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New ‘Zappa’ Documentary Seeks Fresh Converts To Music Legend’s Cult
The Federalist ^ | November 20, 2020 | Bruce Edward Walker

Posted on 11/20/2020 9:16:02 AM PST by Kaslin

'Zappa' is a thorough introduction to the life and musical career of the most idiosyncratic and talented artists of the 20th century.

Although he departed this Earth some 27 years ago, Frank Zappa continues to both fascinate and befuddle. He fascinates because of the sheer brilliance of his guitar playing, his compositional skills, his astute and often biting satire and parody, and his invaluable ability to put together some of the most stellar band lineups of the rock era.

He befuddles, because, let’s face it, some of his lyrical output is little more than puerile scatology, often misogynistic and, frankly, and worst of all, devoid of imagination. His music, however? More often than not, it’s challenging and sublime.

From the rearview mirror, it’s obvious Zappa the artist would have been well-served by a creative partner or professional editor who might’ve been able to dissuade the main Mother of Invention from some of his more crass career lowlights. It’s to the detriment of his legacy that no such influence materialized.

On the other hand, Zappa’s headstrong independence was also one of his greatest artistic accomplishments. His relative success as an independent artist blazed trails for many, yet, by the time he formed his own record company in the late 1970s, he had already established himself on such labels as Verve and Warner Bros/Reprise, United Artists, and had helmed his Straight and Bizarre imprints.

Unsurprisingly, no substantial subjective criticism of Zappa appears in the latest documentary covering his personal life and career. Set to come out Nov. 27 and simply titled “Zappa,” this Magnolia release is helmed by “Bill & Ted” actor and documentary filmmaker Alex Winter.

As these types of passion projects go, Winter’s documentary delivers and is a must-see for true Zappa fans if, for nothing else, the heretofore unseen home footage of Zappa with his family, working with the all-female GTOs (Girls Together Outrageously), as well as intimate scenes of Zappa with the group that put him on the map in the mid-1960s: the Mothers of Invention.

The film also serves as a decent, although far from perfect, intro for the uninitiated Zappa fanatic. Indeed, if you’re not already onboard the Zappa train, this documentary won’t provide you a first-class boarding ticket.

Celebrity Encomiums

Included in the roster of talking heads gathered to deliver respective encomiums are Steve Vai, Ruth Underwood, and Alice Cooper. For the casual music fan who may not have been aware, Cooper’s recording career received a tremendous boost signing on to Zappa’s Straight label.

That said, late 1970s band members Adrian Belew, Terry Bozzio, and a host of other extremely talented musicians are some of the noteworthy collaborators missing in action. As a catalog of Zappa’s influences, “Zappa” does a fair job, but is not nearly as extensive as the 2010 documentary “The Freak Out List.”

What Winter’s does well, however, is postulate why Zappa seemed so intent on violating middle-class decorum throughout much of his recording career; namely, a bust, brief incarceration, and seizure of allegedly pornographic audio recordings by the San Bernardino vice squad and an adolescent fascination with genuinely blowing stuff up.

The word “genius” gets tossed around quite a bit, as is the custom in most celluloid tributes to fallen rock stars. Although tantalizing song fragments abound, there’s little critical context presented to convince the uninitiated Zappa freak of the frequent assertions of Zappa’s musical genius.

Early Mothers albums receive relatively short shrift as well. Focus on the third Mothers of Invention album, “We’re Only in It for the Money,” squanders much of its discussion on the sleeve design and whether its lampoon of the Beatles’s “Sgt. Pepper” cover might spark legal recourse. Left out are the many reasons no self-respecting music collection should be without a copy of perhaps the most brilliant skewering of the counterculture ever committed to vinyl.

That Zappa could so effectively stand outside the Summer of Love to lambaste it so hilariously and effectively should’ve come as no surprise as he and his band had devastatingly tackled the media, the White House, and America at large on their two preceding albums, “Freak Out” and “Absolutely Free.”

Not that you would glean such an impression from Winter’s film, but the first three Mothers albums constitute a trifecta of 1960s American parody never before or since equaled in popular music.

Classic Instrumental Albums – And Ex-Turtles

As the 1960s waned, Zappa, with and without the Mothers, moved more into an instrumental territory, releasing albums with complex instrumentation and kooky titles, including “Lumpy Gravy,” “Burnt Weeny Sandwich,” and what has rightly been deemed a classic, 1969’s “Hot Rats.”

The dawn of the 1970s, however, witnessed a new version of the Mothers, featuring former Turtles Flo and Eddie (Mark Volman and Howard Kaylan) on vocals. Not much consideration is granted this era in Winter’s film, but it should be noted this incarnation of the band displayed much of the freedoms somewhat curtailed in Zappa’s recorded output of the previous decade.

While some of the material has aged well, much of it today smacks of pushing the envelope of decency too far in the wake of Lenny Bruce (who, incidentally, was once signed to Zappa’s Straight label) and other comics who refused to work “clean.”

All the while, Zappa developed his guitar and compositional mastery and even managed a return to cultural parody in his late 1970s output. By the 1980s, he had even scored a massive hit, “Valley Girl,” with his daughter Moon Unit, which is given ample consideration in the documentary. It would have been beneficial, however, for the documentary to use clips that show exactly why so many hardcore music fanatics remain infatuated with Zappa’s music.

Zappa vs. the PMRC

Valuable screen time is given to Zappa’s battle against the Parents Music Resource Center and the organization’s attempts to impose a rating system on the music industry. Ultimately, Zappa lost. But, instead of the brief mention this episode truly deserves, the documentary presents Zappa as a hero for the First Amendment and all things celebrating freedom. Then, as now, this father of two daughters wonders how alerting parents to the increasingly offensive lyrical content of rock and rap music in the early 1990s crosses over into “censorship.”

Where “Zappa” shines is in the scenes bookending the film. The film’s opening sequence captures his sentiments before his final live performances in Prague to celebrate the Czech Republic’s newly established freedom from Soviet rule. His remarks to an adoring crowd serve to welcome their country’s re-entry into the free world and are worthy of inclusion in any textbook covering the end of the Cold War. Unfortunately, viewers don’t see or hear any of the music performed from those evenings.

At more than two hours, “Zappa” is a lengthy introduction to his life and musical career. If it inspires viewers unaware of his music to delve into his extensive catalog (which has more than doubled since he passed away in 1993), it serves a valuable purpose that may well be noble. For the rest of us, “Zappa” is time well spent with one of the most idiosyncratic and talented musical artists of the 20th century.


TOPICS: TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: alexwinter; documentaries; documentary; frankzappa; music; musicalgenius; rock; rockandroll; zappa
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first 1-2021-4041-6061-80 ... 101-116 next last

1 posted on 11/20/2020 9:16:02 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Here Fido, here fido


2 posted on 11/20/2020 9:23:07 AM PST by South Dakota (This is what I do. I drink and I know things)
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To: Kaslin

Frank Zappa and The Mothers, they had the best place around............


3 posted on 11/20/2020 9:23:55 AM PST by Red Badger (Democrats cheat. ... It's what they do. ... GUARANTEED! ... Even if it's not necessary!....)
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To: Kaslin

Wait until these ‘fresh converts’ see the album cover for Joe’s Garage. I imagine many would find that to be ‘problematic’, thereby resulting in Zappa’s posthumous cancellation.


4 posted on 11/20/2020 9:25:33 AM PST by American Infidel (Instead of vilifying success, try to emulate it)
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To: South Dakota

Arf. Arf. Arf.


5 posted on 11/20/2020 9:25:58 AM PST by Eddie01 (too exhausted to apply the sarc tag)
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To: Kaslin

I have never been able to conclude whether Zappa was a bizarre genius or a somewhat skilled conman who fooled people into believing he was something much greater than he was.


6 posted on 11/20/2020 9:26:07 AM PST by vladimir998 ( Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: Kaslin

Billy was a mountain.

Ethel was a tree growing off of his shoulder.


7 posted on 11/20/2020 9:27:03 AM PST by Eddie01 (too exhausted to apply the sarc tag)
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To: Kaslin

There is already a Zappa documentary on Amazon Prime. I’m 67 and the generation he played to. I could never get into his stuff. I’ve tried recently and I still can’t.

I did enjoy Montana and, as a teenager, Dynamo Hum had a certain, um, “charm”, but that was it.

But his abstaining from all drugs and alcohol is interesting, considering his music causes one to infer the exact opposite.


8 posted on 11/20/2020 9:27:54 AM PST by cuban leaf (The political war playing out in every country now: Globalists vs Nationalists)
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To: Kaslin
I don't like the wording of the headline.

Anyway, at about the 5 minute mark Here's My Alma Mater GA Southern doing some Zappa.

9 posted on 11/20/2020 9:27:57 AM PST by real saxophonist (Do not pray for an easy life. Pray for the strength to endure a difficult one. -Bruce Lee)
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To: Kaslin

Camarillo Brillo


10 posted on 11/20/2020 9:29:14 AM PST by hercuroc
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To: vladimir998

“I have never been able to conclude whether Zappa was a bizarre genius or a somewhat skilled conman who fooled people into believing he was something much greater than he was.”

Listen hear Warner brother exec.

It’s obvious you never listened to his music.

...or you’re retarded.


11 posted on 11/20/2020 9:29:34 AM PST by Eddie01 (too exhausted to apply the sarc tag)
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To: Eddie01

“While pondering the significance of pedal depressed pan chromatic resonance, and other highly ambient domains..”


12 posted on 11/20/2020 9:30:44 AM PST by FMBass (USN 1972 - 1975 (DE-1074) NNTaleb fan )
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To: vladimir998

You’ve heard his music?


13 posted on 11/20/2020 9:32:31 AM PST by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: FMBass

I sang Evelyn to my son growing up tucking him in bed before his prayers.

We sang it together.

He can sing it perfectly today at 18 yo.


14 posted on 11/20/2020 9:33:56 AM PST by Eddie01 (too exhausted to apply the sarc tag)
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To: Eddie01

Wanna eat some clams?


15 posted on 11/20/2020 9:34:19 AM PST by Sirius Lee (They intend to murder us. Prep if you want to live and live like you are prepping for eternal life)
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To: Kaslin

You either love or hate him. I’ve been a fan since I was 13. He has some great stuff and some that is not. He certainly could see into the future and the direction of society. Back from his “Freak Out” album “and I don’t even care if your dad’s a he.” Or just listen to the rarely listened to “Joe’s Garage act II and III”.


16 posted on 11/20/2020 9:36:30 AM PST by dgbrown
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To: cuban leaf

To the contrary, his individualism, for better or worse, was never affected by drugs or booze.


17 posted on 11/20/2020 9:36:33 AM PST by OKSooner (BLOAT)
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To: vladimir998

I agree with you—I never could understand the appeal.


18 posted on 11/20/2020 9:37:46 AM PST by dinodino ( )
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Comment #19 Removed by Moderator

Comment #20 Removed by Moderator


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