Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Zappa, Frank - Jon Pareles
Zappa, Frank - Jon Pareles
JON PARELES
Frank Zappa's attitude runs so thick you could smear it on sidewalks. For a decade, his name has conjured a rude blend of cynicism, scatology, and conceit, and until seven years ago he was entitled to all three. Zappa's scabrous all-Americanism, as promulgated on the first half-dozen Mothers of Invention albums, was enough to nurture the Tubes, the Residents, and others; his shifty-meter tunes, tape tricks, and rock-jazz arrangements would be revered and revived by Tin Huey, Hatfield and the North, the Residents, and many others. Yet his best work (the Mothers' Freak Out! and Weasels Ripped My Flesh, and Zappa's solo Hot Rats) went unbought….
His response was so cynical it stunned even ardent Zappaphiles: He went for the moron audience. In what seemed at the time to be a natural (and temporary) de-evolutionary splice from the narratives-with-incidental-music on Just Another Band from L.A., Zappa introduced his...
[The entire page is 573 words long]
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