The Magic Band - Back To The Front (2003)

  • 02 Dec, 21:28
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Artist:
Title: Back To The Front
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: ATP Recordings ATPR6CD
Genre: Alternative Rock, Blues Rock, Jazz-Rock, Avantgarde
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 55:44
Total Size: 386 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1 My Human Gets Me Blues 3:12
2 Click Clack 4:03
3 Abba Zaba 2:43
4 I'm Gonna Booglarize You Baby 4:23
5 Sun Zoom Spark 2:22
6 Alice In Blunderland 3:56
7 Steal Softly Thru Snow 2:37
8 Dropout Boogie 2:44
9 Moonlight On Vermont 3:34
10 Circumstances 3:51
11 On Tomorrow 3:46
12 The Floppy Boot Stomp 4:05
13 Hair Pie 2:26
14 Nowadays A Woman's Gotta Hit A Man 3:59
15 When It Blows Its Stacks 4:09
16 I Wanna Find A Woman That'll Hold My Big Toe Till I Have To Go 2:20

Bonus Track
17 Sure 'Nuff 'N Yes I Do


Written-By – Don Van Vliet (1-16)
Written-By – Don Van Vliet, Herb Bermann (17)
An informal, 'live-to-tape' rehearsal of the show organized for the 'All Tomorrow's Parties Festival'
Recorded during band warm-ups at Paradoxx Sound Studios, Palmdale, California

One of the many profound revelations stemming from the commemorative Grow Fins set that Revenant released at the end of the twentieth century is how crucial Captain Beefheart's Magic Band was to the compositional process behind their askew, beautiful music. For years the emphasis was on the enigmatic Captain himself, and at the heart of his rock legend lay Trout Mask Replica, whose 28 songs-- as the story goes-- Captain Beefheart (né Don Van Vliet) spurted out in 8 1/2 hours, fully-formed, then laid down in the studio with the Magic Band in a half that time. A revealing book penned by drummer John French, and an all instrumental practice tape from that time that accompanied the box and nixed such instant creation myths. The Band worked assiduously with scant food or money in a cult-like situation to make random notes and patterns-- bare scraps of madman thought-- cohere, winding through wildly varied trains of musical thought and figuring how to converge and crash into some alien semblance of sound sense. While I was crestfallen to have the human hands behind the god-like apparatus of Trout Mask Replica revealed, my dismay was quickly replaced by respect for how luminous the band actually was, seeing the intricate, impossible moving parts glimpsed without the iconoclastic bellows and musings of Don Van Vliet overwhelming them.
Even without Van Vliet (who retired from music in the early eighties), the reconvening of this league of gentlemen for the last All Tomorrow's Parties in Camber Sands was something special. That it took over thirty years for a portion of this anomalous music to finally be appreciated by the populace was an incredible breakthrough, and the chance for these hard-working musicians to get any bit of delayed recognition is deserved. To commemorate the event, the band headed into the studio to tape their rehearsals for the comeback concert. They slashed their way through the strongest points of the Beefheart catalog, focusing on early tracks such as "Abba Zabba" and "Dropout Boogie" to warm up before heading into the serrated edges of several Trout Mask tunes like "Steal Softly Through Snow", "Moonlight on Vermont" and "Hair Pie".
This version of The Magic Band serves as strata for the various phases of the group. None of the members ever played together-- as this lineup-- before, an intriguing match-up in and of its own right. From their nascent beginnings comes John "Drumbo" French, whose musical transcriptions of Van Vliet's of-the-moment blurts helped lay out most of Trout Mask Replicas. It's his multi-dimensional tom rhythms and snapping cymbals that "tied together" the numerous Beefheart records, according to the Captain himself. Bassist Mark "Rockette Morton" Boston came into the Trout Mask commune and played through Clear Spot. Even with all the extensive research that went into the Grow Fins project, they failed to unearth him, and he only recently resurfaced, still powered by "laser beans." Denny "Feelers Reebo" Walley was a latter-day guitarist on the original Shiny Beast while Gary "Mantis" Lucas was the Captain's manager near the end of his career, actualizing the near-impossible guitar compositions like "Flavor Bud Living" and "Evening Bell". It's a shame that Bill "Zoot Horn Rollo" Harkleroad could not join in the proceedings.


The Magic Band - Back To The Front (2003)


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