Lumpy Gravy

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Release info

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Lumpy Gravy
Released in May 1968

Tracks

Lumpy Gravy Part One (15:48)

  1. The Way I See It, Barry (00:06)
  2. Duodenum (01:32)
  3. Oh No (02:03)
  4. Bit Of Nostalgia (01:35)
  5. It's From Kansas (00:30)
  6. Bored Out 90 Over (00:31)
  7. Almost Chinese (00:25)
  8. Switching Girls (00:29)
  9. Oh No Again (01:13)
  10. At The Gas Station (02:41)
  11. Another Pickup (00:54)
  12. I Don't Know If I Can Go Through This Again (03:49)

Lumpy Gravy Part Two (15:51)

  1. Very Distraughtening (01:33)
  2. White Ugliness (02:22)
  3. Amen (01:33)
  4. Just One More Time (00:58)
  5. A Vicious Circle (01:12)
  6. King Kong (00:43)
  7. Drums Are Too Noisy (00:58)
  8. Kangaroos (00:57)
  9. Envelops The Bath Tub (03:42)
  10. Take Your Clothes Off (01:53)

Players

Background

After contacting symphonic session musicians through trombonist Kenneth Shroyer, who’d played on Absolutely Free, Frank formed the one-off Abnuceals Emuukha Electric Symphony Orchestra & Chorus, made up of the musicians and characters as they appeared piecemeal on the album rather than in any actual cooperative performances. The Chorus was actually a speaking cast, its members' dialogue taking the place of any sung lyrics on the LP. They were recorded conversing with their heads stuck inside a Steinway grand piano during several sessions at Apostolic Studios in New York City. The chats were improvised, but they followed Frank’s general thematic guidelines. He amassed eight or nine hours of conversation from which to select; further snippets were heard in a few spots on following albums, but the piano characters returned with prominence on Civilization Phaze III, which clarified and continued the plot (all the way to the end of the world) from where it left off on Lumpy Gravy, using both old characters from that album and new, freshly recorded folks.

The album features three Mothers: Bunk Gardner plays woodwinds and brass, while the others -- Roy Estrada and Jim “Motorhead” Sherwood, sometimes using the voice of his alter-ego, Larry Fanoga (“Almost Chinese, huh!” ... “Drums are too noisy when you got no corners to hide in”) -- are listed as members of the Chorus. Other enclosed-perspective, fear-of-freedom piano inhabitants are played by studio staff members, Louie the Turkey from the Garrick Theater audience and Spider Barbour of Chrysalis, another group recording at Apostolic at the time.

Completed in 1967, this featured the earliest commercial appearance of Frank’s symphonic music. Some of the material was even recorded with a fifty-piece Los Angeles orchestra.

The album was commissioned by Nik Venet of Capitol Records, who’d formerly signed the Beach Boys. It had been assumed that Frank was contractually free to compose and conduct, since MGM had only signed him as a musician and vocalist along with the rest of the Mothers. The latter company disagreed, threatened to sue, and finally bought the master tapes. It was just as well; Capitol’s engineers had messed up the countless edits, requiring Frank to reconstruct the album. He and technician Gary Kellgren labored over this unexpected task at Mayfair Studios in New York City. All in all, the release of the album was delayed for over a year.

The album’s title, originally garnered from a television commercial for Aloma Linda Gravy Quick, is used here to describe Zappa’s congealing of the “smooth” textures of popular orchestral music. Frank’s breaking-up of the frozen emotions of safe, dyed-in-the-wool classical forms is achieved via compositional freedom and intrusions of reality: the “lumps” of the imperfect real world, much more interesting than the escapist dullness of antiquated musical forms. The lumps are the “meat of the matter,” and also happen to be the tastiest part of the gravy. Frank’s opting for meat rather than vegetation: substance, and the eclecticism (and humor) of reality, rather than brain-dead uniformity. Upcoming album titles will update this idea (most drastically Uncle Meat and Burnt Weeny Sandwich, but also, indirectly, Hot Rats and Weasels Ripped My Flesh).

The front-cover photo, backdropped in gravy-brown, features Frank in a non-hip, comfortable outfit, staring proudly up at the spectator from his chambers of creation like a worn-out worker after a long day. He’s wearing a shirt occasionally aired onstage that advertises Pipco, a Santa Barbara, California pipe company that has made shirts to sponsor little-league teams (although Frank won’t learn of the shirt’s origins until long after 1967).

The clothing-store dummy inside the gatefold hearkens back to the plastic people on Absolutely Free.

Conceptual Continuity

Versions

ZFT # Version # # discs Format Catalog # Release
(YYYY-MM-DD)
EAN.UCC-13
(barcode)
Artwork Comment
3 0
Demo
Acetate
1 LP   Unreleased None Unknown Bootlegs do exist
(see Lumpy Gravy & Elsewhere)
1.1a
Original
Stereo
? LP          
1.2
Original
Mono
? LP          
Unknown 1 LP Barking Pumpkin
BPR 7777-4
1985-04-19     Included in The Old Masters, Box I set.
1.1b
Remaster
sounds worse
according
to the
Zappa Patio
1 CD Rykodisc
RCD 40024
1986 0144314002425?
0014431002427?
(not printed)
  US edition, coupled with We're Only In It For The Money. Matrix # 818 PUMPKIN RYK-CD40024 SOI01
1 CD VideoArts
VACK 5023
1994-10-26 4988112405264   Japanese edition, coupled with We're Only In It For The Money.
1.1c
Remaster
sounds best
according
to the
Zappa Patio
1 CD Rykodisc
RCD 10504
1995-04-18 0014431050428   US edition. Matrix # IFPI L501 IFPI 8702 DISCTRONICS RCD 10504 01
1 CD VideoArts
VACK 5105
1995-09-25 4988112406995   Japanese edition
1 CD VideoArts
VACK 5240
1997-02-28 4988112408401   Japanese edition
1 CD VideoArts
VACK 1205
2001-09-21 4988112412613   Japanese edition, mini-album papersleeve
1 CD Rykodisc
RCD 10593
2005-07-19 0014431059322   = VideoArts VACK 1205, the barcode is a sticker, the Ryko reference is not printed

See Also