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poodlesrule
December 24th, 2010, 04:32 PM
Time to brew some coffee!

Sadly, I unfortunately do not know enough about his music, and I welcome pointers on where to start...

Zip
December 24th, 2010, 05:07 PM
Start with Black Napkins : _c-NMnYhM3Q

Remember, this was over 33 years ago, too....

Katastrophe
December 24th, 2010, 05:14 PM
Happy birthday, Frank, wherever you are!

R_of_G
December 24th, 2010, 05:51 PM
I could offer you the advice the Hatter gave Alice about telling her story... "Start at the beginning, and when you come to the end, stop."

Instead, I suggest perhaps you begin with one of Frank's more "accessible" records like Hot Rats, Apostrophe', or Over-Nite Sensation.

Then go listen to all the rest. :)

Tig
December 24th, 2010, 09:56 PM
"Is that a mexican poncho. Or is that a Sears poncho?"

"I don't give a f*** if they remember me at all."

"Jazz is not dead, it just smells funny."

http://irom.files.wordpress.com/2009/09/frank-zappa.jpg

Fine Girl

Well, yeah, well
Oh yeah
She was a fine girl
She could get down wit de get down
All de way down
She do yer laundry
She change a tire
Chop a little wood for de fire
Poke it around...if it died down

Oh yeah
She was a fine girl
She go up in the mornin'
She go down in the evenin'...all de way down
She do the dishes
If you wishes
Silverware too
Make it look brand new...when she get through
Oh yeah
She was a fine girl
Outa this world

Well, yeah, well, yeah, well, yeah, well
Oh yeah
She was a fine girl
She could get down wit de get down
All de way down
She do your laundry
She change a tire
Chop a little wood for de fire
Poke it around...if it died down

Oh yeah
She was a fine girl
With a lovely smile
With a bucket on her head
Fulla water from de well
She could run a mile
Oh yeah
She wouldn't spill a drop
It'd stay on top
Her head was kinda flat
But her hair covered that
She was a fine girl
Didn't need no school
She was built like a mule
With a thong sandal
Well, wasn't no kinda job she could not handle
She could get down...wit de get down
All de way down
We need some more like dat in dis kinda town

syo
December 25th, 2010, 08:25 AM
I could offer you the advice the Hatter gave Alice about telling her story... "Start at the beginning, and when you come to the end, stop."

Instead, I suggest perhaps you begin with one of Frank's more "accessible" records like Hot Rats, Apostrophe', or Over-Nite Sensation.

Then go listen to all the rest. :)

In the "accessible" category I would include "One Size Fits All". That was my introduction 30 years ago and I went from there. Still one of my favorites.

syo
December 25th, 2010, 08:55 AM
Start with Black Napkins :
Remember, this was over 33 years ago, too....
By the way Zip, that clip is a great one. I saw the same line up. Frank was of course brilliant and I was especially floored by Terry Bozzio. He was amazing.

M782Ax4b4_0

That's another thing about Zappa, he picked so many great players to take along for the ride. And they had to be more than just good to play with him.

R_of_G
December 25th, 2010, 09:20 AM
That's another thing about Zappa, he picked so many great players to take along for the ride. And they had to be more than just good to play with him.

Exactly. To be in Zappa's bands you had to be more than just a great player. You had to be able to play any song at a moment's notice and in any style because FZ would often change the way a song was played on a whim.

A lot of people call many bands "all star bands" or "supergroups." Any incarnation of a Zappa band was a true all star band.

tunghaichuan
December 25th, 2010, 09:25 AM
I'd add:

Sheik Yerbouti
Strictly Commercial
Guitar
Shut Up and Play Yer Guitar

Zip
December 25th, 2010, 10:34 AM
R of G, you're exactly right. FZ 'made' so many, from Lowell George to Alice Cooper. Here's a telling interview with Vai -
r6cplMM3d_Q

R_of_G
December 25th, 2010, 11:37 AM
It was exactly that interview with Vai and some stuff from Frank's The Real Frank Zappa Book I had in mind when I wrote that. That Zappa book, by the way, is highly recommended reading for anyone even remotely interested in Frank who hasn't read it. If you really want to understand what Frank was all about, there's no better way to find out than in the words of the man himself.