Frank Zappa Musik höre ich gerne 30 Jahre schon gefällt mir immer noch gut 😊🎉
@ganazby3 жыл бұрын
As a musician/composer, it’s so great to hear Frank talking more or less exclusively about music. This is a valuable upload. Thank you.
@forrestgreen1794 жыл бұрын
Thanks to Henning Lohner ! Best piece on FZ I've seen and/or listened to.
@marcomolinari14 жыл бұрын
...sorry for bad video quality but... better than nothing....!
@forrestgreen1794 жыл бұрын
@@marcomolinari1 no worries ! Thanks for putting on here !
@Jiv_Ing578194 жыл бұрын
Yes thanks was turning in 2 a lousy night but thankfully decided to watch this n is good ,: 0
@Frankincensedjb1239 жыл бұрын
It is one composition. You hear over and over again--sometimes in its original form, sometimes in varied forms--rhythmic, melodic, lyrical themes cropping up again and again in Zappa's music. It's ingenious, that Zappa would mix and match anything at anytime. Of course, how many ever listened to John Cage? Most artist feel inhibited to do as such, for the sake of appearing to lack creative skills or ability. You CAN'T! repeat yourself. NO! Genius.
@martin59407 жыл бұрын
Can one hear a correlation that Zappa used to be drummer first? Like any young kid want`s to have a drum kit Zappa chose an instrument with more melodic possibilty: the guitar. With his creativity he must have been glad with the invention of the synclavir. One can "hit it up" play anything you like or create anything that make`s sense. But the sound is there independently with or without the choice of an instrument. If you hear it in your head you can make it. A synclavir helps to do that. Or a guitar for that matter......piano, sax, or Ruthy? (lol)
@fransheuvelmans454 жыл бұрын
Great docu! BEAUTIFUL.
@mnorris7778 жыл бұрын
Wow, this is absolute gold. Thanks so much for sharing.
@Jiv_Ing578194 жыл бұрын
You can go in 2 different climates with music u write or play, is good 2 know Frank was not just a mechanical worker, he enjoyed being creative 2 : -D
@Jiv_Ing578194 жыл бұрын
u know I want 2 get a bucket of ice, n I put some instruments in there n leave it n end up with some music : -D
@xwarx10005 жыл бұрын
Zapp was the man. besides being a very very imporant 20th century modern composer, he was a major game changer in pop culture.... hes an enlightened soul. Its funny he was so much misunderstood during his lifetime especially in his own country. one have to dig lil deeper to enjoy his immense catalogs , his music is not for lazy, people hahaha......
@Jiv_Ing578194 жыл бұрын
Is like Stockhausen but another way n different, n all with individual notes colours n pitches ,: 0
@squanto28 жыл бұрын
This movie has been linked to from the new Zappa website. I love this movie and have watched it many times. Maybe we can see a CLEANER COPY???? Hello Ahmet Zappa, you MOOK.
@marcomolinari18 жыл бұрын
...the copy I had from a friend was worse than this..! :-)
@Jiv_Ing578194 жыл бұрын
Frank playing around on keyboards, never thought I would see this, is a good insight in 2 his creativity ,: 0
@Jiv_Ing578194 жыл бұрын
Listen 2 him create those high synth lines, is fantastic is fantistic ,: 0
@johnappleseed83698 жыл бұрын
Brilliant feature!! thanks!!
@jakeyccc57884 жыл бұрын
Extraordinary.
@cosmicdrifter28710 жыл бұрын
top doc!
@paolamarin26776 жыл бұрын
Love Zappa!
@mayitriggeryou5 жыл бұрын
I LOVE monster movies!!!
@Jiv_Ing578194 жыл бұрын
There r monsters in franks music too yes is true ,: 0
@treblec4me7108 жыл бұрын
Frank Ü 🎃 Music.Is.The.Best.
@typodhitzemann68513 жыл бұрын
so, Peefeeyatco means 'speak for your self' I take it?
@martinroland Жыл бұрын
Make compositions only by dust
@alancumming64073 жыл бұрын
An excellent film with Frank on fine form. I don't think music would feature much if he was still alive. He was interested in running for president in the 60's. That was perhaps a clue to where he was heading. As a fan of his 60's and 70's music I felt that after that, with the exception of Jazz from Hell, it was lacking the spark that set him apart from everyone else. Just my opinion.
@saraondo26984 жыл бұрын
I love Zappa but I disagree. If i csn Musicians to just want to learn them and play them. I learned from Ornette Coleman each performance Is unique perfectly correct or not. Sometimes it's better played wrong. I wrote "Threnody for Frank Zappa " To honour his art.
@SpaceCattttt6 жыл бұрын
I don't know if Frank ever understood or accepted that "imperfect" notes, often are what lend music its character. If every note could be performed perfectly, it would very likely end up sounding clinical and impersonal. Not saying that's a bad thing, but if all music sounded that way, it would be pretty depressing.
@findlesplurb5 жыл бұрын
I don't think he was looking for 'perfection' in the sense you mean. He even says that he'd never want to compose exclusively for the synthesizer, and he wanted to use all methods of composition at his disposal. At the same time the Synclavier gave him the opportunity to hear his music in its purest form. I can understand why he took advantage of it.
@terrypussypower3 жыл бұрын
Zappa’s idea of perfection includes all of what you would think of as “the human element”! Perfection to FZ isn’t every note being “on the square” or “quantised to death”! The man was a genius. What you would think of as “imperfect”, he would have analysed to a quantum level! And included it in the composition.
@SpaceCattttt3 жыл бұрын
@@terrypussypower That's not how Frank put it in "The Real Frank Zappa Book". He disliked having to work with "real" musicians because they couldn't consistently play the right notes, or the right notes the right way, every night and on every recording session. The very first thing he did with every musician he auditioned was to find out exactly how far he could push their abilities. And although he used their abilities very well, he also felt limited by what they could do. His sense of artistic freedom made him want to compose music that no human being could ever perform, so the first chance he got, he bought the Synclavier and manually sampled every note of every instrument he could find, played to perfection by the best musicians. And then he spent the last years of his life composing and recording perfectly played machine music. He stopped touring and all collaborations with real musicians and dedicated all his time to writing impossible pieces for computers to play. No, my son. Frank didn't give a fuck about using imperfections. He had to endure them for most of his career, and then he discarded them as soon as he was able to.
@FreeBrunoPowroznik2 жыл бұрын
Frank just didn't want to pay musicians (whom he compared to sea slugs in laziness) the full value of their labour. His fulfilled dream of a machine to replace them produced some of the most soulless music on the planet. Synclavier music = putrescence.
@terrypussypower2 жыл бұрын
@@SpaceCattttt Fuq you “my son”, I’m old enough to be your grandad. I’ve been a Zappa fanatic since the late 60’s, I’ve forgotten more than you’ll ever know. And you’ve totally misunderstood what FZ was saying in TRFZB. There’s all the difference in the world between lazy orchestral players, and pros who give it their all and play with feeling, and it was the former he had the biggest problem with, and the latter he loved playing with! Zappa loved jamming out with top players! You only have to listen to his recorded output to see that..the majority of his albums were recorded in concert and edited and overdubbed in the studio. He had two bugbears in his musical life…lazy, overpayed orchestral players, and the occasional ass hat professionals who made his life a misery on the road, especially in the last tour, which was the reason he quit touring. IF they hadn’t caused him so much grief, he would’ve finished the ‘88 tour, and would definitely have toured again! And the reason he quit had NOTHING to do with the lack of playing ability of the last band…far from it! He loved that band! It was the constant arguing and egotistical head butting of a few in that band, that finally got to him. And THAT is the main reason he concentrated on his Synclavier!
@Okie-00-Spool6 жыл бұрын
Was Frank aware of his terminal cancer at the time of this video?
@Jiv_Ing578194 жыл бұрын
Probably not ,: 0
@MichaelBB8 жыл бұрын
Improvisation is NOT composition. It is music, but unless you have it planned out ahead of time, it's not composing. Now, it seems this music was created on the spot to demonstrate the SynClavier. No problem with that, of course. How much of Jazz from Hell was planned, and how much was improvised to a sequencer, as is shown here? I wonder? MBB
@josephpatrow6 жыл бұрын
Michael B-B You’re incorrect. Improvisation can be/is planned out to a degree at the discretion of the spontaneous composer. Therefore an improvisation is a composition. It isn’t as cut and dry as you want to make it, but it’s easily understood.
@rhodesrandall5 жыл бұрын
It depends on the music . . [categorically] classical compositions are notated specifically to be played *exactly* according to the score . . Jazz may be notated . . but [without exception] will involve improvised solos in the body of the performance. . Rock usually is not notated . . but can be played *exactly as if* it were scored *and also* involve improvised solos as well. .
@squanto25 жыл бұрын
All composition is improvisation.
@findlesplurb5 жыл бұрын
That may be your opinion, but I know there are thousands and thousands of musicians who'd disagree, many but not all of them coming from the jazz world. Improvisation absolutely IS a method of composition.
@jimmypsychonaut95306 жыл бұрын
:-)
@divingduck19707 жыл бұрын
The sheep are coming in on Wednesday. Gotta go.
@TokyoShemp4 жыл бұрын
I like Frank and this film but feel intimidated by both. I bet he was extra crusty because of the attack and injuries along with the flare gun incident. He probably got jaded. He couldn't even trust the audience.
@stevenedwards44707 жыл бұрын
I hated the Synclavier years. 60s and 70s for me. Still admire the man tho
@Jiv_Ing578194 жыл бұрын
I like it all but I like at least about the mechanical synclavier is that he is onto breaking some interesting creative boundaries that I can understand a bit better sometimes than earlier, I don't think like that (composer like), perhaps I should work back ,: 0
@Jiv_Ing578194 жыл бұрын
u know frank was breaking all the rules back in the 70's in melodies n composing, I can get some things, the brilliant colourful merging of humour classical composition n rock, funk n other styles, but each melody doing whatever contrast harmonically 2 the other was a little 2 deep ,: 0
@Jiv_Ing578194 жыл бұрын
I can get oh he played the instrument like this, or... he had unique style or new rhythm possibilities but the changing from lydian 2 invert or whatever melodies having lives is a little 2 deep n I have 2 work back 2 that ,: 0
@Jiv_Ing578194 жыл бұрын
I get Beefheart a lot, a get zappa quite a bit but seem 2 be missing on what quite how a lot of people see it, like I am getting closer but I have some time 2 go before I really get it n things click ,: 0