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Rock And Other Four Letter Words
Marks, J & Eastman, Linda |
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Bantam Books, New York
1968
ISBN: –
256 pp, paperback, 18 x 11 cm
English |
Frank Zappa (pp. 132-135): "If you want to
come up with a singular, most important trend in this new music, I
think it has to be something like: it is original, composed by the
people who perform it, created by them – even if they have to fight
the record companies to do it – so that it is really a creative
action and not a commercial pile of shit thrown together by
business people who think they know what John Doe and Mr. Jones
really want. We did 'Freak Out' a long time ago if you measure time
the way the clock of music is running today. Our new things are not
released yet; it takes a long time. Some people are just starting to
find one of our records which is far behind what we're currently
doing."
"I think that as far as music in America today
is concerned, rock is probably the most vital, most alive sort of
music, but it doesn't know what the hell it's doing most of the time
... I'm not on intimate terms with most other groups, but the ones I
do talk to don't seem to really know what music is. They don't have
an aesthetic understanding about what or why they compose. They
simply don't get into it on that level. They're concerned with this
attitude of 'Doing their thing' – whatever the fuck that is supposed
to mean! Probably what they finally do is much better than what they
are, if you know what I mean. Because they don't have the equipment
or the background to really develop themselves on an aesthetic
level. For me it's different. I care a great deal about music; all
kinds of music. And I have helped, I really think that I've helped
to turn some kids on to some of the important music they may be
missing. You see, when I was a kid I used to save up for a month, so
I could get an R & B album and, the same day, the completed works of
Anton Webern. Maybe that means something. Maybe that tells you
something about my music. So if they think it's all weirdness, well,
okay, as long as they listen to it. At least they know I'm alive."
"You also have to take some notice of the way
rock has changed the public's ear. You know, it was pretty rough to
expect most people to listen to a recorder or a Bach trumpet and
that sort of instrument. For some reason it takes exposure for us
to get into the sound of various instruments, let alone
electronic music. We have made a lot of progress. Let's face it,
kids are listening to the classical string quartet without
suffering. That's pretty heavy stuff. It's like in the olden days
they used to think atonally; that any chord and any key was okay ...
at one time that was very advanced theory. Then they said that it
was no longer necessary to even think about key at all. We'll just
treat all 12 tones equally. But they didn't really do much to the
space between the notes: they kept a pretty austere view of rhythm.
Some of the things I write have all kinds of chords within keys that
nobody expected to find there, and there are other things, some of
the things we use don't even make use of what you would call noise.
For me the art of composition is the art of assembling anything. The
packaging is to a certain extent an extension of the work itself. If
a person who gets one of our products in their home has enough
perspective to sit back and view the whole package – well, I think
he would find some pretty revolutionary ideas."
"There always was a lyrical Frank Zappa except
for one thing. It's quite possible to take any tune and play it and
make it sound horrid. Arranging is a science and the clothes in
which you dress up any tune makes a lot of difference in the way
people hear it. For instance, you can take something that's really a
bullshit tune and play it on a pretty instrument or have the strings
play it and it becomes nice – or you can play something that's
really an interesting melody and really has something happening
chord-wise and play it on a fuzz-tone guitar and you're going to get
a completely different effect from it. So, a lot of the things I've
written have never been played prettily and mostly that was done on
purpose. Also, you have to understand that most people like to
perceive satire in what I do. I mean that they really aren't into
the music; they are too hooked on the pure theatre side of the
music. They're listening to a comedy routine and they want to listen
to it that way because unfortunately, a lot of people aren't really
equipped to evaluate any other kind of artistic structure. You know
as well as I do that for an audience there's nothing easier than
comedy."
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