A very poor attempt at telling the Beefheart story through the analysis of
all his released songs.
Published by Agenda
ISBN 1 899882 25 1
Price £5.99
July 1996
86 pages
Synopsis from the back of the book
The enduring story of an innovator, an artist in oils, a sculptor
in soap, a poet, and a creative musician. Don Van Vliet was to change his name
to Captain Beefheart and then invent by altering the blues, a new modern music.
A cult following which paralleled the music of his good friend
Frank Zappa, with whom he wrote a screen-play in their high school days.
Relinquishing the music business from where he experienced problems
both with his music and the inability to obtain adequate recompense for his work
he took a new direction into painting, where at last he received the accolades
of the intellectuals.
The story of Don Vliet to Captain Beefheart and back to Don Van
Vliet, a journey always interesting, sometimes amusing the story of an aesthetic
innovator who finally achieved his success and sublime happiness.
Overview by Graham Johnston
Put very simply, this book is a disgrace. Fast & Bulbous
does not tell the Captain Beefheart story in any shape or form, preferring to
simply pass meagre comment on all Don Van Vliet's released songs, much of which
is glaringly incorrect or shockingly feeble-minded. I have to wonder why anyone
would bother to write or publish such an utterly worthless slice of crud in the
first place.
Some of Cruikshank's interpretations appear to be little more
than fantasy, and on ocassions can be unintentionally comical, for example he
asserts that "New Electric Ride" from Unconditionally Guaranteed
is about Don using a vibrator on a woman. He may well be correct, I don't know,
but I would love to know where the author gets his insight from to be so certain.
Out of his arse, perhaps?
At other times, the commentary is banal to the point of being
moronic; we are told little more about "I Love You You Big Dummy" other
than that it contains "only a few lyrics and they seem to be nonsensical"
and that "the second 'You' in the title is not in the song's lyrics."
Thanks for that insight, Ben.
Cruikshank has minimal understanding of the music and absolutely
nothing of interest to say about it. Certain passages of this book are horribly
reminiscent of the sort of comments every Beefheart fan has heard a million times
from the unbelievers. In the three-line commentary about "One Red Rose That
I Mean", he claims that it is "the poorest track, an instrumental filler,
solo guitar, can this really be written down before playing? The playing is pedestrian,
and they may be just tuning up."
The bad grammar and sentence structure don't help either, making
this book an infuriating read simply because the author doesn't elucidate the
few ideas he has in a readable or straightforward way. Even the synopsis quoted
above doesn't contain one single properly constructed sentence. I happen to believe
that these things should matter to a person trying to write a book that he or
she wants others to actually bother to read.
The few examples that I have quoted here are not the exceptions,
the book is riddled with such colourless claptrap. I have just opened the book
at a random page and picked a random song, "Sam With The Showing Scalp Flat
Top". Quoting the full commentary for this song, Cruickshank tells us:
"written by the Captain, the lyrics written so many years
earlier. A spoken poem with musical twiddlings as a back-drop. Captain's esoteric
word play, and this track includes the album title in the last few lines. The
sentiments are that Sam is a basket case with a very strange hair style."
No one needs to pay £5.99 to read this ineffectual, shabby
crap. Criticising this book makes me feel like a bully because it is simply all
to easy.
Steal it and burn it or just avoid at all costs.
Availability
Widely available on the Internet. It can also be purchased through the Radar
Station's Amazon associated book and CD store,
but take my advice and don't bother.
There are an infinte number of more useful things you can do with £5.99.