Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Zappa, Frank - Andy Doherty
Zappa, Frank - Andy Doherty
ANDY DOHERTY
Zappa in New York sounds as much like formula work as anything this character has ever foisted upon his public….
At its most pedestrian, this album offers "Titties and Beer," yet another Zappa attempt to secure the affections of the sophomores in the audience by reviving the crudest elements of vaudeville. The song centers on a locker-room dialogue between Zappa and the Devil …, who has eaten Frank's girl and beer. Sound familiar? It should—the routine aims for the same sleazy places Flo and Eddie (to cite the obvious example) explored years ago…. Being predictable is bad enough; "Titties and Beer" is that and mild, a far greater sin.
"The Illinois Enema Bandit" is a considerable improvement, owing in large part to a successful integration of yuks and riffs. There are a number of structural twists to the piece…. Still, the song was inevitable; eventually Zappa had to write a song about enemas, there only being a...
[The entire page is 335 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Bertram Stanleigh
- Harvey Pekar
- Robert A. Rosenstone
- Ellen Sander
- David G. Walley
- Lester Bangs
- Alan Heineman
- Bill Reed
- Lester Bangs
- Lester Bangs
- Jay Cocks
- Dan Morgenstern
- David Reitman
- Mike Bourne
- David Walley
- Arthur Schmidt
- Peter Kountz
- Alan Niester
- Eric Salzman
- JOHN SWENSON and BART TESTA
- Lester Bangs
- Robert Duncan
- Andy Doherty
- Tim Schneckloth
- David Fricke
- Peter Reilly
- Jon Pareles
- Karl Dallas
- Shel Kagan
- Cole Springer
- Tom Carson
- Jon Pareles
- Don Shewey
- Larry Birnbaum
- Paul Tickell
- Copyright
