Frank Zappa TV Interview- Monday Conference Australia 1973 Robert Moore

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  • Опубліковано 29 сер 2014
  • Frank Zappa answers questions posed by Robert Moore and the members of audience about politics, rock n roll, sex, drugs, rock n roll consumer, advertising, propaganda, pop music,radio. A very interesting discussion, nonetheless.
    Disclaimer- "I do not own this video", or "I don't take credit for the content". Copyright infringement not intended.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 641

  • @eduardoguizarperez8417
    @eduardoguizarperez8417 4 роки тому +264

    I'm becoming addicted to hear Zappa talking, he's so smart and lucid and well articulated.

    • @russk1971
      @russk1971 4 роки тому +21

      Mostly due to not being drunk or high like many of his peers. Finding him clean and sober was the normal thing on or off stage, proving that to be a great artist does not require chemical influences.

    • @fleamarketfloppydisk
      @fleamarketfloppydisk 4 роки тому +4

      What about his music?

    • @danvincent2600
      @danvincent2600 2 роки тому +1

      Reminds me of iggy pop until he became the frontman for banks and holiday companies

    • @markuskalchbrenner3284
      @markuskalchbrenner3284 2 роки тому +3

      and he was talking things in a time , when you thought everything was alright and it wasn´t ->all the decisions from managers and businessmen were the same shit like nowadays(of course-> it was the same economy system) ! The only difference is that today you have more networks and they´re acting more sneaky because the trainig is more subtile -> propaganda had a lot of time to develope and the people are less critical ,I think

    • @tomdaniels3392
      @tomdaniels3392 2 роки тому

      Not Me I have watched about 5 videos on this guy, I didn't know much about Him
      I know why, he is a bitter troll and had a very small following, I was born in 1969 listen to many forms of music, heard of this guy, but know one I ever met actually listened to him.
      He seems so angry about anything mainstream, He just wanted to be controversial instead of entertaining and I see why no one really listened to Him
      He is really just a jerk with a bad attitude , watch the faces of everybody in this interview, no one likes Him and no one wants to listen to his opinions.
      Ya that face you are using right now.............

  • @MacDisel1
    @MacDisel1 8 років тому +240

    He answers every question, doesn't show any anger towards the questions, and is much more intelligent and media savvy than anyone else there

    • @acohen1980
      @acohen1980 4 роки тому +4

      Moore gave him that opportunity...Moore is on the same plane as Zappa

    • @fidoflint
      @fidoflint 3 роки тому +1

      @@acohen1980 Same plane? In what sense?

    • @Butterking99
      @Butterking99 3 роки тому +7

      Lmao the people that are asking questions are not even remotely in the same ball park it’s fucking hilarious

    • @byHexted
      @byHexted 2 роки тому +1

      That’s so corny to just say “he’s smarter then anyone else there” okay so he’s smarter then you too, all the kids there are FANS, who were fans BEFORE you, at a time where it wasn’t popular music that’s considered classic and game changing.

    • @byHexted
      @byHexted 2 роки тому +5

      I think they asked reasonable questions and had reasonable answers. Yall really take the genius out of Zappa by pretending everyone is super stupid and he’s the only normal smart one

  • @robbinsteel
    @robbinsteel 23 дні тому +4

    I’m 74 & saw him 15 times. He was always great and respectful of his audience.

  • @sharktroubles
    @sharktroubles 5 років тому +105

    Steve Vai once said that he and others in the band at the time would sometimes ask Frank Zappa things not so much for a particular answer, but just to hear what he'd say.

    • @fidoflint
      @fidoflint 3 роки тому +8

      I'm pretty sure that's just generally how questions work, universally.

    • @sharktroubles
      @sharktroubles 3 роки тому +1

      @@fidoflint Learn to read.

    • @dantecarouso
      @dantecarouso 3 роки тому +3

      @@sharktroubles i’m with fido

    • @sharktroubles
      @sharktroubles 3 роки тому +2

      @@dantecarouso Go to reading comprehension class.

    • @gordonely3591
      @gordonely3591 2 місяці тому

      Woofers Woofing ​@@dantecarouso

  • @Danuta628
    @Danuta628 Рік тому +31

    How I wish Frank was here today - his perspective holds up close to 50 years later

  • @whiskeyriver4322
    @whiskeyriver4322 8 років тому +222

    ........and forty-three years later, Frank Zappa is still remembered as a genius composer, legendary guitar virtuoso, and magnificent musical visionary and satirist. A one of a kind, self-taught maestro of the first order, that indeed all of the renaissance composers of the ages welcomed with open arms when he left this earth. His compositional manuscripts are testimony to the trivial atmosphere of this sometimes confrontational, always amusing interview. None of the questions, or even the answers mean anything. For Frank, and his millions of fans, it was all about the music; and nothing but the music. Anything else, was just a figment of the imagination........... Forty-three years on, and his intellect continues to sting with surprising awareness, insight and candor. His perspicacity is so overwhelmingly maintained and relevant to current times, so long after his passing, that it's amazing his name isn't a household word, in every household. A true renaissance man of the twentieth century; musical genius, multi-faceted technologist, humorist, social satirist, political commentator, author, producer, filmmaker, supporter of history in education, champion of the First Amendment, and advocate of voter responsibility. One of my generation's most painful losses when he succumbed to cancer. What great fortune it was for me to live during his lifetime............

    • @trankgrappa
      @trankgrappa 7 років тому +11

      truth spoken here! mind if i copy you text for occasional presenting to modern people (who have no idea about what a important person FZ was)?
      regards from a fellow appreciator of FZs output

    • @whiskeyriver4322
      @whiskeyriver4322 7 років тому +22

      You may indeed. My opinions are free of charge, for anyone to digest, or discard. It's a pleasure to know that sometimes my thoughts are appreciated. Peace

    • @trankgrappa
      @trankgrappa 7 років тому +5

      great :)

    • @patrickdesantos5262
      @patrickdesantos5262 6 років тому +2

      Amen.

    • @uncadoug2715
      @uncadoug2715 6 років тому +5

      Whiskey River ...very well said

  • @JasonsGuitarJams
    @JasonsGuitarJams 6 років тому +55

    It's funny how so many hosts try and make Frank fold under pressure. But he's just to smart for those suit and tie guys!!

    • @acohen1980
      @acohen1980 4 роки тому +8

      Agree 100%...Moore obviously 'gets' Zappa...and vice versa...it's a great moment in Aussie TV

  • @oterovidal2484
    @oterovidal2484 7 років тому +100

    He was such a great listener, he had answers for every single question and good ones too.

    • @garymorgan3314
      @garymorgan3314 7 років тому +3

      Well said. Too right.

    • @robertbodle2354
      @robertbodle2354 6 років тому +2

      I mostly agree, but he seems to have punted the political question a bit.

    • @DeathRattlingWhore
      @DeathRattlingWhore 5 років тому +5

      Yeah, a sign of intelligence.

    • @TheCowMouth
      @TheCowMouth Рік тому

      @@robertbodle2354 is it not wrong to provoke political discussion about things we disagree with?

  • @pablosmoglives
    @pablosmoglives 6 років тому +137

    Smart, respectful people everywhere. Must be an old video.

    • @davemabee5798
      @davemabee5798 4 роки тому +15

      Must not be America.

    • @teetoys76
      @teetoys76 4 роки тому +2

      Dave mabee your an ass .

    • @teetoys76
      @teetoys76 4 роки тому +5

      I would say respectful , but not smart . Come on ...

    • @adamkrauss303
      @adamkrauss303 4 роки тому +7

      Sorry, but I find all of these people to be juvenile simpletons - albeit largely respectful ones. I am sad for them and for Frank that they just can’t recognize the brilliance of FZ and every band member he welcomed in to this elite group. I also have to say FZ is perhaps more patient than the Dali Lama in tolerating this innate, shallow and contrived questions. However, I wish Frank gave a little props to the mention of John McLaughlin, another musical genius in his own right.

    • @brainsareus
      @brainsareus 4 роки тому +1

      More like, neurotic white people; hyper-compartmentalizing the shit out of everything!

  • @eis904
    @eis904 2 роки тому +15

    He was really on his game at this point in 73. He had the best lineup these years following.

    • @georgfrank1458
      @georgfrank1458 2 місяці тому

      Yeah, George Duke and Ruth Underwood, among others, remain closely associated with this creative period.

  • @melissarittlinger5429
    @melissarittlinger5429 6 років тому +60

    He is so smart that he answers every question as if it was given to him ahead of time. He is truly brilliant.

    • @acohen1980
      @acohen1980 4 роки тому +2

      and Moore is brilliant in his drawing out of Frank's views

    • @davidburne9477
      @davidburne9477 4 роки тому

      Most of the talking heads on stage asking trite questions in search of a sound bite. . This was the country I grew up in. For those who want to see some hilarity, look for Norman Gunston’s interview with Frank. Norman blows some harp and Frank coolly offers him a big with the band. Very funny.

    • @klausrain111
      @klausrain111 Рік тому

      He knew the questions before hand. He's clever and manipulative enough to do that.

    • @tomdickandharry7024
      @tomdickandharry7024 5 місяців тому

      There was nothing brilliant about moore!

  • @rosradley7366
    @rosradley7366 5 років тому +34

    I wish George Carlin and Frank Zappa would have had their own music/comedy hour with total control over the output. A boy can dream.

    • @bryanknechtel8001
      @bryanknechtel8001 4 роки тому +5

      In 73 Carlin was still doing the hippy dippy weather man bit. Needless to say it wasn't close to his best stuff. George bloomed late and got better with age.

  • @capoleader3793
    @capoleader3793 Рік тому +4

    I can't help but notice how much more intelligent young people were back then

  • @mark11967AD
    @mark11967AD 2 роки тому +15

    I was five years old when this interview took place. People, including Frank, are idealistic and straightforward here as compared to today. Nobody would or does talk this way anymore. Then it was macro thinking about overall agendas and evolvement.. intellectual and romantic. Now it’s micro about so many particular issues and scandals that are replaced daily. And frivolous really simply for ratings. Money and computers have truly taken over. The billionaires have taken over. It’s funny because I scoffed at all the serious idealism that’s what my generation did. We just wanted entertainment, drugs, and sex. And we were TV heads. Computers have only made it a million times more so empty and distracted. And now it’s all dissolving. Humanity.

    • @JohnSmith-ij6ms
      @JohnSmith-ij6ms 2 роки тому +1

      youre not wrong. coming from a 23 year old

    • @chrise842
      @chrise842 2 роки тому +1

      Sorry, but the billionaires haven't taken over.
      He came from them!
      He was sent by the military industrial complex to oversee the Laurel Canyon scene and form it for them.
      Dave McGowan

    • @davidkocher2567
      @davidkocher2567 2 роки тому +1

      Brilliant? Probably. The saddle shoes are the only thing that give me pause.

  • @cgrigalus
    @cgrigalus 4 роки тому +14

    23:56 damn Zappa thought this shit was true back in the 70s imagine wtf he would say now

    • @TheSteelDialga
      @TheSteelDialga 5 місяців тому

      civilization phases 4 and 5 would probably be even more ugly than the 3rd

  • @Yosef9438
    @Yosef9438 2 роки тому +18

    Brilliant answers, and a wide range of questions from simplistic to complex. Really impressed with the '73 Australian audience and their obvious respect for him.

  • @tomjeffersonwasright2288
    @tomjeffersonwasright2288 6 років тому +51

    Zappa was a lion in a field of jackals.

  • @theresa42213
    @theresa42213 8 років тому +49

    l sure wish Frank were alive today. l miss him. There certainly will never be another Frank. Thank goodness for Dweezil, keeping his father's music going.

    • @Funz2022
      @Funz2022 7 років тому +8

      Sure, but Dweezil's no Frank. They don't speak about the same things & they don't write the same way.

    • @chickeastwater9883
      @chickeastwater9883 5 років тому +2

      Stephen Morton not so much Infighting - its Gail Zappa , leaving the legacy (copywrite ect.) To Ahmet & Diva -
      Dweezil.- doesnt have that kind of money for Attorneys -
      Its a Very Strange situation

    • @Chris_Stanley007
      @Chris_Stanley007 5 років тому +1

      @Stephen Morton Yup fuck Gail and fuck Ahmet & Diva. Seriously, diva??? Give me a fucking break. That bitch ain't done nothing to deserve anything.

    • @adamkrauss303
      @adamkrauss303 4 роки тому

      Dweezil is not only an astonishing guitarist but a humble warm individual. I have been at Dweezil shows with thousands in the audience and he stuck around after the show to chat with everyone who wanted the opportunity. And having seen many FZ shows from the late 70’s to his final performances, I must say that Dweezil takes some of his dad’s songs to new heights and with renewed energy. But it is FZ’s music after all.

    • @hyacinthlynch843
      @hyacinthlynch843 2 роки тому +1

      Dweezil is very talented but he doesn't posess genius.

  • @MrChrispy777
    @MrChrispy777 2 роки тому +11

    Frank Zappa was genius, perceptive, intuitive, transparent, articulate, clear-minded, stable, and highly skeptical. As a skilled critical thinker, you couldn't pull the wool over his eyes. He knew about the CIA, the Government(s), the entertainment and advertising industries, cultural trends, and much more. A true Renaissance Man.

  • @sealisa1398
    @sealisa1398 4 роки тому +20

    Frank was a stellar communicator - good listener and stolid in verbal style, full of facts, logical and highly persuasive. Dripping with charisma. And on top of it all he was a paisano. “When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this sign, that the dunces are all in confederacy against him”.

    • @shinybeast8946
      @shinybeast8946 Рік тому

      Who said that?

    • @kooale
      @kooale Рік тому

      @@shinybeast8946 You can't search?... "When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this sign, that the dunces are all in confederacy against him." - Jonathan Swift

    • @shinybeast8946
      @shinybeast8946 Рік тому

      @@kooale When people quote something, they usually attribute it to a source.

  • @acohen1980
    @acohen1980 4 роки тому +12

    Robert Moore gives Frank every opportunity to show his insight...both give a masterful performance

  • @jesusrocks7500
    @jesusrocks7500 Рік тому +13

    His first "mass media" performance was on Steve Allen where he played a bicycle. That pretty much explains the phenomena of Frank.

    • @scotsman6712
      @scotsman6712 Рік тому

      Pronounced his name," Frank ZapPAW

    • @stoggsherfnik4569
      @stoggsherfnik4569 6 місяців тому

      I actually saw that when I was five or six years old, when I had just got my first bicycle and was fixing playing cards with a clothesline clip to the spokes of its wheels. I remember overhearing during the opening introductions something about “ coming up is a guest… ‘ plays the bicycle…’ My little boy brain just lit up😊🎉!
      It’s one of my first tv memories. By that time I had just learned the different orchestra instruments were, and the weirdest most complex looking one was the bassoon. A mad scientist invented a musical instrument, I thought, ah hah! That’s the one for me😅, I proclaimed. That really baffled the snot out of my parents. And then, that TV show Steve Alan, comes on and announces” man plays bicycle” I remember being mildly disappointed that my mom was not present so I could drag her into the living room and make her watch it. I have not yet discovered the existence of electric guitars, and I was also at the age where I still wanted to bang on everything in the kitchen.

  • @AndrewGrey22
    @AndrewGrey22 2 роки тому +10

    It's almost like Frank arrived from the year 2080 to educate these people.

  • @stevenhigley1930
    @stevenhigley1930 Рік тому +14

    ZAPPA is a musical genius, highly articulate,he has a genius I.Q.and speaks very intelligently ! Nobody compares to Zappas guitar playing and phrasing of words in his songs !!Zappa is very unique,he is the best!!!

    • @stevenhigley1930
      @stevenhigley1930 Рік тому +3

      Listening to Zappa speak is just as interesting as listening to him to perform!’

  • @timothydillow3160
    @timothydillow3160 Рік тому +2

    "A misunderstood mind is always one of a kind, a rock is a gem if it's hard to find." td

  • @JoeContiMusic
    @JoeContiMusic 2 роки тому +13

    I keep re-discovering Frank and I just love it

    • @mikebryan7060
      @mikebryan7060 Рік тому

      Me too. I think it will take a lifetime to take in his musical legacy

  • @acidtacos455
    @acidtacos455 3 роки тому +8

    watching him talk makes me wanna go sober, he sounds so smart and easily gets his point across

    • @scotsman6712
      @scotsman6712 Рік тому +1

      I support you Being sober is great,life is short enough even if you live to 100. So much opportunity to do things that are positive!

  • @SpaceCattttt
    @SpaceCattttt Рік тому +5

    Superb upload. Perfect format for Frank, this show. He wasn't forced to talk to just a boring interviewer but instead could address both a panel and the audience as well.

  • @beachcomber2008
    @beachcomber2008 6 років тому +20

    Hooray for the internet. I had not heard this wonderful piece of music before, although from 1965 I had come to believe Frank Zappa to be the finest musician of the the twentieth century. This interview was also very good. !994, when Frank died, was a black year for me (blacker for him), but in the two thousand teens I'm still here and still hold Zappa in the highest esteem. His music is still brilliant and sparkling, and there is no-one anywhere that has surpassed him. It has been a very great pleasure to watch this.

  • @yobyob9369
    @yobyob9369 Рік тому +4

    I have become a fan over the last few months because what a great mind just listen all his interviews I can

  • @olly3700
    @olly3700 4 роки тому +12

    Just great.
    Really timeless.
    Hard to realise he's gone...

  • @MrRemcoLamberts
    @MrRemcoLamberts Рік тому +5

    This is one hundred % golden!. Just amazing to see Zappa so comfortable and at ease in this forum discussion (basically ABC's current Q&A program predecessor. Whatever you think of the (somewhat judgemental) questions , I believe it also shows Australia's as a country that is more liberal and open to non-conformity then the US of the UK at that time!
    It would have been interesting to know who some of the guest where (and how they look back on it now).

    • @haydenwalton2766
      @haydenwalton2766 27 днів тому

      ah, the good old days - when music was good and aust journalists were intellectual

  • @MrUltraworld
    @MrUltraworld Рік тому +20

    I find it amazing that Frank was able to finance shipping all of his gear and band members to Australia. It must have cost a fortune, and he wasn't a huge star commanding big fees to perform. I doubt he made any money. It says a lot about Frank. I loved Franks interviews, he was thoughtful with his answers.

    • @cristicini
      @cristicini Рік тому

      Is it possible that he leased the equipment. That would make more sense.

    • @MrUltraworld
      @MrUltraworld Рік тому

      @@cristicini Many times Frank bought used gear and then sold it at the end of a tour.

    • @Frunobulax74
      @Frunobulax74 11 місяців тому

      @MrUltraworld - There is no way Frank would have done the Australian tour if he wasn't going to profit. He was a small business. Doing tours that caused him to lose money would put him in major debt and or out of business. He couldn't afford to lose a lot of money like the big groups.

  • @RebuttalRecords
    @RebuttalRecords 9 років тому +49

    Frank was a true visionary, he even predicted a pop icon (Michael Jackson) doing a cola commercial (Pepsi).

    • @jasonbone5121
      @jasonbone5121 5 років тому +4

      He predicted the world we currently live in.
      Journey - Any Way You Want It - State Farm insurance
      Ozzy Osbourne - Crazy Train - Mitsubishi and Honda
      Van Halen - You Really Got Me - Nissan featuring GI Joe and Barbie
      Rush - Working Man - WalMart
      The Who - Won’t Get Fooled Again & Baba O’Reily - Nissan
      Cream - White Room - Apple
      Guns N’ Roses - Welcome To The Jungle - Taco Bell
      Queens Of The Stone Age - Smooth Sailing - Mountain Dew
      I could add more but it would take about an hour...

    • @Chris_Stanley007
      @Chris_Stanley007 5 років тому +2

      Coke is still and always has been better though lol

    • @thepuppethead1188
      @thepuppethead1188 4 роки тому +2

      actually lots of bands at the time had already done ads for Coke,The Who most prominently. It wasn't a prediction,just a statement.

    • @thepuppethead1188
      @thepuppethead1188 4 роки тому +2

      @@jasonbone5121 most things where popular songs end up in ads are done by the labels who own the songs,not the bands.

  • @timmccoy1750
    @timmccoy1750 6 місяців тому +3

    Now this was a very insghted, articulated sit down interview! And this was 50 years ago! Frank just was a visionary and knew where things were heading to....

  • @steveplattify
    @steveplattify 28 днів тому +3

    That is an astonishingly thoughtful - and thought-provoking - programme. Hard to imagine any TV network that would do anything like it today. Although I was disappointed (but not surprised) not to hear more from the women members of the panel.

  • @craigpage381
    @craigpage381 4 роки тому +10

    One thing is clear... This man knew what he wanted
    Recognized the weight of and rate of opposition. And clearly. He knows how to answer before the presentation of a question. True self confidence..steadfast in his belief. He (to me) is an ICON.

  • @spb7883
    @spb7883 4 роки тому +14

    20:35 - FZ discusses his early experience in advertising. It's intriguing that Zappa, Robert Crumb, and George Carlin all had experiences in advertising and/or radio before they "made it", and all had very similar cultural views about the United States. They saw conformity everywhere, whereas most of their contemporaries only saw conformity among their parents.

  • @danvincent2600
    @danvincent2600 2 роки тому +5

    What’s amazing aboot this footage is how almost word for word he says the same things in 1984 on the MTV interview. Also, a tin teardrop

    • @paulinebutcherbird
      @paulinebutcherbird 29 днів тому

      He had a program of things he said in interviews, eg in mid 1980s it was all about TV evangelism, and then later about labelling records on suitability for children, during another period it was AIDS disease, etc.

  • @brentwentfishing
    @brentwentfishing 6 років тому +10

    After watching this interview I am even more convinced that Frank was a genius that was way before his time. R.I.P. Mr. Zappa.

    • @burleybater
      @burleybater 2 роки тому

      Yep. Curious thing. If you exchanged 1970 to 1973 with 2019 to 2022, Frank would hardly have skipped a beat, and would still be spot on.
      Which is pretty outrageous when you think about it. We think we're so 'new.' But this goes back 49 years, and so many of the same things were on the menu back then.

    • @lastnamefirst4035
      @lastnamefirst4035 Рік тому

      @@burleybater you think Frank was the only smart guy? He had a platform to speak

  • @clacclackerson3678
    @clacclackerson3678 5 років тому +16

    "Would one of the women like to speak?"
    Australia, 1973.

    • @rods6405
      @rods6405 3 роки тому

      In a perfect universe no! Sorry could not help myself!

    • @TheSteelDialga
      @TheSteelDialga 5 місяців тому +2

      @@rods6405 dude

    • @jimjam51075
      @jimjam51075 18 днів тому

      ​@@rods6405Per a 2020 Guardian article, the publishing industry is 80% female peers and 60% female supervisors.
      They get to speak plenty...

    • @rods6405
      @rods6405 18 днів тому

      @@jimjam51075 And look at the mess the world is in ! "female supervisors' managers Ive worked with them (unfortunately) poor productivity, no profits , no planning at all but always the last to be made redundant but maybe that's because HR is...... You guessed it full of females.

  • @danielwalker1991
    @danielwalker1991 Рік тому +5

    Frank Zappa was my "Guru" of musical humor with an insight into life since I was in highschool during the 1960's... May Zappa RIP.. 💪✌️❤️‍🩹🇺🇸

  • @vrod2144
    @vrod2144 Місяць тому +2

    I'm just discover his interviews. What a amazing human being. Authentic, intelegent and stands behind his words through whole his career. Everything he says is gold.

  • @tommyt1971
    @tommyt1971 3 роки тому +6

    "What is Frank Zappa?" Nobody could ever figure it out -- including himself. And that was one of the coolest things about it.

  • @peterstonehouse3194
    @peterstonehouse3194 4 роки тому +7

    Thank goodness for common sense and Frank Zappa, the genie of how to make complicated notions just common sense

  • @mantovannni
    @mantovannni 5 років тому +10

    Watching any Zappa interviews just gives me more respect for him. What a mind!

  • @That1Guy
    @That1Guy 4 роки тому +11

    The music is so beautifully sophisticated and being performed here on the highest level. Everyone on this panel seems not to notice that small detail.

    • @kaykybernardes2471
      @kaykybernardes2471 3 роки тому

      Please you can tell me the name of the song that play athe 5:10?

    • @hahatarachine
      @hahatarachine 2 роки тому

      @@kaykybernardes2471 RDNZL is the name of the piece

  • @rubendrakkar
    @rubendrakkar 7 років тому +32

    jean luc ponty on violins

    • @Chris_Stanley007
      @Chris_Stanley007 5 років тому +4

      Dude could always shred. His stuff with the Mahavishnu Orchestra was incredible too

  • @lyndapierson6338
    @lyndapierson6338 4 роки тому +8

    pure genius. hard to find nowadays

  • @dennishunt1590
    @dennishunt1590 5 років тому +13

    I loved Frank Zappa and still play play his wonderful music. Frank Zappa was a genius and not only because of his music.

  • @mfasiscrackbeats3543
    @mfasiscrackbeats3543 Рік тому +5

    easily one of my favorite musicians and his interviews are great, was always dropping knowledge💎

  • @dorianedwards8522
    @dorianedwards8522 Рік тому +10

    What is truly interesting about Frank and his music is that here in the 21st century, his music is being introduced to a much larger audience than it ever was when he was alive and creating it. I think that there is a huge audience for Frank's music in the world today. It's amazing what the internet has allowed for the art of music. Experimental music has almost disappeared from contemporary music today. But Frank can still be experienced with the click of a mouse.

    • @davidaston5773
      @davidaston5773 Рік тому

      The panel is full of people who think they're cleverer than Zappa when in reality their thinking is the result of following limited and restrictive ideas. Plus, Zappa wasn't interested in fitting in or pleasing people to the detriment of himself or his creative output.
      Plus, he sees music in a simple honest way, while he's surrounded by, people who big it up so they can look and sound good.

  • @Danuta628
    @Danuta628 Рік тому +8

    This dude is so ahead of his time. It amazes me the questions coming out of the panel just shows how boxed in their mentality is. Frank is so universally brilliant that they just hang on every word

    • @lastnamefirst4035
      @lastnamefirst4035 Рік тому

      Too bad Frank wasn't smart enough to quit smoking cause of death being cancer

    • @lastnamefirst4035
      @lastnamefirst4035 Рік тому

      "Universally brilliant"😀

    • @louieo.blevinsmusic4197
      @louieo.blevinsmusic4197 Рік тому

      This was the comment I was looking for. Agreed, way ahead of his time. He apparently understood, what seems so obvious now, the games that are played to brainwash folks. It must’ve been real hard for him to take part in that generation where change seemed inevitable only to watch history repeat itself by tenfold. I’ve never been a huge fan of progressive experimental rock, more of a singer/songwriter guy, but he’s very fucking captivating none the less.

    • @louieo.blevinsmusic4197
      @louieo.blevinsmusic4197 Рік тому

      @Lastname first I’ve seen you make backhander remarks under multiple comments. Meaning you’re going out of your way. Why is that?

    • @hazeshi6779
      @hazeshi6779 Рік тому

      It's probably just an angry evangelical lol

  • @georgekraft1401
    @georgekraft1401 5 років тому +16

    This maybe the best in depth (could of gone all nite for me) interview I've seen. Frank's thoughts in many areas. The guy is still missed

  • @bobsyeruncle4841
    @bobsyeruncle4841 Місяць тому +2

    great upload Zappa knows his own mind- refreshing

  • @MITCHY_B_2003
    @MITCHY_B_2003 6 років тому +17

    This man is as sharp as a tack
    📌📌📌📌📌📌📌📌📌

  • @d.w.5144
    @d.w.5144 6 років тому +5

    My Son (12) thinks I am crasy then I look this videos or listen to Franks Musik. So I try to explain him what was going on here in Germany in the 80. So Frank Zappa helps me to get some history education to my son . Thank you Frank. Miss you.

  • @TreMc
    @TreMc 3 роки тому +4

    what an attentive, respectful, somewhat uptight and totally willing audience.

  • @215Gallagher
    @215Gallagher 5 років тому +6

    Yes I remember watching this when I was 14, obviously I became an instant fan, one of the great minds of the 20th century.

  • @simonmcgrath4112
    @simonmcgrath4112 9 років тому +21

    god I love frank!! he in my opinion is and always will be the most articulate, knowledgeable and writer of some the the best songs that blow me away and I was very lucky to see him live!!! such a loss that could have been avoided by a simple test!!! long live frank and thank you to everyone who posts all these albums and other offerings!!!

  • @nzoz1977
    @nzoz1977 8 років тому +21

    46:00 ..... you'd never see an interviewer and audience member exchange like that on Australian TV these days.

  • @geinikan1kan
    @geinikan1kan 6 років тому +16

    What a great upload. This period is so important. Zappa has formed an incredible group, and he was composing and performing some of his best compositions. His articulateness is a pleasure to listen to.

  • @gingercat777
    @gingercat777 4 роки тому +6

    Never thought I'd hear Slade and Nuremberg in the same sentence....lol

  • @putridabomination
    @putridabomination 4 роки тому +15

    I don't normally watch interviews but for Frank Zappa I've watched many. He is one of a kind. I've listened to over 30 of his albums so far. He is an inspiration and a role model. America's Best Kept Musical Secret! He simply is the best.

    • @2hotnips
      @2hotnips 2 роки тому +1

      Nice profile picture.

  • @pedroleal7118
    @pedroleal7118 Рік тому +2

    Frank is probably one of the most honest artists in rock , and probably one of the most interesting. Music needs more of that kind of people, educated, cultivated, creative, proficient and no compromise? He is missed, and is probably one of the most interesting composers of the 20th century's end! These kind of artists are dangerous to today's 'music business', they stand for something, Music, not 'business'! History will tell!

  • @pierodavies9508
    @pierodavies9508 4 роки тому +5

    Self control in action! Some of those questions....sheeeesh. Was great seeing Chris Winter lurking in the audience, and firing off a couple of questions. I was fortunate enough to be listening to to Chris on 2JJ and answered a phone in question that resulted in my winning a copy (Vinyl) of 'Bongo Fury'. No mail out in those day's. I had to travel into Sydney (William St ABC Studio) to pick it up. It still sits in my collection.

  • @leftenanthiccups.4849
    @leftenanthiccups.4849 2 роки тому +3

    Ah yes,1973.😎 I was ten,going to the fourth grade at Claremont Primary, close to the river. WA. The most important things that I can remember include this interview with Frank Zappa, because he was a ' yank' as well, on the tele. But, I loved my new country🇦🇺the other good memory was when the school made us line up on the sidewalk of Sterling Hwy ,to wave at Queen Elizabeth as she drove by on her way to Fremantle Hbr.🙂

  • @slimshine953
    @slimshine953 5 років тому +9

    A unique interview indeed. Zappa being his usual honest, dry, unadulterated, unassuming, humorous, and witty self. People had hair! Oh and such cute girls in the audience!

  • @donkkong5551
    @donkkong5551 8 років тому +44

    Man i was and still am so influenced by this individual! The thing i respect the most about this man besides his musical talents and unique style of guitar playing and soloing is he had so much self confidence in himself and achieving his and or the American Dream. He set out to do what he wanted with his life and some how got it done and got paid for doing what he enjoyed in life. He managed to get people on the same page to perform his music on more than one occasion with more than one band which seemed to be every four years. Musicians were coming and going so fast he brought us some really talented people such as Aynsley Dunbar, George Duke, Chester Thompson, Ruth Underwood, Fowler Bros, Napoleon Murphy Brock on Tush Tush Tush Btw, Terry Bozzio, Vinnie Colaiuta, Steve Vai, Chad Wackerman, Mike Keneally, Tommy Mars, Ike Willis, Adrian Belew. The list go's on and on.. RIP FZ and Gail and thanks!

    • @duanedrake5552
      @duanedrake5552 7 років тому

      frank zappa, gave me his silk jacket, 561-284-5969, I'm selling it now, ask for ***Rebel stevie***

    • @StillBillyD92
      @StillBillyD92 7 років тому

      Don K Kong exactly how I feel about him too. Man I wish I was alive when he was.

    • @donkkong5551
      @donkkong5551 7 років тому +3

      Well his son has done a fantastic job reproducing his works. I see ZPZ every time they come around. Its a shame the family Is fighting.. I owned four Zappa albums when he died. I remember being in the tenth grade waking up for school and hearing it on the news that he died from prostate cancer. I had no idea he was sick like that and i was just opening up his collection and really just dissecting everything especially after he died... It sad... Extremely motivated individual, wish i had a ounce of that mans energy & intellect.... Peace my brother!

    • @StewartGartland
      @StewartGartland 7 років тому +13

      Nicely said. I started listening to Frank when I was 18. I'm nearly 58 and I am still listening to him. His music is so irreverent, raucous, funny, interesting and excellent. Good grief, cats like Ed Palermo are still releasing records interpreting his music. He was prolific, visionary and a great mind, not just within music.
      RIP Frank, we all miss you terribly.

    • @donkkong5551
      @donkkong5551 7 років тому +3

      +Stewart Gartland nicely said to you also! Imagine what Frank would be doing today, he would have been a great leader for this country!

  • @nickmessitte1721
    @nickmessitte1721 Рік тому +1

    I love how he talks so fiercely about rock and roll and then they show him with his big band playing jazz

  • @mikedemike5393
    @mikedemike5393 4 роки тому +7

    the last great artist of the 20th century...Dada invocation...multi memetic...multi artformed merging synchronicity and xenochromatic audio and visual mediums....this man is still not fully understood....

  • @basedbattledroid3507
    @basedbattledroid3507 6 років тому +5

    Master of Time Signatures.

  • @jansdoe6963
    @jansdoe6963 4 роки тому +6

    I miss Mr.Zappa and his music. When I was in high school I took myself too seriously and a friend "turned me on to" Mr.Zappa and The Mothers of Invention. My friend played "You Didn't Try To Call Me" on the record player. [Yea, I'm that old.} That song made me laugh at myself. I'm in debt to my friend & Mr. Zappa and the Mothers of Invention. I learned to laugh t myself. Oh yea, I forgot my parents. They too taught me to laugh at myself. Laughing helps ya stay off the shrink's chair.

  • @tracylf5409
    @tracylf5409 4 роки тому +7

    RIP, Frank. The people in all of this were so uninformed, I cringed. I love you forever, Frank Zappa. Thank you to his passed-away band mates in, Mother of Invention. You're the best!

  • @levijm825
    @levijm825 4 роки тому +4

    Sad i wasnt alive in his lifetime. Brilliant man!

  • @papajay111
    @papajay111 8 років тому +12

    The King of the social revolution ,,, this guy is the greatest satirist, non hippy, freak, best guitar player/orchestated rock music composer, non intellected intellectual that the mad freaky 60s ever created. And the world would not be the same place had he not been a part of it in such an influencing, yet non-influential way.

  • @dorianedwards8522
    @dorianedwards8522 Рік тому +1

    The Plaster Casters? I love it.......

  • @michaelboyce
    @michaelboyce 8 років тому +4

    some of the best performance footage

  • @Croot_Music
    @Croot_Music 8 років тому +9

    this is gold

  • @SethJacobson
    @SethJacobson 9 років тому +4

    Thank you for sharing this wonderful bit of history

  • @nextmove
    @nextmove 9 років тому +19

    Lighten up Jessica Alcorn. Frank only documented what went on on his tours and how people behave. If he had a degree in it he'd be called an anthropologist. No one forced the girls to turn up in dressing rooms or tour buses they did it by their own volition. In other words don't shoot the messenger !

    • @SaintNektarios
      @SaintNektarios 4 роки тому +1

      Don't you know that men control everything through the patriarchy and women have no control or responsibility over their own behaviour. It is always men's fault.

    • @HectorSpector
      @HectorSpector 3 роки тому +1

      @@SaintNektarios Its so sad how wimen today are indoctrinated with that framework. It takes away empowerment from femenism. And the original sin of being born with a pp is creating a generation of simps and soyboiis.

    • @paulinebutcherbird
      @paulinebutcherbird 29 днів тому

      Is Jessica Alcorn the girl at the beginning who asks several questions, coyly?

  • @malectric
    @malectric 10 місяців тому

    I could listen to what Zappa has to say for hours - and I already have. And the music - probably the most nuance-rich compositions I've ever heard.

  • @dorianedwards8522
    @dorianedwards8522 Рік тому +2

    Noddy Holder? That's funny, comparing anything that he did with anything Frank did. Although I must say, he managed to bring back the spirit of early rock and roll.

  • @MacDisel1
    @MacDisel1 8 років тому +5

    Love the old Slade footage, platform shoes which FZ is also rocking, Get Down Get With It

  • @zootsootful
    @zootsootful 7 років тому +8

    The whole thing feels like they were trying to corner him. No small task when you're faced with someone as forthright as Zappa was.

  • @barkofink
    @barkofink 3 роки тому +4

    Most important part, a musician has to be surprised by his and others one creativity, melodically essentially. This is not about doing scales all day long. Still relevant today, people don't understand anything to music including most of self-proclaimed "musicians".

  • @browningautomatic2393
    @browningautomatic2393 3 місяці тому +1

    GREAT INTERVIEW ! WEDNESDAY 3/27/24 MARCH 27, 2024

  • @terrypussypower
    @terrypussypower 7 років тому +2

    What a fucking GREAT clip! Sal Marquez, Ralph Humphrey, Tom Fowler, Jean Luc Ponty, Ruth Underwood, George Duke, Bruce Fowler, Ian Underwood and FZ playing the blond headstock SG that Gibson reissued a few years back that Dweezil plays onstage with Zappa Play Zappa (or whatever they're called now, once his young brother and him fell out!)

  • @cosmicdrifter287
    @cosmicdrifter287 9 років тому +8

    excellent,frank is right on the money throughout this program.

  • @trankgrappa
    @trankgrappa 7 років тому +1

    great! tnx 4 uploading :))

  • @herakleitus
    @herakleitus 4 роки тому +6

    4:33-9:50 Ironic, how the conversation about “dirty lyrics” segues into a clip of some of the most harmonically complex instrumental music you’ll hear in “rock.”

  • @williamtaylor5193
    @williamtaylor5193 2 роки тому +2

    The word genius is overused and misapplied to many, but I think Frank was the genuine article. From an early age, he had command of so many subjects, and was skillful in so many areas.

  • @Chris_Stanley007
    @Chris_Stanley007 5 років тому +2

    The world would be a much LESSER place without Mr. Zappa's contributions. We are all better for it whether we know it or not.

  • @burleybater
    @burleybater 2 роки тому +1

    My God, the woman at 11:00 and there it was, the typical question deconstructing the meaning into as aimless and purposeless a thing as the musings of a distracted and autistic toddler.
    I discovered how fucking brilliant Frank was at the perfect age of 17, when so much of Mothers was practically brand-new. Not being a television fan, I never really blundered into the interviews until much later in life, but I listened to the music well into my early twenties.
    Now I realize how much more brilliant Frank actually was, than what caught my sensibility then. I don't think we thought of it as ahead of its time, but all these years later, it's positively prophetic.
    One other thing. Maybe the thing we loved him for the most was the impeccable manners with which he trashed the pretensions of what was at the time, a pretty tame world. Only we didn't know that, then.

  • @stevejames5863
    @stevejames5863 2 роки тому +3

    rock music back then was a powerful source. not definely good or bad, or sometimes good sometimes bad. but in late sixties, early seventies, rock and change were involved. change sometimes politically in a vague way. but it was powerful. sometimes it was cool, sometimes for some it was upsetting and so on. it goes on today in different ways. but what i like about zappa is he gave a different view then. he was not pro drugs, he told it basically straight, he played a more esoteric music for the people. i respect all of that.... someone like lennon, who was political back then , sometimes a good message, sometimes maybe a bad one, a certain pr, where he is somewhat hypocritical by 1980. zappa was never really hypocritical, he told it straight, basically, i respect that.

  • @seansweeney3532
    @seansweeney3532 4 місяці тому

    It's a very nice show here, in which Zappa is allowed to state his views on a lot of things, and field questions from every direction in his unique way. What a great time capsule!

  • @FirstnameLastname-jz2oq
    @FirstnameLastname-jz2oq 6 років тому +24

    i thought he was quite handsome

  • @electricchurchmusic4298
    @electricchurchmusic4298 8 років тому +1

    All those Australian Concerts are brilliant shows !!!

  • @gergsar
    @gergsar 8 років тому +3

    this was very good!

  • @dazykuri
    @dazykuri 5 років тому +3

    That guy in the crowd is an underrated legend