Frank Zappa Talks Of Faves, Raves And Composers In Their Graves
Giovanni Dadomo collected Zappa's thoughts during a recent interview.
Let It Rock, June 1975
1. 'Supernaut': Black Sabbath. I think
it's from Paranoid. I like it because I think it's prototypical of a
certain musical style, and I think it's well done. Also, I happen to like the
guitar lick that's being played in the background.
2. After The Gold Rush: Neil
Young. The whole album; because it's very direct, it's very melodic, and it
sounds like a bunch of demos.
3. Between The Buttons: The
Rolling Stones. The American release – I don't like the English version so much
because it contains a totally different set of tunes. I understand that they
don't like the album very much but I thought that it was an important piece of
social comment at the time. I remember seeing Brian Jones very drunk in the
Speakeasy one night and telling him I liked it and thought it superior to
Sergeant Pepper ... whereupon he belched discreetly and turned around.
4. The American issue of Abbey Road
– which has nothing to do with the material on the album but because I think
it's probably the best mastered, best engineered rock'n'roll record I've heard
... except that I take exception to the choice of stereo placement.
5. The first Muddy Waters album –
because it's wonderful.
6. The Devils Of Loudon: Zysztof
Penderecki. Because it's also an extremely well-produced album and I think it's
an excellent piece of dramatic music. And also because Tatiana Troyanos who
plays the main nun sounds absolutely marvellous during the enema scene. The
story is about a hunch-backed nun who's possessed by the Devil and has to have
an exorcism. The exorcism involves the nun being given a hot herbal enema. In
live performance the exorcism takes place behind a screen and you hear Tatiana
singing and screeching whilst an orchestra plays enema music. You also hear the
Devil chuckling from inside the nun's bowel.
7. The Complete Works Of Edgar Varèse
Vol. 1. As it was the first album I'd ever heard of any of Varèse's music
and it opened my eyes up to a lot of possibilities.
8. 'Three Hours Past Midnight': Johnny
'Guitar' Watson. One of the best guitar solos on an old R&B record.
9. 'Story Of My Life': Guitar Slim.
Another of the best guitar solos on an old R&B record.
10. 'Who Will Be Next?': Howlin' Wolf.
Because it is very serious.
Not forgetting ...
Recently I've been listening to Mott The
Hoople's Mott The Hoople; I enjoy every cut except 'The Golden Age Of
Rock 'n'Roll'. 'Newly Wed' by the Orchids – one of my very favourite group vocal
R&B tunes. 'My White Bicycle' – Tomorrow. Because it was one of the bestmade
singles of its time, and it may have been a little ahead of its time too. I also
like the other side, 'Claramount Lake' – I like the guitar solo – oh, it's Steve
Howe, is it? Well if you see him tell him I like the guitar solo on 'Claramount
Lake'.
'Can I Come Over Tonight' – The Velours.
Any musicologist that can find that record and listen to the bass singer ...
he's singing quintuplets and septulets. And considering where it came from and
when it was made (it was on the East Coast Onyx label) it was amazing. 'Let's
Start All Over Again' – The Paragons. Also prototypical and it has the
unmitigated audacity to have the most moronic piano section I ever heard on any
record – and it repeats it often enough to convince me that it's deliberate.
Anything that Richard Berry did. Without
getting the credit for it he made so much of what happened in R&B possible and
so many people wouldn't have been there at all without him. He was one of the
most important secret sources behind the West Coast R&B in the fifties and now
he's walking around trying to get a contract.
I interviewed him when I did a piece for
Life magazine and he told me he sold the rights for 'Louie Louie' for
5,000 dollars. He was working with a Latin band at a place called the Harmony
Park Ballroom and the band had an instrumental that went ... (sings 'Louie
Louie' rhythm) and he scribbled the lyrics out on a paper napkin in the dressing
room. It's always been one of my favourite fantasies that songs like 'Woolly
Bully' get written on a lunch bag in blue crayon.
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