Hey check out these fun facts about Frank Zappa

in music •  7 years ago 
  1. In 1964, Ray Collins, drummer Jimmy Carl Black, bassist Roy Estrada, saxophonist Dave Coronado, and guitarist Ray
    Hunt formed The Soul Giants. Hunt was eventually replaced by Frank Zappa, and the group evolved into the Mothers of
    Invention.

  2. In 1968 Zappa appeared on The Monkees TV show dressed as guitarist Mike Nesmith. Later he was shown “playing” a car
    by repeatedly beating it.

  3. Freak Out! released in 1966, is often cited as one of rock music's first concept albums. The album is a satirical expression
    of Zappa's perception of American pop culture.

  4. Zappa's first band was named "The Blackouts", who renamed themselves a little later to "The Omens".

  5. His school time friend Don van Vliet became known later on as "Captain Beefheart".

  6. Zappa's first recording project after the break-up of the original Mothers of Invention was Hot Rats, released in October

    1. Five of the six songs are instrumental, ("Willie the Pimp" features a short vocal by Captain Beefheart).
  7. Zappa produced almost all of the more than 60 albums he released with the band the Mothers of Invention and as a solo
    artist. Since 1994, the Zappa Family Trust has released 38 posthumous albums, making a total of 100 albums.

  8. "Valley Girl" by Frank Zappa and his then 14-year-old daughter, Moon Unit Zappa became his biggest selling single ever,
    (topping out at No. 32 on the Billboard charts). In her improvised lyrics to the song, Zappa's daughter satirized the vapid
    speech of teenage girls from the San Fernando Valley, which popularized many "Valspeak" expressions such as "gag me
    with a spoon," "fer sure, fer sure," "grody" (gross), and "barf out".

  9. Zappa worked for a short period in advertising.

  10. An article in the local press describing Zappa as "the Movie King of Cucamonga" prompted police to suspect that he
    was making pornographic films. In 1965, Zappa was approached by a vice squad undercover officer, and accepted an
    offer of $100 to produce a suggestive audiotape. Zappa and a female friend recorded a faked erotic episode and when
    Zappa was about to hand over the tape, he was arrested. He was charged with "conspiracy to commit pornography"
    and was sentenced to six months in jail.

  11. Frank had to go to prison for 10 days, aged 18. And also was judged not to get close to a woman aged under 21 without
    an adult.

  12. The groundbreaking Freak Out! album released in 1966, which, after Bob Dylan's Blonde on Blonde, was the second
    rock double album ever released.

  13. Every year the German town on Bad Doberan hosts the Zappanale where only Frank’s music is performed.

  14. The forth album Ruben & the Jets was popular with radio stations, as they believed it to be an unearthed doo-wop
    album by an unknown band. A band called Ruben and the Jets, named in honor of the album, released their debut
    album, For Real! in 1973, produced by Zappa.

  15. Scientists from various fields have honored Zappa by naming new discoveries after him. In 1967, paleontologist Leo P.
    Plas, Jr. identified an extinct mollusc in Nevada and named it Amaurotoma zapper. Biologist Ferdinando Boero named
    a Californian jellyfish Phialella zapper. Belgian biologists Bosmans and Bosselaers discovered a Cameroonese spider,
    which they named Pachygnatha zappa.

  16. Zappa's most commercially successful album is the 1974 release, Apostrophe ('), which features the track "Don't Eat the
    Yellow Snow".

  17. Zappa’s son Dweezil was named after his wife’s strangely shaped little toe. Dweezil's registered birth name was Ian
    Donald Calvin Euclid Zappa. The hospital at which he was born refused to register him under the name Dweezil, so
    Frank listed the names of several musician friends.

  18. In 1986 Frank took part in the TV series "Miami Vice". He played a drug dealer, Mario Fuente, who dealt in "weasel dust"
    in his boat offshore.

  19. The Real Frank Zappa Book is an autobiography/memoir by Frank Zappa, co-written by Peter Occhiogrosso, and was
    published in 1989. Reviewing the book The New York Post said, "This book belongs in every home".

  20. In December 1971 while performing at Casino de Montreux in Switzerland, the Mothers' equipment was destroyed
    when a flare set off by an audience member started a fire that burned down the casino. The incident immortalized in
    Deep Purple's song "Smoke on the Water".

  21. Frank Zappa had a voice role in American animated television series The Ren & Stimpy Show.

  22. In 1971, during a Mothers show at the Rainbow Theatre, London, an audience member, pushed Zappa off the stage and
    into the concrete-floored orchestra pit. The band thought Zappa had been killed, he suffered serious fractures, head
    trauma and injuries to his back, leg, and neck, as well as a crushed larynx, this accident resulted in an extended period
    of wheelchair confinement.

  23. French filmmaker Claire Denis named her 2001 film Trouble Every Day after the Frank Zappa song of the same name
    from Freak Out!.

  24. "Don't Eat The Yellow Snow" is a song about a man who dreams that he was an Eskimo named Nanook. His mother
    warns him "Watch out where the huskies go, and don't you eat that yellow snow."

  25. In 1990, Frank Zappa was diagnosed with terminal prostate cancer. The disease had been developing unnoticed for ten
    years and was considered inoperable. Frank Zappa died on December 4, 1993, in his home with his wife and children by his side

    Frank Zappa Guitar.jpg

Source: thisdayinmusic.com

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Woo! Thanks for this.

My pleasure!