Frank Zappa was a composer, guitarist, songwriter, movie director, social critic, and above all a consummate artist. He is most widely known for his work as a rock n’ roll musician and band leader, but his musical output consists of ballets, operas, Broadway musicals, suites, chamber music, and large orchestral compositions as well.
He easily and masterfully weaved rock, classical, jazz, avantgarde, doo-wop, and others, often in the span of one song. Born in Maryland on December 21st, 1940, but mostly raised in Southern California, he died in Los Angeles at the age of 52 from prostate cancer on December 4th, 1993.
Probably the most important on Zappa’s musical development was Edgard Varese, the French-born composer. At the age of thirteen Zappa was confronted with an album cover in Look magazine that bore the mad-scientist face of Varese. The music was described as: “a banging and clanging with sirens and stuff.” Zappa was entranced, and immediately bought the album.
One of the pieces on the album, entitled “Ionization”, was written entirely for percussion instruments and well as sirens. Instead of concentrating on melody and harmony Varese instead wrote with only timbre and rhythmic possibilities in mind. This percussive style had an enormous impact on Zappa, and throughout his career, especially in orchestral compositions, the influence of Varese is prevalent.
At the same time he listened extensively to rhythm and blues, as well as 1950’s doo-wop, which Zappa adored for its direct naivety. These, among countless other influences, helped Zappa create a style wholly unique and singular world of sound.
Zappa generally despised traditional academic curriculum, but he did attend junior college for one semester. At that time he took a music theory class which he later described as “really basic beginner mongoloid stuff.”
His education really came from his being an autodidact, and he absorbed practically everything that came his way, and then remade it his own.
After playing in high school bands and various Top 40 bar bands at a young age, the Mothers of Invention became the first band in which he acted as leader. The music was in the “rock band” context, but the classical influence was abundant.
Lyrics, all written by Zappa, were always irreverent, ironic, incredibly satirical, and always expressed Zappa’s disgust with pop-culture trends. Generally, he felt the high commoditization of “culture” dumb-downed the citizenry, and limited people’s authentic potential to be self-expressive individuals.
Their first album Freak Out was released in 1966. 1967 saw the release of Absolutely Free, which contains the song "Brown Shoes Don’t Make It", a mini rock-suite. In 1968 We’re Only In It For The Money was essentially an album’s length satirizing the “hippie” and “flower power” movement among his peers.
In the same year Lumpy Gravy was produced. Both 1968’s albums make heavy usage of musique concrete, which is the process of cutting and splicing together tape reels with razors and scotch-tape, in order to make sound collages.
In 1969 Zappa released Hot Rats, which was his first release as a solo musician. As a solo musician Zappa was able to hire musicians who were highly trained and could read music. This enabled him to write music of greater difficulty, and the live album Roxy and Elsewhere is a great presentation of the diverse and disciplined capabilities of both Zappa and the musicians he met throughout his career.
Until his death in 1993 he produced, arranged, and composed the music for nearly 60 albums in a recording career that spanned 27 years.
Frank Zappa, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
Singers on Songwriting, Paul Zollo, pp. 318-328.
Overlooked GuitaristsQuick information about a few commonly overlooked rock guitar players. Yes, everyone knows about Jimmy Page, Eric Clapton, and Jimi Hendrix and their skill with the axe. But here are a few other guitar gods whose place in the pantheon draws less support from the casual rock listener. PrinceWhile Prince is famous in his own right for his catchy pop tunes and dirty lyrics, it is often forgotten that Prince can play a mean (if silly looking) guitar. Although he doesn't necessarily showcase his talents often, preferring to blend his guitar in with a mix of other instruments, there are plenty of Prince solos. For proof, check out the songs “Let's Go Crazy” and “I Can Never Take the Place of Your Man.” Mike McCreadyWith front man Eddie Vedder taking center stage in the hard rock act Pearl Jam, guitarist Mike McCready is in the background writing riff after riff. Check out Pearl Jam's first album Ten for examples of McCready's killer riffs, particularly “Even Flow” and “Alive.” Also worth mentioning is Pearl Jam's rhythm guitarist Stone Gossard. Izzy StradlinIn the tumultuous career of the half defunct heavy metal band Guns N' Roses, lead singer Axl Rose spent a lot of time in the limelight both for his unique voice and also for his off stage explosive persona. Whatever attention wasn't spent on Mr. Rose often focused on Slash, the band's lead guitarist and an exciting headline waiting to happen in his own right. Still, Izzy Stradlin played a key role in all of Guns N' Roses' major albums, including penning such notable songs as “Patience,” “14 Years,” and “Bad Obsession,” and co-writing the majority of the bands other big hits, including most of their seminal and groundbreaking album Appetite for Destruction. Tom VerlaineTom Verlaine is best known as the lead guitarist of the band Television, a critically acclaimed although (at least in the United States) commercially unsuccessful band from the seventies that only released two albums. One of the more notable facts about Verlaine is that his guitar work very rarely features distortion, bucking the popular trend in guitar work from this time period. Robert RandolphAlthough Robert Randolph and the Family Band have achieved some critical success, the band has not achieved a high level of commercial success. Still, Robert Randolph has opened for Dave Matthews Band, the Black Crowes, and Eric Clapton. Randolph plays a steel pedal guitar, and his concerts are known for extended jam sessions (check out Live at the Wetlands for example). These five guitarists are some of the finest the industry can offer, and although they may be overshadowed by their other achievements, by band mates, or by other artists, a close listen to their fret work will reveal that they have what it takes to play with some of the more notorious guitar masters. |
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