| by Ned Raggett With yet one final Magic Band lineup in place, featuring Richard Snyder 
        on bass and Cliff Martinez on drums alongside returning vets Tepper and 
        Lucas, Beefheart put the final touch on his recording career to date with 
        Crow. It's a last entertaining blast of wigginess from one of the few 
        truly independent artists in late 20th century pop music, with humor, 
        skill, and style all still intact (as even the song titles like "Semi-Multicoloured 
        Caucasian" and "Cardboard Cutout Sundown" show). With the 
        Magic Band turning out more choppy rhythms, unexpected guitar lines, and 
        outré arrangements, Beefheart lets everything run wild as always, 
        with successful results. Sometimes he sounds less like the blues shouter 
        of lore and more of a spoken word artist with an attitude, thus the stuttering 
        flow of "The Host the Ghost the Most Holy." "Hey Garland, 
        I Dig Your Tweed Coat" is even more entertainingly outrageous, Beefheart's 
        addictive if near impenetrable ramble about tobacco juice and straw hats 
        and more backed by an insanely great arrangement. Magic Band members each 
        get chances to shine one way or another -- "Evening Bell" in 
        particular demonstrates why Lucas went on to later solo renown, a complex, 
        suddenly shifting solo instrumental that sits somewhere between background 
        music and head-scratching "how did he do that?" intrigue.  |