Hans writes:
In 1980 I attended the
concert in Paradiso, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. The band was late,
so by the time the audience arrived they were still tuning up behind
closed doors. I was standing right in front of those doors, trying
to peek in. I could see all kinds of people on stage, but no Captain
Beefheart.
My friends and I started
to get worried (maybe Don was ill, maybe we would just see the Magic
Band, maybe the concert would be cancelled), when suddenly this big
voice addressed me from behind: "Excuse me, I'd like to get in." It
was the Captain, all right. It took the Paradiso personnel, who had
not anticipated the Captain would arrive at the front doors, five
minutes to find a key to let him in. But the Captain was in no hurry.
He took the opportunity to strike up a conversation with me, asking
personal questions - as he was sometimes apt to do, I had read about
that. However, I was so taken aback by this sudden turn of events
(one minute I was peering through a crack between the doors to see
whether I could spot the Captain, and the next thing I know he is
right there in front of me) that I only managed to ask him whether
he had visited the Van Gogh Museum. He had, and judging by the enthousiastic
musings this question triggered he had liked what he saw. But given
the circumstances, and given the peculiar nature of his ramblings,
I failed to understand him - and I must say I was actually relieved
when somebody opened the door for him and he said "See you in a minute".
I took pictures during
the concert and the funny thing was, he remembered my face. He nodded,
and every now and then he would come up to me (I was right in front
of the stage) and strike some sort of special pose. Most of these
pictures are unremarkable (bad lighting) but some of them are really
quite good.
Personally I think they are all very
good, and the lighting in some of them is particularly striking.
Note the final shot of Don's leg and
shoe; it's good to see that Hans has his priorities right - these
details are important!
Copyright held by the photographer, Hans Van Hulst.
Used by permission, not to be reproduced for commercial use.
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