domingo, 26 de junho de 2011

The Genius of Frank Zappa

Source: www.speakup.com.br
Language level: Advanced
Standard: British accent
Speaker: Mark Worden



The Genius of Frank Zappa

Frank Zappa was one of pop music’s most complex personalities. His music covered a range of genres, from classical symphonies for free-form jazz and wild rock ’n’ roll, and his records and stage shows could be hilariously funny. Zappa died of prostate cancer in December 1993, at the age of 52, but his influence remains strong – even in Brazil, where he was the subject of the book Zappa Detritos Cósmicos, launched in March by the São Paulo – based writer Fabio Massari. Why does Zappa still generate so much excitement, nearly 15 years after his death? To learn more about the legendary pop icon, Speak Up talked to Jimmy Carl Black, who was a member of Zappa’s own band, The Mothers of Invention. Black now plays for the Liverpool based group The Muffin Men, which is named after a Zappa song. Black explains that he first met Zappa back in 1964, when the latter was still an unknown guitarist:

Jimmy Carl Black:
(Standard: American/Texan accent):

From the beginning, actually before the beginning, I was with The Soul Giants. He joined The Soul Giants and, he took over the band and the rest is history. Well, we were just working, playing in tittie bars, actually, go-go joints, just trying to make a living, but we were rehearsing, we were rehearsing Frank’s music, he said…he did tell us one time, he said “If you’ll play my music, I’ll make you rich and famous.” He kept one half of that promise: he made me famous, but sure in hell didn’t make me rich!

OBSESSED

Roy Estrada was also a member of Zappa’s first group and he was likewise to play with The Mothers of Invention on and off over the next 30 years.

Today Estrada, along with Don Preston, Napoleon Murphy Brock, and other musicians, is a member of and other Zappa tribute project, The Grandmothers Re-Invented. We asked Roy Estrada what Zappa had been like to work with:

Roy Estrada
(Standard American accent)

He was fun, he liked to laugh, I liked to make him laugh and he liked rock ‘n’ roll, he liked blues, rhythm ‘n’ blues, and he was just like a comedian a lot of times, you know, and in turn we would joke around…so what happened with Frank, he…he got so much into his music, he got involved so much into his music and…which I’m not saying is bad, but I don’t think he really gave time to anything else but to music, so, you know, the smoking and drinking a lot of espresso, and creating his music, you know, that is…which is great, you know, but I guess that took the toll, you know.

VALLEY GIRL

Estrada remembers working with Zappa and his daughter, Moon Unit, in the recording studio in the basement of the family home in Los Angeles’ Topanga Canyon. Zappa’s wife Gail and his other daughter, Diva, tended to stay up stairs:

Roy Estrada:

(He) hardly ever slept, as far as I knew, and hardly would see his family, they’d would see his family, they’d go into the studio, just to check, you know, to see him, to get a hug before they went to sleep, ‘cause I remember I used to go…I went there to do…like in the ‘80s, I went back and did Drowning Witch, the white album, where his daughter’s singing “Valley Girl,” and at that time I remember when they were kids, you know, they used to go and…before they went to bed, go in there, he would hug them and then they’d (be) gone: kept on working again. I don’t think they ever saw him any more than that.