Frank Zappa - The Deathless Horsie - 1979, Munich (audio)
Вставка
- Опубліковано 13 жов 2024
- Zappa and musicians playing The Deathless Horsie in Munich, 1979-03-31. Soundboard recording.
Frank Zappa - lead guitar, lead vocals, band leader
Ike Willis - rhythm guitar, vocals
Denny Walley - guitar, slide guitar, vocals
Warren Cuccurullo - guitar
Tommy Mars - keyboards, vocals
Peter Wolf - keyboards
Ed Mann - percussion
Arthur Barrow - bass
Vinnie Colaiuta - drums
Ahhhhh my favorite Deathless Horsie. Cheers 🥂
Zappa was possibly the most indivualistic guitar player, ever. There is also much true emotion in his solos, whether he'd admit it or not.
gergsar Hands down my favorite guitar player. The techniques and sounds are uniquely his. What is even more amazing is that he could play a whole band like that.
No, allan holdsworth is. Frank would probably agree with me. Frank admired allan
Concordo
@@pobinrHey, let’s disagree! It’s the UA-cam way.
He continues to speak beyond the grave in this timeless song.
You could almost say it's.........deathless.
This is Glorious. I'd like to ascend into nothingness listening to this song when the time comes.
Another guitar solo for the ages.
Ya just GOT! to love Zappa's melodic and rhythmic sense. There's little he hasn't done with those little musical notation sheets over the years. Another exceptional piece.
I can remember listening to this 20 years ago walking into my hometown after being away for 5 years,still brings a tear to my eye
This is my favorite version of this tune I've heard. The relaxed tempo makes it sound so glorious and intense!! Frank was a monster, and with Vinnie behind him...watch out boy!!!
It's remarkable. He's playing in front of, behind, and around Vinnie. This is tops for me with the YCDTOSA v1 with Wackerman.
+zach shuler I'm with you..but I do like that version. Maybe we'll get a video of it. The show was pro shot. Does Humor Belong In Music?
Watch me now..i'm going down ! 👍🎶🎧🎶🎵🎵
@@napomania and here I thought you were gonna eat the label! 😂
more than once I crawled into the street after hearing versions of this tune. he liked to change it from time to time .....always a fave....
I'm a drummer, but FZ makes me want to play guitar. The man could solo over anything.
ZAPPA IS FRANK
FZ started out as a drummer.
Well , Frank himself started out as a drummer but listening to himself play guitar made him want to switch instrument
Love that sculpture. Amazing.. The song is so incredible too.
schöne musik nd tolles pferd.
Most incredible Mr Zappa. Your music evokes feelings in the listener that only your style is capable of. 38 years later and this song has not lost a thing in unique stylings and timelessness. I could listen to this tirelessly for another 38 years.
Besides a fuck tyrant
incredible version!
One of my favorites!
Love this version, better than the one on Shut Up album imo. Very cool and apt sculpture too!!
Today everyone is mourning Jeff Beck, who died a few days ago and was, I'll admit, an extraordinary guitar player. But when Frank died, I didn't eat for a week, I was so broken-up.
Fantastic performance of one of my favorite Zappa tunes.
A personal favorite,awesome!And the sound quality of the video is perfect for a mp3.
Superb thank you FRANK Zappa
Amazing the song thank you FRANK Zappa
Holy s**t! This version is awesome!~
IMHO, Black Napkins/ Deathless Horsie, Halloween ‘78 is as “far out” as Frank ever went. This is crisp and clean, with a little coffee and nicotine. Music is the best!
A true Genius
So beautifully incredible and off the chain. Arf!!
The Speachless Fan
Superb.
Seems like it was 79 or so-- between Sheik Yerbouti and Joe's Garage-- that Frank seems to have (as Blakeans put it) stood on the shore of the Sea of Time and Space. There's a difference in degree before and after, an awareness of some sort. The solos of this period I find, um, useful in figuring out whatever it is that music is getting at.
Imho the period with Arthur Barrow on Bass are inspired with guitar solos. And Winni Colaiuta also..
An Excellent comment!
Quelle fantastique version
Beautiful...
It may be true that Zappa wasn't fully understood in America, but part of what makes america great is that you are allowed to express yourself anyway that you choose. Frank did it with music, and I believe that he could not have developed into the talent that he was anywhere else in the world.
There’s a reason he never left the U.S., as much as he’d always make fun of it.
Youre joking!
Great music, thanks !
@mbgphoto79 Thank you!! It's awesome!!!
Freaking amazing
@OLugs This is the Winged Horse of the Apocalypse by DragonSpark.
Oh boy.
Greatness
Mr. Crabs! He was number one!!!
Kewl !
wow.
The Known...The Unknown and the Unknowable
@markhayes69 Yerbouti was also at a time when Sheikh Yamani had a pretty high profile...
getting close but it s hard man, is like myself is in the way this time.
He was a modelizer of sound.
@alrozz you are so right!!!!!!!
Someone said Zappa "Deviated from the norm"? LOL There was no "norm" He played whatever the vibe was in the Universe at the time.
4 of the solos on "Shut Up and Play Yer Guitar" and the "wet T shirt" solo from Joe's Garage are all the "Inca Road" solo "norm"
System of edges is one of his best solos from the Inca Roads series
I'm not certain but I think there is a quote from Frank " Without deviation from the norm, change is not possible"....
sea6bear ...progress is not possible
Correct..."without deviation from the norm, progress is not possible". Deviation from the normal term is frequently use in descriptive analysis or statistics. Can't see how it applies to Zappa as an artist, what is normal art? he was anything but ordinary
FZ, the Best!
The Conceptional Continuity is all one album! The way I understand it?
russell paps It took me awhile to work it out..lol.. I have been listening to Mr. Zappa since i was 16 years old, he really inspired me to learn how to play guitar and appreciate music. I am now 56 years old and still listen to his music daily. R.I.P Frank
russell paps I could only imagine how far my jaw may have came to the floor if it was 1969 and I just heard Hot Rats for the very first time (or even hearing Zappa for the first time before that). There's been albums credited as jazz-rock fusion earlier, but most of them were slightly jazz influenced but still rock, other than Miles Davis (who was still playing jazz at the time that was influenced by rock. But Hot Rats is jazz-rock fusion at its finest. Jazz music played with a true approach to jazz played by a rock band. It has forever changed my view on music.
shred5 Yep! I bet it has!
+Ziggy “Frappanised” Zappada He's constantly bringing in lyrics, entire songs or fragments of songs, jokes, and other stuff that's used time and again. I've noticed he's kind of done albums in series where he's using certain forms like jazz, or more ROA music, classic, whatever, but amongst it all he's continually repeating lyrical and musical themes. Cool beans, bro.
not a lot of people know that, so is "occam's razor" isn't the one on joe "on the bus" ??
@ChurchOSkatan Certainly not here in México.
press it on a record - I'll buy it
"SHHHHHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiT" - Someone who experienced God with a moustache.
Sounds like Sinister Footwear toward the end of this.
After a few more listens I hear Sinister Footwear at the beginning of this to. Am I right or wrong?
And in most ‘top guitarist’ polls, FZ would be lucky to crack the top 10, let alone the top 20. Myself, I consider him to be number ONE. And yes Jimi (who still usually gets the top spot), as much as I love ya, Frank passed you by by the mid 70s.
Peter Townsend, who is amazing in his own right, and i consider genius, can’t hold a candle to Franks chops on the axe. Pete also gets rated higher than Frank.
Let’s face it, like the RR Hall of fame, it’s just a popularity contest. And don’t say anything negative on Rolling Stone magazine. Case in point, Jethro Tull still is NOT in the RRHOF. Disgusting. It’s 2022. They shoulda been inducted in the 90s. Plainly sad. Ian Anderson is an absolute genius. Good Lord. Without he and Frank around in my teens (1970s), going to concerts would have been a whole lot less fun.
As good as the first time.
The one dislike, is Zappa because he was deviating from the norm.
@Rinhiromaus Could it possibly be 'The Deathless Horsie'?
Please! Can you tell me the name of the sculpture in the picture?
@stargate669 yeah but there are many many more trying to top him up. like uh monSANTO???
What am I missing?! F# B C# E C# Eb E C# G# f#
I know I'm missing something but I cannot figure out the OneNote that I'm missing, I just know I'm not resolving where they are.
Title of scupture, who did it, and when? Thanks, in advance.
Winged Horse of the Apocalypse by DragonSpark
I don't think so. This comes from a bootleg.
Lyrics:
@alrozz most amerxians dont like music they like stuff that they know familer stuff,anything new and long they cant lisen to ,true fact frank said
Now being sold all over the UK as Bugers lol
Dweezil is Jesus by proxy then ? Works for me my friend.
@ChurchOSkatan allso because, most americains dont like music f.z. quot
mwhahaha
Love his compositions & humour. Not so sure about his pentatonic noodlings on guitar. After a while you realise pretty much all of his solos are pretty much the same.
+pobinr I don't know much about pentatonic noodlings but I've been listening to Frank since 1964 when I was 13 and there is is just something about the guitar and the backing band that I never get tired of.
April Fools, right?
the man was mental, in the literal sense. He could compose on paper the world's greatest symphony. But, when physically performing a guitar solo, was limited by what his fingers could accomplish. But even then, were a little more adventurous than most things you would hear on the radio of that time, or now even
I'm never sure if some of this isn't simply running his fingers across the guitar like crazy BUT it's just phantastic the way it is. Unique in the world. Where did he go so early..?
You take that back!
Nice photo
from outside now??