“Captain Beefheart’s music career stretched from 1966 to 1982, and from straight rhythm and blues by way of the early Rolling Stones to music that sounded like a strange uncle of post-punk. He is probably best known for “Trout Mask Replica,” a double album from 1969 with his Magic Band.
A bolt-from-the-blue collection of precise, careening, surrealist songs with clashing meters, brightly imagistic poetry and raw blues shouting, “Trout Mask Replica” had particular resonance with the punk and new wave generation to come a decade later, influencing bands like Devo, the Residents, Pere Ubu and the Fall.
Mr. Van Vliet’s life story is caked with half-believable tales, some of which he himself spread in Dadaist, elliptical interviews. He claimed he had never read a book and had never been to school, and answered questions with riddles. “We see the moon, don’t we?” he asked in a 1969 interview. “So it’s our eye. Animals see us, don’t they? So we’re their animals.” (via NYTimes.com obit).
Related:
- Don Van Vliet, known as Captain Beefheart, dead at 69 (ctv.ca)
- Captain Beefheart, musician and artist also known as Don Van Vliet, dies at 69 (dailymail.co.uk)
- Don Van Vliet, aka Captain Beefheart, dead at 69 (seattletimes.nwsource.com)
- Don Van Vliet, aka Captain Beefheart, Dies at 69 (seattlepi.com)
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