Frank Zappa

Frank Zappa - We Made Our Reputation Doing It That Way ... lyrics

Artist: Frank Zappa

Title: We Made Our Reputation Doing It That Way ...

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FZ:

The story of the . . . the music of the Mothers is the story of, uh . . . a

combination of what I knew about music from . . . from my studies plus the

musical capabilites of the players in the group as I found them, you know,

which had . . . . Somewhere along the line, I had to teach them a lot of what

they didn't know about music.

I started out playing rhythm & blues when I was about 14 or 15 years old in

San Diego. And, uh . . . I was playing nothing but blues 'til I was 18 and, you

know, I was really honking and I started out playing drums with a band and

got tired of listening to other people's guitar solos. Took up a guitar and

started playing lead right away. Then I spent, uh . . . the early part of my

musical teen childhood doing the same thing that most of the, uh . . . uh,

white blues bands are, uh, pulling down heavy bread for. But in those days it

was, you know . . . it was the underground music, uh . . . the unpopular

underground music because the kids, uh, then wanted to hear, uh . . . you

know, sweeter, easier stuff. They didn't go for hard, screaming blues or

Chicago, uh, you know, weirdness. Nobody knew who the Howlin' Wolf was,

nobody . . . you know, Muddy Waters, what the fuck is that? And, uh, so I

grew up on that stuff but simultaneously buying, uh, classical albums and,

uh, going to the library to study music. I had albums of Stravinsky and

Varèse and Webern and Bartók. And I never bought anything el . . . I

never bought any Beethoven or, uh, Mozart or anything like that because

I didn't like the way it sounded, it was too weak.

So . . . eventually I started hearing a little folk music. I didn't like most of

the commercial folk music that was around. My taste in folk music was, uh,

sea shanties and, uh . . . uh, Middle Eastern stuff. I like Indian music, I like,

uh . . . Arab music. So, that . . . that was all my own personal taste-making,

uh, influences.

The original guys in the band had been brought up on nothing but rhythm &

blues. Now, rhythm & blues branches out into about four different categories

the way we grew up with it. There was the ooh-wah ballad, you know, with

the high falsetto and the grunting bass and all that stuff. That type. There's

a Chicago blues type with the harmonica and, you know, and the funky-ness.

There was a Texas type with a, you know . . . rock, uh, Bobby, uh, "Blue"

Bland type thing. And then there was the hard drive type James Brown shit.

And offshoots of the, uh . . . of each one of those, like in the ooh-wah

classification you've got the uptempo singers where the . . . like Hank

Ballard and the Midnighters and the Royales. They had a different type of a

thing.

Uh . . . all the other guys in the group grew up with just that and had no

knowledge whatsoever of any kind of classical music, uh, or serious music,

the . . . uh, above and beyond Mozart or, uh, Beethoven or, you know,

standard concert hall, uh . . . warhorses. And even that, they didn't give a

shit about and they weren't interested at all in folk music. And, uh . . . so I

had quite a bit of trouble in the beginning, eh . . . just making them aware

that there were other kinds of music that we could be playing. To top it off,

we were in a, uh . . . very sterile area. We . . . we kept getting fired because

we'd playing anything other than "Wooly Bully" or, uh . . . you know . . . uh,

"Twist and Shout" or the rest of that stuff. We'd lost job after job.

Interviewer:

When . . . when is this that you're talking about exactly?

FZ:

Two years ago.

Interviewer:

In '65?

FZ:

Yeah. And, uh . . . so it was . . . it was rough keeping it together because

there's lots of times that, uh . . . the guys wanted to quit, I mean,

everybody's quit at least 200 times. So . . . we finally got a chance to come

into L.A. and the reason we stood out from the bands in Los Angeles, you

know, why we would attract any attention at all at that point . . . 'cuz, uh,

we were working out in the sticks, this whole thing was developing out, uh,

away from any, uh . . . you know, any urban civilization. We were really,

you know, just out there with the Okies.

And we got to town, we expected to find all kinds of, you know . . . uh, all

the bands gotta be really far-out. Well, they weren't, they were bullshit and

they had no balls, you know, they weren't funky, they weren't, uh, tasteful,

they weren't nothin'. They were just, you know, plastic, folk-rock, teenage

puker bands. And they were making a lot of bread. And we came on the

scene . . . and, uh, we were loud and we were coarse and we were strange

and if anybody in the audience ever gave us any trouble, we'd tell 'em to

fuck off. And . . . we made our reputation doing it that way

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