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#Captain Beefheart's Magic Band
odk-2 · 1 year
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Hugh Cornwell and Robert Williams: “White Room”
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Hugh Cornwell and Robert Williams - White Room (1979) Jack Bruce / Pete Brown from: “White Room” / “Losers in a Lost Land” (Single) "Nosferatu“ (LP)
Post-Punk | Goth
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Hugh Cornwell, The Stranglers Robert Williams, Captain Beefheart's Magic Band
Personnel: Hugh Cornwell: Lead Vocals / Lead Guitar / Bass / Moog Bass / Chamberlin Mellotron Robert Williams: Drums / Timpani / Backing Vocals David Walldroop: Rhythm Guitar Ian Underwood: Sonar Yamaha Synthesizer
Arranged by Hugh Cornwell / Robert Williams Produced by Hugh Cornwell / Robert Williams
Recorded: @ The Cherokee Studios @ The Sunset Sound Studios @ The Village Recorders and @ The Davlen Sound Studios in Los Angeles, California USA 1978
Single Released: on October 25, 1979
Album Released November 16, 1979
United Artists Records (UK)
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undergroundrockpress · 9 months
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Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band by Jim Marshall.
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kidpix-album-covers · 4 months
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Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band - Doc at the Radar Station (1980)
(requested by Facebook user Blake Dadd)
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jt1674 · 3 months
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musickickztoo · 9 months
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Captain Beefheart   
January 15, 1941 – December 17, 2010
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mudwerks · 7 months
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(via Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band - I'm Gonna Booglarize You, Baby (1972)
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disease · 1 year
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SAFE AS MILK (TAKE 5) CAPTAIN BEEFHEART & HIS MAGIC BAND [SAFE AS MILK, 1967]
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skf-fineart · 1 month
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Don Van Vliet (1941-2010)
“Cholla”, 1989-90
Oil on canvas, 32 ½” x 37”
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Tracklist:
Frownland • The Dust Blows Forward 'N The Dust Blows Back • Dachau Blues • Ella Guru • Hair Pie: Bake 1 • Moonlight On Vermont • Pachuco Cadaver • Bills Corpse • Sweet Sweet Bulbs • Neon Meate Dream Of A Octafish • China Pig • My Human Gets Me Blues • Dali's Car • Hair Pie: Bake 2 • Pena • Well • When Big Joan Sets Up • Fallin' Ditch • Sugar 'N Spikes • Ant Man Bee • Orange Claw Hammer • Wild Life • She's Too Much For My Mirror • Hobo Chang Ba • The Blimp (Mousetrap Replica) • Steal Softly Thru Snow • Old Fart At Play • Veteran's Day Poppy
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Captain Beefheart And The Magic Band , One Red Rose That I Mean I Lick I My Decals Off, Baby, 1970
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Captain Beefheart And His Magic Band in 1971. Photo by Robert Matheu.
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dustedmagazine · 4 months
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Listed: Vague Plot
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Vague Plot is made up of New York City avant-indie regulars, veterans of other bands, who got together to make driving, moving, long-form instrumental music a la Can and Popul Vuh during the pandemic: Zachary Cale, Uriah Theriault, Phil Jacob, Ben and John Studer. Of their debut Crying in 9 from earlier this year, Jennifer Kelly wrote, “Vague Plot’s jams shimmer like highways melting in the heat, running straight on through Kansas or Nebraska until they disappear in the undecipherable distance. Which is to say, they go on for a while, repeating the same short grooves ad infinitum, with modest changes, until the measures blow by like mile markers and the journey transcends itself.” All five members contributed picks to this wide-ranging listed.
Phil Jacob (sax/keys)
King Tubby meets Lee Perry — Megawatt Dub, 1997
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In my late teens I started getting into dub, particularly King Tubby and Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry. It’s tough picking one album, but this is the compilation I keep coming back to over the years. My favorite Tubby track, “Termination Dub,” isn’t here, but the giddy feeling I get from “Come By Yah” and “Perfidia” has no equal. And these are some of my favorite Lee Perry selections as well, particularly “Rainy Night” and “Open the Gate”. There’s an attention to melody here that often gets lost on dub remixes, even while these two are digging deep and pulling everything apart. Every delay drop seems to happen exactly when I want it to, leaping out of the speakers. A lot of the genre classics make me feel locked to the couch in a smoky haze, but this collection pulls me into a dance of dub ecstasy.
Captain Beefheart and the Magic Band — Shiny Beast (Bat Chain Puller), 1978
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Possibly the best music education I ever received was playing in a Beefheart tribute band. The emphasis on polyrhythms as arranged by Don Van Vliet and John French on Trout Mask Replica made me feel music in an entirely new way; that it’s best if things don’t always line up at the beginning or end of a bar, a tension I enjoy searching for. TMR does it so often and with such ferocity that it grows exhausting over the length of the 79-minute album. On the other hand, Shiny Beast manages to incorporate some of those ideas into layers and layers of infectious hooks. From the driving bass line of “Floppy Boot Stomp” to the loping funk of “Tropical Hot Dog” to the stately guitar lines of “Owed T’Alex” to the existential spoken-word closer “Apes-Ma”, every track perfectly highlights a different aspect of what makes Beefheart so unique to my ears.
John Studer (drums)
Slint — Untitled EP, 1994
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When I first heard the song “Glenn,” it changed the physicality of my body. Britt Walford has an impressive skill to subtly shift around beats so they gently roll and slide over themselves. It’s as if he’s repeating the same line of poetry but with different punctuation to give it fresh meaning each time.
DJ Shadow — Endtroducing, 1996
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The surprisingly refreshing choices around arrangements and samples on this album highlight their unexpected connections. Repetitive, hypnotic rhythms combine with soothing layers of instrumentation and allow every special moment to shine appropriately. Endtroducing then delicately transcends these distant connections to create an entirely new space.
Zachary Cale (guitar)
Sonic Youth — SYR 1: Anagrama, 1997
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The music on SYR 1 consists of four instrumentals. The first song “Anagrama” has a beautiful winding arc to it. Over the span of nine minutes, you can hear the band searching and expanding. When I first heard it in 1997, it broadened my sense of not only what guitars could do but also the importance of listening when playing within a group. There's structure but it's extremely loose, there's playfulness but not without restraint. That's a big part of what Vague Plot is about. One thing about Sonic Youth I've always appreciated is that even though they “jam,” they never get trapped into a traditional blues or one-chord vamp freak out. It's modal. Sometimes that can lead to dissonance, but that dissonance has always rubbed against something highly melodic.
CAN — Ege Bamyasi, 1972
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I once had a summer job painting dorm rooms at the college I went to. One day I found a discarded CD with no jewel case or artwork. It was Ege Bamyasi. I took it home and put it on not knowing anything about the band. I was completely taken off guard upon hearing it. I could not place it into any known quantity. The inscrutable lyrics, the infectious rhythms and the mystery and sonics of it all; it cracked my brain wide open. To me CAN’s mission was always to find the pulse, vibrate with it and then ultimately dance around it. Vague Plot uses some of that same framework in our music. A singular idea to keep extrapolating on. Now that I know more about music history I can hear Fela Kuti, Stockhausen, disparate folk music as well as 1960s psychedelic rock all mixed up in this record. CAN has always seemed genreless to me in their fearless exploration of style. That’s something we as a band all aspire to. All gates open.
Ben “Baby” Copperhead (bass)
The Staple Singers & Curtis Mayfield — Let’s Do It Again, 1975
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Let’s Do It Again is a soundtrack album composed by Curtis Mayfield and performed by The Staple Singers. A few years ago, I had the honor of performing a benefit concert for Little Kids Rock. I was playing guitar in the backing band and one of the singers was Hozier who wanted to do the title track “Let’s Do It Again”. Mavis Staples was also on the bill. It was an unforgettable evening. After the concert, I bought this record on vinyl and it’s been on heavy rotation ever since. The string arrangements are absolutely magical. The whole album is a beautifully recorded masterpiece with Curtis Mayfield and his stellar band backing up The Staple Singers. What more can you ask for?
Ornette Coleman — Change of the Century, 1960
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Change of the Century was the first Ornette Coleman album I bought when I was in college. I was interested in the world of “free jazz” and Ornette and his band were the pioneers. Surprisingly, all of it is incredibly melodic with bebop-style phrasing, which I wasn’t expecting at the time. All the musicians have incredible ears to be able to pull this off. Ornette Coleman used the harmolodic system which allowed contrapuntal movement during the solos to avoid a key center. Charlie Haden and Billy Higgins were masters at this and could make any soloist sound great by deep listening, feel and support.
Uriah Theriault (guitar)
Dirty Three — Ocean Songs, 1998
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My first exposure to Mick Turner came through this album, which introduced me to a broader range of guitar styles than the folk music I had been listening to. Unlike Fahey’s intricate picking patterns, Mick Turner’s guitar work resonated as lyrical phrases more than prose. Often open and spare, other times stormy and erratic, his guitar created atmosphere and conveyed emotion without relying on virtuosic solos. He and drummer Jim White crafted moody mise-en-scenes for Warren Ellis's main character, and l found myself drawn to the visual storytelling more than the narrative itself. Over the years, I’ve had the opportunity to see Mick perform in various forms, but the tour for this album stands out due to a specific memory. During a live performance of “Authentic Celestial Music,” my then-girlfriend passed out right in front of the stage. A stranger and I caught her and moved her to the side. When she came to, her only remark was, “Great song.”
Popol Vuh — Hosianna Mantra, 1972
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I was familiar with Popol Vuh only as Herzog’s house band until I heard this album, and it cut immediately. I listened religiously to this enigmatic album over the span of a few years, whenever I took a shower so that my attention was undivided. Defying easy categorization, the collection spans classical, ambient, and krautrock. The title track was haunting, calling back to the only music I knew growing up, Catholic hymns. The guitars, oboe, and harpsichord weave sinewy webs of harmony — more chamber music than rock bravado, more conversation than monologue. The ecclesiastical tenor of the Hosianna Mantra (Hosianna, or "please save") sits uncomfortably amongst its dancy krautrock contemporaries, but the slow-burn nature of this album is anything but stiff. If deep attention is akin to prayer, as suggested by Simone Weil, then to me, this album is a dozen rosaries — penance not required.
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jt1674 · 4 months
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musickickztoo · 8 months
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Captain Beefheart  *January 15, 1941
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mudwerks · 1 year
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(via I Love You, You Big Dummy - Captain Beefheart And The Magic Band (1970)
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