The MOFO Project/Object - The Making Of Freak Out! (CD) ~ Frank ... Cover Art

Mofo Project/Object (CD)

By: Frank Zappa (Artist)


List Price: $32.98
Tower Price: $29.97
You Save: $3.01 (10%)
Add to BagAdd to Bag Click to go directly to the checkout.
FREE Shop N' Save Shipping. Check individual shipping price. *Some Restrictions Apply.
 
Availability: In Stock
Share This:
Add To KaboodleAdd To Kaboodle  Submit To Digg!Submit To Digg!  Share On FacebookShare On Facebook  Add to FavoritesAdd to Favorites  TwitterTwitter 

Product Description


Track Listing

Your browser doesn't seem to have Flash enabled.
In order to access the album preview center, please ensure that the Flash player is installed. You can download it here.

DISC 1 for Mofo Project/Object (CD) Album By Frank Zappa (Artist)
1   Hungry Freaks, Daddy
2   I Ain't Got No Heart
3   Who Are The Brain Police?
4   Go Cry On Somebody Else's Shoulder
5   Motherly Love
6   How Could I Be Such A Fool?
7   Wowie Zowie
8   You Didn't Try To Call Me
9   Anyway The Wind Blows
10   I'm Not Satisfied
11   You're Probably Wondering Why I'm Here
12   Trouble Every Day
13   Help, I'm A Rock
14   It Can't Happen Here
15   Return Of The Son Of Monster Magnet
 
DISC 2 for Mofo Project/Object (CD) Album By Frank Zappa (Artist)
1   Trouble Every Day - (basic tracks)
2   Who Are The Brain Police
3   I Ain't Got No Heart - (basic tracks)
4   You Didn't Try To Call Me - (basic tracks)
5   How Could I Be Such A Fool?
6   Anyway The Wind Blows - (1987 FZ remix)
7   Go Cry On Somebody Else's Shoulder - (vocal overdub take 2)
8   Motherly Love - (vocal overdub master takes)
9   Tom Wilson
10   My Pet Theory
11   Hungry Freaks Daddy - (basic tracks)
12   Help, I'm A Rock - (1970 FZ remix)
13   It Can't Happen Here - (1970 FZ remix)
14   Freak Out Drum Track
15   Watts Riot Demo/Fillmore Sequence
16   Freak Out Zilofone
17   Low Budget Rock & Roll Band
 


Run a Quick Search on "Mofo Project/Object" by Frank Zappa to Browse Related Products:

Browse more products related to "Mofo Project/Object"

Browse more products related to "Frank Zappa"


Title Note

Personnel: Frank Zappa (percussion); Ray Collins (vocals, harmonica, finger cymbals, tambourine); Jim Black (vocals, drums, percussion); Roy Estrada (soprano, guitarron); Elliot Ingber (guitar); Ken Watson, Gene Estes (percussion).

Audio Remasterers: Sangwook "Sunny" Nam; Doug Sax.

Audio Remixers: Frank Zappa; Stan Agol; Bob Stone.

Liner Note Authors: Chris Riess; David Fricke.

Authors: Edgard VarÅ se; Frank Zappa.

Unknown Contributor Roles: Arthur Maebe; Roy Caton; Benjamin Barrett; David Anderle; John "Snakehips" Johnson; Raymond Kelley; Joseph Saxon; Emmet Sargeant; Paul Bergstrom; Mothers Auxiliary; Eugene Dinovi; Carl Franzoni; George Price; John Rotella; Kim Fowley; Plas Johnson ; Ray Collins; Terry Gilliam; Virgil Evans; Kurt Reher; Dave Wells ; Neil Levang; Carol Kaye.

Arranger: Frank Zappa.

In late 1965, record producer Tom Wilson, who had been behind the board when Bob Dylan went electric on songs such as "Like a Rolling Stone," moved from Columbia Records to the Verve division of MGM, where he looked for new acts. In Los Angeles, he saw a band called the Mothers at the Whiskey-A-Go-Go performing a song called "Trouble Every Day," a wordy folk-rock tune in the style of "Like a Rolling Stone" that the group's leader, Frank Zappa, had written in the wake of the recent race riot in the Watts ghetto of L.A. Wilson signed the Mothers for an advance of $2,500. When the band assembled to record its debut album at T.T.G. Studios the following March, he found that he had a lot more on his hands than just another Dylan imitator. In fact, the Mothers (who were forced to change their name to the Mothers of Invention by the record company) were a combination of a doo wop group with Mexican antecedents and a rock & roll band, with a leader whose appreciation for contemporary classical music included the percussion experimentalist Edgard VarÅ se as a major influence. Not only was Wilson unfazed, he helped persuade the record company to let the band make a double-LP for its debut recording. That is some of the story of Freak Out! told in The MOFO Project/Object, aka "The Making of Freak Out! An FZ Audio Documentary", which is in effect a deluxe edition reissue of the album. Maybe "super deluxe" would be a better way to put it. The four-CD set quadruples the running time of the original album, which lasted about an hour. Producers Gail Zappa (Zappa's widow) and Joe Travers have gone into the vaults and come out with the usual goods: alternate takes, unreleased tracks, remixes, live performances, and interviews in which Zappa discusses Freak Out!

One of the most valuable aspects of the package is that it brings into the digital realm the original stereo mix of Freak Out!, which takes up the first disc. In 1987, when Zappa, who had acquired his masters from Verve/MGM, embarked on a CD reissue program, he extensively remixed the material and in some cases replaced original performances with new instrumental tracks. Anyone wishing to compare the original Freak Out! to the later CD can do so by turning to Tracks 15, 16, and 17 on the fourth disc, which present three of those altered versions, which were all that was available of Freak Out! on CD until now. Much of the second disc is taken up by basic tracks without vocals, and these selections accentuate the studio performances by the Mothers accompanied by a host of mostly unnamed session musicians (annotator David Fricke mentions guitarist Carol Kaye, for one). The third disc is, if anything, even more basic, presenting percussion tracks and audience sounds that were edited into the sidelong closing track, "The Return of the Son of Monster Magnet." Interestingly, Zappa later reveals that that track, considered a VarÅ se-like sonic experiment, was never completed; he says Verve pulled the plug after he'd only gotten the rhythm track done.

A five-song live performance from the Fillmore Auditorium in 1966, introduced by Bill Graham, is a highlight, even if it cuts off suddenly, and the extensive interviews with Zappa are illuminating, even if he becomes increasingly negative and dismissive as those interviews extend into the 1980s and '90s. (Asked about how Freak Out! was received, he curtly answers, "Flop"; asked how critics responded, he replies, "They hated it.") Despite his protestations that Freak Out! was only intended to entertain and that it isn't likely to be of interest in the future, the existence of The MOFO Project/Object demonstrates that the album and its composer's career as a whole continue to fascinate later generations, and it more than justifies that fascination. [A two-CD version was originally released.] ~ William Ruhlmann



Customer Reviews for "Mofo Project/Object (CD)" by Frank Zappa (Artist)

There are no customer reviews yet. Be the first to write a review!

Submit your Review




Explore More Great Tower Sales & Specials



Tower Records music Sales, Promotions & Special Features

Today's Most Popular Music Genres

Tower.com Music Boutique Stores

  • Greatest Hits Boutique
    Expand your musical horizons with our monthly selections for "Greatest Hits" and "Best Of" CD Collections.
  • Tower Records Vinyl Store
    Enjoy some of our favorite new pressings, indie rock releases, and milk crate essentials priced at up to 30% off so you can keep spinning right round (Like a record!)
  • The Beatles Collector's Boutique
    On 09-09-09, experience music history when the original studio albums by The Beatles are re-released, digitally remastered for the first time! Browse our favorite Beatles music, video and book titles!
  • Woodstock Anniversary Boutique
    Celebrating 40 years of Woodstock - Three days of music that changed the world forever!
  • The History Of Indie Rock Boutique
    Browse Our Album Art History of Indie Rock Influencers, from the 1960s to today!

Interact with Tower.com