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The Magic Band

The Magic Band was the backing band of American singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Captain Beefheart between 1967 and 1982. Originally Beefheart had simply been the lead singer of the group, formed by guitarist Alex St. Clair, but eventually they morphed into a backing band for him. The rotating lineup featured dozens of performers, many of whom became known by nicknames given to them by Beefheart. Long-time members during the band's heyday included drummer/arranger John French (aka Drumbo), guitarist Bill Harkleroad (aka Zoot Horn Rollo), bassist/guitarist Mark Boston (aka Rockette Morton), percussionist/keyboardist Art Tripp (aka Ed Marimba), and guitarist Elliot Ingber (aka Winged Eel Fingerling). Ex-members of the Magic Band formed the short-lived group Mallard in 1974.[2] The Magic Band reformed in 2003, without Beefheart.

The Magic Band
The Magic Band at a reunion show in Manchester, England in 2014
Background information
OriginCalifornia, USA
GenresBlues rock, avant-rock
Years active1964–1982
2003–2017[1]
Labels
Past membersSee members

Origins edit

The members of the original Magic Band had come together in 1964. At this time Don Van Vliet (later dubbed Captain Beefheart) was simply the lead singer of the group, which had been brought together by guitarist and former classmate Alex St. Clair. As in many emerging groups in California at the time, there were elements of psychedelia and the foundations of contemporary hippie counterculture. In this early incarnation they were a blues-rock outfit.[3]

The group was therefore promoted as "Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band", on the premise that Captain Beefheart had "magic powers" and, upon drinking a Pepsi, could summon up "His Magic Band" to appear and perform behind him.[4] The strands of this logic emanated from Vliet's Beefheart persona having been "written in" as a character in a "teenage operetta" that friend Frank Zappa had formulated,[5] along with Van Vliet's renowned "Pepsi moods" with his mother Willie Sue and his generally spoilt teenage demeanor. The name "His Magic Band" changed to "the Magic Band" in 1972.

The group played numerous car-club dances and juke joint gigs, and won the Teenage Fair Battle of the Bands.[6] (The Teenage Fair was an annual event held at the Hollywood Palladium in the 1960s. It was sponsored by radio stations and had rides and various merchandise booths with music- and youth-related items. Bands performed.) In late 1965, the group finally bagged a contract for recording two singles with the newly created A&M Records label with Leonard Grant as their manager. It was at this time that musical relationships had also been struck with members of Rising Sons who would later feature in the band's recordings. The A&M deal also brought some contention between members of the band, torn between a career as an experimental "pop" group and that of a purist blues band. Working with young producer David Gates also opened up horizons for Vliet's skills as a poet-cum-lyricist, with his "Who Do You Think You're Fooling" on the flipside of the band's first single, a cover of the Ellas McDaniel/Willie Dixon-penned hit, "Diddy Wah Diddy". Fate and circumstance, not for the first time, would befall the band's success upon its release – which coincided with a singles cover of the same song by the Remains.[7] The initial line-up of the Magic Band that entered the studio for the A&M recordings was not that which emerged by the second release, "Moonchild", also backed by a Vliet-penned number, "Frying Pan". A 12" vinyl 45rpm mono EP/mono mini-cassette tape was later released in 1987, with the four tracks of the two singles, plus "Here I Am, I Always Am" as a fifth previously unreleased song. This release was titled The Legendary A&M Sessions, with a red-marbled cover and (later) members Moon, Blakely, Vliet, Snouffer and Handley seated in a "temperance dance band" photo-pose.

The original Magic Band was primarily a rhythm and blues band, led by local Lancaster guitarist Alexis Snouffer, along with Doug Moon (guitar), Jerry Handley (bass), and Vic Mortenson (drums), the last being rotated with and finally replaced by Paul "P.G." Blakely. For the first A&M recording Mortenson had been called up for active service and Snouffer stood in on drums, with a recently recruited Richard Hepner taking up the guitar role. By the time the single was aired on a pop television show P. G. Blakely was back in the drum seat. He then left for a career in television and was replaced by John French by the time the band cut their first album, as the first release on the new Buddah Records label.

Personnel in the Magic Band for Beefheart's first album, Safe as Milk, were Alex St. Clair, Jerry Handley and John French. Earlier meetings with the Rising Sons had also secured them the guitar and arranging skills of Ry Cooder, which also brought about input from Taj Mahal on percussion and guitar work from Cooder's brother-in-law Russ Titelman. Further guests to this line-up included Milt Holland on percussion and the all-important and controversial theremin work on Electricity by Samuel Hoffman. It was perhaps this track, above the others, which caused A&M to view the band as "unsuitable" for their label with what was seen as weird and too psychedelic for popular consumption. Thus, this album was recorded for Buddah, with the band signed to Kama Sutra, which left them close to penniless after extricating themselves from A&M. A large proportion of the tracks on this album were co-written with Van Vliet by Herb Bermann, whom Vliet initially met up with at a bar gig near Lancaster. Part-time Hollywood television actor and budding scriptwriter Bermann and his then wife Cathleen spent some time in Vliet's company prior to this release.[8] Bermann would later write for Neil Young and script an early Spielberg-directed television medical drama. Gary "Magic" Marker (the "Magic" added by Beefheart) was involved in early session work for this release, and his involvement with Rising Sons was also instrumental in acquiring the skills of Cooder, upon an unfulfilled suggestion that Marker might produce the album.[9] Marker would later lay down two uncredited bass tracks for Trout Mask Replica before being replaced by Mark Boston.

French worked on five more Beefheart albums, while Snouffer worked with Beefheart on and off on three more albums. Bill Harkleroad joined the Magic Band as guitarist for Trout Mask Replica and stayed with Beefheart through May 1974.

Relationship with Beefheart edit

While appearing humorous and kind-hearted in public, by all accounts Van Vliet was a severe taskmaster who abused his musicians verbally and sometimes physically. Vliet once told drummer John French he had been diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic and thus he would see inexistent conspiracies that explained this behaviour.[10] The band were reportedly paid little or nothing. French recalled that the musicians' contract with Van Vliet's company stipulated that Van Vliet and the managers were paid from gross proceeds before expenses, then expenses were paid, then the band members evenly split any remaining funds—in effect making band members liable for all expenses. As a result, French was paid nothing at all for a 33-city US tour in 1971 and a total of $78 for a tour of Europe and the US in late 1975. In his 2010 memoir Beefheart: Through The Eyes of Magic French recounted being "... screamed at, beaten up, drugged, ridiculed, humiliated, arrested, starved, stolen from, and thrown down a half-flight of stairs by his employer".[11]

The musicians also resented Van Vliet for taking complete credit for composition and arranging when the musicians themselves pieced together most of the songs from taped fragments or impressionistic directions such as "Play it like a bat being dragged out of oil and it's trying to survive, but it's dying from asphyxiation."[12] John French summarized the disagreement over composing and arranging credits metaphorically:[13]

If Van Vliet built a house like he wrote music, the methodology would go something like this ... The house is sketched on the back of a Denny's placemat in such an odd fashion that when he presents it to the contractor without plans or research, the contractor says "This structure is going to be hard to build, it's going to be tough to make it safe and stable because it is so unique in design." Van Vliet then yells at the contractor and intimidates him into doing the job anyway. The contractor builds the home, figuring out all the intricacies involved in structural integrity himself because whenever he approaches Van Vliet, he finds that he seems completely unable to comprehend technical problems and just yells, "Quit asking me about this stuff and build the damned house."...When the house is finished no one gets paid, and Van Vliet has a housewarming party, invites none of the builders and tells the guests he built the whole thing himself.

Most of the group quit after the recording of Unconditionally Guaranteed in 1974, owing to years of allegedly abusive treatment by Beefheart, lack of compensation, and dissatisfaction with his new crossover direction. Beefheart's subsequent recordings in the late 1970s would enlist a new cast of younger musicians under the Magic Band heading.

Reunion edit

Receiving only a "grumpy" reception from Van Vliet,[11] the Magic Band reformed in 2003 with John French on drums, lead vocals and harmonica, Gary Lucas and Denny Walley on guitars, Rockette Morton on bass, and Robert Williams on drums for the vocal numbers. The initial impetus came from Matt Groening who wanted them to play at the All Tomorrows Parties festival he was curating. For their subsequent European tour, Williams left and was replaced by Michael Traylor.

John Peel was initially skeptical about the re-formed Magic Band. However, after he aired a live recording of the band playing at the 2003 All Tomorrow's Parties festival on his radio show, he was lost for words and had to put on another record to regain his composure. In 2004 the band did a live session for him at his home "Peel Acres".[14] They played over 30 shows throughout the United Kingdom and Europe, and one in the United States.[15] They also released two albums: Back to the Front (on the London-based ATP Recordings, 2003) and 21st Century Mirror Men (2005).

The group disbanded in 2006 but reformed in 2011, with Lucas and Traylor replaced by Eric Klerks and Craig Bunch respectively, to play at ATP once again (which was due to take place in November, curated by Jeff Mangum).[16] The festival was postponed until the following March but they honoured the other UK and Ireland dates which had been booked to coincide with it, the new line-up being dubbed "The Best Batch Yet" by Beefheart song-title-referencing commentators. They returned to play the rescheduled ATP and more UK gigs in March 2012, followed by a European tour in September and October. They toured Europe again in 2013 and 2014.

The reformed band's repertoire was initially drawn mainly from the Clear Spot and Trout Mask Replica albums, with some of the latter's songs performed as instrumentals, allowing the intricacy of the instrumental parts to be heard, where they had previously been obscured by Beefheart's vocals or sax. During subsequent tours the setlist has been expanded to include a more representative selection of Beefheart's repertoire. French has described the set as "a play which should be rolled out from time to time".

Discography edit

With Captain Beefheart:

The Magic Band solo:

Members edit

Original run edit

Classic era edit

  • Alex St. Clair – guitar, drums, musical director (1964–68; 1972–74; died 2006)
  • Jerry Handley – bass (1964–68)
  • John French (Drumbo) – drums, vocals, guitar, musical director (1966–69; 1970–71; 1975–76; 1977; 1980)
  • Jeff Cotton (Antennae Jimmy Semens) – guitar, slide guitar, vocals (1967–69)
  • Bill Harkleroad (Zoot Horn Rollo) – guitar, slide guitar, musical director (1968–74)
  • Mark Boston (Rockette Morton) – bass, guitar (1968–74)
  • Victor Hayden (The Mascara Snake) – bass clarinet (1968–69; died 2018)
  • Art Tripp (Ed Marimba) – drums, marimba, percussion, piano, harpsichord (1969–74; session guest:1969, 1978)
  • Elliot Ingber (Winged Eel Fingerling) – guitar (1970–71; 1971–72; 1974–76)
  • Roy Estrada (Oréjon) – bass (1972–73; session guest:1969)

Others edit

  • Doug Moon – guitar (1964–67; session guest:1969)
  • Paul G. Blakely – drums (1964–65; 1966; died 1995)
  • Vic Mortenson – drums (1965)
  • Richard Hepner – guitar (1965–66)
  • Ry Cooder – guitar, slide guitar (1967)
  • Gerry McGee – guitar, slide guitar (1967; died 2019)
  • Gary "Magic" Marker – bass (1968; died 2015)
  • Jeff Burchell – drums (1969)
  • Bruce Fowler (Fossil) – trombone, air bass (1975–76; 1978–80)
  • Greg Davidson (Ella Guru) – guitar, slide guitar (1975)
  • Jimmy Carl Black (Indian Ink) – drums, percussion (1975; session guest:1969; died 2008)
  • Denny Walley (Feelers Rebo) – guitar, slide guitar, accordion (1975–78)
  • Jeff Moris Tepper (White Jew) – guitar, slide guitar (1976–82)
  • John Thomas – keyboards (1976)
  • Eric Drew Feldman (Black Jew Kittaboo) – bass, keyboards (1976–81; session guest:1982)
  • Gary Jaye – drums (1976–77; died 2011)
  • Robert Williams (Wait For Me) – drums, percussion (1977–81)
  • Richard Redus (Mercury Josef) – guitar, slide guitar (1978–79)
  • Richard Snyder (Brave Midnight Hat Size) – guitar, slide guitar, bass, marimba, viola (1980–82)
  • Gary Lucas – guitar, slide guitar (1980–82)
  • Cliff Martinez – drums, percussion, glass washboard (1981–82)

Reunion era edit

Current edit

  • John French – drums, vocals, saxophone, guitar, harmonica (1966–69; 1970–71; 1975–76; 1977; 1980; 2003–2017)
  • Mark Boston – bass, guitar (1968–74; 2003–2017)
  • Eric Klerks – guitar, bass, iPad (2009–2017)
  • Andrew Niven – drums (2013–2017)
  • Max Kutner – guitar (2014–2017)
  • Jonathan Sindleman – keyboards (2016–2017)[1]

Past edit

  • Denny Walley – guitar, slide guitar, accordion (1975–78; 2003–14)
  • Robert Williams – drums, percussion (1977–81; 2003)
  • Gary Lucas –guitar, slide guitar (1980–82; 2003–09)
  • Michael Traylor – drums (2003–09)
  • Craig Bunch – drums (2009–13)
  • Brian Havey – keyboards (2016)

Timeline edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "The Magic Band Farewell Tour 2017 – Captain Beefheart Radar Station".
  2. ^ Colin Larkin, ed. (1992). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music (First ed.). Guinness Publishing. p. 1595. ISBN 0-85112-939-0.
  3. ^ Ankeny, Jason. "Captain Beefheart – Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 21 November 2022.
  4. ^ Courtier, Kevin. Captain Beefheart's Trout Mask Replica (3313), p. 32, London: Continuum Press (2007)
  5. ^ . The Captain Beefheart Radar Station. Archived from the original on April 7, 2007. Retrieved March 17, 2007.
  6. ^ French, John "Drumbo" (2010-01-11). Beefheart: Through The Eyes of Magic. Proper Music Publishing. ISBN 9780956121240.
  7. ^ "Beefheart vs The Remains". Discogs.com. Retrieved July 18, 2011.
  8. ^ Johnston, Graham. . Beefheart.com. Archived from the original on October 20, 2008. Retrieved February 11, 2010.
  9. ^ "Grow Fins CD box set booklet p.38 [also in vinyl set booklet]". Discogs.com. April 3, 2009. Retrieved July 18, 2011.
  10. ^ teejo. "Don't argue the Captain". Freewebs.com. Retrieved July 18, 2011.
  11. ^ a b "John "Drumbo" French: Through The Eyes Of Magic review and interview" diskant.net. Retrieved April 7, 2010.
  12. ^ Barnes 2000, p. 59
  13. ^ Barnes 2001, pp. 815–816
  14. ^ "Radio 1 – Keeping It Peel – Sessions – 2004". BBC. Retrieved February 11, 2010.
  15. ^ . Beefheart.com. Archived from the original on August 17, 2009. Retrieved February 11, 2010.
  16. ^ "ATP curated by Jeff Mangum". Atpfestival.com. Retrieved July 18, 2011.

External links edit

magic, band, backing, band, american, singer, songwriter, multi, instrumentalist, captain, beefheart, between, 1967, 1982, originally, beefheart, simply, been, lead, singer, group, formed, guitarist, alex, clair, eventually, they, morphed, into, backing, band,. The Magic Band was the backing band of American singer songwriter and multi instrumentalist Captain Beefheart between 1967 and 1982 Originally Beefheart had simply been the lead singer of the group formed by guitarist Alex St Clair but eventually they morphed into a backing band for him The rotating lineup featured dozens of performers many of whom became known by nicknames given to them by Beefheart Long time members during the band s heyday included drummer arranger John French aka Drumbo guitarist Bill Harkleroad aka Zoot Horn Rollo bassist guitarist Mark Boston aka Rockette Morton percussionist keyboardist Art Tripp aka Ed Marimba and guitarist Elliot Ingber aka Winged Eel Fingerling Ex members of the Magic Band formed the short lived group Mallard in 1974 2 The Magic Band reformed in 2003 without Beefheart The Magic BandThe Magic Band at a reunion show in Manchester England in 2014Background informationOriginCalifornia USAGenresBlues rock avant rockYears active1964 19822003 2017 1 LabelsA amp M ABC ATP Recordings Buddah Blue Thumb Mercury Pye Reprise Straight VirginPast membersSee members Contents 1 Origins 2 Relationship with Beefheart 3 Reunion 4 Discography 5 Members 5 1 Original run 5 1 1 Classic era 5 1 2 Others 5 2 Reunion era 5 2 1 Current 5 2 2 Past 5 3 Timeline 6 References 7 External linksOrigins editThe members of the original Magic Band had come together in 1964 At this time Don Van Vliet later dubbed Captain Beefheart was simply the lead singer of the group which had been brought together by guitarist and former classmate Alex St Clair As in many emerging groups in California at the time there were elements of psychedelia and the foundations of contemporary hippie counterculture In this early incarnation they were a blues rock outfit 3 The group was therefore promoted as Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band on the premise that Captain Beefheart had magic powers and upon drinking a Pepsi could summon up His Magic Band to appear and perform behind him 4 The strands of this logic emanated from Vliet s Beefheart persona having been written in as a character in a teenage operetta that friend Frank Zappa had formulated 5 along with Van Vliet s renowned Pepsi moods with his mother Willie Sue and his generally spoilt teenage demeanor The name His Magic Band changed to the Magic Band in 1972 The group played numerous car club dances and juke joint gigs and won the Teenage Fair Battle of the Bands 6 The Teenage Fair was an annual event held at the Hollywood Palladium in the 1960s It was sponsored by radio stations and had rides and various merchandise booths with music and youth related items Bands performed In late 1965 the group finally bagged a contract for recording two singles with the newly created A amp M Records label with Leonard Grant as their manager It was at this time that musical relationships had also been struck with members of Rising Sons who would later feature in the band s recordings The A amp M deal also brought some contention between members of the band torn between a career as an experimental pop group and that of a purist blues band Working with young producer David Gates also opened up horizons for Vliet s skills as a poet cum lyricist with his Who Do You Think You re Fooling on the flipside of the band s first single a cover of the Ellas McDaniel Willie Dixon penned hit Diddy Wah Diddy Fate and circumstance not for the first time would befall the band s success upon its release which coincided with a singles cover of the same song by the Remains 7 The initial line up of the Magic Band that entered the studio for the A amp M recordings was not that which emerged by the second release Moonchild also backed by a Vliet penned number Frying Pan A 12 vinyl 45rpm mono EP mono mini cassette tape was later released in 1987 with the four tracks of the two singles plus Here I Am I Always Am as a fifth previously unreleased song This release was titled The Legendary A amp M Sessions with a red marbled cover and later members Moon Blakely Vliet Snouffer and Handley seated in a temperance dance band photo pose The original Magic Band was primarily a rhythm and blues band led by local Lancaster guitarist Alexis Snouffer along with Doug Moon guitar Jerry Handley bass and Vic Mortenson drums the last being rotated with and finally replaced by Paul P G Blakely For the first A amp M recording Mortenson had been called up for active service and Snouffer stood in on drums with a recently recruited Richard Hepner taking up the guitar role By the time the single was aired on a pop television show P G Blakely was back in the drum seat He then left for a career in television and was replaced by John French by the time the band cut their first album as the first release on the new Buddah Records label Personnel in the Magic Band for Beefheart s first album Safe as Milk were Alex St Clair Jerry Handley and John French Earlier meetings with the Rising Sons had also secured them the guitar and arranging skills of Ry Cooder which also brought about input from Taj Mahal on percussion and guitar work from Cooder s brother in law Russ Titelman Further guests to this line up included Milt Holland on percussion and the all important and controversial theremin work on Electricity by Samuel Hoffman It was perhaps this track above the others which caused A amp M to view the band as unsuitable for their label with what was seen as weird and too psychedelic for popular consumption Thus this album was recorded for Buddah with the band signed to Kama Sutra which left them close to penniless after extricating themselves from A amp M A large proportion of the tracks on this album were co written with Van Vliet by Herb Bermann whom Vliet initially met up with at a bar gig near Lancaster Part time Hollywood television actor and budding scriptwriter Bermann and his then wife Cathleen spent some time in Vliet s company prior to this release 8 Bermann would later write for Neil Young and script an early Spielberg directed television medical drama Gary Magic Marker the Magic added by Beefheart was involved in early session work for this release and his involvement with Rising Sons was also instrumental in acquiring the skills of Cooder upon an unfulfilled suggestion that Marker might produce the album 9 Marker would later lay down two uncredited bass tracks for Trout Mask Replica before being replaced by Mark Boston French worked on five more Beefheart albums while Snouffer worked with Beefheart on and off on three more albums Bill Harkleroad joined the Magic Band as guitarist for Trout Mask Replica and stayed with Beefheart through May 1974 Relationship with Beefheart editWhile appearing humorous and kind hearted in public by all accounts Van Vliet was a severe taskmaster who abused his musicians verbally and sometimes physically Vliet once told drummer John French he had been diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic and thus he would see inexistent conspiracies that explained this behaviour 10 The band were reportedly paid little or nothing French recalled that the musicians contract with Van Vliet s company stipulated that Van Vliet and the managers were paid from gross proceeds before expenses then expenses were paid then the band members evenly split any remaining funds in effect making band members liable for all expenses As a result French was paid nothing at all for a 33 city US tour in 1971 and a total of 78 for a tour of Europe and the US in late 1975 In his 2010 memoir Beefheart Through The Eyes of Magic French recounted being screamed at beaten up drugged ridiculed humiliated arrested starved stolen from and thrown down a half flight of stairs by his employer 11 The musicians also resented Van Vliet for taking complete credit for composition and arranging when the musicians themselves pieced together most of the songs from taped fragments or impressionistic directions such as Play it like a bat being dragged out of oil and it s trying to survive but it s dying from asphyxiation 12 John French summarized the disagreement over composing and arranging credits metaphorically 13 If Van Vliet built a house like he wrote music the methodology would go something like this The house is sketched on the back of a Denny s placemat in such an odd fashion that when he presents it to the contractor without plans or research the contractor says This structure is going to be hard to build it s going to be tough to make it safe and stable because it is so unique in design Van Vliet then yells at the contractor and intimidates him into doing the job anyway The contractor builds the home figuring out all the intricacies involved in structural integrity himself because whenever he approaches Van Vliet he finds that he seems completely unable to comprehend technical problems and just yells Quit asking me about this stuff and build the damned house When the house is finished no one gets paid and Van Vliet has a housewarming party invites none of the builders and tells the guests he built the whole thing himself Most of the group quit after the recording of Unconditionally Guaranteed in 1974 owing to years of allegedly abusive treatment by Beefheart lack of compensation and dissatisfaction with his new crossover direction Beefheart s subsequent recordings in the late 1970s would enlist a new cast of younger musicians under the Magic Band heading Reunion editReceiving only a grumpy reception from Van Vliet 11 the Magic Band reformed in 2003 with John French on drums lead vocals and harmonica Gary Lucas and Denny Walley on guitars Rockette Morton on bass and Robert Williams on drums for the vocal numbers The initial impetus came from Matt Groening who wanted them to play at the All Tomorrows Parties festival he was curating For their subsequent European tour Williams left and was replaced by Michael Traylor John Peel was initially skeptical about the re formed Magic Band However after he aired a live recording of the band playing at the 2003 All Tomorrow s Parties festival on his radio show he was lost for words and had to put on another record to regain his composure In 2004 the band did a live session for him at his home Peel Acres 14 They played over 30 shows throughout the United Kingdom and Europe and one in the United States 15 They also released two albums Back to the Front on the London based ATP Recordings 2003 and 21st Century Mirror Men 2005 The group disbanded in 2006 but reformed in 2011 with Lucas and Traylor replaced by Eric Klerks and Craig Bunch respectively to play at ATP once again which was due to take place in November curated by Jeff Mangum 16 The festival was postponed until the following March but they honoured the other UK and Ireland dates which had been booked to coincide with it the new line up being dubbed The Best Batch Yet by Beefheart song title referencing commentators They returned to play the rescheduled ATP and more UK gigs in March 2012 followed by a European tour in September and October They toured Europe again in 2013 and 2014 The reformed band s repertoire was initially drawn mainly from the Clear Spot and Trout Mask Replica albums with some of the latter s songs performed as instrumentals allowing the intricacy of the instrumental parts to be heard where they had previously been obscured by Beefheart s vocals or sax During subsequent tours the setlist has been expanded to include a more representative selection of Beefheart s repertoire French has described the set as a play which should be rolled out from time to time Discography editMain article Captain Beefheart discography With Captain Beefheart Safe as Milk 1967 Mirror Man 1967 released 1971 Strictly Personal 1968 Trout Mask Replica 1969 Lick My Decals Off Baby 1970 The Spotlight Kid 1972 credited to Beefheart solely Clear Spot 1972 Unconditionally Guaranteed 1974 Bluejeans amp Moonbeams 1974 Bat Chain Puller 1976 released 2012 Shiny Beast Bat Chain Puller 1978 Doc at the Radar Station 1980 Ice Cream for Crow 1982 The Magic Band solo Back to the Front 2003 21st Century Mirror Men 2005 Members editOriginal run edit Classic era edit Alex St Clair guitar drums musical director 1964 68 1972 74 died 2006 Jerry Handley bass 1964 68 John French Drumbo drums vocals guitar musical director 1966 69 1970 71 1975 76 1977 1980 Jeff Cotton Antennae Jimmy Semens guitar slide guitar vocals 1967 69 Bill Harkleroad Zoot Horn Rollo guitar slide guitar musical director 1968 74 Mark Boston Rockette Morton bass guitar 1968 74 Victor Hayden The Mascara Snake bass clarinet 1968 69 died 2018 Art Tripp Ed Marimba drums marimba percussion piano harpsichord 1969 74 session guest 1969 1978 Elliot Ingber Winged Eel Fingerling guitar 1970 71 1971 72 1974 76 Roy Estrada Orejon bass 1972 73 session guest 1969 Others edit Doug Moon guitar 1964 67 session guest 1969 Paul G Blakely drums 1964 65 1966 died 1995 Vic Mortenson drums 1965 Richard Hepner guitar 1965 66 Ry Cooder guitar slide guitar 1967 Gerry McGee guitar slide guitar 1967 died 2019 Gary Magic Marker bass 1968 died 2015 Jeff Burchell drums 1969 Bruce Fowler Fossil trombone air bass 1975 76 1978 80 Greg Davidson Ella Guru guitar slide guitar 1975 Jimmy Carl Black Indian Ink drums percussion 1975 session guest 1969 died 2008 Denny Walley Feelers Rebo guitar slide guitar accordion 1975 78 Jeff Moris Tepper White Jew guitar slide guitar 1976 82 John Thomas keyboards 1976 Eric Drew Feldman Black Jew Kittaboo bass keyboards 1976 81 session guest 1982 Gary Jaye drums 1976 77 died 2011 Robert Williams Wait For Me drums percussion 1977 81 Richard Redus Mercury Josef guitar slide guitar 1978 79 Richard Snyder Brave Midnight Hat Size guitar slide guitar bass marimba viola 1980 82 Gary Lucas guitar slide guitar 1980 82 Cliff Martinez drums percussion glass washboard 1981 82 Reunion era edit Current edit John French drums vocals saxophone guitar harmonica 1966 69 1970 71 1975 76 1977 1980 2003 2017 Mark Boston bass guitar 1968 74 2003 2017 Eric Klerks guitar bass iPad 2009 2017 Andrew Niven drums 2013 2017 Max Kutner guitar 2014 2017 Jonathan Sindleman keyboards 2016 2017 1 Past edit Denny Walley guitar slide guitar accordion 1975 78 2003 14 Robert Williams drums percussion 1977 81 2003 Gary Lucas guitar slide guitar 1980 82 2003 09 Michael Traylor drums 2003 09 Craig Bunch drums 2009 13 Brian Havey keyboards 2016 Timeline editReferences edit a b The Magic Band Farewell Tour 2017 Captain Beefheart Radar Station Colin Larkin ed 1992 The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music First ed Guinness Publishing p 1595 ISBN 0 85112 939 0 Ankeny Jason Captain Beefheart Biography AllMusic Retrieved 21 November 2022 Courtier Kevin Captain Beefheart s Trout Mask Replica 331 3 p 32 London Continuum Press 2007 Captain Beefheart vs the Grunt People The Captain Beefheart Radar Station Archived from the original on April 7 2007 Retrieved March 17 2007 French John Drumbo 2010 01 11 Beefheart Through The Eyes of Magic Proper Music Publishing ISBN 9780956121240 Beefheart vs The Remains Discogs com Retrieved July 18 2011 Johnston Graham The Captain Beefheart Radar Station Herb Bermann interview pt 1 Beefheart com Archived from the original on October 20 2008 Retrieved February 11 2010 Grow Fins CD box set booklet p 38 also in vinyl set booklet Discogs com April 3 2009 Retrieved July 18 2011 teejo Don t argue the Captain Freewebs com Retrieved July 18 2011 a b John Drumbo French Through The Eyes Of Magic review and interview diskant net Retrieved April 7 2010 Barnes 2000 p 59harvnb error no target CITEREFBarnes2000 help Barnes 2001 pp 815 816harvnb error no target CITEREFBarnes2001 help Radio 1 Keeping It Peel Sessions 2004 BBC Retrieved February 11 2010 Captain Beefheart Up Sifter Magic memories Beefheart com Archived from the original on August 17 2009 Retrieved February 11 2010 ATP curated by Jeff Mangum Atpfestival com Retrieved July 18 2011 External links editThe Magic Band at AllMusic nbsp The Magic Band discography at Discogs nbsp The Magic Band discography at MusicBrainz nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Magic Band amp oldid 1222410144, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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