Captain Beefheart On Track; Every Album, Every Song

  by Nicky Crewe

Longtime Beefheart enthusiast Opher Goodwin has researched and written an essential reference work for fans old and new. Nicky Crewe takes us through the pages

It could be argued that we can now expect the internet to provide the answers to our curious questions on any topic, but sometimes it’s important to know what questions to ask, and whose information to believe. That’s where the ‘Every Album, Every Song’ series from Sonicbond Publishing steps in. The series is a great resource for those who want to know more about the music and musicians they admire and love. Written by fans who dig deep into the archives and their own experiences, these slim volumes pack a huge amount between the covers. In this one, Opher Goodwin shares some of his own life-changing encounters with Captain Beefheart and his music, coming right up to date with the Magic Band tours of 2014 and 2017. He sets Beefheart’s music and legacy into context, socially and culturally – in his case, John Peel’s radio programme and a significant 1967 London gig at Middle Earth meant he never looked back. Goodwin doesn’t avoid the difficult aspects of Beefheart’s behaviour towards members of his band, especially during the ‘Trout Mask Replica’ era. Some of the stories are as discordant and disturbing as the music they produced. Credit is also given to the roles played by John French, Ry Cooder and Frank Zappa in building Beefheart’s success and lasting reputation and relevance. He both researches and reviews this music that continues to inspire and influence, setting it in context, unpicking some of the stories and myths that have built up around the man and his chosen musicians. As the author his task is to listen with attention to every track: what an amazing opportunity. My own love of Beefheart’s music followed a similar trajectory. I first heard ‘Electricity ‘on the jukebox at the Magic Village, Roger Eagle’s cellar club in Manchester in 1968, and was blown away. I was then introduced to ‘Trout Mask Replica’ and ‘Safe As Milk’. Beefheart’s music may have been an acquired taste, but it was one I acquired quickly. I saw the band at the Bickershaw Festival in 1972, as I was working in a wholefood catering tent right next to the stage. No sleep possible! Roll on another year and I was in a band managed by Roger Eagle (later responsible for Eric’s in Liverpool). Not only did he promote Beefheart’s tours in the UK, but the two of them became close friends, sharing a love of blues music and a similar stature and approach to life. Through Roger, I was invited on the tour bus whenever I was free and got to see much of the ‘Clear Spot ‘tour. I took this opportunity for granted at the time. Many of my friends were musicians, in bands with varying degrees of success. I still have my gifted copies of ‘Spotlight Kid’ and ‘Clear Spot’ from those days, and over the years I have come to realise how privileged and fortunate I was to have had such an adventure. I followed Beefheart’s new releases for many years, but for me those two albums stand out. They contained songs that were unexpectedly tender and poetic, as well as harking back to the delta blues that Beefheart was so influenced by, and they are forever associated too with that particular period of my young life. Sometimes when I walk in to a cafe, club or shop, I unexpectedly hear one of Beefheart’s songs. My heart leaps: it’s a little piece of magic for the day. It happened to me last week with ‘Too Much Time’, which led to a conversation with a young barista, about the same age now as I was when I met Captain Beefheart and the Magic Band. It’s fantastic that people are still discovering him, still sharing his music, as his legacy continues to grow. Opher Goodwin’s book covers the official albums, the compilations, rarities and bootlegs and the live albums. There’s information about the offshoot band Mallard, and the reformed Magic Band, and the solo projects of all those who passed through that legendary band. There’s even a section on tributes and covers. Sometimes I wonder if you can know too much: when I was 16 I didn’t need to know the hows and whys to respond to the music, the voice, the presence and the genius, but now I find those back stories fascinating, and I owe Opher Goodwin my thanks.

Excerpt – Captain Beefheart On Track

Excerpt – Captain Beefheart On Track -There were a number of young kids getting into the blues and, just like in England, these musicians tended to find each other and form blues bands. All the members of the Trout Mask Replica era band had previously played together at Lancaster in a band called Blues in a Bottle.

In 1965, a short while after Don’s return from Frank’s, Alex Snouffer, a local R&B guitar player, approached Don with the intent of putting together an R&B band. I’m sure Alex didn’t know what he was letting himself in for.

Don added the Van to his name, thinking that it sounded cool, and the first Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band was spawned. As Captain Beefheart was the ‘magic man’ in those early Frank Zappa collaborations it was only natural that he should have ownership of the magic band. This was also the start of Don giving the band members their alternative names. For some reason Alex Snouffer became Alex St. Clair. Could that have had something to do with Taj Mahal’s real name being Henry St Claire Fredericks? A mysterious piece of coincidence? Or was it to sound more English? The British invasion was certainly having an impact.

That first band comprised Don on vocals and blues harp, Alex St. Clair on guitar, Doug Moon on second guitar, Jerry Handley (really an American but reported as being English– probably as a publicity stunt) on bass and Vic Mortensen on drums. Vic was soon replaced by Paul Blakely and the band immediately started to make an impact in their area. Their English R&B sound captured the zeitgeist of the moment.

Captain Beefheart On Track: Every Album, Every Song – Paperback 

Captain Beefheart (Don Vliet) was undoubtedly the creator of the most bizarre and wonderful music. A child prodigy sculptor, he applied his artistic approach to music, creating ‘aural sculptures’. He befriended Frank Zappa in High School, collaborating on a teenage rock opera and sci-fi/fantasy film entitled Captain Beefheart vs The Grunt People. It was from this film that Don took his name. Of course, a magic character had to have a magic band. The Magic Band started out as a blues band in the mid-sixties but soon, with lysergic propulsion, surreal poetry, free-form jazz, polyrhythms and African beats, they were at the forefront of West Coast Acid Rock. A series of hugely inventive albums, including the infamous Trout Mask Replica, established them as the foremost avant-garde rock band with legendary live performances. The author was there for their first concert at Middle Earth and that night changed his life. Few Bands are as influential. The Beatles, The Fall, PJ Harvey and Tom Waits all pay homage, While The Magic Band have inspired a myriad of tribute bands and created a mythology like no other. This book sets the history of the band in context, analysing every track and interpreting the music with its poetic content. It is essential reading for diehard fans and the Beefheart-curious alike.

1973 Captain Beefheart gig at Rainbow – Finsbury Park

1973 Captain Beefheart gig at Rainbow – Finsbury Park

Right up there with the greatest gigs I’ve ever been fortunate enough to be part of! Up there with Jimi Hendrix, Son House, Cream, Roy Harper, Led Zep and Pink Floyd. Excitement was palpable!

Quite often when your expectations are high the gig doesn’t live up to expectations. Not in this case. They blew me away.

Having seen the original band at Middle Earth in 1968, which still rates as one of the most exhilarating gigs ever, I went to the Rainbow with heart in mouth.

The Rainbow was just around the corner from where I was living so I strolled around early. The fact that it was seated was a bit of a turn off but we were near the front.

Rockette came out clutching his bass with a long coiled lead. He was wearing what looked like a space helmet. A great cheer went up! He introduced himself – ‘Hello. I’m Rockette Morton’ another great cheer. He then mumbled something about starting with a toast that went straight over my head at the time. I asked Rockette about this on the 2011 tour. He explained that it wasn’t a space helmet at all; it was a big American toaster that he’d pulled open and wore as a hat. That made the toast comment more understandable. Rockette laughingly told me that the band had flown in all wearing their stage garb (probably, given the politics of Don’s rigid leadership, the only clothes they had) and Rockette had worn the toaster helmet as they trooped past a bemused customs man.

Someone yelled out ‘What do you run on Rockette Morton’ and he proceeded to show us. Using his steely fingers to set up the incredible intricate rhythms of the instrumental that started all those 1973 gigs a very fit and wiry Rockette proceeded to pogo around the stage madly like the stage was molten lava. Those laser beans sure had energy!

The rest of the band sloped out behind him and plugged in. I can still picture the tall lanky figure of Zoot Horn Rollo, with long fair hair flowing over his skinny face and voluminous shirt, plugging in his guitar and turning the volume up. Alex Snouffer plugged in and Ed Marimba took his place behind the drums. As the crowd clapped and roared their appreciation of Rockette’s amazing efforts, the band roared in with the instrumental Suction Prints. The guitars weaved their magic as the bass and drums set up a thunderous beat. It plunged and roared through changes of rhythm and tempo as the guitars duelled. Fabulous! I knew we were in for a storming night!

Still no sign of the Captain but towards the end of Suction Prints some harmonica came in.

When the number finished there was a pause. The crowd roared its approval. Atmosphere electric. I was already zooming!

The band started up again with a familiar intro. It was loud! The sound was pounding through my body. The whole audience were melded into a single bouncing body riding those incredible vibrations. Then, impossibly, the Captain’s powerful vocal erupted over the top sending my eardrums pulsating. So loud yet clear. Coming in like a jet plane. It’s funny how your mind plays tricks with you. I would have put my house on that first song being Electricity. It wasn’t until Steve Froy gave me a bootleg of the concert many decades later that I registered that it was in fact Mirrorman.

At the time Don was standing invisibly in the wings as the band projected the force and that astounding voice bellowed over the top Miiiiirrrrrrrroooooooorrrrrrrrrr  MMMiiiiiiirrrrrrrrrrrooooorrrrrrr!!

Then he strode out as the band launched in and he picked up the vocal. Everything impossibly went to a different level. The excitement surged. Audience and band melded, riding on waves of electricity.

After that it was one great surging blend of intricate polyrhythms, changing tempos, wailing harp, searing, stinging guitar and a driving rhythm section with Don’s voice and poetry roaring over the top. The barrage of sound was physical, the bombardment sending endorphins into overdrive. The visceral thump sending all the cells in my body throbbing in time to the driving beat. This was how rock music should be experienced – the perfect combination of mind and body – fused into one pulsing entity, carried away on a wall of sound, the poetry and dynamics of that voice blending with the complex rhythms of that primitive powerhouse. This was it!

They just kept coming- Low Yo Yo Stuff, Nowadays a Woman, Crazy Little Thing, Sugar and Spikes, Peon, Grow Fins, Abba Zabba, Electricity, Veteran’s Day Poppy, King Bee, Big Eyed Bees From Venus, Golden Birdies. The barrage was relentless! Everything just perfect, powerful, moving. The words resonating; the music brought to life by the power of performance. The whole audience caught up in the fervour of the moment.

You had to be there! The bootlegs are a weak insipid substitute compared to this. In that moment the energy was a tumbling tsunami.

This was it! This was it! Pure joy! I dissolved into the magic of the Magic Band. Nothing surpassed that. Nothing.

Magic Band – Dorchester 2012

A fabulous gig!!

When I heard that the Magic Band were reforming and touring I was ecstatic. My favourite band! After the initial euphoria, I was much more circumspect. How could anybody possibly substitute for Don Van Vliet? Don probably had the best (and loudest) voice in Rock Music history. He gave Howlin’ Wolf a run for his money. I checked out the line-up and it looked great. There was Gary Lucas, John ‘Drumbo’ French, Denny ‘Feeler’s Rebo’ Walley and Mark ‘Rockette Morton’ Boston. Even so I was expecting little more than a tribute band. How wrong I was. They not only had the vibe and the excitement of the original incarnations but somehow Drumbo turned out to be a dynamic frontman and even carried the vocals to within a gnat’s crotchet. Amazing. After that the band toured regularly and I got to as many gigs as I could, took my younger son and his friends and introduced them to real music. They were blown away. Gary Lucas unfortunately, dropped out (Oh, if only he had been replaced with Zoot Horn Rollo) but Eric Klerks came in and did a fine job. The standard didn’t drop. I even liked the Henry Kuttner incarnation (though I sorely missed both Mark and Denny). Far from a tribute act – they were indeed Magic! Here’s a number of shots of John and the band in action at the Duchess York in 2012.

Captain Beefheart Radar Station – Review by Steve Froy.

On Track … Captain Beefheart. Every album, every song by Opher Goodwin

BY: STEVE 

ON: 28 JANUARY 2023 

IN: BLOGBOOKSBY OR ABOUT DON VAN VLIET 

TAGGED: ON TRACKOPHER GOODWIN 

WITH: 4 Comments

Publisher ‏: ‎ Sonicbond Publishing
Date of Publication : 26 August 2022
Language : ‎ English
Paperback‏ : ‎ 160 pages
ISBN-10 : ‎ 1789522358
ISBN-13 : ‎ 978-1789522358
Dimensions : ‎ 14.96 x 1.24 x 20.57 cm

Extract from blurb:

Few Bands are as influential. The Beatles, The Fall, PJ Harvey and Tom Waits all pay homage, while The Magic Band have inspired a myriad of tribute bands and created a mythology like no other. This book sets the history of the band in context, analysing every track and interpreting the music with its poetic content. It is essential reading for diehard fans and the Beefheart-curious alike

Review by Steve Froy

I don’t know how many books there are in the ‘On Track’ series but it has been going a while and is a well established brand. It was only a matter of time before the Captain received the ‘On Track’ treatment. I’d even thought of doing it myself but never seemed to find the time but I was pleased to see that my good friend and fellow Beefheart fan, Opher Goodwin, has taken it on.

Opher has been a fan since the early days of the band and was one of the lucky few to see the band perform their legendary 1968 gig at the Middle Earth. He’s lived through the ups and downs of Don’s career and recorded output and he brings this perspective to bear on his analysis of each track and album.

I know some people don’t see the point of books like this, as far as they’re concerned they know the albums and all the tracks so why bother reading about them too. If that’s your view, them fair enough but I have to disagree with you. Sometimes you can be too familiar with the music and a book like this gives you the chance to distance yourself slightly and see it through someone else’s eyes, giving you the chance to reassess what you think about the songs and maybe seeing them afresh.

All the studio albums are included plus the few official live releases. Opher also looks at some of the many unofficial live and outtake albums, as well as Magic Band members solo efforts, the Magic Band reunion albums and a few of the many cover versions of the Beefheart songbook.

Opher takes you on a wild ride. His writing style is highly enthusiastic and entertaining which amazingly he maintains throughout the book. The only time the book doesn’t work so well is in the section about compilation albums which is mainly lists of tracks and doesn’t have much in the way of the author’s comments.

Factually there is little to quibble about, a couple of mistakes have crept in despite proof-reading but these are probably due to the publisher not correcting the proof.

Overall this is a nice addition to the Beefheart library, and isn’t very expensive so why not treat yourself to a copy.

Thanks to Steve Froy ( a good friend) who runs the super Captain Beefheart Radar Station site with everything you might need to know on the good Captain.

Steve is a great friend and helped me enormously in the production of this book. Thanks Steve.

https://burningshed.com/opher-goodwin_captain-beefheart-on-track_book

Captain Beefheart On Track: Every Album Every Song – Two of the brilliant reviews.

A couple of the excellent 5 * reviews following the UK release. Thank you so much guys. It is really great to read, gives me a boost.

I’d be really grateful for any other reviews! Always good to hear from you!

c j perkins

5.0 out of 5 stars GIMME DAT BOOK, BOYReviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 26 September 2022

Verified Purchase

As with his excellent On Track book about Roy Harper, Opher Goodwin has immersed us in the world of a truly great, if enigmatic musician. Opher’s deep and personal knowledge of the times, the culture, man and his music create a provocative and fulfilling read.
An introduction quickly puts the reader into the background and mindset of the Captain and his intriguing, often fractious, relationship with Frank Zappa from their initial mutual love for blues, R&B, and do-wop and the unfortunate pornography bust to their creative collaborations. Willie The Pimp from Zappa’s Hot Rats album is discussed as part of a Contemporary Recording section associated with various albums. A great touch.
Opher’s insights are enhanced having witnessed the man perform on a number of occasions, comparing the live with the recorded. He takes us on a journey though each of the official albums, track by often painful track. Not all concerts or tracks are regarded as classic, Opher remains a critic throughout. What he does do is reveal the strengths and weaknesses of the Captain’s work, relationships and attitudes. He discusses not just the musicians involved and the Captain’s poetry but the background to its creation and the tensions that exist between the personnel.
There’s an almost visceral description of the track Lick My Dacals Off, Baby managing references to Led Zeppelin and the Beatles, musical structure, ‘wild animal sex’ and the joys of ‘licking everywhere that’s pink’. All in two short paragraphs. His comments about the tracks Hair Pie Bake 1 & 2, leaves little to the imagination.
But the Captain is more than lascivious tracks and Opher describes his love of nature, fear for the World and his support for feminism on such pieces as Nowadays A Woman’s Gotta Hit A Man and The Host The Ghost The Most Holy O.
Opher uses the book to explore some of the multitude of bootlegs and rarity/outtake recordings available. This is ideal for the more adventurous or devoted collector. Those musicians closely associated with the Captain, ex-Magic Band members as such, are given a rightful space where their subsequent work is discussed.
As with other On Track books, there is a generous number of images reprinted, in colour and B&W. These range from album covers and promo shots to concert photos and some of the author with band members.
I always enjoyed Beefheart and his music and have fond memories of the parties where his music was played but it was this book that gave me a greater understanding of the man, his music and why he is still such an influential character. More importantly, it headed me back for a wiser listen.

Barry Snaith

5.0 out of 5 stars Superb companion guide for every Beefheart nerdReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 4, 2022

Verified Purchase

Firstly, reader, I’ll tell you what this book is like: You know when you go into an art gallery or museum and have an accompanying guide book explaining a little about the art or artefacts? Well, this is very much like that.
A companion piece for every track.
The author has lovingly reviewed and described every song and it is also full of little facts and interesting information.
If, like me, you are a Beefheart and The Magic Band aficionado (and I’m guessing that you are) then you’ll appreciate this book.
We’ve all read John French’s definitive horse’s-mouth and meticulous account, Bill Harkleroad’s equally valid (but not so obsessively detailed) story and we’ve also read Mike Barnes’s fantastic and accurate outsider view. There are a couple of other tomes too but those three are the glorious triumvirate of Beefheartian history.
This book isn’t trying to be that.
What it does is makes you revisit the albums. Not with a different perspective – we all have our own, as does this, but with another incentive; to listen to the most original, influential, unique music in rock history.
It’s a book for Beefheart lovers, nerds and obsessives.
If you don’t agree with some of the author’s viewpoints on the music it really doesn’t matter.
The purpose of the book is as a companion to this vast and broad decade of sheer creativity, originality and music-as-art from a genius/tyrant/eccentric and the supremely dedicated and unique musicians who helped to realise the vision, even taking a backseat to his ego for the sake of the art.
I love it and so will you.

Great 5* Reviews for Captain Beefheart On Track: Every Album, Every Song – Thanks Guys! Really Appreciate it!

Great 5* Reviews for Captain Beefheart On Track: Every Album, Every Song – Thanks Guys! Really Appreciate it!


Barry Snaith

5.0 out of 5 stars Superb companion guide for every Beefheart nerd

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 4 September 2022

Verified Purchase

Firstly, reader, I’ll tell you what this book is like: You know when you go into an art gallery or museum and have an accompanying guide book explaining a little about the art or artefacts? Well, this is very much like that.
A companion piece for every track.
The author has lovingly reviewed and described every song and it is also full of little facts and interesting information.
If, like me, you are a Beefheart and The Magic Band aficionado (and I’m guessing that you are) then you’ll appreciate this book.
We’ve all read John French’s definitive horse’s-mouth and meticulous account, Bill Harkleroad’s equally valid (but not so obsessively detailed) story and we’ve also read Mike Barnes’s fantastic and accurate outsider view. There are a couple of other tomes too but those three are the glorious triumvirate of Beefheartian history.
This book isn’t trying to be that.
What it does is makes you revisit the albums. Not with a different perspective – we all have our own, as does this, but with another incentive; to listen to the most original, influential, unique music in rock history.
It’s a book for Beefheart lovers, nerds and obsessives.
If you don’t agree with some of the author’s viewpoints on the music it really doesn’t matter.
The purpose of the book is as a companion to this vast and broad decade of sheer creativity, originality and music-as-art from a genius/tyrant/eccentric and the supremely dedicated and unique musicians who helped to realise the vision, even taking a backseat to his ego for the sake of the art.
I love it and so will you.


Mr. Phil Secretan

5.0 out of 5 stars Every track of every album reviewed.

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 1 September 2022

Verified Purchase

This is another book in the fabulous On Track series. Opher Goodwin has a forensic knowledge of Captain Beefheart and the Magic Band. Beefheart was active in the years 1964 to 1982 but his influence is still felt 40 years later. Mr Goodwin knows his subject inside out and each track from each album is described in great detail. The author goes into the background to the recordings and lists the musicians on each album. I can thoroughly recommend this book to anyone who!s interested in music of the 60s and 70s.

The Release Date Sept 30th in the USA

The book is available through Burning Shed (The publisher’s own distribution site) Captain Beefheart On Track (burningshed.com)

Or through Amazon:

Captain Beefheart On Track: Every Album, Every Song: Amazon.co.uk: Opher Goodwin: 9781789522358: Books

I do have a batch of copies that are available signed (including post and packaging) for: £17 – UK     £20 – Europe   £23 – USA

If you are interested please message or email me with your address. Payment through paypal – opher.goodwin@gmail.com

Captain Beefheart On Track: Every Album, Every Song. Book Launch Day!

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Captain Beefheart

Captain Beefheart On Track: Every Album, Every Song.

Book Launch Day!!

Two years in the writing!

Fifty-five years in the making!

So good to finally hold the book!

The Release Date in the UK is Aug 26th. (Sept 30th in the USA).

The book is available through Burning Shed (The publisher’s own distribution site) Captain Beefheart On Track (burningshed.com)

Or through Amazon:

Captain Beefheart On Track: Every Album, Every Song: Amazon.co.uk: Opher Goodwin: 9781789522358: Books

I do have a batch of copies that are available signed (including post and packaging) for: £17 – UK     £20 – Europe   £23 – USA

If you are interested please message or email me with your address. Payment through paypal – opher.goodwin@gmail.com

First hearing of Captain Beefheart and his impact.

   I first heard Beefheart’s Safe As Milk at Mike’s on the day of its release. To say I was bowled over is an understatement. I was into both the blues and psychedelia, but this seemed to combine the two in a way that blasted your mind and body into atoms. It shook me, and I was hooked. I’d never heard anything like it. By this time I was also going to London underground clubs Middle Earth, UFO, The Roundhouse, The Marquee and Les Cousins. For me it was to see mainly Pink Floyd, Peter Green’s Fleetwood Mac, Jimi Hendrix and Roy Harper. When I heard that Captain Beefheart was going to play at Middle Earth, I was ecstatic. There was only one problem: I was in the midst of my A-level exams. I had been offered a provisional place at university, and needed the grades, but music was more important to me, and besides, my biology exam was a week away. Surely I could afford a night off. High on adrenalin, I drove to London on my trusty motorbike, only to discover that the gig had been postponed. Beefheart’s bassist Jerry Handley was ill, and they’d been replaced by the Aynsley Dunbar Retaliation. Now, I quite liked Aynsley Dunbar, but he was no substitute for Captain Beefheart, who was rescheduled for the following week as a double bill with John Mayall (another favourite of mine). That made it an absolute must.

   The gig was now going to be the night before my A-level biology exam. If I went, I wouldn’t be home until 3:00 a.m., and my exam started at 9:00 a.m.. I would have no last-minute revision, and I’d be knackered. Still, needs must. No choice! It was truly one of the best gigs I have ever been to. I can’t remember anything about John Mayall that night, but Beefheart just blew me away! Needless to say, I didn’t get the required grade, and the course of my life changed. However, I’d seen Captain Beefheart in all his glory! I wouldn’t change that even if I could.

Captain Beefheart On Track: Every Album, Every Song.

Exciting times!! After 2 years in the writing, the book is finally released in the UK tomorrow!!

The Release Date in the UK is Aug 26th. (Sept 30th in the USA).

The book is available through Burning Shed (The publisher’s own distribution site) Captain Beefheart On Track (burningshed.com)

Or through Amazon:

Captain Beefheart On Track: Every Album, Every Song: Amazon.co.uk: Opher Goodwin: 9781789522358: Books

I do have a batch of copies that are available signed (including post and packaging) for: £17 – UK     £20 – Europe   £23 – USA

If you are interested please message or email me with your address. Payment through paypal – opher.goodwin@gmail.com