So happy these guys ( my new favorite REACTORS) are doing Zappa. A genius. After highschool class ( back in the day 😊) we'd head over to our friend.VITO'S basement... listening to Zappa on his 5 ft tall " Voice of the Theater" speakers. What an ERA 🎵🎵🎵.
Comparing Frank to Ted Nugent is like comparing Gandhi to Hitler, this is seriously funny, time to take a journey to the center of your mind@@markwilliams5606
I play bass and once got to play this song with Dweezil at his Dweezilla Music Camp. 8 of the best minutes of my life. This is basically Frank and Jack Bruce trying to out solo each other, with a drummer. There is also an acoustic rhythm guitar deep underneath. I have a live video of this from 2015 with Dweezil, Kurt Morgan on Bass, and Ryan Brown on Drums in Chicago that is amazing!
I don’t put many artists on a pedestal but this man is propped up. His flowers will always come forth. He made me think, he made me laugh my ass off, he gave me freedom and he made me rock the F out. You have soooooo much more to look forward to. Listen to the entire Apostrophe album. Or do Joe’s Garage from beginning to end. Ship arriving too late to save a drowning witch?!?! There;s a lot. Enjoy the ride my friends. ❤❤❤
Frank was not huge because he chose to not do a lot of commercial music, he didn't have as many fans as Zeppelin or Sabbath but if you liked Zappa you really liked Zappa. Try something from the early days, Trouble Every Day. It's a cool song with a good message.
Actually that song is mainly electric guitar. Franks vocals were really cool. He says I'm not black, but there's a lotta times I wish I could say I'm not white. I think he's referring to the racist violence in Mississippi and stuff. And I agree. I believe in the Black Panther Party and all the radical black channels on UA-cam, Spotify, Patreon, Rokfin, Rumble, Odyssey, Substack, Instagram, X, TikTok etc 🌍♥️🕊️⚖️✊
Trouble Every Day Is referencing the Watts riots in 1965 Los Angeles. Trouble Every Day quite possibly could be the very first Rap song, given the vocal cadence of it and social commentary within it. A song ahead of it's time...
@@leddygee1896 I always think of Trouble Comin' Every Day as what could be the first rap song. That or Dylan's Subterranean Homesick Blues, which came out a year and a half before Trouble.
We're Only In It For The Money is a difficult listen, but I put it right up with Abbey Road, Highway 61, Revolver, and the first Velvet Underground in terms of late 60s masterpieces.
I started listening to Frank in 1965 when I was all of 13 years old. He helped me get through Jr., Senior High School, College and pretty much everything up to this day. He knew his audience loved him for being himself and pretty much accepted everything he did, not what they wanted or expected of him. He broke the mold and had a free life.
Slight correction, Jeff. Unless you was seeing The Mothers at The Whiskey in 1965 when you were all of 13 years old, your timeline doesn't jibe. Their first album, Freak Out! was released in June of 1966. Was you there from the beginning with that album in 1966?
@@jeffmartin1026 I was 15 when I first learned of Zappa, in 1975. Heard Billy The Mountain and the bulk of Fillmore East. Instantly hooked. Arf Arf! If you were 13 in 1966, that makes you 70 now. Hope you're doing well, old timer.
Zappa said "This song needs that nasty Cream bass". Jack Bruce said "Hold my beer". A Fretless Bass through a Marshall Stack. God bless ya Jack! Early on Zappa created his own music publishing/recording company. He hated the Corporate studios and decided he should get (and his band etc) the money since they did all the work. So he was rarely heard on commercial radio. He was a kind of secret that people in the know knew about. Word of mouth type success . Plus as you know he isnt too bashful about the subjects he writes about.
La & Chi, love the Trower album in the background! I am a big PROG rock fan, could never get into Zappa until my 40s. I love him now. Such a great album! Amazing guitar player.
Jack Bruce's bass on this is so great! I heard it was just improvised in the studio. I like how the drum break brings the band back to the begining riff too!
The music was all George Duke. You can feel the church coming out of George on that one. Duke recorded it for a proposed album of his own with a German label. The deal fell through and Geroge is sitting on this beautiful instrumental piece and nowhere to go with it. Frank asked him if he wouldn't mind letting him write lyrics to it. Duke agreed and there's the song. One of only a few songs that Frank collaborated on with others.
You wanna just jam to Zappa, check out his instrumental albums “Shut Up and Play Yer Guitar”, “Shut Up and Play Yer Guitar Some More” and “The Return of the Son of Shut Up and Play Yer Guitar”
Thanks dudes. I been requesting this song to a number of reactionists and your the only ones who have played it. That's Jack Bruce playing that funky bass. Keep up the great work!
Throughout his career Frank got zero airplay . His legions of dedicated fans carried him. He was also in control of every aspect of his writing,production and record label . Frank also organized and financed his tours with his own money. This insured he made plenty of money being less popular.
Yes that was Frank. He could play every instrument you heard there. I saw Frank several times live(5 times), and his solo’s never disappointed. Check some of the interviews with long time band mates. I loved the guy.
Sadly, not a lot of Zappa was played in the States, thus his great popularity overseas. He's certainly one of the most important modern composers. The fact that he wrote in just about every genre was what held him back: orchestrated music, music concrete, jazz, rock, pop, fusion, and everything in between. One of the most misunderstood and brilliant composers of our time.
Former Czech president Vaclav Havel appointed Frank Zappa as "Special Ambassador to the West on Trade, Culture and Tourism." There is some great footage in the recent Zappa film by Alex Winter of him arriving in Prague.
@@eximusic Actually it was the so-called "novelty" songs that financed his other work. As for people taking it "seriously" most modern composers of note aren't taken seriously except because someone "important" decided their music was "serious." Most music is pablum for children, like 99% of the Beetles catalogue, and if children want to dismiss Zappa and embrace 4/4 120 that's their business. Anyone who judges Zappa as a "novelty" artist" is woefully and willfully ignorant.
@@Gerhardium Well during Zappa's mainstream popularity, minimalist composers like Steve Reich, Phillip Glass, and Jon Adams were extremely popular and thriving. I actually had the same theory/harmony professor that taught Zappa. He actually knew a lot about what Zappa's real interests were. It wasn't Dynamo Hum.
the first live gig i ever saw was when my friend and i as 14 year old kids travelled on our own by train without telling our parents and saw zappa playing in london - it may have been the gig where he fell off the stage and broke his leg but we were so overwhelmed with the excitement of being at a gig surrounded by adults and bright lights and noise, we may have missed it! pretty cool first gig,i think
Jim Gordon (who played with Derek and the Dominoes, Traffic and a whole bunch of other bands and musicians) on drums, Jack Bruce (Cream) on bass. RIP to them both.
I was introduced to Frank Zappa in college in 1969. My favorite albums are Hoy Rats, Burnt Weeny Sandwich and and Uncle Meat. I saw h8m in concert in the early 1970’s.
I seen Frank Zappa live in Detroit Michigan at the Cobo Arena back in 1978. I was only a young man it was sold out concert maybe about 12,000 people maybe about maybe Tim Black guy but he was he was a legendary a lot of people wouldn’t hit the Franks up and back them, but he’s a legend. 1:45
@@elisaabolafia9542 The way it went was that Frank was recording in Ike Turner's studio, so Tina and the Ikettes were at his disposal. Of course Frank asked them to sing backup vocals on a handful of songs. Tina was very proud of what they were doing and invited Ike to come in and listen to some of what they recorded. Ike responded with "What is this shit?!" and demanded that they don't get credited on the albums. He also said to pay them each $25. per song, because that's what he paid them, but Frank paid them $25. per hour each, which amounted to more than what Ike would've paid them. He didn't give them credit on the album before this, Over-Nite Sensation but, on this album, he credited the two Ikettes (Lynn and Debbie) by first name only. Fk Ike! Tina did well to dump his sorry azz.
Ya gots to flip this record over and play the other side!😂 Don’t eat the Yellow Snow/ Nanook rubs it/ St Alphonso’s pancake breakfast ( the yellow snow suite)
Keif found his Satisfaction tone trying to emulate a sax part, and you can really hear that square-wave similarity between sax and fuzz guitar on this, too.
I am still working on what to think about FZ, but this tune was excellent. Thanks to you both for an insightful reaction, which despite your differences was great in and of itself! Cheers!
Fellas Bowie was pretty mainstream and had radio play during the seventies and eighties. Zappa was not mainstream and was rarely heard on radio with few exceptions. Both had a rabid fan base. The strength of which is about what they brought creatively. Both were musically gifted in their own way. Loved them both!!RIP Frank Zappa and David Bowie…
Jim Gordon on drums who played on Layla by Derek and the Dominos and the Low Spark of High Heeled boys by Traffic. He also had a great drum solo on Jump Into the Fire by Harry Nilsson. Unfortunately later he was diagnosed schizophrenic after he killed his mother.
I'm over 60 yrs old and I can honestly say as the youngest of 7 children being forced to listen to Zappa and all his changing and evolutionary music i was exposed to, he was generally a music genius. Long live "Joe's garage" and Apostrphe.
Willie the Pimp off of Hot Rats. And The Slime..saw him on the Just Another Band From L.A. tour with the guys from the Turtles..who played the White House for Tricia Nixon...
yep... it's goin down...Happens all the time guys. Once you start listening to Zappa... and you realize "Woah...!!! This shit is next level!! " and guys... you have only just begun.
Back in the day I would put that on the turntable and the next song on the album is Uncle Remus which Frank wrote for George Duke. It’s great. The whole album is great and is where many start listening to Zappa.
You should check out his appearance on The Steve Allen Show in 1963. He played percussion on a bicycle. Not sitting on a bicycle, but using the bicycle as an instrument.
Hell of a song, killer music whatever you label it. Frank was a unique genius but a polarizing figure for people I hung with back in the day, most people dug Hot Rats but saw a fight break out over 200 Motels. He had tons of great stuff and his guitar playing was one of a kind, it was just the bizarre and avante guard creations he came up with, that were not easy to digest and sometimes plain offensive. I still listen to Frank once in a while but have to be in the right mood, when I am it is all good. Enjoy! 🎵🎸🎤🎹🎶
Guys my brother turned me onto this album about 1971. That’s the Mighty Jack Bruce from Cream Playing that Bass, as a lead guitar. Franks jamming on the guitar. He came in and they jammed. Btw, this Album is an absolute top 5 Album from Frank. Guys I’m 61, I’m listening to this album for 50 years. Holy Shit do I feel old. Check the whole album out. As always Peace, Love and Continued Success ❤
That was Jack Bruce playing bass through a cranked acoustic guitar amp, it was a somewhat impromptu session Jack having been invited by Jim Gordon and they didn't have a bass amp available, that's why it might have sounded like a "deep guitar"
As a small segment sample, my close friends and I listened to him occasionally and at that time (late 70's) it seemed like we were the only ones who did.
The playing on this is astronomical. When I first heard this I already knew that Jack's ability from his Cream days was amazing so when him and Frank got going it was pure rip roaring funk rock improv heaven. Jim Gordon had been a session man for years, also in Clapton's Derek and the Dominoes. He unfortunately went crazy after his mom with an axe !
God bless your soul put this out there as much as you can. There’s nothing like this anywhere in the world, father Frank, father Frank, father friend Zappa, Zapp, Zappa
So, I looked it up and it appears that Zappa played lead on this, but the more interesting thing that I learned is that Jack Bruce of Cream was in studio for something else and sat in as electric bass player on this.
Do a reaction of Frank doing “shutup and play yer guitar” the title track from the live album of his guitar solos. The most underrated guitar player in popular music
You guys should take look at the live concert footage from New York 1977 the band was insane. Adrian Belew from King Crimson on guitar, Bozzio on drums, Peter Wolf from J Giles Band and others.
Not Peter Wolf from J. Geils. J. Geils was very active on their own in 1977. The J. Geils band was playing in the Pacific Northwest the same week that Frank played the Halloween gigs in NY. Same name, different guy. He played keyboards for Frank. When you say Adrian Belew from King Crimson, you make it sound like he went from KC to Zappa. Zappa discovered him, Bowie poached him, and he eventually ended up with King Crimson. I don't mean to sound picky, but I'm looking to give Zappa props for discovering Belew.
Zappa is more of a chameleon than Morrison. Immensely talented guitar player. Incredible writer and creator. Monstrous catalog. No two songs sound the same. He is a uniquely singular musician.
The late great Jim Gordon on drums, with Jack Bruce on bass and Frank on guitar, just sheer brilliance.
Like Ted Nugent. Different.👍
So happy these guys ( my new favorite REACTORS) are doing Zappa. A genius. After highschool class ( back in the day 😊) we'd head over to our friend.VITO'S basement... listening to Zappa on his 5 ft tall " Voice of the Theater" speakers. What an ERA 🎵🎵🎵.
@@elisaabolafia9542Think there really getting into the Real music.🌄
Precisely
Comparing Frank to Ted Nugent is like comparing Gandhi to Hitler, this is seriously funny, time to take a journey to the center of your mind@@markwilliams5606
Jack Bruce of Cream playing bass on this track!
This entire album is incredible.
Yes indeed
I play bass and once got to play this song with Dweezil at his Dweezilla Music Camp. 8 of the best minutes of my life. This is basically Frank and Jack Bruce trying to out solo each other, with a drummer. There is also an acoustic rhythm guitar deep underneath. I have a live video of this from 2015 with Dweezil, Kurt Morgan on Bass, and Ryan Brown on Drums in Chicago that is amazing!
Oh that's Jack Bruce Wow I didn't know that thanks 👍 I love the politician
I salute you just for keeping up on this song. Zappa seems to always have a difficult pocket among other challenges
And a definite 🫡 to you because thats crazy stuff man
@@melvinwomack3717I didn't either. Also Los Lobos did a good cover of Politician 🎸
Must’ve been great!
It’s taken me 40 years to finally GET Zappa. I wanted to when I was younger but it way over my head. Cheers.
I listened only to top 40 radio until a classmate in middle school got me to try The Blues Project and Zappa’s “Chunga’s Revenge.” Changed my life.
Ah, that gives me hope for some of my friends who don't appreciate Zappa.
I don’t put many artists on a pedestal but this man is propped up. His flowers will always come forth. He made me think, he made me laugh my ass off, he gave me freedom and he made me rock the F out. You have soooooo much more to look forward to. Listen to the entire Apostrophe album. Or do Joe’s Garage from beginning to end. Ship arriving too late to save a drowning witch?!?! There;s a lot. Enjoy the ride my friends. ❤❤❤
The whole Apostrophe album is killer. It's one of those "you have to listen to the whole thing" albums.
Frank was not huge because he chose to not do a lot of commercial music, he didn't have as many fans as Zeppelin or Sabbath but if you liked Zappa you really liked Zappa. Try something from the early days, Trouble Every Day. It's a cool song with a good message.
Yeah the early days with Jimmy Carl Black on drums. Blending rock with woodwinds, marimbas etc
Actually that song is mainly electric guitar. Franks vocals were really cool. He says I'm not black, but there's a lotta times I wish I could say I'm not white. I think he's referring to the racist violence in Mississippi and stuff. And I agree. I believe in the Black Panther Party and all the radical black channels on UA-cam, Spotify, Patreon, Rokfin, Rumble, Odyssey, Substack, Instagram, X, TikTok etc 🌍♥️🕊️⚖️✊
Trouble Every Day Is referencing the Watts riots in 1965 Los Angeles. Trouble Every Day quite possibly could be the very first Rap song, given the vocal cadence of it and social commentary within it. A song ahead of it's time...
@@leddygee1896
I always think of Trouble Comin' Every Day as what could be the first rap song. That or Dylan's Subterranean Homesick Blues, which came out a year and a half before Trouble.
We're Only In It For The Money is a difficult listen, but I put it right up with Abbey Road, Highway 61, Revolver, and the first Velvet Underground in terms of late 60s masterpieces.
I started listening to Frank in 1965 when I was all of 13 years old. He helped me get through Jr., Senior High School, College and pretty much everything up to this day. He knew his audience loved him for being himself and pretty much accepted everything he did, not what they wanted or expected of him. He broke the mold and had a free life.
Slight correction, Jeff. Unless you was seeing The Mothers at The Whiskey in 1965 when you were all of 13 years old, your timeline doesn't jibe.
Their first album, Freak Out! was released in June of 1966.
Was you there from the beginning with that album in 1966?
@@Royale_with_Cheeze right you are, it was 66
@@jeffmartin1026
I was 15 when I first learned of Zappa, in 1975. Heard Billy The Mountain and the bulk of Fillmore East. Instantly hooked. Arf Arf!
If you were 13 in 1966, that makes you 70 now. Hope you're doing well, old timer.
Jack Bruce's bass playing on this track is insane. Just wicked.
This is my favorite Frank album. A true masterpiece. Jack Bruce goes off on this one.
🔥
Zappa said "This song needs that nasty Cream bass". Jack Bruce said "Hold my beer". A Fretless Bass through a Marshall Stack. God bless ya Jack!
Early on Zappa created his own music publishing/recording company. He hated the Corporate studios and decided he should get (and his band etc) the money since they did all the work. So he was rarely heard on commercial radio. He was a kind of secret that people in the know knew about. Word of mouth type success . Plus as you know he isnt too bashful about the subjects he writes about.
The absolute best reactors on da Tube. Deep dive specialists, you guys are the best, keep up the great work. More Zappa pleeeeez
La & Chi, love the Trower album in the background!
I am a big PROG rock fan, could never get into Zappa until my 40s. I love him now. Such a great album! Amazing guitar player.
One of the best instrumentals ever. Just brilliant. Played this constantly in high school.
One of my favorite albums
One of my favorites. Uncle Remus, as well. ❤
Listen to Frank's Joe's Garage act's 1 through 3 my favorite and probably his best.
👆🏽👆🏽👆🏽this
Zappa on guitar. Jack Bruce on bass (he was in Cream with Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker).
The legendary Jack Bruce on the bass. What a track!
A rather fuzzy Jack Bruce, such a cool contrast of sounds
At the 5 minute mark of the song it sounds like everyone is playing a different song and it fits perfectly. Pure genius.
Frank Zappa was amazingly talented. 🤘🏽
Lots of great songs on the album. Cosmic Debris. Don’t Eat The Yellow Snow suite.
The tone is everything and the bass. As mentioned Jack absolutely kills the this one! Always the best musicians on stage with Frank.
Jack Bruce's bass on this is so great! I heard it was just improvised in the studio. I like how the drum break brings the band back to the begining riff too!
Is that a real poncho ... love this album.
This is my favorite Zappa album
Musical genius, nobody like him, surrounded himself with incredible musicians
Looooooove Zappa!
i bet you all would love City of Tiny Lites 💯
Play the next track, Uncle Remus. You'll get the crazy lyrics and some of Frank's best melodic work.
The music was all George Duke. You can feel the church coming out of George on that one.
Duke recorded it for a proposed album of his own with a German label. The deal fell through and Geroge is sitting on this beautiful instrumental piece and nowhere to go with it. Frank asked him if he wouldn't mind letting him write lyrics to it. Duke agreed and there's the song. One of only a few songs that Frank collaborated on with others.
You wanna just jam to Zappa, check out his instrumental albums “Shut Up and Play Yer Guitar”, “Shut Up and Play Yer Guitar Some More” and “The Return of the Son of Shut Up and Play Yer Guitar”
The poodle bites
The poodle chews it
Brilliant!
😁😅 come on Frenchie
Got to love Frank! 👍🇬🇧
Thanks dudes. I been requesting this song to a number of reactionists and your the only ones who have played it. That's Jack Bruce playing that funky bass. Keep up the great work!
Why you requested it ? It's literally the worst track on Apostrophe...it has nothing and it's going nowhere
I had no idea how good Frank was on the guitar until I heard Black Napkins
Winos do not march.... Muffin man.... you probably heard those
O what fun! The crux of the biscuit.
There is a version with funny lyrics. Play that one!
you thinking of stink foot?
@@jimmayors2315 Maybe so. That's one of the first I head from Frank. Worth a review.
Throughout his career Frank got zero airplay . His legions of dedicated fans carried him. He was also in control of every aspect of his writing,production and record label . Frank also organized and financed his tours with his own money. This insured he made plenty of money being less popular.
Yes that was Frank. He could play every instrument you heard there. I saw Frank several times live(5 times), and his solo’s never disappointed. Check some of the interviews with long time band mates. I loved the guy.
Sadly, not a lot of Zappa was played in the States, thus his great popularity overseas. He's certainly one of the most important modern composers. The fact that he wrote in just about every genre was what held him back: orchestrated music, music concrete, jazz, rock, pop, fusion, and everything in between. One of the most misunderstood and brilliant composers of our time.
His novelty songs kept his brilliant compositions from being taken seriously. It's hard to break out of a role you create for yourself.
Former Czech president Vaclav Havel appointed Frank Zappa as "Special Ambassador to the West on Trade, Culture and Tourism."
There is some great footage in the recent Zappa film by Alex Winter of him arriving in Prague.
@@eximusic Actually it was the so-called "novelty" songs that financed his other work. As for people taking it "seriously" most modern composers of note aren't taken seriously except because someone "important" decided their music was "serious." Most music is pablum for children, like 99% of the Beetles catalogue, and if children want to dismiss Zappa and embrace 4/4 120 that's their business. Anyone who judges Zappa as a "novelty" artist" is woefully and willfully ignorant.
@@Gerhardium Well during Zappa's mainstream popularity, minimalist composers like Steve Reich, Phillip Glass, and Jon Adams were extremely popular and thriving. I actually had the same theory/harmony professor that taught Zappa. He actually knew a lot about what Zappa's real interests were. It wasn't Dynamo Hum.
Greatest musician of the 20th century
The best 5 minutes you can fit into a song. What almost seemed like an afterthought.
Happy 777th upvote c: I'm discovering new artists through you guys
the first live gig i ever saw was when my friend and i as 14 year old kids travelled on our own by train without telling our parents and saw zappa playing in london - it may have been the gig where he fell off the stage and broke his leg but we were so overwhelmed with the excitement of being at a gig surrounded by adults and bright lights and noise, we may have missed it! pretty cool first gig,i think
Jim Gordon (who played with Derek and the Dominoes, Traffic and a whole bunch of other bands and musicians) on drums, Jack Bruce (Cream) on bass.
RIP to them both.
Love Zappa from the seventies
in my book this is one of the best instrumentals
Huge Zappa fan saw him in 78
I was introduced to Frank Zappa in college in 1969. My favorite albums are Hoy Rats, Burnt Weeny Sandwich and and Uncle Meat. I saw h8m in concert in the early 1970’s.
ZAPPA! BABY!
I seen Frank Zappa live in Detroit Michigan at the Cobo Arena back in 1978. I was only a young man it was sold out concert maybe about 12,000 people maybe about maybe Tim Black guy but he was he was a legendary a lot of people wouldn’t hit the Franks up and back them, but he’s a legend. 1:45
Hooray, Frank is back. Tina Turner and the Ikettes guest vocals on this album
What❗ Tina Turner was scooped up by this musical GENIUS. Thanks for that tidbit.
@@elisaabolafia9542
The way it went was that Frank was recording in Ike Turner's studio, so Tina and the Ikettes were at his disposal. Of course Frank asked them to sing backup vocals on a handful of songs.
Tina was very proud of what they were doing and invited Ike to come in and listen to some of what they recorded.
Ike responded with "What is this shit?!" and demanded that they don't get credited on the albums. He also said to pay them each $25. per song, because that's what he paid them, but Frank paid them $25. per hour each, which amounted to more than what Ike would've paid them.
He didn't give them credit on the album before this, Over-Nite Sensation but, on this album, he credited the two Ikettes (Lynn and Debbie) by first name only. Fk Ike! Tina did well to dump his sorry azz.
Frank Zappa Loved the SG standard 👍. Pure Genius 👌🪴🌴
More zappa
A true Masterpiece!!!!!!!!
that’s my jam!
Another great album
This has to be my favorite album of all time. Only got to see FZ 2 times live, and Dweezal amazing interpretation of hos fathers music once.
Jack Bruce from Cream played the funky, electronically altered bass throughout this song. Jim Gordon was on drums, and Frank was obviously on guitars.
2nd guitarist was Tony Duran. He was well utilized on Waka/Jawaka (recorded the same year as this song) playing slide guitar.
Damn this brings back memories. I listened the shit out of this album as a teenager.
I'm glad you guys are getting into Frank...I also spy the debut Robin Trower album behind you guys, GREAT ALBUM 📢
He's pure genius. Nothing more or less.
Good Saturday morning fellas 🤟
Ya gots to flip this record over and play the other side!😂 Don’t eat the Yellow Snow/ Nanook rubs it/ St Alphonso’s pancake breakfast ( the yellow snow suite)
Keif found his Satisfaction tone trying to emulate a sax part, and you can really hear that square-wave similarity between sax and fuzz guitar on this, too.
please do " Don't Eat The Yellow Snow/St. Alfonso's Pancake Breakfast".
That bass sound is insane. Forgot how this sounded in my trunk back in day. Lol
Sounded like Frank had the Wah Wah all the way up, giving room for the fuzz bass, the drum break is worth another listen, that was deadly, sublime
Love that drum break
I am still working on what to think about FZ, but this tune was excellent. Thanks to you both for an insightful reaction, which despite your differences was great in and of itself! Cheers!
What is great that Frank let Jack Bruce be featured so much
Fellas Bowie was pretty mainstream and had radio play during the seventies and eighties. Zappa was not mainstream and was rarely heard on radio with few exceptions. Both had a rabid fan base. The strength of which is about what they brought creatively. Both were musically gifted in their own way. Loved them both!!RIP Frank Zappa and David Bowie…
Jim Gordon on drums who played on Layla by Derek and the Dominos and the Low Spark of High Heeled boys by Traffic. He also had a great drum solo on Jump Into the Fire by Harry Nilsson. Unfortunately later he was diagnosed schizophrenic after he killed his mother.
Know all those tunes but didn’t know he killed his mother…
@@sea6bear he died in prison last year.
what? Jim Gordon killed his mother?
ZAPPA!!! WOOHOOO!!! 😍😍😍😍😍 Thanks, GUYS!! :) HUGS!!!
Play the whole albums especially The Yellow Snow Suite!
I second "Trouble Every Day" from the album "Freak Out" 1965
I'm over 60 yrs old and I can honestly say as the youngest of 7 children being forced to listen to Zappa and all his changing and evolutionary music i was exposed to, he was generally a music genius. Long live "Joe's garage" and Apostrphe.
Willie the Pimp off of Hot Rats. And The Slime..saw him on the Just Another Band From L.A. tour with the guys from the Turtles..who played the White House for Tricia Nixon...
yep... it's goin down...Happens all the time guys. Once you start listening to Zappa... and you realize "Woah...!!! This shit is next level!! " and guys... you have only just begun.
Back in the day I would put that on the turntable and the next song on the album is Uncle Remus which Frank wrote for George Duke. It’s great. The whole album is great and is where many start listening to Zappa.
You should check out his appearance on The Steve Allen Show in 1963. He played percussion on a bicycle. Not sitting on a bicycle, but using the bicycle as an instrument.
Yup - that’s on UA-cam.
Hell of a song, killer music whatever you label it. Frank was a unique genius but a polarizing figure for people I hung with back in the day, most people dug Hot Rats but saw a fight break out over 200 Motels. He had tons of great stuff and his guitar playing was one of a kind, it was just the bizarre and avante guard creations he came up with, that were not easy to digest and sometimes plain offensive. I still listen to Frank once in a while but have to be in the right mood, when I am it is all good. Enjoy! 🎵🎸🎤🎹🎶
Guys my brother turned me onto this album about 1971. That’s the Mighty Jack Bruce from Cream Playing that Bass, as a lead guitar. Franks jamming on the guitar. He came in and they jammed. Btw, this Album is an absolute top 5 Album from Frank. Guys I’m 61, I’m listening to this album for 50 years. Holy Shit do I feel old. Check the whole album out. As always Peace, Love and Continued Success ❤
I'm pretty sure it was recorded in '73 at the same sessions as "Overnite Sensation"
I was a a actually thinking 1974. All I know is I got him and his music immediately. BTW, One Size Fits All. Also in my top 5…
Thank You
That was Jack Bruce playing bass through a cranked acoustic guitar amp, it was a somewhat impromptu session Jack having been invited by Jim Gordon and they didn't have a bass amp available, that's why it might have sounded like a "deep guitar"
Have you heard of The Black Page? The orchestral piece that has so many notes you can't see the white paper? Another level.
Yes, that's Frank on his guitar.
As a small segment sample, my close friends and I listened to him occasionally and at that time (late 70's) it seemed like we were the only ones who did.
Jack Bruces Bass sounded like a Guitar when he played it
"Lay back and groove on a rainy day." -- Jimi Hendrix, ("Rainy Day, Dream Away")
Jack Bruce on fuzzed out bass! Heavy stuff here.
The playing on this is astronomical. When I first heard this I already knew that Jack's ability from his Cream days was amazing so when him and Frank got going it was pure rip roaring funk rock improv heaven. Jim Gordon had been a session man for years, also in Clapton's Derek and the Dominoes. He unfortunately went crazy after his mom with an axe !
hammer, not an axe
Thanks for the correction
@@fmellish71
I think that Jacks blues-rock style of playing brought out the best in Franks guitar talent.😜✌️
I think you missed the part where he actually sings about " The Apostrophe " its funny
Frank, Jack and Jim - RIP.
God bless your soul put this out there as much as you can. There’s nothing like this anywhere in the world, father Frank, father Frank, father friend Zappa, Zapp, Zappa
So, I looked it up and it appears that Zappa played lead on this, but the more interesting thing that I learned is that Jack Bruce of Cream was in studio for something else and sat in as electric bass player on this.
Check out (Bolero) that his full band did in Spain. They were excellent !
Do a reaction of Frank doing “shutup and play yer guitar” the title track from the live album of his guitar solos. The most underrated guitar player in popular music
As a long time ZAPPA fan, I encourage you to check out the Documentary Movie that was released in 2020. It's just called "ZAPPA".
Thanks! I had not heard of that! I still like Baby Snakes, that video is such a trip
I hope y'all enjoy this album as much as I did when I first discovered it.
That was Jack Bruce playing the distorted bass and Frank on guitar
You guys should take look at the live concert footage from New York 1977 the band was insane. Adrian Belew from King Crimson on guitar, Bozzio on drums, Peter Wolf from J Giles Band and others.
Not Peter Wolf from J. Geils. J. Geils was very active on their own in 1977. The J. Geils band was playing in the Pacific Northwest the same week that Frank played the Halloween gigs in NY. Same name, different guy. He played keyboards for Frank.
When you say Adrian Belew from King Crimson, you make it sound like he went from KC to Zappa. Zappa discovered him, Bowie poached him, and he eventually ended up with King Crimson. I don't mean to sound picky, but I'm looking to give Zappa props for discovering Belew.
Zappa is more of a chameleon than Morrison. Immensely talented guitar player. Incredible writer and creator. Monstrous catalog. No two songs sound the same. He is a uniquely singular musician.