British guitarist reacts to Frank Zappa's subtle techniques

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
  • A bit of Frank Zappa is on the menu tonight, playing some Watermelon in Easter Hay.
    Original video - • Video
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Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @NautilusGuitars
    @NautilusGuitars 6 лет назад +269

    Frank, imo, is one of the greatest musicians to have ever lived. He's so underappreciated, and sadly is viewed by most people as a novelty musician. He was a brilliant composer, and one of the most unique and talented guitarists of the era. Not to mention his brilliant critiques of society.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +15

      Amen!

    • @davehartgraves4957
      @davehartgraves4957 6 лет назад +14

      Yes he was a musical genius. I had the preveledge to know him.

    • @NautilusGuitars
      @NautilusGuitars 6 лет назад +4

      Very cool! Any worthwhile stories or insight about him as a person?

    • @sealisa1398
      @sealisa1398 6 лет назад +6

      Nicely expressed. He had a beautiful mind.

    • @rhlang11
      @rhlang11 6 лет назад

      to me, he was ehh. a sour puss and a square but truly original.

  • @SidBonkers51
    @SidBonkers51 6 лет назад +84

    Frank was so much more than a guitarist, his whole approach to music set him apart from us mere mortals, great video.

  • @Wayzor_
    @Wayzor_ 6 лет назад +48

    I refuse to believe that anyone, even remotely associated with a guitar, does not find their way to Frank at some point... I hope this video inspires both players and non-players to explore Frank's body-of-work.

  • @miketrew9715
    @miketrew9715 6 лет назад +69

    Listened to frank since freak out and still listen to him I am 64 now I never tire of his sound and he still my favourite guitar player greetings fae Scotland

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +1

      Hi Mike! Cool!

    • @sealisa1398
      @sealisa1398 6 лет назад +4

      I’m with you on that. I picked him up at Hot Rats and have been a fool for love since.

    • @kilgoretrout3966
      @kilgoretrout3966 5 лет назад +5

      @@sealisa1398 Well, yeah!.....Peaches en Regalia is a masterpiece, and the quality never dips on the LP at all.

    • @charcolew
      @charcolew 5 лет назад +4

      Hi Mike, I'm another sixty-plus Scots Zappa fan! What an amazing guitarist / composer / social satirist / you name it!

    • @christianugolini8493
      @christianugolini8493 5 лет назад +1

      hi mike me too 63 old and 50 with FZ !

  • @brianmorrow5350
    @brianmorrow5350 6 лет назад +26

    It is gratifying to know that Frank is still noticed and appreciated. It's hard for me to believe it was 25 years ago that we lost him! The man spoke his mind and pulled no punches, and when he picked up his guitar, he could make magic.
    Thanks for the upload!!!

  • @tluagel
    @tluagel 6 лет назад +42

    Because my big brother had Hot Rats, I was 9 or 10 when I discovered Zappa. His répertoire his so vast and eclectic that through him, I learned to appreciate not only rock but classical and contemporary music, minimalists, free jazz, punk, surf, doo-wop, techno and other alternative music. He expended my musical universe

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +4

      Yeah he recorded relentlessly!

    • @TrinidadJamesWoods
      @TrinidadJamesWoods 4 года назад +1

      I would think that Frank would consider that among the best compliments his audience could give. He obviously valued eclectic musical taste greatly.

    • @paulinebutcherbird
      @paulinebutcherbird 3 года назад

      One of the few musicians/composers to have such a vast range.

  • @grubbetuchus
    @grubbetuchus Год назад +8

    Zappa was one of the greatest guitar players ever. I've listened to over 10,000 hours of his music. Every single guitar solo is like babe Ruth hitting a grand slam. Every single guitar solo. His solos are like compositions in and of themselves. I'm talking about written compositions, musical essays. His guitar speaks. It's solos bring you on a musical journey, every single solo. He was amazing. Anyone who listens to this song and doesn't have tears in their eyes, I don't know.

  • @gordonm7038
    @gordonm7038 6 лет назад +81

    When the world ends, play Watermelon...

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +5

      Amen!

    • @gordonm7038
      @gordonm7038 6 лет назад +1

      wingsofpegasus
      Or the Laurel & Hardy theme which what Lemmy had at his funeral!

    • @radioboys8986
      @radioboys8986 5 лет назад

      Dog Breath Variations

    • @3moons29
      @3moons29 3 года назад +2

      I’ve got a set list for my funeral.... 🤪( yeah I know...) watermelon in Easter hay is the last to be played!

    • @d.w.5144
      @d.w.5144 3 года назад +1

      @@3moons29 yes same do I . Lot of cry but thats my way of live with Franks music

  • @shanemccormick6072
    @shanemccormick6072 6 лет назад +32

    I just love this guitar style there aren't many that have this talent and can play this way I could just listen to this stuff all day very mellow relaxing and easy to listen to

  • @Mr.Batsu12
    @Mr.Batsu12 6 лет назад +23

    It's great to see you do something on Frank who is one of my favorite musicians (not just guitarist). He had a very unique style that was very different from others.
    Watermelon in Easter Hay is a great piece for people new to Frank as it's not too 'strange'. The alternating 4/4 to 5/4 time signature works really well and many people don't even notice it.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +2

      Amen!

    • @fredzeppelin3969
      @fredzeppelin3969 5 лет назад +2

      The chicken and the spider. The chicken was his picking hand, always anchored with the ring finger and pinky against the bottom of the neck pickup, the spider was his fretting hand, all over the neck. Timeless

    • @MarcusL1995
      @MarcusL1995 4 года назад

      9/4

  • @TheOldgeezah
    @TheOldgeezah 6 лет назад +25

    No frantic fireworks, just careful thought. Perfect artistry

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад

      Amen!

    • @josephsiciliano3681
      @josephsiciliano3681 4 года назад

      If you want to hear fireworks listen to some Drowning Witch solos such as the one at the Ritz 1981. Totally mindblowing! Frank Zappa at the Ritz 1981in the search bar.

    • @danaveye3977
      @danaveye3977 5 месяцев назад

      ​@josephsiciliano3681 I'm so glad they released the Ritz album. Finding a solid live version of sinister footwear is almost impossible and his solo for SF @ the Ritz is one of his best

  • @Bruce516
    @Bruce516 6 лет назад +13

    I am so happy to see young guitarists appreciating Frank. Cool video.

  • @donkarnage6032
    @donkarnage6032 6 лет назад +21

    In my opinion Frank Zappa was the best guitarist to come out of the scene from the late 60s to early 70s when we saw so many new fabulous guitar players. Solo's like Inca Roads stand with anything that was put out during that period. He had a unique style that nobody has been able to copy.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад

      Thats true!

    • @MrTortureneverstops1
      @MrTortureneverstops1 6 лет назад

      Don Karnage very very true !

    • @dpatruck7020
      @dpatruck7020 6 лет назад +1

      Don Karnage Inca roads my fave guitar solo

    • @cryptotharg7400
      @cryptotharg7400 6 лет назад +1

      Don - "Andy" and "Sofa" are totally epic, too! Did a vehicle come from somewhere, out there?

    • @josephsiciliano3681
      @josephsiciliano3681 4 года назад +1

      In fact if you study his career you will find his "style" changed many times,,unlike most guitar players. I have been listening to FZ close to 50yrs. And am still discovering new and amazing playing. We are very fortunate that he recorded almost everything he did and much of his work can be found on his many official releases as well as the many bootlegs available on RUclips and Zappateers for your listening pleasure. Fortunately he wasn't only in it for the money.

  • @pilgrimnix1
    @pilgrimnix1 6 лет назад +54

    Frank was so underrated. It's a shame that a lot of people only remember his antics and crazy behavior. Thanks for video!

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +2

      No problem!

    • @TheProsirius
      @TheProsirius 6 лет назад

      know most Lps, was at Broadway the hard Way. Longtime listener: specialy 2 his guitar. & Drums (as a drummer)
      he stay in my heart, this Man save my soul many times.
      Moogely

    • @sealisa1398
      @sealisa1398 6 лет назад +2

      Underrated by whom?

    • @timowalker24
      @timowalker24 6 лет назад +6

      NIX_34 ... frank’s sense of humor is what you probably mean by “antics” ... the musicians who played him with loved to go on the road with him because he was so much fun, sure they worked their asses off with all the full sound checks before almost every show but they still had a great time... frank is in my life everyday, somehow, or somewhere ...

    • @BKJJAMALEN
      @BKJJAMALEN 6 лет назад +4

      Back in 75 my best friend loved zappa especiall y the album with dynamo hum.I reluctantly went to see him at scope arena in Norfolk.we were on front by the speakers.He came out and sat in a lawn chair and blew us away.we went the next night to see him in Richmond (2hrs away on a work night)i have loved him and dweezil ever since

  • @ElliotRose
    @ElliotRose 6 лет назад +9

    His tone and control on this are fascinating, he goes right to the edge of distortion, then pulls it back to into clean tone

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +6

      Yeah he's in total control all the time!

  • @michaelroberts3898
    @michaelroberts3898 3 года назад +7

    As amazing as this is, I have a sentimental favorite version of this song. For years, Dweezil said he couldn’t play this song. He said it was the most moving song his father had composed. I have seen Dweezil and his band twice and have never been more amazed by the music and players at any concert by any band. Well, he didn’t play this at either of those shows. However there’s a video out there of Dweezil playing Watermelon in Easter Hay while crying and it is so brave personal and touching to see a son mourn his father through his father’s music.

  • @tixximmi1
    @tixximmi1 6 лет назад +8

    Was very lucky to see him more times than I can remember. One week back in the 70's I got to see him in LA, Santa Barbara, The City, Sacramento and Reno. No two concerts were the same. Great Review. You nailed it. Just like Frank would do.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +1

      Awesome!

    • @theemptycross
      @theemptycross 6 лет назад +1

      I saw I think all of his early to mid-80s concerts in Portland Oregon there was only one bad one when my wife and I barely got to the theater in a bad snowstorm by having to take a bus, and obviously the band had also experienced the same thing getting there however they did, the support playing was a bit lackluster and I can't remember which one of the guitarists was apparently so exhausted (or, you know . . . ) that he had to lean against a stage wall and watch his fingers on the strings!

  • @jefflantz2569
    @jefflantz2569 6 лет назад +8

    when i was younger i was a zappa fan my friends where not but i got most of them to spend the six dollars and go see him he put on one of the best live shows ever, but the live playing was extra special to see. much better than just a record. what a great talent.

  • @hervethervet1117
    @hervethervet1117 6 лет назад +12

    Mr Frank Zappa has the most high place in my pantheon ! Genius composer, great guitarist, from the most intricated playing to the melodious eloquenct in simplicity ! Thanx boy ! Keep on rockin' !

  • @sterlingprice5963
    @sterlingprice5963 6 лет назад +7

    Frank looks like he is really enjoying himself there. Very mellow and pretty tune.

  • @natdmc85
    @natdmc85 6 лет назад +9

    6:45 he truly got it and I laughed as he smiled,. great to see Frank's magic still reaching people today,very nice to see our cousins across the "pond" get it too,he was truly one of our most underrated national treasures.

  • @brucepieroni9102
    @brucepieroni9102 6 лет назад +18

    66 Years old and can't get enough. MIss his ass big time!

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад

      Amen!

    • @catherinehermansen4376
      @catherinehermansen4376 6 лет назад

      Bruce Pieroni you and me both.

    • @michaelledford4751
      @michaelledford4751 6 лет назад

      I just turned 74 and miss the living shit out of him even though I'm sure he & my wife had a fling while I was finishing up my 3rd and final combat tour Vietnam in March of 69 .

  • @TheKitchenerLeslie
    @TheKitchenerLeslie 6 лет назад +15

    Everything about him was extremely idiosyncratic... even the way he held a pick. He was good and had a one of a kind style and tone. It's no secret Steve Vai worshiped him.

  • @andyzephyr1582
    @andyzephyr1582 6 лет назад +4

    Greatest electric guitarist that ever lived.
    Thanks for showcasing the master.

  • @fenderjazz6213
    @fenderjazz6213 6 лет назад +6

    I bought my first Zappa album in 1968 ( freak out ) and I was hooked. I have 119 album's including some boot legs. I saw him over 40 times, from San Diego to NY
    my favorite being the residency he did at the Garrick theatre for quite a few months in NY. The Garrick was owned by David Lee Roths father and Uncle. Of course the Halloween shows he did for many years in NY were great also....never saw a bad show ever....the first time I heard watermelon in Easter hay when JG came out....I made the decision that it would be played at my memorial...it's in my last will and testament......peace......

  • @victorhawkins3461
    @victorhawkins3461 6 лет назад +6

    No need to apologize for continuing the video...I could watch/listen to FZ play all night long...thanks.

  • @omikl
    @omikl 6 лет назад +8

    Summer 1996. Part of my weekend routine was to go and buy another FZ album on a Saturday afternoon and then walk around Hong Kong listening to it on my CD Walkman.
    "The Best Band You Never Heard In Your Life"

  • @carlbrutananadilewski3345
    @carlbrutananadilewski3345 6 лет назад +11

    He left a big impression with Steve Vai while working with him at 18. Don't eat the yellow snow BTW.

  • @Frankincensedjb123
    @Frankincensedjb123 4 года назад +13

    Frank, in his attempt to "play the perfect note," never played a solo the same. It was all about improv for him. Fortunately, enough realize what a great guitarist he was, and you'll often find him in the pools as a high ranking guitarist. But that was the least of his skills. As a master composer, he ruled the musical world and still does. Miss his sanity.

  • @markkasick
    @markkasick 6 лет назад +14

    Every guitar enthusiast should dig into the Zappa catalog. If you just like instrumental stuff with no Buffoonery get "Shut Up n' Play Yer Guitar" and the sequel "Guitar". Steve Vai got the Zappa gig by transcribing the former. Mike Keneally, who is in this video got the gig by transcription corrections to that. Mike is an incredible musician and is in Joe Satriani's band.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +1

      Yeah they learned a lot from him!

    • @TheSamgopal
      @TheSamgopal 4 года назад +1

      If you want to get into Zappa just to hear the dirty guitar stuff you're stupid. Appreciating this 20th century icon is easier if you enter with a truly open mind and a curiosity for the musical and political culture of the 50s - 80s. That was the setting in which FZ let his own creative genius loose. Zappa was a composer and is easier to understand if you know that. Everything he wrote or performed, even if improvised, should be viewed as a composition, often part of the "conceptual continuity". One of the benefits of exploring Zappa's work is the exposure to badass riffs and scorching guitar playing. But really that's just a part of it. I like how he said he did his art just to entertain himself.

    • @markkasick
      @markkasick 2 года назад

      @gmosier59 you are probably correct.

    • @markkasick
      @markkasick 2 года назад

      ​@@TheSamgopal Realize I'm finally reading this a year later, while it's true I may be stupid, I was obsessed with Zappa for a long period of time. After listening to all that stuff I get it. I just don't lke it. I like his instrumental stuff or mostly instrumental work.

  • @jackvai2681
    @jackvai2681 6 лет назад +32

    Black Napkins, might be an interesting study

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +6

      Thanks for the suggestion!

    • @prsplayer210
      @prsplayer210 6 лет назад +4

      Jack Vai Yes, love that song got a very waltz like feel to it

    • @rhmayer1
      @rhmayer1 6 лет назад +2

      Yes! I was going to make that comment - that perhaps a better example of his playing would be Black Napkins, from Zoot Allures. Frank's playing was unique. I think his signature sound were his little bursts of flurries of notes. It somehow matched his razor-sharp quick tongue and mind.

    • @johannesdegen9225
      @johannesdegen9225 6 лет назад +2

      Very much in agreement! One of Frank's best performances over such simple chords.

    • @kilgoretrout3966
      @kilgoretrout3966 5 лет назад +1

      ...or The Black Page perhaps.

  • @sisojaile9214
    @sisojaile9214 6 лет назад +24

    This is in Barcelona, May 1988. I was there!!

  • @cryptotharg7400
    @cryptotharg7400 6 лет назад +9

    Frank was one of the greatest musicians (and humourists!) of the 20th century (and beyond.) I got into FZ and the Mothers of Invention as a teenager in the early 1970s, and have loved his huge body of work, ever since. Great video! (BTW, his son, Dweezil, is very competently filling his Dad's old shoes. A great player, too.)

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +1

      Thanks for the reference!

    • @Reno_Slim
      @Reno_Slim 6 лет назад +1

      Phil Silvers I Saw Dweezil in April and his dad would be proud. You can see some of his dad in his playing but you can also see/hear Steve Vai's influence come shining through too. He can really shread it up.

    • @christophersleight1943
      @christophersleight1943 6 лет назад

      1974, I had the opportunity to go to my 1st Zappathon. Group of guys would start at the beginning, or end and play Every single Zappa album in order front to back.
      Few things in my life have ever effected me the way Frank's Music did. Tears streaming down my face.
      I am perplexed by how emotional I could, can become by his music.
      It saddens me that Frank was so angry. I would really enjoy being able to talk with Dweezil about his Dad.
      Isa 26:12

  • @johnsholl698
    @johnsholl698 6 лет назад +8

    Another artist I was blessed to see live. One show was truly amazing, the other not so much but certainly memorable. The Joe’s Garage trilogy is probably my favorite Zappa album. Zoot Allures and Hot Rats too. Yo Mamma off Sheik yer Booty is a go to track whenever I’m trying out new audio equipment. Thank you WOP! You Rock!

  • @shemanic1
    @shemanic1 Год назад +2

    That tune is "Watermelon In Easter Hay", the album version is probably the purest guitar solo ever, & remains a joy to listen to.

  • @terrypussypower
    @terrypussypower 6 лет назад +3

    Favourite Zappa solos, in no particular order.....”Alien Orifice” from NYC Palladium 1981, “Heavy Duty Judy” from “Shut Up ‘n’ Play Yer Guitar”, “Fifty Fifty” from “Overnite Sensation”, “Five Five Five” from “Shut Up ‘n’ Play Yer Guitar”, “Occam’s Razor” from “One Shot Deal” (the full live solo that “On The Bus” from Joe’s Garage was edited from),

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +1

      Nice!

    • @terrypussypower
      @terrypussypower 6 лет назад +2

      wingsofpegasus Yup! For me, FZ is the greatest electric guitarist of all time. Frank said that his approach to a solo was as an "air sculpture", that he looked at his solos as compositions in their own right! That's why his guitar only albums work so well.

    • @johnamaral1786
      @johnamaral1786 6 лет назад

      First and foremost he was a composer and band leader.

  • @lantzkeefer8674
    @lantzkeefer8674 6 лет назад +92

    There was a period in my life when i was working on acquiring his entire catalog of music. I got to about 30 and gave up.He had so much material. He was extremely prolific. Yeah, i really enjoyed his playing,wish he was still with us.

    • @ursafan40
      @ursafan40 6 лет назад +2

      +Lantz Keefer SO tell me, if you could only have 1 Frank album, which would it be? :)

    • @lantzkeefer8674
      @lantzkeefer8674 6 лет назад +11

      ursafan40 Lol,probably Joe's Garage

    • @ursafan40
      @ursafan40 6 лет назад +12

      +Lantz Keefer Good one. I'd go with Apostrophe....or Shut up n play yer guitar ... or Hot Rats .. or
      How did you manage to choose just one :)

    • @cryptotharg7400
      @cryptotharg7400 6 лет назад +10

      Lantz - Totally agree. Although, "One Size Fits All" comes very close, for me!

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +2

      Amen.

  • @erikwade3668
    @erikwade3668 6 лет назад +6

    Anyone who appreciates Frank Zappa's stylings and missed the opportunity to see him live should attend a Dweezil Zappa Concert as soon as they are able. Dweezil performs this song regularly, usually toward the end of the show.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад

      Cool!

    • @LogiForce86
      @LogiForce86 6 лет назад

      Already did many moons ago. Also went to Steve Vai and Joe Satriani. They were some great nights out!

    • @robinreiley1828
      @robinreiley1828 4 года назад +1

      Dweezil takes great care to learn his Father's music faithfully. He took 2 years to learn the "Black Page" with help from Steve Vai.

  • @garypowell1540
    @garypowell1540 3 года назад +3

    You have a very rare talent my friend for beautifully analyzing the very essence of all forms of music. You don't miss a detail, while your use of our wonderful language is both proficient and concise. You get an A1* every time, whether it is Frank Zappa or Dolly Parton, a truly amazing talent that is all but wasted on RUclips.

  • @atomaalatonal
    @atomaalatonal 6 лет назад +5

    One thing which is almost never reckognized, and its lifting zappa above any guitarist, Is that he was able to produce a genuine tone. Almost evry solo or live setup he has a certain tone of distortion and effects, which gave his solos its character. Theres hardly any rock guitarist who is using different setups at all, maybe sometimes switching to acoustics to showoff SENSIBILTY...or a bit more reverb here less delay there. Zappa was always in full control of his hardware.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад

      Amen!

    • @michaelledford4751
      @michaelledford4751 6 лет назад

      Dig Frank's insane picking style ,he almost always picks upwards and he spends an insane amount of time on the high E in most solos .

    • @absolutelypositively
      @absolutelypositively 3 года назад

      ‘Brian I could use a little more monitor!’

  • @xYohmx
    @xYohmx 6 лет назад +7

    Man... you didn't choose the easiest song to explain Frank's Playing... There's so much to say here.. the abilities he had to play on with polyrythm, the arrangement, his unique picking style (Dweezil, his son, and the best Zappa coinoisseur, called it Chicken against Spider cause his right hands picks note just in single stroke like a chicken while his left hands runs through the neck like a spider trying to not be eaten by the chicken.)
    He spent years and years to build his sounds and to modify his equipment to have a unique sound.
    And for the record this songs (with Black Napkins and another one whom i forgot the name) is one of the few songs he was totally proud of.
    If somebody read me please check the Joe's Garage album where this song came from. "You'll love it, it's a way of life"

  • @Gravyballs2011
    @Gravyballs2011 6 лет назад +8

    That hit the spot. ALWAYS DOES!

  • @robertutecht3125
    @robertutecht3125 3 года назад +1

    Thank you so much for playing this, it is one of my favorite tunes. Frank was and thru his music still is. Joe's Garage is 41 years old .

  • @sideshowtink
    @sideshowtink 6 лет назад +5

    The genius, the MASTER, Frank Zappa. Amazing guitarist. Brilliant composer. Gone too soon.

  • @lnugent1000
    @lnugent1000 3 года назад +1

    His influence stretches far and wide.
    Brilliant man....great guitar player, composer etc.

  • @markkasick
    @markkasick 6 лет назад +17

    Oh, Good Lord, I am getting old. Everything you post I have seen live. I am a huge Zappa fan (my cat's name was Zappa) and saw this tour at the beautiful Auditorium Theater in Chicago. The first night I had "nosebleed" seats way up in the back. Sting came out and they did a version of "Murder by Numbers", which made it on the subsequent live album. I was so blown away with the show, I convinced another friend to go to the second night and just buy tickets out front (which can get expensive). We showed up 5 minutes before the show was going to start and some dude sold us tickets for a buck or two less than face value. This was in the 80's when up front tickets were like 30 bucks. These seats were really close up front, easily in the first 15 rows and were right in front of Frank. Franks guitar playing was off the charts great when he would play like this. He was playing that Strat too .

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +1

      Cool! It's great to have people here who have experienced these players in the flesh!

    • @exentr
      @exentr 6 лет назад +3

      +wingsofpegasus I am no guitar player. I just listen to music I like. In my miind Frank was an expert to find the genuin sound for Fender and Gibson. Am I far out on this topic? So many times I listen to Frank playing guitar, I think to myself, this is the sound. This is how the strat, tele, SG and les Paul should sound like. Because the sound of his guitars are - so beautiful.

    • @EmptyGlass99
      @EmptyGlass99 6 лет назад

      "Mr Sting"

    • @markkasick
      @markkasick 6 лет назад +1

      As I remember it, and I was not wasted. Frank took Sting's top coat off- butler style then balled it up and tossed it.

    • @exentr
      @exentr 6 лет назад +1

      A Norwegian impressario was asked what entertainment star that impressed him most. His answare were Frank Zappa. The impressario thought that he was going to pick up a punk at the airport but the impressario said Frank was a true gentleman. No primadona. Simple, autentic, humble, no raiders but if Frank could have a sightseeing in Oslo, he'd appreciate. Of course the impressario could arrange that.

  • @zindy29
    @zindy29 6 лет назад +2

    Zappa is pure genius, his body of work is massive, it's amazing one man could create so much. I love he recreated his music over and over, tkanks

  • @digidaemon
    @digidaemon 6 лет назад +6

    As a guitar 'freak', I reckon that any guitarist who doesn't pay attention to Zappa's work is missing a huge chunk of insight. Have followed him since the 60's and have (almost) everything that he's produced, influenced or collaborated on. Satriani, Vai and Dweezil are testaments to his innovation and ability. Great video - thanks.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад

      Amen!

    • @kjelleriksson5122
      @kjelleriksson5122 6 лет назад

      And he was a friend of van Halen (Dweezil's idol). van Halen was the first one to call when Frank had died. When van Halen showed up at Frank's place, young Dweezil almost shit himself.

  • @19672701
    @19672701 6 лет назад +2

    When I watch him playing, he seems totally in tune with his guitar and impervious to even knowing there's a crowd out there. I don't know if it's true but, I've heard stories where those guys would literally locked themselves in his home studio 4 weeks playing. Wish I had a chance to see them.

  • @rkkotilley358
    @rkkotilley358 6 лет назад +53

    there are and have been many , many fine guitar players extraordinaire...but in my book , ya start with frank and go backwards

  • @findlesplurb
    @findlesplurb 3 года назад +2

    Excellent analysis. What I also find interesting is the way he incorporates 'mistakes' so deftly into the solo. His quick thinking means there can be no 'wrong' notes.
    And I have to add, I love how the entire band is so keyed in on what Zappa is doing that they're able to periodically change time signatures to support what he's doing. The drumming in particular is outstanding in this regard.

  • @sivad2
    @sivad2 6 лет назад +5

    Glad to see people looking at Franks technique. He was an amazing composer and a fantastic guitar player. many times his playing gets lost a bit I think. Mainly due to the fact that Frank was all about the musical piece. It wasn't about the solo and showing of. It was all about the music. And it makes a great deal of sense that people like Steve Via would be in the same mindset, guitar playing wise, as Frank. Frank did give Via his start.

  • @robinreiley1828
    @robinreiley1828 4 года назад +1

    Frank once said "Music is Sculpted Air." and this is what he did, he created air sculptures of great beauty and complexity.

  • @drfavstvs
    @drfavstvs 6 лет назад +3

    Isn't it amazing how many musical ideas Frank presents in a short song that is essentially two chords, A and E, I believe . . . and in 5/4! And this is a much "swifter" abbreviated version than the Joe's Garage original. His tone on the original studio cut, is the sweetest thing I've ever heard. You sure know how to pick pick 'em, Fil!

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад

      Thanks Terry!

    • @chuckdye707
      @chuckdye707 6 лет назад +1

      It's in 9, 4/4 then 5/4 repeated.

    • @funkempfang
      @funkempfang 6 лет назад +1

      Check ``Occams Razor´´!!!! Orignal solo Inca Roads and used for ``On the bus´´ on Joe´s Garage,

  • @briandebold7795
    @briandebold7795 4 года назад +1

    He always takes it so far out there you think there’s NO WAY to bring it back and make it fit, ahh but, he always does! Miss you Mr. Zappa ✨✌️✨

  • @RyanAcidhedzMurphy
    @RyanAcidhedzMurphy 6 лет назад +5

    I always love to see guitar players that remember you're allowed to play on the whole neck, and not just the bottom third.
    Okay... that may be a bit of an exaggeration, but I've seen plenty of them who never seem to leave that... let's call it the shredding solo high note area.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад

      Yeah there's a neck full of dynamics on there!

  • @michaelscottcutler3627
    @michaelscottcutler3627 Год назад +1

    Thanks for doing Frank. Many don't realize he was a guitar virtuoso. Absolutely brilliant.

  • @ursafan40
    @ursafan40 6 лет назад +15

    Frank understood it's not just the notes you play, it's the spaces in between that count for so much.
    One of my favorite players.
    This isn't even one of his better tracks.

    • @rebecam.8397
      @rebecam.8397 6 лет назад +2

      ursafan40 could you give the name of a couple of his better guitar works?

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +2

      Yeah he knew exactly where to let it breath.

    • @ursafan40
      @ursafan40 6 лет назад +1

      +Rebeca Cervantes I hope I didn't give the impression Frank has any "bad" work. It's all great. Here are a few of my faves.
      ruclips.net/video/rQsOYbxIm9w/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/jvB5dQHvRSc/видео.html
      And the entire album of
      ruclips.net/video/fKwnhyWRNAI/видео.html

    • @peterziggyw
      @peterziggyw 6 лет назад +2

      ursafan40 "Shut up n play yer guitar" is beyond this world. I'm sold.

    • @ursafan40
      @ursafan40 6 лет назад +1

      +Peter Wilson Glad you like it. Beyond the silly lyrics, the obscene attitude, the politics ...... Frank was one of the best guitarists out there.

  • @johnmcallister8372
    @johnmcallister8372 2 года назад +1

    Shouldn't have stopped it there ,as the note starts to break up he brings it back using the whammy bat, just beautiful.

  • @magn8195
    @magn8195 6 лет назад +5

    It's good to see people appreciating and analyzing his music. We definitely do not see that at all nowadays.

  • @S7EVE_P
    @S7EVE_P 6 лет назад +1

    A natural and pure talent, beautiful to listen to. My introduction to Frank Zappa was hearing Florentine Pogen some 25 years ago, I'd never heard anything like it before and became hooked on his stuff. Good to see people still discovering him and appreciating his skills :)

  • @58gennaro
    @58gennaro 6 лет назад +7

    heart breaking loss.

  • @kurtisle
    @kurtisle 6 лет назад +1

    Thanks. Frank spoke with his guitar. He was always in control of his sound. I miss Frank Zappa. It was always a real treat to see he and his band live.

  • @bobsmart2110
    @bobsmart2110 6 лет назад +7

    I always listerned to his music some people say he's freeky ?.but Frank started out as a jazz musician but developed his own rifts and licks there is certain notes even today that cannot be produced ! Only by Frank .

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +1

      Amen!

    • @kjelleriksson5122
      @kjelleriksson5122 6 лет назад

      And he started out as a drummer. When the bass player couldn't play a very different part Frank went up to him and showed him where to put his fingers on the bass. Recommended: the folder that comes with Roxy by Proxy, the notes written by Ruth Underwood (whom FZ calls "a nymphomaniac"). She talks about sleepless nights worrying about "difficult sevens". Even for us who don't have a university education in music there are interesting stuff she tells. I am 64 and have been to many FZ concerts from 1972 and on. Swedish audiences were silent, so sometimes Frank could play 15 minutes long solos without repeating himself. Btw, he never played the same solo twice, not even my favorite Black Napkins. People often forget that he did everything himself; mixing, producing, composing, playing fantastic guitar. Dweezil says that that his dad always was searching for the tone he wanted. Dweezil had to learn a 20 seconds FZ solo, it took him a full week. Frank had one of the fastest right hands in the business. Another story: an orchestra was practicing a FZ classical work. The conductor went to Frank and said - You have to rewrite this part, my musicians can't play that fast. Reply: Ha! My rock band can do that!

  • @holdencaustic
    @holdencaustic 6 лет назад +1

    Frank’s work on this song ALWAYS gives me goosebumps-
    Most people do not get how complex his guitar playing was. On many of his improvised solos, he’s polymodal, and polyrhythmic for days... and that was just how his heart beat- its all visceral, not through composed ( save for main motifs he would refer to )....it’s almost impossible to get one of his improved solos down pat-
    Thank you for giving attention to his style- more folk need to listen to him.
    SUBBED!!

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад

      Yeah many people, even players, don't see the detail. Playing the notes is one thing, getting them to communicate the same thing is the difficult part!a

  • @georgekrats2573
    @georgekrats2573 6 лет назад +4

    Frank Zappa the KING of the guitar solo

  • @ronnie5129
    @ronnie5129 4 года назад +2

    FIL, THANKS FOR THIS VIDEO, AND YOUR GREAT COMMENTS, WHEN I SAW DWEEZIL, DO THE ZAPPA PLAYS ZAPPA TOUR, HE PLAYED THIS SONG, AND THE GUY STARTED CRYING, WHAT A HEART FELT THING TO WATCH, WHAT A GREAT CONCERT, COUSIN FIGEL

  • @mdub7194
    @mdub7194 6 лет назад +3

    I think Frank Zappa was a musical genius . Serious talent .

  • @periurban
    @periurban 4 года назад +1

    Zappa himself said that this was his favourite guitar solo to play. He didn't really often reproduce a guitar solo in this way, one of the other exceptions being Black Napkins from Zoot Allures. the original solo was composed live on the 1978 Halloween shows in New York (I think). What's interesting in this version is the brass accompaniment, which is new, supporting the lines. I saw him play this in London on that tour, and I had goosebumps. Frank was not an emotional person, but for sure this solo gets me every time. It always reminds me that we lost a great man too early.

  • @cjpmugsr999
    @cjpmugsr999 6 лет назад +23

    This was the point where Frank found out he was really sick and this was the end of his touring career thanks to a couple of the guys in the band who didn't like each other. Frank got fed up with professional musicians acting like children... like musicians tend to do a lot. The original recording on Joe's Garage is the place to go for the best version of this track.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +1

      Thanks for the reference!

    • @theemptycross
      @theemptycross 6 лет назад +3

      it's on the double album sequel to Joe's Garage not the first joe's garage but maybe these days it's all one CD I don't have all the CD's anymore having ahem "transferred" everything I really like to digital (on the extended Joe's Garage I still can't listen to that Stick It Out song about prison rape . . . but anyway) . . . sometimes wish I had kept all that vinyl but I never could figure out how to keep them from getting scratched.

    • @theemptycross
      @theemptycross 6 лет назад +3

      then again what am I saying, besides showing my age, you can go to youtube and find anything ever recorded including the studio version of Watermelon which as others have mentioned is better than the live version here

    • @zombywoof9188
      @zombywoof9188 5 лет назад

      @@theemptycross Not better, different or more preferred. Not better.

    • @ncpmellifluousanonymous1984
      @ncpmellifluousanonymous1984 5 лет назад

      i do like the live version from "Guitar". I find it very moving.

  • @erichvonmolder9310
    @erichvonmolder9310 6 лет назад +1

    You can see Zappa is having a great time. He loved it.

  • @mmmegameat
    @mmmegameat 6 лет назад +3

    Absolutely enjoy your vids. Thanks for bringing a musician's perspective to reaction videos. More Frank, please!

  • @johncummins6655
    @johncummins6655 5 лет назад +1

    What a super guitarist approaching Keaggy. Zappa was just full of tastefulness.

  • @MrTortureneverstops1
    @MrTortureneverstops1 6 лет назад +3

    Hi from France ! I saw Frank 3 times on stage and it's unforgettable ! Listen to his solo on Rat Tomago. It's so powerful ! Very different of Watermelon.

    • @SpaceCattttt
      @SpaceCattttt 6 лет назад +2

      Yeah, Rat Tomago is actually a live solo from a performance of The Torture Never Stops. Who else but Frank would take a guitar solo from one song,
      and give that solo a new title and make it into a new song on a different album?! And who else could get away with it? XD

    • @SpaceCattttt
      @SpaceCattttt 6 лет назад +2

      By the way, I started wondering about what "Tomago" actually is. And apparently, it's some kind of sushi.
      So how about some Rat Sushi? Mmmm!!

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад

      Awesome!

  • @shawni321
    @shawni321 5 лет назад +1

    I am so impressed, as young as you are, that you are giving these guys their due. You're a real aficionado, and have a deep appreciation for the musicianship of those who have gone before. Kudos!

  • @jeffdubuque5622
    @jeffdubuque5622 6 лет назад +11

    no one play`s solo`s like frank zappa.

  • @ckane510
    @ckane510 5 лет назад +1

    Frank was a music master! Excellent choice! Intellectually second to none!

  • @BrungersBandRock
    @BrungersBandRock 6 лет назад +11

    Up there with Jeff Beck... unique player

    • @estoy1001
      @estoy1001 6 лет назад +1

      Ha, I was about to tell you Jeff Beck was still alive - I thought you meant in heaven or summat. But yeah, not enough reactions to Jeff.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +2

      Yeah true!

    • @Coltreign
      @Coltreign 4 года назад +1

      I heard a rumor Punky Meadows was more fluid than Jeff Beck.

  • @pasodeminick
    @pasodeminick 6 лет назад +2

    "Watermelon in easter hay" is probably the most melodic "conventional" Zappa's song.
    Loved it in its original "Joe's Garage" version, and loved it with passion in the Frank Zappa "Guitar" double CD.
    Having the whole real great band behind in this 1988 Barcelona concert, he turned back to the record version.
    Anyway, he was a genius.

  • @davedynamite77
    @davedynamite77 6 лет назад +5

    Frank was an amazing player...

  • @MDee-db7by
    @MDee-db7by 4 года назад +1

    That entire two hour performance is absolutely brilliant.

  • @progrock3214
    @progrock3214 6 лет назад +96

    To me, and I really think this, with all my heart, Frank IS the greatest musician and composer of the 20th century.
    Thanks for your video. Nice !

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +13

      No problem! Yeah some people miss the fact that actually NOT playing notes is more effective than cramming in as many as possible! Frank was a master at this.

    • @FZ-TAS
      @FZ-TAS 6 лет назад +4

      You're not alone Prog Rock!

    • @PhilipBurton-dn3ce
      @PhilipBurton-dn3ce 6 лет назад +2

      Prog Rock you hit the nail fairly and squarely on the head, my sentiments exactly

    • @sealisa1398
      @sealisa1398 6 лет назад +2

      I’m with you. Strictly Genteel

    • @sealisa1398
      @sealisa1398 6 лет назад +1

      Technically don’t know if Varese could be considered his mentor. Don’t think Frank ever took instruction from him, Inspirational mentor definitely.

  • @pomod
    @pomod 6 лет назад +5

    Yes, more Zappa!!

    • @pomod
      @pomod 6 лет назад

      Also check out Jimi Hendrix - Machine Gun (Live Copenhagen 1970)

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад

      Jimi is difficult because of the copyrights.

  • @elsapucai
    @elsapucai 2 года назад +1

    First thing I have to point in this video is how HUGE Frank's hands are. He had a really unorthodox way of picking, as it can be seen here, holding his ring and little finger on the neck's side and picking almost over the fretboard. Unique

  • @TheOverlordOfProcrastination
    @TheOverlordOfProcrastination 6 лет назад +4

    FZ - the king.

  • @paulinebutcherbird
    @paulinebutcherbird 3 года назад +1

    1988 Frank was already ill and I don't think this is his best rendition of the piece, but still wonderful. One of his few totally emotional compositions.

  • @worstxb1playertylerteehc635
    @worstxb1playertylerteehc635 6 лет назад +7

    Steve Vai was a student and member of Frank's Band and Steve knows it too.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад

      Amen!

    • @KWE.ECLECTIC
      @KWE.ECLECTIC 6 лет назад +1

      Steve was much more than a member of Franks band. Those two became great friends till the end.

    • @MarcusL1995
      @MarcusL1995 4 года назад

      I heard he got a spanking

  • @marvymarier8988
    @marvymarier8988 2 года назад +2

    One of my favorite Zappa songs .
    Such a beautiful soulful rendition .

  • @LilSirAxolotl
    @LilSirAxolotl 6 лет назад +13

    First time I saw/heard Zappa was a screening of Does Humor Belong in Music? at my local youth center... They started playing Zoot Allures and as soon as he broke out into his solo I was like WTF is this?!? It seemed to be all over the place but sounded so beautiful to my ears... I was familiar with most blues, rock and metal guitarists back then but I had never heard anything like that... Little did I know he influenced a bunch of them in their youth
    I think what separated him from most of them is that he wanted to play an instrument and chose the guitar because of it's possibilities instead of wanting to play guitar because it was cool while not knowing much about music... It's a completely different mindset

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +2

      Yeah he wasn't your usual kind of player!

    • @EmptyGlass99
      @EmptyGlass99 6 лет назад +4

      "From the very beginning when I used to hear those solos on those old records I used to say: now here is an instrument that is capable of spewing forth true obscenity, you know? If ever there's an obscene noise to be made on an instrument, it's going to come out of a guitar. On a saxophone you can play sleaze. On a bass you can play balls. But on a guitar you can be truly obscene ... Let's be realistic about this, the guitar can be the single most blasphemous device on the face of the earth. That's why I like it .... The disgusting stink of a too-loud electric guitar: now that's my idea of a good time."
      Frank Zappa

    • @LilSirAxolotl
      @LilSirAxolotl 6 лет назад

      EmptyGlass99 thank God he chose the guitar over the sax 😏 he also liked the low and breathy noise of the hobo I think it was... That brown sound that makes the hairs stand up in your neck

    • @lilith9653
      @lilith9653 6 лет назад +2

      Zoot Allures is my favorite, and Black Napkins is amazing. Not a hard core Zappa fan but if I ever play his videos I can't ever stop watching. truly a genius

  • @vagabondvibes2578
    @vagabondvibes2578 2 года назад +1

    Please, more Zappa analysis!
    Many people say this is their favourite Zappa song but I can't name a favourite decade, let alone a favourite album, let alone a favourite song!
    RIP Frank Zappa.
    'Information is not knowledge.
    Knowledge is not wisdom.
    Wisdom is not truth.
    Truth is not beauty.
    Beauty is not love.
    Love is not music.
    Music is the best."
    (Frank Zappa, Packard Goose)

  • @SpaceCattttt
    @SpaceCattttt 6 лет назад +5

    Nice one! Frank's been my hero for 35 years, and he would've been a lot earlier as well, if I'd only heard about him sooner. But I was 6...
    Anyway, Watermelon, extremely beautiful, though it is, is not the best example of Frank's guitar skills. In fact, what's special about it, is how
    unusual it is among his other work. It's one of the very few ballads he wrote that is played straight for emotion. No jokes for once.
    But I agree that this performance shows his mastery of tone in action.
    It saddens me when some people criticize him for playing "sloppily", and for not shredding or even sweep-picking his way through arpeggios (unthinkable!).
    The thing with Frank was that this kind of blues/atonal/12-tone/whatever hybrid, was his chosen style of playing.
    He couldn't play like Steve Vai, which is why he hired him. But he COULD play in a large variety of different ways.
    For example, he ran into Hendrix one day, and Jimi was showing off as usual with his string-licking antics. And Frank grabbed his guitar and not only showed
    everyone what he could do, but he also started playing Jimi's music back to Jimi. Perfectly. And then he played stuff that Jimi would never have come up with
    on his own. And apparently, Jimi stormed off (depending on which source you believe), but they were friends, and Frank eventually got Hendrix's strat from
    the Monterey festival. The one he burned.
    I'm rambling. I'm excited! But if you get the chance, check out a few versions of Inca Roads. And if you haven't heard it, Shut Up And Play Yer Guitar will blow your mind.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад +2

      Yeah I think when someone just wants to hear mindless shredding, they've totally missed the point of music in general! Even in shredding there has to be melody that takes your ears on a journey!

    • @GoodCorporateRobot
      @GoodCorporateRobot 5 лет назад

      +teppolundgren one counterpoint - as the Central Scrutinizer on Joe's Garage he narrates the beginning of the song and makes fun of it even before it starts ("Who gives a fuck anyway?"). This is what I love about Frank - he made fun of everyone including himself, even though the song he's making fun of is one of the most beautiful pieces you'll ever hear. Just offering a different perspective...

  • @MrChuck19941
    @MrChuck19941 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks for video Fil , Zappa could do it all, a rare musical genius , great analysis of his playing !

  • @napoleoninrags1346
    @napoleoninrags1346 6 лет назад +5

    So good. I miss the old maestro

  • @davedynamite77
    @davedynamite77 6 лет назад +2

    I heard that when he first got sick he wanted to tour before he wouldn't be able to....from the story that I heard he went and played around the states and Europe....many people who attended those shows thought it was some of the best performances of his life/...I hope he is in PEACE>>>>>

  • @dasalottamayonaze
    @dasalottamayonaze 6 лет назад +5

    FRANK COME BACK!! NO ONE CAN PLAY IT LIKE YOU USED TO...THANK GOODNESS THE DWEEZ IS CARRYING ON IN DADS VOODSCHTOPS! (young Frankenstein reference)

  • @webert2634
    @webert2634 5 лет назад +1

    Brilliance flowed from him. There will never be anyone who comes close to his eccentricity.

  • @TheMDJ2000
    @TheMDJ2000 6 лет назад +4

    The Inca Roads solo is wonderful.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  6 лет назад

      👍

    • @greuve
      @greuve 6 лет назад +1

      One of my favourite Zappa solos and one one of my favourite Zappa songs. I remember vividly the first time listening to one of the earlier YCDTOSA albums that had just been released. I was at my mate's house and it had a live version of Inca Roads recorded somewhere in a Scandinavian country and we immediately recognised that had to be the track where he took the studio cut from .... note-for-note identical! Very revealing to hear the bits he "cut out" as well.

  • @jackstraw8145
    @jackstraw8145 4 года назад +1

    More people should appreciate Zappa. Only 61k views? This is the goodness. I've got your back Wings of Pegasus!

  • @3moons29
    @3moons29 6 лет назад +4

    Frank zappa forever!!

  • @loveit7484
    @loveit7484 2 года назад +1

    Great video. Great points. You're so right, his playing is so intetesting, its like a conversation.
    You're waiting to listen, not hear, listen to what hes going to say next. Those subtle changes, so good. Makes me think of a line from TV show Angel. Lorren tells Angel " I can hold a note forever but after awhile its just noise. Its what comes next that makes it interesting..." That is guitar solos in a nutshell. Love your videos!