Released on August 10, 1970, Weasels Ripped My Flesh was the ultimate album to characteristic the unique line-up of The Mothers Of Invention, whom Frank Zappa had disbanded the earlier 12 months. It was compiled by Zappa from recordings made between 1967-69 and painstakingly edited into an unique and very important album that showcases what the Mothers had been able to.
Zappa later claimed that he began to consider breaking the Mothers up after they’d appeared on the Charlotte Jazz Festival, on the Coliseum, Charlotte, North Carolina on June 28, 1969. The Mothers had been sharing a invoice with Duke Ellington, amongst others. In The Real Frank Zappa Book (1989), Zappa stated, “Before we went on, I saw Duke Ellington begging, pleading for a 10-dollar advance. It was really depressing.” Reasoning that if a colossus of jazz resembling Ellington needed to decrease himself with such a request, it was unbecoming of him to look with a 10-piece band, Zappa advised the Mothers, “That’s it, we’re breaking the band up.” They would have their final gig just a few months later.
Listen to Weasels Ripped My Flesh now.
It’s a sometimes provocative declare from Zappa, particularly contemplating the exalted standing that Ellington loved at that time. It’s additionally seemingly that, for Zappa, the Mothers had run their course. He’d complained in a Downbeat interview shortly earlier than the break-up that the audiences at their exhibits didn’t admire the music, saying, “The best responses we get from an audience are when we do our worst material.”
Zappa quickly started planning an archival set, telling Rolling Stone in August 1969 that it’d be a 10LP set known as No Commercial Potential. By October, it had expanded to a 12LP set, and he was referring to it as The Mothers Of Invention Record Club. The logistics of such an unlimited launch had been daunting, to say the least, and a single album of outtakes took its place. As he advised Jazz & Pop in August 1970, “What I needed to do is put out a 12-record set. Then we did a value breakdown on doing that, and with a view to press 10,000 every of the 12 data, plus protection – it might have come to a few quarter of 1,000,000 {dollars}… So we simply tossed that one into the rubbish can.
“What I’ve been doing is ripping up the 12 albums, which were already edited – I had them ready to go. Chopping them up and I put together a new album called Weasels Ripped My Flesh.”
The title of the album got here from the quilt story of the September 1956 problem of Man’s Life journal. The article featured the strapline, “Many claws tore at my skin, putting razor sharp teeth in easy reach of my flesh. The furry animals came from all directions – chewing, gnarling, turning the water red with my blood.” It was sensational stuff and illustrated by an equally out-there cowl by Will Husley, that includes a muscle-bound hunk waist-high in water, writhing in agony as he’s set upon by a mess of weasels. It’s simple to see why it caught in Zappa’s reminiscence. He confirmed artist Neon Park the journal and requested, “What can you do that’s worse than this?”
Neon Park delivered a pop art-inspired illustration that was modeled on a Schick electrical razor commercial that appeared within the Saturday Evening Post in 1953, changing the razor with a weasel dragging its claws throughout the face of an all-American man.
The music contained inside is each bit as witty and uncompromising, making it an ideal entry into the imaginative and unhinged world of the Mothers. Opening monitor “Didja Get Any Onya?” plunges the listener straight into the deep finish with a cacophony of wailing horns and sinister organ over shifting time signatures earlier than Lowell George (later the inventive dynamo behind Little Feat) takes the mic to ship a rambling and fictional monologue about his childhood in Germany in a thick accent. So far, so Zappa.
“Directly From My Heart To You” exhibits one other facet of the Mothers, a canopy of the 1953 Little Richard monitor that the Mothers recorded throughout the Hot Rats classes in late July 1969. Don “Sugarcane” Harris delivers a heartfelt vocal and provides violin to a gradual and simmering blues groove. “Prelude To The Afternoon Of A Sexually Aroused Gas Mask” in the meantime, is comprised of disparate performances, expertly edited by Zappa to create a novel and unsettling sound collage.
The first part of “Toads Of The Short Forest” is one other offcut from the Hot Rats classes, with Zappa taking part in acoustic guitar by way of a wah-wah pedal on a brisk, gentle passage of music. Around the minute mark, although, the temper shifts to a riot of discordant noise as Zappa informs the viewers of the time signature every member of the band is taking part in in. “Get A Little” adjustments the temper once more, the Mothers laying down a gradual and luxuriant cosmic funk groove.
Side Two kicked off with “The Eric Dolphy Memorial Barbecue,” an exploratory marvel steered by Art Tripp’s masterful percussion, which nimbly steers the ship because the Mothers’ improvisations take the monitor to ever-more wild locations. “Dwarf Nebula Processional March & Dwarf Nebula” begins as a chunk of electrical chamber music earlier than shifting into a chunk of distorted glitch.
“My Guitar Wants To Kill Your Mama” is among the few standard songs right here, a soulful, riff-heavy rock monitor with a lyric that speaks of teenage rebel delivered deadpan by Zappa. “Oh No” follows, sung brilliantly by Ray Collins. It’s a revamp of a theme from Lumpy Gravy given lyrics that might learn as a rebuttal of The Beatles’ “Within You, Without You” and “All You Need Is Love” (“Oh no, I don’t believe it/You say that you think you know, the meaning of love/You say love is all we need/You say with your love you can change/All of the fools, all of the hate”). It segues brilliantly into “The Orange County Lumber Truck,” a showcase for Zappa’s dazzling, questing guitar taking part in. The title monitor closes proceedings with a minute-and-a-half of coruscating suggestions earlier than a “Good night, boys and girls” from Zappa and applause.
It’s a sometimes opposite option to finish an album that sums up what made the primary line-up of the Mothers so particular – a musically dextrous and adventurous unit who gave life to Zappa’s early concepts, nonetheless out-there and bold they might have been.
Listen to Weasels Ripped My Flesh now.