Frank Zappa is an amazing rabbit hole to go down. Recorded 68 albums in his lifetime. I'm dyslexic and I have trouble reading but there is a great movie just called Zappa. I love what you do, keep it up.
Whilst it's in my top 10 tracks of Zappa's, this is a very odd "starting point". It's incredibly challenging. I know it note for note, so I can't remember how it must sound on a first listen, but it's beyond "difficult" at times. Well done for taking on the challenge.
The ZAPPA rabbit hole. It's a long dark journey. Some can't take it. Some are just too unequipped to listen and understand musical genius. GOOD LUCK....just subscribed. Can't wait for more.
The Real Frank Zappa autobiography is a really good read. First half is about his life and music and the second half is about his politics. Great vid 👍
When it came out, I went into NYC when I heard he was doing a signing at Walden books, I believe it was. Standing in front talking with him while he signed my book was a trip. That book is tucked safely away with all my other Zappa memorabilia.
Zappa put out such a massive amount of music over the course of his career, with so many different "eras" of different styles and fellow musicians. I'm sure everyone has their favorite, and people will likely tell you theirs in the comments. My recommendation is to listen to a few songs each from different parts of his life and find out which era you like the most and dive into that. That's one of the great things about listening to his music. He's played with some of the greatest musicians to have lived, and he was endlessly creative. It's fun to just listen to how it evolved over time, and discover all the unique parts.
And this was live. No 2nd takes. Saw Frank 5 times in 7 days. He performed Inca Roads every show. But each time he improvised a new solo. All were great and highly structured. That's a reason he hired Vai. Steve would transcribe Franks various leads. Inca Roads and the Adventures of Greggery Peccary. I was weened on Fillmore. 53 years ago.
It IS live but patched together from several different concerts. Frank is on record as saying this is one song (among very few) that the bands who played it (81, 82, 84), NEVER played correctly all the way through.
HOT RATS is a top 10 album from Zappa and a perfect introduction to the rest of his catalog of over 40 released albums. Lots of Instrumentals on Hot Rats, and some insight to his BIG BAND music writing style.
At the cover of his first album "Freak out" (1966) Zappa lists some 50 persons who inspired him. Now, after 50 years of listen to much of his music (still I find songs I never heard), I explore many of these persons music (but all are not musicians) as well as music by members of Mothers. It is widen my interest for all kind of music!
There is a quote from Stravinsky's Rite of Spring in this, about when Frank sings ritual sacrifice. And, of course, the Rite of Spring is about a sacrifice.
"The Real Frank Zappa Book" is Frank's autobiography. "Freak Out - My Life with Frank Zappa", by Pauline Butcher is also very good. If you want to try another Zappa song, try Peaches En Regalia from the Hot Rats album. This is a brilliant early instrumental from Frank and Hot Rats is often considered the first rock/jazz fusion album.
I would like to emphasise to anyone listening to this that Scott thunes and chad wackerman, the bass player and the drummer, was around 20 years old when this was recorded. That is absolutely insane.
Frank didn't even create it. It's from a 1954 Droodle, as well as the title, both created by Roger Price. Frank contacted Mr. Price to get permission to use the artwork as well as the title and went to work writing the song around it.
Although the original caption of this Droodle is far from the context of this album, I've always seen it as a Z and A for Zappa. It wasn't until two years ago that I looked at it and saw the bow of a ship arriving at the tip of a witch's hat.
I'm a huge Zappa fan and there are still corners of his oeuvre that I've yet to discover but for nice primer on career and work check out the 2020 doc titled simply "Zappa". For nice over view of his peak period in the mid 70s the 40th anniversary deluxe version of Zappa in New York is also a great place to start. There's also the film Baby Snakes released around the same time which has some great live footage and the wonderful and weird claymation of Bruce Bickford.
Yeah, so many eras, all different from each other. My preference is the early to mid 70's material. Grand Wazoo is my absolute favorite album from him. It's one of his jazz albums.
El tiburon amarillo es un gran disco de una sonoridad majestuosa !!! Zappa era un genio demasiado grande para la época y en especial para Gringolandia ...
Esta es la etapa de Vai, Bobby Martin con una voz increible,los teclados de Tomy Mars, Wakerman en batreria aunque tambien hay algo de Colaiuta...tremendos musicos como siempre y unas composiciones complejas que luego de escucharlas varias veces y en distintos momentos cobran nuevo sentido, un gran artista no solo musico rodeado tambien de grandes artistas.Un gran compositor de verdad que trasciende los generos.
The best book is his autobiography, “The Real Frank Zappa Book”. There are tons of biographical and documentary videos on TH-cam. “Zappa” is the best documentary. Lots and lots of interviews and live concert videos too. For me, the best era of his work starts in 1971 with Hot Rats. A couple years later he went on a run with albums like Overnite Sensation, Apostrophe and One Size Fits All. Your impressions of “…Drowning Witch” tell me that you have a predisposition to appreciate his music. Once you get started down the rabbit hole you can move through his catalog in either direction to be blown away by the volume of his output most of which is populated by the best and most dedicated musicians you will ever hear. My naming four albums here is barely scratching the surface. Look for live performance videos fronted by his son, Dweezil, who also has top notch musicians with him to give fans excellent renditions of Frank’s music. You’re welcome.
Zappa himself was playing the 2 guitar solo's Stevie Via was playing the composed guitar lines. This whole track was edited together from live recordings taken from the 82 tour. it's a shame you did not segue into envelopes, even though you state you could not find it, it's the next track on the album (maybe you should have tried from Spotify)
He tried pot a couple times but didn't like it. He was a chain smoker and he drank LOTS of very strong, very black coffee. He didn't allow illicit drugs of any kind at rehearsals or on the road, one reason being thwt he didn't have to bail out anyone from his entourage from jail. Another reaso being that it's impossible to do his music justice while intoxicated. For most mortals it's impossible to play this music while not intoxicated. Zappa's is a very deep rabbit hole that's well worth exploring. Drowning Witch is based on several live performances edited together to get the basic track (complete live versions were typically be what you have here, with different solos obviously but he pidked the best performances of every moment of the song). Afterwards he added LOTS of overdubs in the studio. Frank Zappa - vocals, guitar solos, conducting Scott Thunes - Bass Chad Wackerman - Drums Steve Vai - impossible guitar parts (or written guitar lines or strat abuse) Bobby Martin - Keyboards, vocals Ike Willis - Guitar, vocalss Ray White -Guitar, vocals Tommy Mars - Keyboards, vocal Ed Mann - Percussion
Ruth Underwood is the percussionist and a long-time associate. There is a great video on TH-cam with most of his percussionists/drummers discussing working with him. She is a music major who studied at Ithaca College under Warren Benson and at Juilliard. All his musicians were top drawer. You needed to pass an audition to get into Zappa's band.
@@rk41gator Are you not very well versed in the ever-changing lineup of Zappa musicians? Ruth was the goddess of percussion, but not with him since as I posted. Ed Mann was her successor and with Frank until the final tour of '88. Ed Mann just passed away a couple of weeks ago. R.I.P. Ed Mann.
Zappa is a great rabbit hole to get into but it appears to be endless so buckle up. I'm currently reading the Real Zappa book and it is pretty good. A song suggestion I'd say is Cocaine decisions from the Halloween 81 performance. It is a currently favorite that doesn't get talked about much
Rabelaisian fusion prog, polymath and polyhistor, Franklin Delanore Zapper had that third nut so essential to redbudding geniusi. Et Capricornicus! Achieving his heights without the aid of the usual cosmic triggers is what baffles. Perhaps he was just super cautious, and private. During my chance encounter with him, at a luxury hotel in Boston, which I was showing a friend from Charlotte who had come for a visit, I was loaded for bear, in that I had remembered great swaths if Joe's Garage, including the German bits, which I asked him about. He chuckled as it was fairly x-rated, and we spoke a minute or five, introducing my friend, with whom I was carrying on a short-lived affair, and who became a fine actor, acting happy inside her handsome home, I am assuming. A sister of a former, I was that much of a scoundrel. Sorry. I blather. Anyway...here is Frank on the aboriginal Tonight Show with Steve Allen, it's creator...and himself a polymath and Capricorn. I assume you are as well? You seem so. th-cam.com/video/QF0PYQ8IOL4/w-d-xo.html
Comment 1: Marimbas on this track - Ed Mann, who recently left this vale of tears. Steve Vai is playing the difficult written parts - Frank just plays both solos. Comment 2: My recommended Zappa books - either Greg Russo's Cosmik Debris, or any volume of Scott Parker's series of FZ chronicles, just because these books focus on the music and thereby induce an intense desire to listen. The widely-distributed biography by Barry "right-wing but doesn't know it" Miles ought not to be touched with a bargepole.
I'd warn you off any live Zappa taken from the TV special "A Token of His Extreme" as, while the performance is Zappa and the band at their very best, that show has way too many intrusive bits of animation. THAT SAID... The definitive live performance if a must-see "Inca Roads" is only found there, link below. Your best viewing experience will be to completely disregard the amination. Don't let it be a distraction from the performance of this geat song, just wait for more live footage. th-cam.com/video/8jPysRnY-hE/w-d-xo.htmlsi=lCmBdcH0cTw3mMTB
If you stare at the album cover (which is a Droodle by Rodger Price) long enough and intently enough you too will see the witches hat just in front of the bow of the ship.
BUT you really can't dance to this. OH, it is progressive rock. Yes, a time machine would be nice. He is on my list.....plus, Peter Gabriel with Genesis, CSN&Y, and Fleetwood Mac. (and so many others)
The quality of the Audio you have o this track is awful. I hope what you are hearing is better. I prefer Zappa's erlier stuff but everyone has their own favourite period. My Suggestions would be "Trouble Coming Everyday" (the Original studio version), "Inca Roads" (The Live version from "A Token Of His Extreme"), "Apostrophe" (from the LP of the same name), or maybe "Willie The Pimp" from (Hot Rats ft Captain Beefheart on Vocals).
In my opinion the first solo of the track is his best solo on an official release (along with the solo on Truck Driver Divorce). 80's Zappa is underrated, and some of the 70s albums are a bit overrated. All the songs you listed are boring to me. To each their own. I hate Hot Rats, I don't like his jazz fusion stuff and Apostrophe, the track, is never going anywhere for me. That's why I think a lot of his 70s stuff is overrated, compared to the early albums like Absolutely Free or Uncle Meat. Probably the most inventive and creative mind in popular music ever. In the 80s, his art became more concise and refined. My recommendation : "You are what you is" album. Very eclectic, vocal oriented album of short songs with amazing musicianship and great lyrics, most of the time.
Saw Frank 12 times in concert starting in October 1978, right before I turned 15. I rarely listened to anyone else or saw anyone else in concert because of him. I had virtually zero interest in any other music.
0:00 intro
1:18 song
13:23 additional comments (can't be missed!)
every note was written by frank and he made them change time with signals and hand gestures.genius
Frank Zappa is an amazing rabbit hole to go down. Recorded 68 albums in his lifetime. I'm dyslexic and I have trouble reading but there is a great movie just called Zappa. I love what you do, keep it up.
And if you count every album after his death up to now it's over 150, I have every official record released and several bootleg albums.
Whilst it's in my top 10 tracks of Zappa's, this is a very odd "starting point". It's incredibly challenging. I know it note for note, so I can't remember how it must sound on a first listen, but it's beyond "difficult" at times. Well done for taking on the challenge.
The ZAPPA rabbit hole. It's a long dark journey. Some can't take it. Some are just too unequipped to listen and understand musical genius. GOOD LUCK....just subscribed. Can't wait for more.
Drowning Witch
The Real Frank Zappa autobiography is a really good read. First half is about his life and music and the second half is about his politics. Great vid 👍
When it came out, I went into NYC when I heard he was doing a signing at Walden books, I believe it was. Standing in front talking with him while he signed my book was a trip. That book is tucked safely away with all my other Zappa memorabilia.
Zappa put out such a massive amount of music over the course of his career, with so many different "eras" of different styles and fellow musicians. I'm sure everyone has their favorite, and people will likely tell you theirs in the comments. My recommendation is to listen to a few songs each from different parts of his life and find out which era you like the most and dive into that. That's one of the great things about listening to his music. He's played with some of the greatest musicians to have lived, and he was endlessly creative. It's fun to just listen to how it evolved over time, and discover all the unique parts.
His autobiography is phenomenal! Absolutely do read it!
And this was live. No 2nd takes. Saw Frank 5 times in 7 days. He performed Inca Roads every show. But each time he improvised a new solo. All were great and highly structured. That's a reason he hired Vai. Steve would transcribe Franks various leads. Inca Roads and the Adventures of Greggery Peccary. I was weened on Fillmore. 53 years ago.
It IS live but patched together from several different concerts. Frank is on record as saying this is one song (among very few) that the bands who played it (81, 82, 84), NEVER played correctly all the way through.
15 edits and tons of overdubs, including a sped up bass in unison w xylophone just before the guitar solo begins.
HOT RATS is a top 10 album from Zappa and a perfect introduction to the rest of his catalog of over 40 released albums.
Lots of Instrumentals on Hot Rats, and some insight to his BIG BAND music writing style.
Live in New York is another good starter.
At the cover of his first album "Freak out" (1966) Zappa lists some 50 persons who inspired him. Now, after 50 years of listen to much of his music (still I find songs I never heard), I explore many of these persons music (but all are not musicians) as well as music by members of Mothers. It is widen my interest for all kind of music!
i just subscribed because of zappa. saw him a few times back in the day. zappa is the man. can't wait for more reactions. the waters are deep.
There is a quote from Stravinsky's Rite of Spring in this, about when Frank sings ritual sacrifice. And, of course, the Rite of Spring is about a sacrifice.
One of my top 5 Zappa songs ! Can't wait to watch your review
You are already into prog and haven't dug into ZAPPA?! You are in for it.
frank was right about everything.
"The Real Frank Zappa Book" is Frank's autobiography. "Freak Out - My Life with Frank Zappa", by Pauline Butcher is also very good. If you want to try another Zappa song, try Peaches En Regalia from the Hot Rats album. This is a brilliant early instrumental from Frank and Hot Rats is often considered the first rock/jazz fusion album.
Stream of consciousness to music......very difficult and strange music. I have this album and LOVE the album cover.
I would like to emphasise to anyone listening to this that Scott thunes and chad wackerman, the bass player and the drummer, was around 20 years old when this was recorded. That is absolutely insane.
One of the great, minimalist album cover artwork for the title. It’s genius.
Frank didn't even create it.
It's from a 1954 Droodle, as well as the title, both created by Roger Price.
Frank contacted Mr. Price to get permission to use the artwork as well as the title and went to work writing the song around it.
@@_Fake_Rolex That's cool to know...I didn't figure it was a FZ original, and was too lazy to look up the origin. Thanks for clarifying!
@@MattKrogmeier
Always happy to give credit where it's due.
Although the original caption of this Droodle is far from the context of this album, I've always seen it as a Z and A for Zappa. It wasn't until two years ago that I looked at it and saw the bow of a ship arriving at the tip of a witch's hat.
The" Real Frank Zappa Book"
I'm a huge Zappa fan and there are still corners of his oeuvre that I've yet to discover but for nice primer on career and work check out the 2020 doc titled simply "Zappa". For nice over view of his peak period in the mid 70s the 40th anniversary deluxe version of Zappa in New York is also a great place to start. There's also the film Baby Snakes released around the same time which has some great live footage and the wonderful and weird claymation of Bruce Bickford.
Yeah, so many eras, all different from each other. My preference is the early to mid 70's material. Grand Wazoo is my absolute favorite album from him. It's one of his jazz albums.
El tiburon amarillo es un gran disco de una sonoridad majestuosa !!! Zappa era un genio demasiado grande para la época y en especial para Gringolandia ...
Esta es la etapa de Vai, Bobby Martin con una voz increible,los teclados de Tomy Mars, Wakerman en batreria aunque tambien hay algo de Colaiuta...tremendos musicos como siempre y unas composiciones complejas que luego de escucharlas varias veces y en distintos momentos cobran nuevo sentido, un gran artista no solo musico rodeado tambien de grandes artistas.Un gran compositor de verdad que trasciende los generos.
Chad Wackerman is the only drummer on this album.
Vinnie Colaiuta left the band after the fall '80 tour.
Would recommend checking out Inca Roads
The best book is his autobiography, “The Real Frank Zappa Book”. There are tons of biographical and documentary videos on TH-cam. “Zappa” is the best documentary. Lots and lots of interviews and live concert videos too. For me, the best era of his work starts in 1971 with Hot Rats. A couple years later he went on a run with albums like Overnite Sensation, Apostrophe and One Size Fits All. Your impressions of “…Drowning Witch” tell me that you have a predisposition to appreciate his music. Once you get started down the rabbit hole you can move through his catalog in either direction to be blown away by the volume of his output most of which is populated by the best and most dedicated musicians you will ever hear. My naming four albums here is barely scratching the surface. Look for live performance videos fronted by his son, Dweezil, who also has top notch musicians with him to give fans excellent renditions of Frank’s music. You’re welcome.
I thought the Zappa documentary was terrible. The best is here on youtube, from the BBC - th-cam.com/video/ZuhoavP4k4c/w-d-xo.html
Zappa himself was playing the 2 guitar solo's
Stevie Via was playing the composed guitar lines.
This whole track was edited together from live recordings taken from the 82 tour.
it's a shame you did not segue into envelopes, even though you state you could not find it, it's the next track on the album (maybe you should have tried from Spotify)
I download off youtube always
@@deanwolfechannel that's no good as the sound quality is not always up to scratch on YT. anyway nice reaction man.
Rat tomago made me a fan 40 years ago
He tried pot a couple times but didn't like it.
He was a chain smoker and he drank LOTS of very strong, very black coffee.
He didn't allow illicit drugs of any kind at rehearsals or on the road, one reason being thwt he didn't have to bail out anyone from his entourage from jail.
Another reaso being that it's impossible to do his music justice while intoxicated.
For most mortals it's impossible to play this music while not intoxicated.
Zappa's is a very deep rabbit hole that's well worth exploring.
Drowning Witch is based on several live performances edited together to get the basic track (complete live versions were typically be what you have here, with different solos obviously but he pidked the best performances of every moment of the song).
Afterwards he added LOTS of overdubs in the studio.
Frank Zappa - vocals, guitar solos, conducting
Scott Thunes - Bass
Chad Wackerman - Drums
Steve Vai - impossible guitar parts (or written guitar lines or strat abuse)
Bobby Martin - Keyboards, vocals
Ike Willis - Guitar, vocalss
Ray White -Guitar, vocals
Tommy Mars - Keyboards, vocal
Ed Mann - Percussion
Joe's Garage is my favorite hence my name lol Zappa fans know
The white zone is for loading and unloading only. if you have load......
Maybe listening to this right before bed was a bad idea...
he was doing evh shit in the 60s
Drowning Witch.
whoops, Ok, changed it
Ruth Underwood is the percussionist and a long-time associate. There is a great video on TH-cam with most of his percussionists/drummers discussing working with him.
She is a music major who studied at Ithaca College under Warren Benson and at Juilliard. All his musicians were top drawer. You needed to pass an audition to get into Zappa's band.
I'll look Ruth up
Ruth is not the percussionist on this.
She left the band at the end of the '74 tour and only came back in '76 to play in the end of year gigs in NYC.
@@_Fake_Rolex Thanks. I should look at the credits closer. Ed Mann was on a LOT of the later Zappa recordings.
@@rk41gator
Are you not very well versed in the ever-changing lineup of Zappa musicians?
Ruth was the goddess of percussion, but not with him since as I posted.
Ed Mann was her successor and with Frank until the final tour of '88.
Ed Mann just passed away a couple of weeks ago.
R.I.P. Ed Mann.
Zappa is a great rabbit hole to get into but it appears to be endless so buckle up. I'm currently reading the Real Zappa book and it is pretty good. A song suggestion I'd say is Cocaine decisions from the Halloween 81 performance. It is a currently favorite that doesn't get talked about much
Rabelaisian fusion prog, polymath and polyhistor, Franklin Delanore Zapper had that third nut so essential to redbudding geniusi. Et Capricornicus!
Achieving his heights without the aid of the usual cosmic triggers is what baffles. Perhaps he was just super cautious, and private.
During my chance encounter with him, at a luxury hotel in Boston, which I was showing a friend from Charlotte who had come for a visit, I was loaded for bear, in that I had remembered great swaths if Joe's Garage, including the German bits, which I asked him about. He chuckled as it was fairly x-rated, and we spoke a minute or five, introducing my friend, with whom I was carrying on a short-lived affair, and who became a fine actor, acting happy inside her handsome home, I am assuming. A sister of a former, I was that much of a scoundrel. Sorry. I blather. Anyway...here is Frank on the aboriginal Tonight Show with Steve Allen, it's creator...and himself a polymath and Capricorn. I assume you are as well? You seem so. th-cam.com/video/QF0PYQ8IOL4/w-d-xo.html
I'm aries
@@deanwolfechannel Ah! Glad you are catching up! :)
@@MisterWondrous 😄👍
Try " Little Umbrellas"
Comment 1: Marimbas on this track - Ed Mann, who recently left this vale of tears. Steve Vai is playing the difficult written parts - Frank just plays both solos.
Comment 2: My recommended Zappa books - either Greg Russo's Cosmik Debris, or any volume of Scott Parker's series of FZ chronicles, just because these books focus on the music and thereby induce an intense desire to listen. The widely-distributed biography by Barry "right-wing but doesn't know it" Miles ought not to be touched with a bargepole.
I'd warn you off any live Zappa taken from the TV special "A Token of His Extreme" as, while the performance is Zappa and the band at their very best, that show has way too many intrusive bits of animation. THAT SAID...
The definitive live performance if a must-see "Inca Roads" is only found there, link below. Your best viewing experience will be to completely disregard the amination. Don't let it be a distraction from the performance of this geat song, just wait for more live footage.
th-cam.com/video/8jPysRnY-hE/w-d-xo.htmlsi=lCmBdcH0cTw3mMTB
Don't warn anyone away from those performances. The Bruce Bickford animations are awesome.
American composer.
And yes,you gotta listen more Zappa.
If you stare at the album cover (which is a Droodle by Rodger Price) long enough and intently enough you too will see the witches hat just in front of the bow of the ship.
BUT you really can't dance to this.
OH, it is progressive rock. Yes, a time machine would be nice. He is on my list.....plus, Peter Gabriel with Genesis, CSN&Y, and Fleetwood Mac. (and so many others)
The quality of the Audio you have o this track is awful. I hope what you are hearing is better.
I prefer Zappa's erlier stuff but everyone has their own favourite period.
My Suggestions would be "Trouble Coming Everyday" (the Original studio version), "Inca Roads" (The Live version from "A Token Of His Extreme"), "Apostrophe" (from the LP of the same name), or maybe "Willie The Pimp" from (Hot Rats ft Captain Beefheart on Vocals).
'Inca Roads' is a must (with Chester Thompson on drums).
really? The audio seemed good to me. I know it was live. I've got great headphones .
In my opinion the first solo of the track is his best solo on an official release (along with the solo on Truck Driver Divorce).
80's Zappa is underrated, and some of the 70s albums are a bit overrated.
All the songs you listed are boring to me. To each their own. I hate Hot Rats, I don't like his jazz fusion stuff and Apostrophe, the track, is never going anywhere for me. That's why I think a lot of his 70s stuff is overrated, compared to the early albums like Absolutely Free or Uncle Meat.
Probably the most inventive and creative mind in popular music ever. In the 80s, his art became more concise and refined.
My recommendation : "You are what you is" album. Very eclectic, vocal oriented album of short songs with amazing musicianship and great lyrics, most of the time.
@@deanwolfechannel It might just be me but it sounded a bit thin. My vinyl sounds far meatier.
Drowning Witch.
Drown the Witch would be purposely doing it to her.
Tsk tsk.
It's all good and well to "like" the comment.
Better to act upon the info given and rename your video to honor Frank properly.
Saw Frank 12 times in concert starting in October 1978, right before I turned 15. I rarely listened to anyone else or saw anyone else in concert because of him. I had virtually zero interest in any other music.
Are you kidding me.? Both solos were played by Zappa.
Listen more Zappa....you will realize that is not possible to confuse
Drowning Witch. Not Drown The Witch.
whoops, ok, made the change, thanks
@@deanwolfechannel No worries.
he is intentional annoying to get your attention.