Frank Zappa - Hot Rats
Rykodisc  (1970)
Classic Rock

In Collection
#5001

0*
Tape    6 tracks  (47:12) 
   01   Peaches En Regalia             03:39
   02   Willie The Pimp             09:16
   03   Son Of Mr. Green Genes             09:00
   04   Little Umbrellas             03:04
   05   The Gumbo Variations             16:56
   06   It Must Be A Camel             05:17
Personal Details
Purchase Date 14.12.1994
Details
Notes
Rycodisc Year: 1970 Catalog Number: RCD 10066 Produced by: FZ Engineered by: Dick Kunc, Jack Hunt, Cliff Goldstein, Brian Ingoldsby Other Artists: Capt. Beefheart, Sugar Cane Harris, Jean Luc Ponty, John Guerin, Paul Humphrey, Ron Selico, Max Bennett, Shuggy Otis by William Ruhlmann Frank Zappa was one of the most accomplished composers of the rock era; his music combines an understanding of and appreciation for such contemporary classical figures as Stravinsky, Stockhausen, and Varese with an affection for late-'50s doo wop rock & roll and a facility for the guitar-heavy rock that dominated pop in the '70s. But Zappa was also a satirist whose reserves of scorn seemed bottomless and whose wicked sense of humor and absurdity have delighted his numerous fans, even when his lyrics crossed over the broadest bounds of taste. Finally, Zappa was perhaps the most prolific record-maker of his time, turning out massive amounts of music on his own Barking Pumpkin label and through distribution deals with Rykodisc and Rhino after long, unhappy associations with industry giants like Warner Brothers and the now-defunct MGM. Zappa became interested in music early and pursued his studies in school, up through a six-month stint at Chaffey College in Alta Loma, CA. He scored a couple of low-budget films and used the money to buy a low-budget recording studio. In 1964, he joined a local band called The Soul Giants, which, over the course of the next two years, evolved into The Mothers, who played songs written by Zappa. The band was signed to the Verve division of MGM by producer Tom Wilson in 1966 and recorded its first album, a two-LP set called Freak Out!, which introduced Zappa's interests in both serious music and pop as well as his scathing wit. (Verve insisted on adding "of Invention" to the band's name.) Subsequent albums extended the musical and lyrical themes of the debut, and they came frequently. Three albums, for example, hit the charts in 1968: We're Only in It for the Money, a Mothers album that made fun of hippies and Sgt. Pepper; Lumpy Gravy, a Zappa solo album recorded with an orchestra; and Cruising with Ruben & the Jets, on which The Mothers played neo-doo wop. Toward the end of the '60s, Zappa expanded The Mothers lineup, turning more toward instrumental jazz-rock, much of which displayed his technically accomplished guitar playing. But by the end of the decade, he had broken up the band. In 1970, however, Zappa reassembled a new edition of The Mothers, featuring former Turtles lead singers Mark Volman and Howard Kaylan as frontmen. The lineup moved the group more in the direction of X-rated comedy, notably on the album Fillmore East June 1971, but it was short-lived: during a performance at the Rainbow Theatre in London, Zappa was pushed from the stage by a demented fan and seriously injured. While he recovered, Zappa released several albums, then he re-formed The Mothers with himself as lead singer and made pop/rock albums, such as Over-n