Marking
 half a century on the shelves this month, it’s Captain Beefheart & 
The Magic Band with their seventh studio LP, Clear Spot, released in 
October, 1972.  While Beefheart had established himself as the owner of 
the outfields when it came to extreme music, with classics like Trout 
Mask Replica, bills had to be paid and pushing boundaries wasn’t 
bringing home the bacon.  
This desire to align more to the 
mainstream had been a driving force with the Spotlight Kid LP from 
earlier in the year and it continued to push priorities for Clear Spot. 
 However, while Spotlight Kid felt strained and left many in the band 
and their fans feeling less than satisfied, the recruitment of Doobie 
Bros producer, Ted Templeman, seemed to bring the balance between 
avant-garde and accessibility into an alignment which felt far more 
rewarding and far less like a compromise.  The clarity of his production
 allowed the eccentricities of Beefheart’s music to mellow out enough to
 create an accessibility which had been elusive on previous albums.  
Some
 of the ranks of the band were being shuffled around at this time with 
longtime drummer, John “Drumbo” French, departing and being replaced by 
Art Tripp.  Zappa bassist, Roy Estrada, also joined along with regulars,
 Bill Harkleroad (Zoot Horn Rollo) and Mark Boston (Rockette Morton) on 
guitars.  Much of the music had been developing since the Spotlight Kid 
sessions, but once it got into fully produced form, was certainly not 
anything that could be considered “leftovers”.  Ultimately, the album 
proved to be the pinnacle of Beefheart's attempts at more mainstream, 
commercial variations on their angular, challenging aesthetic.  
Unfortunately,
 the attempts to break into bigger sales figures still never 
materialized with the album barely charting in the US and flying 
completely below the radar in the UK.  Though the effort may not have 
resulted in the popularity they’d wanted, the album still holds up as 
one of their most professionally realized productions, held aloft by 
solid songwriting and inventive musicianship.  The edges were still 
there, but wielded with more restraint and intent.  For those looking 
for a gateway album into the world of the Captain, Clear Spot might just
 be the ticket.   

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