Difference between pages "John Bergamo" and "Elliot Ingber"

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Born: 28th May 1940, Englewood, New Jersey. Attended the Lenox School of Jazz, Lenox Mass. in 1959  with fellow students such as [[Ornette Coleman]] and [[Wikipedia:Don Cherry|Don Cherry]]. During the mid-1960's he was with the Creative Associates at the State University at Buffalo. Moving to [[California]] he became coordinator of the percussion program at [[Cal-Arts|California Institute of the Arts]] in 1970. He taught [[Ed Mann]] who later joined him in his group The Repercussion Unit.
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__NOTOC__
  
[[John Bergamo]] provided percussion for:
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[[File:Elliot Ingber.jpg|350px|thumb|right|Elliot Ingber.]]
  
*[[Zappa In New York]]  
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'''Elliot Ingber''' (24 August 1941 - 21 January 2025) was an American rock guitarist. He was a member of [[Biography|Frank Zappa]]'s Mothers of Invention, [[Captain Beefheart]]'s [[Magic Band]] and Fraternity of Man.
*[[Studio Tan]]  
 
*[[Orchestral Favorites]]  
 
  
He has also worked with many artists from Herb Alpert to [[Van Dyke Parks]] and [[Ringo Starr]].
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==Frank Zappa==
  
John is head of the '''Repercussion Unit''', with occasional bandmember [[Ed Mann]].  
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He joined [[The Mothers]] early in 1966, shortly before they signed with [[Verve Records|Verve]]. Ingber's guitar can be heard on the albums ''[[Freak Out!]]'', ''[[Lumpy Gravy]]'', ''[[You Can't Do That On Stage Anymore Vol. 5]]'', ''[[The Lost Episodes]]'' and ''[[Mystery Disc]]''. Ingber also recorded on the ''[[Boy Wonder I Love You]]'' sessions. He can be seen in the Zappa movies [[Uncle Meat (The Film)|Uncle Meat]] and [[Video From Hell]]. According to [[Jimmy Carl Black]] Ingber was fired after tripping on [[LSD]] on stage and not realizing that his amplifiers weren't working.  
  
[[Category:Bandmembers|Bergamo]][[Category:Percussionists|Bergamo]][[Category:Musical Educators|Bergamo]]
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==Post-Zappa career==
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After leaving [[The Mothers]] in 1967 he formed [[Fraternity Of Man]]. Joined [[Captain Beefheart]] in the early 1970s performing as Winged Eel Fingerling.
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Elliot Ingber appeared in [[Frank Scheffer]]'s documentaries ''[[Frank Zappa: The Present-Day Composer Refuses To Die]]'' (2000), ''[[Frank Zappa Phase II: The Big Note]]'' (2002) and ''[[Frank Zappa: Pioneer Of Future Music, parts 1 & 2]]'' (2007).
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He is included in the list of names in the liner notes of ''[[The MOFO Project/Object (Fazedooh)|The MOFO Project/Object]]'' (2006) album.
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Eliot Ingber died in 2025.
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==Quotes about Elliot Ingber==
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From the "biographical trivia" section on the [[Freak Out!]] (1966) album:
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<blockquote><p>''"...'''Elliot''' digs the blues. He has a big dimple in his chin. We made him grow beard to cover it up. He just got out of the Army. Lucky for the Army."''</p></blockquote>
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==Sources==
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<references/>
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==External links==
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* [[Wikipedia:Elliot Ingber]]
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* [https://www.united-mutations.com/i/elliot_ingber.htm United Mutations page.]
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[[Category:Bandmembers|Ingber]]
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[[Category:Guitarists|Ingber]]

Latest revision as of 09:36, 23 January 2025


Elliot Ingber.

Elliot Ingber (24 August 1941 - 21 January 2025) was an American rock guitarist. He was a member of Frank Zappa's Mothers of Invention, Captain Beefheart's Magic Band and Fraternity of Man.

Frank Zappa

He joined The Mothers early in 1966, shortly before they signed with Verve. Ingber's guitar can be heard on the albums Freak Out!, Lumpy Gravy, You Can't Do That On Stage Anymore Vol. 5, The Lost Episodes and Mystery Disc. Ingber also recorded on the Boy Wonder I Love You sessions. He can be seen in the Zappa movies Uncle Meat and Video From Hell. According to Jimmy Carl Black Ingber was fired after tripping on LSD on stage and not realizing that his amplifiers weren't working.

Post-Zappa career

After leaving The Mothers in 1967 he formed Fraternity Of Man. Joined Captain Beefheart in the early 1970s performing as Winged Eel Fingerling.

Elliot Ingber appeared in Frank Scheffer's documentaries Frank Zappa: The Present-Day Composer Refuses To Die (2000), Frank Zappa Phase II: The Big Note (2002) and Frank Zappa: Pioneer Of Future Music, parts 1 & 2 (2007).

He is included in the list of names in the liner notes of The MOFO Project/Object (2006) album.

Eliot Ingber died in 2025.

Quotes about Elliot Ingber

From the "biographical trivia" section on the Freak Out! (1966) album:

"...Elliot digs the blues. He has a big dimple in his chin. We made him grow beard to cover it up. He just got out of the Army. Lucky for the Army."

Sources


External links