— Zappa Wiki/Jawaka
— Captain Beefheart, “Willie the Pimp”
There’s an unlikely, if distant, connection to Ol’ Blue Eyes: the Reprise record label was founded in 1960 by Frank Sinatra. Warner Bros.
purchased the label in August of 1963. And now: back to our regularly scheduled programming.
It shouldn’t really surprise me that the music made during these
sessions which did not appear as tracks on Hot Rats would surface
on, e.g. Weasels Ripped My Flesh (“Directly From My Heart to You”)
Studio Tan (“Let Me Take You to the Beach.” here under the working title
of “Dame Margret’s Son to Be a Bride”) and Burnt Weeny Sandwich (“Another
Waltz,” here, 28 minutes of music-making would reduce and morph into
“Little House I Used to Live In.”) So, I waive any and all surprise pertaining
thereto. “Directly From My Heart to You” as released later on Weasels runs five
minutes and a quarter; the unedited master here runs five minutes longer, and I can
report that they are five toothsome minutes. Disc 4 sees “Son of Mr Green Genes
being workshopped, and more work towards “It Must Be a Camel.” The bulk
of the disc, though, is an almost 33-minute master take of “Big Legs,” which when
edited, will greet the world as “The Gumbo Variations.” I live for discoveries like these,
I freely admit. There’s more work on the jazz waltz here dubbed “Arabesque,” which
will see light on Weasels as “Toads of the Short Forest,” which was Zappa’s nickname
for “the crabs.” The disc closes with almost six minutes of Ian Underwood playing
keyboard overdubs which will appear on Burnt Weeny Sandwich. Remembering how
strong the final albums are, makes it a joy to hear these musical notions in embryo.
Since I had begun with Disc 5 whose mainstay was the 1987 digital re-mix of the album.
That leaves Disc 6, which takes us back further, opening with a two-minute acetate of the saxophone tune of “Little Umbrellas,” recorded at Studio Z in Cucamonga, “circa
1961-64.” Then 1969 mix outtakes of “Minuscule Umbrellas,” as Zappa says on tape,
“It Must Be a Camel,” and “Son of Mr Green Genes.” There are more sundries, perhaps
most notably a 1970 Record Plant mix of “Bognor Regis” (you may be pardoned if you
might not recall from earlier, substantially a showcase for Don “Sugarcane” Harris’
violin; cool, where “The Gumbo Variations” run hot.)
In sum, while nothing would have prevented me from observing so before, had I been
facing the right direction, the experience of passively “participating” in the making
of the album by listening to all the myriad pieces of the puzzle has put for me into sharp
focus the tripartite symmetry of Hot Rats: one-third of the album (that is, two of the six
tracks) is rhythmically straight—“Peaches en Regalia,” the number Zappa would jestingly count in for his bandmates when they visited him while he recovered in hospital after he
was attacked and pushed off the stage of London’s Rainbow Theatre, and “Son of Mr
Green Genes,” an instrumental timbral reimagining of a song from Uncle Meat, faithfully following the song’s form. Another third is the two compact jazz chamber music vignettes—“Little Umbrellas” and “It Must Be a Camel,” brightly polished jazz gems whose finished perfection gives no token of their volcanic birthing. And the remaining third is the
exultantly extrovert vulcanism of “Willie the Pimp” and “The Gumbo Variations”—vehicles
for the trading off of athletically virtuosic solos, not forgetting Captain Beefheart’s by turns gravelly and hootey vocalizations.
Insofar as recording my musings here has a purpose, I doubt that the purpose is to get the Reader to purchase this set. Presumably, if you are inclined to find such a cornucopia
of source documents for a seminal album by an iconic countercultural American musical master an engaging listen, you may likely already own the Sessions. For the other Readers, though (held in no less warm regard by the Author) I expect the principal end will be a renewed interest in hearing the album itself, an album, as one witty promotional spot
puts it “almost too psychedelic, almost too spiffy to listen to,” and to which I myself will
listen afresh directly.