Strictly Personal discography

Recording details:

Date – 25 April to 2 May 1968
Studio – Sunset Sound, Hollywood
Producer – Bob Krasnow
Engineer – Gene Shiveley, Bill Lazerus

Musicians:

Don Van Vliet – vocals, harmonica, electric flour sifter
Alex St Clair Snouffer – guitar, backing vocals
Jeff Cotton – guitar, backing vocals
Jerry Handley – bass, backing vocals
John French – drums, backing vocals

Track list

  1. Ah Feel Like Ahcid
  2. Safe As Milk
  3. Trust Us
  4. Son of Mirror Man – Mere Man
  5. On Tomorrow
  6. Beatle Bones and Smokin’ Stones
  7. Gimme Dat Harp Boy
  8. Kandy Korn

Myths and legends

According to legend the album was ruined by producer Bob Krasnow who tried to make it more “commercial” by adding psychedelic post-production phasing effects to the recordings. This was done supposedly without the band’s knowledge while they were away in England.

Don Van Vliet denounced the album’s production in numerous indignant interviews of the time:

So he hands me the album, and there’s the album cover I did with the stamps and manila envelope. Everything just as I did it. So I put the album on and, my God, it’s not the same album! He had put psychedelic Bromo-Seltzer all over the tapes we’d made – you know, phasing, whooooosh. The music – there are diamonds in the rough tinder there, but it sounds like some kid’s got a hold of a Mona Lisa. A mean little kid. All of a sudden I find this album a shambles with psychedelic Bromo-Seltzer all over it. I didn’t know what to do.

-from a Conversation With Captain Beefheart, 1973

The truth may be different, however.

Album overview from Graham Johnston

Beefheart’s ‘ruined’ classic doesn’t sound half bad at all, amazing in fact, despite the slightly dated effects. Outtakes without the effects have appeared on numerous releases over the years and perhaps sound even better but there is no denying the album’s curious allure due to its great wordplay, humour, pounding throbbing rhythms, unique vocals and great lumbering blues. It’s often totally OTT in the best possible way.

I have so many favourite bits but when the phased vocals start to warble in at the beginning of “Son Of Mirror Man – Mere Man” just after the bass and drums explode in… that’s pretty magic.

To me, there is a clear distinction between the albums up to Strictly Personal and that which followed. After this point, nothing was to sound quite the same ever again….

Some background info

Don Van Vliet “approving” the mix

A note from the late Gerry Pratt:

This is Krasnow’s story that Don said he liked it while the band hated it (this came from a friend of John “Drumbo” French). Don’s opinion changed when it got bad reviews/sales. Krasnow may have told him it was going to be a hit album and that Beefheart and the band would make lots of money – this was at a time when they had little if any income.

In my Beefheart ‘zine (Steal Softly Thru Show #4 – Old Fart At Play) I will be publishing a telephone interview from January ’94 of Bill Harkleroad AKA Zoot Horn Rollo by John Ellis – this sheds some new light on the Summer 1968 period after the April/May ’68 recording sessions and before the October (?) 1968 issue of Strictly Personal by Krasnow on his own Blue Thumb label:-

JE: This is Bill Harkleroad that I’m talking to and thanks very much for doing this interview for us…the first question I want to ask …which you’ve probably been asked before…was how did you become the guitarist for Trout Mask Replica?

BH: For Trout Mask Replica or for Captain Beefheart?

JE: Well did it start before then?

BH: Well actually yeah…I was in the group before Strictly Personal came out and recorded some of the tunes that…we were going to redo that album…I’m sure that you know the history because of our past conversations

JE: I’ve heard some really convoluted stuff…that it was recorded for MGM at one point

BH: I recorded two tunes in the studio as my first studio thing…Zappa was the engineer and producer of that…we were going to redo the album… then a guy called Bob Krasnow kind of put out the album without anyone knowing…so we dumped what we had…

JE: He’s President of Elektra now and I’ve actually heard from him that he’s interested in reissuing that album…the unmixed album …I also heard that someone contacted a friend of mine in England…said that Capitol or EMI had got hold of it and might be putting it out on CD

BH: Strictly Personal?

JE: Yes

BH: Before he added all the…phasing and stuff?

JE: Yes

BH: Interesting…anyway so your question was the Trout Mask Replica thing

JE: Can you remember what the two tracks were?

BH: “Kandy Korn” and “Moonlight on Vermont”

JE: Wow!

BH: “Moonlight on Vermont” was going to be on that album but ended up going onto Trout Mask Replica

JE: Very interesting …so Zappa was the producer of that so he probably has the tapes…

BH: Probably yes…I guess I don’t know what’s happening with his stuff now

Releases

View the Radar Station’s full information about the various editions of Strictly Personal which have appeared over the years.

Related links

Purchase Strictly Personal

Help us out

If anyone is able to complete or update any of the information above, then please do get in touch.

10 Comments

  1. The UK mono blows away the US stereo. Is the mono a fold-down?

    1. It’s not a fold down. There are very real differences.

    1. Great piece! Strictly Personal is just as special as Trout Mask

      1. Here’s the text:
        The Accepted Rock Critic Line on Strictly Personal is “the album was ruined by Bob Krasnow’s over-the-top production. He added phasing without consulting Van Vliet, who was justifiably furious. It has some value as a historical curiosity.”
        Well, no. There’s also the story that Beefheart approved the mix, but changed his mind later, laying the blame on Bob. This sounds wayyy like him, as far as we know, but we know Jack Shit about any of this because we weren’t there. So it looks like we’ll have to form our own opinions without the benefit of critical acuity and Backstory Bullshit. Gee whiz.
        This was the album that made Beefheart notorious in the UK, not the first, which was only bought by hip guys who drew band names in ballpoint on their Army Surplus school bags, our equivalent of jail ink. That was the internet back then. You’d check what names the cool kids were drawing on their bags and listen out for them on John Peel. I copied the Strictly Personal rubber stamp on mine, carrying the album around under my arm as a hipness signifier. One of the great room emptiers at parties, as I learned – or maybe that was just me – it held the illicit thrill of buying Oz magazine or sharing a lunchbreak joint behind the toilets. This was not for our parents. The gatefold picture was uniquely disturbing in the same way as the music – threatening, deadly serious, teetering on the edge of sanity. We’d all tumble over that edge with Trout Mask Replica, losing girlfriends in the process.
        Absolutely nobody back then was throwing up their pale hands in horror at the production. Nobody knew what production was – we were too into the music to give much of a fuck. The whole album was totally mind-blowing, unlike anything we’d heard. Still is. Where Safe As Milk was based around recognisably structured songs, Strictly Personal owed nothing to song-writing craft, the music business as we knew it, or even the hippie demographic. If anything, it’s anti-psychedelic, in a similar way to Frank Zappa, although abstract to his literal.
        The stumbling, howling intro to the first track, Ah Feel Like Ahcid, sets the tone – when that off-kilter railroad guitar comes in under the Captain’s barnyard harp you know you’re not in Kansas any more. This is authentically other – not self-consciously weird or “challenging”, or even psychedelic. From Son House to the Trout House, this is ancestral music played sideways, skittering from the cracks, the rumble in the jungle, creaks in the attic, insect rattle and roll. A heartbeat segués into the tarpit bass riff of Safe As Milk, time signatures tesselating, Van Vliet’s vox schizo-stereo, and half way through the thing groans and rolls over, the Captain crooning “I may be hungry but I sure ain’t weird” over squalls of slide guitar and John French battering his planetary drums, Thor-thundering and phased to stun. Trans-fucking-cendent.
        The impact of Van Vliet’s lyric writing isn’t often credited. In the late ‘sixties poetry – almost unbelievably – was still part of youth culture, in the tradition of the beats a decade earlier. I wasn’t alone in carrying a notebook with copied-out poems and lyrics and koans and haiku. Incredible, right? Words were treasure. Words got you high. So anyway – someone showed me a Beefheart lyric in his notebook, saying that’s poetry. The words, as they say, leapt off the page. Vivid, funny, and powerfully hallucinogenic. It was on Strictly Personal where Van Vliet freed his lyric muse, syllables sparking and popping:

        “Porcelain children see through white light so cracker bats, cheshire cats, named the dark the light the dark the day. Blue veins through gray felt tomorrows.”

        The whole album is unprecedented, in form and texture. A collapsing architecture of disarticulated chords and stub-your-toe beats tattoo your cerebral cortex. No compromise, no prisoners, no bullshit, and no sales. It is astonishing, in retrospect, that anyone thought it would fly off the racks with little or no radio play, but those were the times: risks might pay off, and nobody knew nuthin’.

        Not only unprecedented, but impossible to Trout Mask replicate; this magic can never happen again. We live in tamed times, but listening to this, for those lucky enough not to have been born too late, sheds the intervening years like they never happened. Which, in a way, they haven’t. Those coming fresh to it will have to bust out of the sterile salon of academic etiquette that is contemporary music culture, and lots of luck with that.
        As far as I know, Strictly Personal has avoided the remaster and reissue treatment – it remains an odd backwater even in the knotted swamps of Beefheart’s music, where few think to go. The raw session tracks have seen many attempts at organisation and release (Mirror Man, I May Be Hungry, It Comes To You etc.) and are preferred by modern minds for their *cough* “purity”. Don’t fall for the Backstory Bullshit that those “un-produced” tracks are in some way better than the Krasnow production. They ain’t. They’re different. Everything is different to Strictly Personal. It deserves better than to languish in the shadow of Trout Mask Replica (the one Rock Critics pretend to like, so we’ll think they’re groovy). It’s one of the most wildly thrilling and genuinely avant-garde albums ever cut. What was far out, is far out.

        1. Hi Tim, thanks for taking the time to send us this. Couldn’t agree more ..

          1. I think of all Beefheart’s albums this is the most sheerly enjoyable for me. Because barking mad bonkers. And part of that is the phasing, which always seemed integral and not tacked on. But the back story – that it was unwanted interference from dumb old Krasnow – is so ingrained it’s hard for anyone who wasn’t lucky enough to be around at the time to get their minds blown by it. Phasing was used rarely back then, so why it’s sneered at as a production cliché is a bit of a mystery. Strictly Personal is the great shining grail of Phase.

            There’s some more Beefheart blabber on my blog – right now there’s a pimped Spotlight Kid(s) at the top – take a look!

            https://falsememoryfoam.blogspot.com

  2. Did they ever locate the master tapes?

    Would LOVE it hear it w/o the damn
    Bromo!!!

    1. The master tapes have never surfaced. According to Gary Marker they don’t exist in their original form because Bob Krasnow cut up the master tapes to create the final mix.

  3. Bee Fart shouldah had kept a tighter reign/rein on the juvenile Krasnow what had spewed his electronic shit all over the rekkord

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