annoyed him enormously), onto the drug-fuelled, electric “Judas period”. We finish in the rehab of the reclusive family man and his temporary re-invention as a country singer.

Opher Goodwin, author of 2022’s On Track: Captain Beefheart book, has now tackled the thornier topic of Bob Dylan 1962 to 1970. He goes album-by-album through the eleven studio releases in that period, as well as covering additional tracks associated with those albums. He also has a chapter on the welter of bootlegs (official and unofficial) that has followed Dylan through his career.

Goodwin starts with an excellent, short introduction. Fleshing out the origins of the Dylan persona. A persona that is slippery and hard to pin-down fully. He is a character that evolved through a lot of self-mythologising. Goodwin tries hard with the unenviable task of trying ‘to unravel the man from the myth’ but it is near impossible to find a complete solution to this conundrum.

There is little connection between Dylan’s music and progressive rock, as his focus was and is on blues, r&b, folk, 1950s rock’n’roll and the American song book. However, arguably, there is a link between his masterful lyrical wordplay, and in his opening-out frol the three-minute straight-jacket of popular music.

From the release of Like A Rolling Stone, a 6 minute 11 second single, the world of popular music rapidly began to blossom and become more complex. Witness the change in The Beatles, who, influenced by Dylan, moved from their rock’n’roll and pop to (four years or so later) releasing Strawberry Fields Forever and more.

Dylan’s lyrics may have had an influence on prog-rock in that I can’t imagine the flights of wordsmithery of Jon Anderson in Yes, nor the prose poems of Peter Hammill‘s solo and with Van Der Graaf Generator, without the freedom afforded by the general changes in popular music, helped in no small way by Dylan.

Goodwin gives a readable and concise take on Dylan’s music, not hiding his fandom, nor so blinkered that he can’t criticise the poor albums Dylan released in the last years of the 1960s. If you want to dip into Dylan, but don’t know where to start, then Opher Goodwin’s On Track…Bob Dylan 1962 to 1970 is a great roadmap to the commencement and growth of the Dylan enigma.

https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/a6Kv0vF41Bc

Thank You Martin – Much appreciated!

Sha

On Track – Bob Dylan 1962-1970 – The Afterword Review

Posted on 

On Track – Bob Dylan 1962-1970

07/08/2023 by Bargepole 9 Comments

Author:Opher Goodwin

The sixties isn’t my favourite run of Dylan albums – I’m more of a seventies sort of guy – but it does contain some of my favourite Dylan songs – Visions of Johanna, Chimes of Freedom, It’s Alright Ma, It’s All Over Now Baby Blue to pluck out a few – in fact I’d forgotten just how many there are, and a good best of compilation or Spotify playlist covering these years is essential listening while reading this book.. Of course, there have been plenty of books analysing every word of Dylan’s lyrics, but this does a fine job of providing a potted history of the songs written in that period without getting bogged down in too much detail and interpretation. One thing the book has done is made me relisten to those albums again. I really enjoyed this one, well written and put together and ideal for the more casual fan of Dylan.

Thanks guys!!

Bob Dylan 1962 to 1970 On Track (Decades) by Opher Goodwin (amazon.co.uk)

DPRP Review – My Beatles White Album book!

Thanks to Jan for a brilliant review!

The Beatles: White Album – Rock Classics: Amazon.co.uk: Opher Goodwin: 9781789523331: Books

Opher Goodwin - Rock Classics: The Beatles - White Album

info:

 sonicbondpublishing.co.ukFacebooksonicbondpublishing.co.uk

8

Jan Buddenberg

If one band needs no further introduction then this must surely be The Beatles. Just mention the names of the Fab Four, their countless timeless compositions, and their groundbreaking Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band and Abbey Road albums, and I’m sure many events, other milestone albums and miscellaneous facts involving The Beatles will come flooding back into memory. Surprisingly, for me, this didn’t include their ninth album The Beatles. Their 1968 effort which is best known as The White Album.

Here to make me never forget about this earliest of proto-prog albums comes author Opher Goodwin with his expertly told and in depth reconstructed Rock Classic interpretation on the album.

Living to tell the tale first-hand, Goodwin, aged 19 in 1968, starts of by painting the rural 60s with great cultural insight. And following a sum up of preceding singles (Strawberry Fields ForeverAll You Need Is LoveLady MadonnaHey Jude) and other ventures like the Magical Mystery Tour and Yellow Submarine movies, quickly arrives at the challenges that The Beatles were facing prior and during the recordings of The White Album.

Well researched and comprehensively told with plenty of interesting historic details, Goodwin elaborates on The Beatles’ growing wealth, their new-found spiritualism, the individual marital changes of McCartney and John Lennon (enter Yoko Ono) and the disastrous sudden passing of their manager Brian Epstein which left the band fairly rudderless in approach to The White Album.

Just how directionless becomes perfectly clear in the 50+ pages that Goodwin objectively devotes to The White Album. Loaded with biographical information it is this lengthy chapter that creates a clear understanding towards the gradually forming split between the various Beatles members, and the resulting eclectic/fragmentary (take your pick) outcome of the album.

Sharing all the ins and outs on the making of the album this includes the thoughts behind the album cover, the various lyrical topics, Eric Clapton’s involvement on George Harrison’s composition While My Guitar Gently Weeps, and the many takes done before songs were finally approved for album inclusion. As well as a complete insightful rundown of songs that next to pop songs like Back In The USSR and Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da includes tracks that touch upon such genres as folk, country rock, British blues, proto-metal (Helter Skelter) and the avant-garde (Revolution 9).

Add to this Ringo Starr’s two week Beatles-divorce, Yoko Ono’s studio invasion, the walk out of producers, and the fact that only 16 of the 30 recorded tracks actually included all four Beatles members, and it’s almost a miracle that The White Album was ultimately finalised. Much like the view of critics and listeners who rate the release to be one of the greatest albums of all time.

Successfully teasing readers to further investigate by mentioning demos, outtakes, the excluded album-related gem Not Guilty which they worked on for 102 takes, and related topics such as the Plastic Ono Band  and cult leader/murderer Charles Manson’s obsession with several album songs, I find Goodwin’s substantiated narrative to end somewhat abruptly and not fully rewarding towards my own accumulating curiosity of what happened to The Beatles afterwards. An aspect Goodwin apart from a few words about the album’s legacy doesn’t particularly elaborate upon.

Personal preferences aside: Opher Goodwin’s book does exactly what it is supposed to do. It enthuses willing musical guinea pig readers like myself and those generally interested in music to explore the album. And all together offers a captivating in-depth and well-written analysis of The Beatles’ biggest-selling album to date. Simple conclusion: job well done!

Pigs can fly!

A World interconnected with love and support!

Nope!

Zuckerberg, Trump and the rest of the billionaire, money-scamming creeps, created a conspiracy ridden, hate-driven, division creating, propagandoping- dispensing, surveillance system geared to putting the corrupt into power and scamming billions into their banks!

So, while we are fed lies via algorithms, manipulated and lied to, the rich get even richer and the world goes to pieces!

Who would have thought that billionaires like Zuckerberg, Bezos and Trump could be so calculated and cruel? Who would have believed they could be so self-centred and nasty?

They don’t like to take it!

They don’t like to take it!

When they don’t understand

                They make it up as they go along.

They sure don’t like the criticism

                When it all goes wrong.

They make it up and try to fake it.

                They can dish it out

                                But they sure don’t like to take it!

When it comes to corruption

                They know how to take a bribe.

The ‘Me First’ movement

To which they conscribe:

If offered cash

                They’ll always take it.

They will criticise others

But they sure don’t like to take it!

When it comes to self-promotion

                They are very pushy.

They think everybody’s wrong.

                Life for them is cushy

Nothing they can’t do

                Whatever – they can make it

But when it always goes wrong

They sure don’t like to take it!

These fools are arrogant,

Incompetent grifters

Criticising everyone;

Real truth shifters.

Given a working scenario

                They will always break it.

                                Incompetent twats

Who give it out, but sure don’t like to take it!

Opher 16.5.2025

Hypocrisy rules. They lie, cheat and steal. They’re a bunch of ideological thieves – drunks let loose in the brewery. They are quick to criticise others for the things they do themselves. They are busy suppressing free speech while promoting lies and conspiracy. They are a bunch of rapists, drunks, addicts and paedophiles pushing family values. They are a bunch of crooks lining their own pockets while pretending to represent the poor.

The have set up the ME FIRST movement!

The Me First Movement!

Bribes and Morons!