Label:
Liberty – LBS 83172, Liberty – LBS 83172E
Format:
Vinyl, LP, Album / Country: UK / Released: Dec 1968
Style:
Blues Rock, Avantgarde
Recorded April
25th - May 2nd, 1968 at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, California.
Art
Direction – Tom Wilkes
Photography
By – Guy Webster
Arranged
By, Written-By – Don Van Vliet
Engineer
– Bill Lazerus, Gene Shiveley
Producer
– Bob Krasnow
Matrix
/ Runout (Side A stamped runout): LBS 83172 A//1 420
Matrix
/ Runout (Side B stamped runout): LBS 83172 B//1 420
LBS
83172 is the catalog number on the spine and labels while LBS 83172E is the
catalog number on the back cover.
A1
- Ah Feel Like Ahcid ................................................................... 3:05
A2
- Safe As Milk ............................................................................. 5:20
A3
- Trust Us .................................................................................... 8:05
A4
- Son Of Mirror Man - Mere Man ................................................ 5:20
B1
- On Tomorrow ........................................................................... 3:25
B2
- Beatle Bones N' Smokin Stones ............................................... 3:15
B3
- Gimme Dat Harp Boy ............................................................... 5:00
B4
- Kandy Korn ............................................................................... 5:05
Don
Van Vliet – lead vocals, blues harp [mouthharp]
Alex
St. Claire – guitar
Jeff
Cotton – guitar
Jerry
Handley – bass
John
French – drums, percussion
After the production of "Safe As Milk" Ry Cooder departed, resulting from an incident at a warm-up 'Magic Mountain' gig at Mount Tamalpas prior to their booking at Monterey. The band thus failed to capitalize on airing the tracks at the all-important Monterey Festival in June '67. Problems further plagued Vliet's new-formed line up of Snouffer, Handley, French and Cotton when they began their European gigs in January '68. Their appearances at the UK's "Middle Earth" and "Speakeasy" clubs were jeopardized by problems at Immigration, where they were accompanied by event organizer (and "The Who" manager) Pete Meaden. This 'lack of UK work permit' fiasco soured UK deals between Meaden, Buddah management and Pye - perhaps beginning the rot that would lead Krasnow, and the band, to depart from Buddah. However, the band completed gigs in Hanover on the 16th, London's two club dates on the 20th & 21st, "The John Peel Sessions" on the 24th, the MIDEM performance on the beach at Cannes on the 27th and the Casino le Croisette with "The Crazy World Of Arthur Brown" on the 28th. They then returned to the US in February, appearing at the Whisky-A-Go-Go from the 1st to the 4th.
By
late April a number of compositions, rehearsals and tapes were begun by the
band for a second album on Buddah - broadly conceptualized as a double vinyl
entitled "It Comes To You In A Plain Brown Wrapper". The core of this
work took on a new shape when Vliet teamed the band up to an agreement with
producer Bob Krasnow. Vliet had considered renaming the band "Blue
Thumb", but this became the name of the new label which Krasnow formed.
The material was pared-down to a single album and, whilst The Magic Band were
appearing and performing this material back in the UK in May '68, Krasnow
assembled the album under his own initiative. Much of the work had been created
under the Buddah aegis, which may have been one of the reasons the work was
reduced to a single album. Phasing and effects were added by Krasnow to the mix
and the "Strictly Personal" album emerged as the first release on
"Blue Thumb" as BTS 1. The album has also been manufactured &
distributed by Liberty, United Artists and EMI.
The
band began and ended their European "Strictly Personal" tour at UK's
"Middle Earth" on 3rd & 25th May 1968. In between they appeared
in Rome, along with UK bands such as "The Trinity" with Auger &
Driscoll, "Ten Years After", "Donovan" and "Fairport
Convention", plus another "John Peel Session". Dates also
encompassed UK colleges, pubs and clubs, including "Frank Freeman's"
in Kidderminster on the 19th - some of which can be found on record.
In
retrospect, there has been much controversy among Beefheart followers over the
merits of Krasnow's additions to the "Strictly Personal" work.
'Un-phazed' material and sessions can be found on such releases as "I May
Be Hungry But I Sure Ain't Weird" or "The Mirror Man Sessions",
which provide an overview on the birth and existence of "Strictly
Personal". The album "It Comes To You In A Plain Brown Wrapper",
on the 'Sundazed' label, also plugs gaps in the band's "Strictly
Personal" history- onwards to the release of the fifth official album
"Mirror Man".
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.
(Review
by Stewart Mason)
If
you find it, buy this album!