by Stewart Mason (AMG)
Considered by many to be a substandard effort due to the circumstances
of its release (producer Bob Krasnow, the owner of Blue Thumb, the label
which debuted with this album, remixed the album while Don Van Vliet and
crew were off on a European tour, adding extraneous sound effects like
heartbeats and excessive use of psychedelic-era clichés like out-of-phase
stereo panning and flanging), 1968's Strictly Personal is actually a terrific
album, every bit the equal of Safe As Milk and Trout Mask Replica. Opening
with "Ah Feel Like Ahcid," an a cappella blues workout with
its roots in Son House's "Death Letter," the brief (barely 35
minutes) album is at the same time simpler and weirder than Safe As Milk
had been. Working without another songwriter or arranger for the first
time, Captain Beefheart strips his idiosyncratic blues down to the bone,
with several of the songs (especially "Son of Mirror Man/Mere Man")
having little in the way of lyrics or chords beyond the most primeval
stomp. Krasnow's unfortunate sound effects and phasing do detract from
the album at points, but the strength of the performances, especially
those of drummer John French, make his efforts little more than superfluous
window dressing. Strictly Personal is a fascinating, underrated release.
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