placeholder wrote:I've heard more of Zappa's records than I care to admit, and I think they're all pretty awful. Granted, a lot of them are awful in very different ways. Maybe I haven't heard the "right ones" (Which ones are the "right ones"? The albums of all cock guitar solos? The cheesy fusion stuff? The ones with gradeschool-level sex humor? The cRaZy, WaCkY Broadway parody? "You Are What You Is"? The irritating novelty songs? The irritating doo-wop stuff? The records where he made fun of hippies which playing ridiculous, irritating hippie music? Do tell!) , but the stuff I have heard doesn't make me eager to seek anything else out. I "get" his music, and I think it's "crap".
Um, I think I went into a pretty decent description of why Waka/Jawaka is very palatable. In my opinion, these are all good Zappa records (I took the liberty of bolding the ones I think are best, and the coolest thing is that other Zappa fans will completely disagree. It's a concept known as diversity, which has been stamped out by the recording industry oligopoly):
Freak Out (1966)
Absolutely Free (1967)
We're Only In It For The Money (1968)
Uncle Meat (1969)
Hot Rats (1969)
Burnt Weenie Sandwich (1969)
Weasels Ripped My Flesh (1970)
Chunga's Revenge (1970)
Waka/Jawaka (1972)
The Grand Wazoo (1972)
Over-Nite Sensation (1973)
(') (1974)
Roxy & Elsewhere (1974)
One Size Fits All (1975)
Bongo Fury (w/Beefheart 1975)
Zoot Allures (1976)
Shiek Yerbouti (1979)
Joe's Garage (Act I only, up to [and not including] "Lucile" 1979)
Jazz From Hell (1986)
Make a Jazz Noise Here (1991)
The Yellow Shark (1993)
Civilization, Phaze III (1994)
It seems you have only heard his bad stuff. I don't even own the "shut up and play your guitar" series or the cheesy fusion stuff, or the wacky broadway parody stuff, or the doo-wop stuff... "We're only in it for the money" is mired in a 60's rock sound, but it's not hippy, and Zappa is not a hippy. Being critical of the American way should not be confused with being a hippy.
I own probably 20 Zappa CD's (sorry, didn't listen when it was available on vinyl!) and these are obviously none of the ones you have heard.
To me, this is like people who think "Genesis" is the first Genesis album, and haven't heard the good stuff, because it never made it's way to MTV.
Again, you have to put forth some effort and do some research.
Zappa suffers from the same condition Genesis and many other fine artists suffer from... The fact that their popular
shit occludes their non-popular genius. There really is an inverse relationship between musical intelligence and popularity. I'm not a fan of the whole "unwashed masses" thing, but most music today (even indie rock) suffers from a lack of intra and inter diveristy. In terms of "intra-diversity", bands are encouraged to have a "sound", so every song on an album sounds the same. This is so fucking boring. In terms of "inter-diversity", bands are encouraged to fit into nice neat genres so the industry can reap profits off of the new trend (uh, shitty 80's music like Interpoop, Modest Muff, Fucked Turdinand). When the rock record industry was younger, there was more competition among the many record labels. The competition caused labels to take risks. Zappa felt that no one could do what he did in the 60's-70's today, because labels don't take risks anymore.
Now there's a few major labels that own other major labels and "indie" labels... This is how industry evolves in a capitalist economy (anyone take any econ in college?). It progresses from pure competition to oligopoly, to monopoly.
The most obvious evidence is how a band like Henry Cow, signed to Virgin, is still more fresh and original than most bands signed to [fill in the blank] indie label that pawns off King Crimson clones that have just filtered out all the "cheese" (and also the warmth) from that sound. Anyone who thinks their favorite indie label is doing something decent, I'd have to say, even stuff on Virgin/Charisma from the 70's is more cutting edge. I do have to give a nod to Skin Graft and a few others for trying to put out music that goes beyond...
And you do have to be intelligent and dilligent to find out what is good and what is not. It takes work and effort beyond what you'll find in the pages of any indie-zine.
As much as Zappa favored people voting, I don't think you should be able to vote on this one if you think "Shut up and play your guitar volumes 1-3" are "Zappa". Yes, he made those records, and about 100 other records. He was prolific. Most of his records are crap. The ones that aren't are so fucking brilliant, that they make his crap irrelevant. Just avoid the bad ones...
I just don't own those bad Zappa CD's. It doesn't take a lot of work to figure this out. You go to Amazon, listen to the samples and read the reviews...
Some people have very limited tastes in music, and that's fine. Don't blame Zappa for your narrow interests.
I feel sorry for Zappa. The way he is represented today (by groups like Project Object) would make anyone hate Zappa. My friend played me a bootleg of Project Object live, and they managed to play every bad Zappa tune there is. While Zappa was alive, he was very critical of these bands with ex-Zappa band members... The fact is, the great Zappa compositions are
very difficult to play...
Without Zappa, where would Terry Bozzio, Steve Vai, and so many others be? Where would Bowie be... he pilfered many a musician from Zappa, after they had polished their skills on his intensly complicated compositions and demanding re-working of material.
These people were virtual nobodies, but Zappa didn't care what sort of buzz you had. If you auditioned and you played well, that's all that mattered.
Also, on tour, Zappa wouldn't be snorting coke and flittering about. He would stay in his hotel room re-writing horn charts and re-arranging the music so that each show would be different... The closest I've seen to this in the "indie" world is Cheer-Accident.
http://www.keneally.com/1988.html
I do find Zappa's anti-drug stance to be sanctimonious, considering he smoked 4 packs of cigs and drank 10 pots of coffee a day... And I must admit, his music is something I do enjoy (immensly) in altered states.
The thing I notice here is everyone who dislikes Zappa has obviously not heard a note of the 15 years of great music he did. They've only heard the last 15 years of crap.
Who the FUCK can listen to "Eric Dolphy Memorial Barbeque" on Weasels, and say Zappa is crap?!?