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Where to start with Frank Zappa ?

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CiSTM

Banned
Never got into Frank Zappa's stuff and now I really want to but don't really know where to start. Man has over 50 studio albums so I really need GAF's help here :lol
 
Joe's Garage.
Apostrophe (')
Over-Nite Sensation
Sheik Yerbouti

Check "Watermelon in Easter Hay" (Joe's Garage), best guitar solo ever.
Im not kidding: E V E R.
 
Apostrophe (') already got two votes so I'm gonna start with it right now... If I can get it from itunes. Keep 'em coming. Youtube vids etc. from your favorites are also appreciated.
 
Fersis said:
Joe's Garage.
Apostrophe (')
Over-Nite Sensation
Sheik Yerbouti

Check "Watermelon in Easter Hay" (Joe's Garage), best guitar solo ever.
Im not kidding: E V E R.
Listen to this man!
Also,
Have I Offended Someone?
 
CiSTM said:
Apostrophe (') already got two votes so I'm gonna start with it right now... If I can get it from itunes. Keep 'em coming. Youtube vids etc. from your favorites are also appreciated.
You can sing along Apostrophe (Only one instrumental song)... Jazz from hell? Not so much.

The guy was a genius.
 
Aaah, a thread about Frank Zappa on Gaf!

I think those 3 or 4 albums are the most "accessible" yet (as always) brilliant ones!
My favourite songs from the following albums:
Black Napkins (from Zoot Allures)
Zoot Allures (also form Zoot Allures)
Why Does It hurt When I Pee?
Sofa No. 2

One Size Fits All - All classics on this one. Enjoy the sofa!
album-one-size-fits-all.jpg


Zoot Allures - The title song is one of my favourite Zappa songs ever.
album-zoot-allures.jpg


Joe's Garage - A very funny concept album with extreme lyrics and music!
joe%27s_garage_cover.jpg


It always helps to get a best of! It's all subjective etc but it's a great guide to his different styles!
album-strictly-commercial-the-best-of-frank-zappa.jpg
 
Psychedelic rock & humor:
Freak Out
Absolutely Free
We're Only In It For the Money

Jazz Rock:
Hot Rats
Grand Wazoo
Waka/Jawaka
One Size Fits All
Roxy & Elsewhere
Sleep Dirt
Studio Tan

Both of the above styles:
Weasels Ripped My Flesh
Burnt Weenie Sandwich
Uncle Meat

Comedy hard rock:
Just Another Band From LA
Chunga's Revenge
Fillmore East
Overnight Sensation
Apostrophe
Zoot Allures
Bongo Fury
Joe's Garage

and... I'm really late for something. Will finish later.
 
VALIS said:
Psychedelic rock & humor:
Freak Out
Absolutely Free
We're Only In It For the Money

Jazz Rock:
Hot Rats
Grand Wazoo
Waka/Jawaka
One Size Fits All
Roxy & Elsewhere
Sleep Dirt
Studio Tan

Both of the above styles:
Weasels Ripped My Flesh
Burnt Weenie Sandwich
Uncle Meat

Comedy hard rock:
Just Another Band From LA
Chunga's Revenge
Fillmore East
Overnight Sensation
Apostrophe
Zoot Allures
Bongo Fury
Joe's Garage

and... I'm really late for something. Will finish later.

This is really the best list submitted so far because you truly have to segment his works in order to make the question relevant. And this list doesn't even include his avant garde/classical experiments....

You'd be best to start with Strictly Commercial, as it covers his most accessible music, which, upon first listen, will still mostly sound slightly odd to most people.

Now, from era, these are my faves:

Mothers Era: Absolutely Free

Jazz Rock Era: Hot Rats (One of my favourites, period)

"Mainstream"/"Moderately Succesful: Overnite Sensation/Apostrophe

Late Era Comedy Rock/Experimental: Joe's Garage

Avant Garde: Yellow Shark

Also, all of Zappa's solos are amazing. Watermelon in Easter Hay is great, fantastic even, but for further mindblowing solos see Shut Up N Play Your Guitar or basically any rock related album he released post 1969. When I think of his award winning solos, that one actually didn't cross my mind first.
 
Honestly I just started from the beginning and went from there. A lot of music that man has made, it's almost scary.
 
King Of Fuh said:
When I think of his award winning solos, that one actually didn't cross my mind first.
Dunno about awards, but that songs sings into my heart.
Every single note its the right one to my ears.

<3 FZ <3
 
wenis said:
Honestly I just started from the beginning and went from there. A lot of music that man has made, it's almost scary.

Yes...

It will be a while before it sinks in for me that Zappa is dead, because I'm still working through his collection and have many albums to buy.

Hell, I bought Imaginary Diseases on his site, released in 2007, and was Mastered by Zappa himself. There's too much to work through.
 
Fersis said:
Dunno about awards, but that songs sings into my heart.
Every single note its the right one to my ears.

<3 FZ <3

It's not that I don't feel the solo is amazing, just that there is so much to his catalogue that it is almost impossible for me to pick any one out of his sea of brilliant solos.
 
King Of Fuh said:
It's not that I don't feel the solo is amazing, just that there is so much to his catalogue that it is almost impossible for me to pick any one out of his sea of brilliant solos.
Thats the thing with Zappa, you can listen to 10 records and its nothing compared to his entire repertoire.
Amazing.

EDIT: Ive only listened to 8-10 Zappa albums.
 
O_O @ Apostrophe (') amazing song. It's been on repeat for last 15 minutes. Gonna buy two more albums today, most likely over-nite-sensation and Hot Rats.
 
I'm personally in love with Joe's Garage, but the good in Zappa is deep and wide.

Also, if you want to see him throw down with the PMRC in the 80's, the entire congressional meeting is available on C-Span's archives.
 
My gateway to Frank Zappa was Joe's Garage and You Can't Do That on Stage Anymore vol.1. I'd recommend both for people wanting to check out Zappa for the first time. Current favourites would be Them or Us and Hot Rats. All time favourite is You Are What You Is. I tried to listen to Weasels Ripped My Flesh recently as well and just couldn't get into it at all.
 
Hot Rats is my favourite. Willie the Pimp and Son of Mr Green Genes are incredible.

Freak Out! doesn't do much for me but it has the song Trouble Every Day which is lyrically the best song I've ever heard.
 
VALIS said:
Psychedelic rock & humor:
Freak Out
Absolutely Free
We're Only In It For the Money

Jazz Rock:
Hot Rats
Grand Wazoo
Waka/Jawaka
One Size Fits All
Roxy & Elsewhere
Sleep Dirt
Studio Tan

Both of the above styles:
Weasels Ripped My Flesh
Burnt Weenie Sandwich
Uncle Meat

Comedy hard rock:
Just Another Band From LA
Chunga's Revenge
Fillmore East
Overnight Sensation
Apostrophe
Zoot Allures
Bongo Fury
Joe's Garage

This is a good list to reference if your really just starting out, personally my two favorite albums are from the jazzy rock section, Hot Rats and Grand Wazoo. I now await the first avatar quote.
 
Roxy and Elsewhere. A double live lp now on a single CD. It has the best balance of funny stuff with serious musical chops of any of his albums that I've heard(admittedly a small fraction of the whole).
 
There is so much VICTOLY in this thread, it brings a tear to my eye.

Three of the things I've always respected about his music is the lack of fluff, the razor-sharp timing, and the use of USEFUL percussion (ie, not a glorified metronome).

CiSTM: If you don't "get it" right away, set it aside to listen later. You're going deep into one of the 20th century's greatest musicians. No shitting. It takes awhile to; I myself only "got it" a few years back.

GRATUITOUS YOUTUBE LINKAGE:

TALKIN' BOUT DEM TINEH COOKEHS!!!!!1

"Some people like cupcakes better; I for one care less for them..."

She could go on the freeway and grow up to be 15 feet tall and scary-lookin'!

"We heard how people in this land liked Traditional Jazz."
 
I always thought We're Only In It For The Money (with The Mothers of Invention) was a good starting point, but that's probably because it just happened to be MY starting point.

Anyway, it's a kooky album, which might be a little hard to digest at first, but I think it's a great blend of satire and actual musical quality. It grabbed me, at any rate.
 
Just wanted to thank all of you for the recommends. I ended up getting following albums

- Freak Out!
- We're only in it for the money
- Hot rats
- Over-nite sensation
- Apostrophe (')
- Joes garage

Lot to listen but every single album has been solid in one way or other. No favorites yet but Hot Rats is currently the most played album. Thank you GAF.
 
I'm more of an early Zappa fan but he has insanely good music spanning decades.

IMO start with We're Only In It For The Money and Lumpy Gravy, throw in Hot Rats, Grand Wazoo and Burnt Weeny Sandwich. Go from there...

Enjoy one of my favourite musicians ever.
 
CiSTM said:
Just wanted to thank all of you for the recommends. I ended up getting following albums

- Freak Out!
- We're only in it for the money
- Hot rats
- Over-nite sensation
- Apostrophe (')
- Joes garage

Lot to listen but every single album has been solid in one way or other. No favorites yet but Hot Rats is currently the most played album. Thank you GAF.

Good solid list dude.
To appreciate We're only in it for the money, it's best to have a good knowledge of what it was like to live in america during the 1960's. The album is a lot like South park, it parodied and satirized the present as it was going on. The lyrics hit home hard for hippes, wannabes, conservatives, the hate vs the apathy, family structure falling apart, the american-indian idolizing...nobody was spared. And it's not just for laughs, there's a real hate or affection in that album. Unlike Zappas goofier albums, this one to me feels personal. He really wanted the planet to wake the fuck up. He had a stake in it. It's so harsh it's funny.
Besides the mastered lyricism, you have the mastered musicality of the psychedelic sound. Someone not paying attention would think this is some solid authentic stuff. The album reminds me of Spinal tap in that sense.

Hot Rats is solid too
Peaches en Regalia is a great song. It shows that if frank wanted to, he could play and compose with the rest of them. He just didn't feel like it and did his own thing. Even Captain Beefheart is bearable in that album.
 
Mr. B Natural said:
Start with his most influential.
Start with his best.

album-The-Mothers-of-Invention-Were-Only-in-It-for-the-Money.jpg


The perfect musical parody


This man knows the score.


I listened to this for weeks straight, with Lumpy Gravy. Start here.
 
samratty said:
I'm more of an early Zappa fan but he has insanely good music spanning decades.

IMO start with We're Only In It For The Money and Lumpy Gravy, throw in Hot Rats, Grand Wazoo and Burnt Weeny Sandwich. Go from there...

Enjoy one of my favourite musicians ever.

Lumpy Gravy, really?

That is the most inaccessible album of his I think. I didn't know anybody listened to it more than twice.

You may want to avoid that one.

I cosign that Hot Rats and Grand Wazoo are two of my favourites though.
 
samratty said:
I'm more of an early Zappa fan but he has insanely good music spanning decades.

IMO start with We're Only In It For The Money and Lumpy Gravy, throw in Hot Rats, Grand Wazoo and Burnt Weeny Sandwich. Go from there...

Enjoy one of my favourite musicians ever.

Love that album. Has another of my favorites in it: Eat That Question. The album version is VERY different, and Dunbar and Duke were killing in it.
 
Not only was Frank a great guitarist and songwriter, his band always featured some incredible musicians. Jean-Luc Ponty, Terry Bozzio, Steve Vai, Aynsley Dunbar and many others. Enjoy their contribution as well.
 
adamsappel said:
Over-Nite Sensation is his most accessible. Apostrophe (') is another one that's not too weird for the uninitiated.

These are a good place to start.

Hot Rats, Freak Out! (his first album!) and Roxy and Elsewhere are also good for someone to ease into Zappa with.

DieNgamers said:
While I enjoy the older albums I'm more a fan of his mid till late 70s work. One track that popped into my mind yesterday was this one:
Filthy Habits from the Sleep Dirt album! It's creepy!

Is Sleep Dirt any good? I've never listened to it.
 
Lard said:
Is Sleep Dirt any good? I've never listened to it.
Of course it's good! Did you listen to this song? I think of the album as a slightly dreamy and dark Hot Rats, it's purely instrumental (though there are some remasters with annoying voices added over it in the 90s). Zappa wanted to call it Hot Rats III at first, as far as I know. It's very jazzy and experimental. I love his fuzzy guitar tones and every song has a catchy melody. If you like Hot Rats or Grand Wazoo go for it and find the original version without added voices. ;)
 
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