Difference between revisions of "Garrick Theatre"
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==Pigs & Repugnant== | ==Pigs & Repugnant== | ||
− | With the reduction in the number of venues available to play in Los Angeles and having had a run of successful shows in New York's Balloon Farm throughout [[66/11/23-26 New York NY US Balloon Farm|November]] and December 1966 the band returned to play at the Garrick Theatre, a | + | With the reduction in the number of venues available to play in Los Angeles and having had a run of successful shows in New York's Balloon Farm throughout [[66/11/23-26 New York NY US Balloon Farm|November]] and December 1966 the band returned to play at the Garrick Theatre, a narrow, 199 seat, performance space/cinema located on the floors above the [[Cafe Au Go Go]], at 152 Bleecker Street, New York.<ref>Previously it functioned as a cinema and was known as the Garrick Theatre but it fell into disuse and was known as Upstairs at the Café Au Go Go during the initial performances. The full name and marquee restored by June 1967</ref> This covered the Easter vacation period Thursday 23 March to Monday 3 April 1967. |
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− | With so many visitors around during the holiday period the shows had been very successful with weekends having three performances to accommodate the demand. Given this success Cohen and Zappa decided to rent the theatre | + | With so many visitors around during the holiday period the shows had been very successful with weekends having three performances to accommodate the demand. Given this success Cohen and Zappa decided to rent the theatre throughout summer to September 5th. The show, occasionally entitled Pigs & Repugnant, evolved into extended musical pieces interspersed with [[wikipedia:Dada|Dada]], [[wikipedia:Vaudeville| vaudevillian]] theatrics. But attendance declined with, on occasions, more people on stage than in the audience. |
+ | <blockquote>"Of course, after Easter vacation, the crowds dwindled to zilch. Some nights there were three, maybe five people in there and we'd still play. But we would do it just for them."<ref>Cruising Down Memory Lane With Frank Zappa, Trouser Press, April, 1979</ref></blockquote> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Towards the end of May it was decided to re-launch the show as an off-off-Broadway revue<ref>[http://www.iobdb.com/Production/3486 Off Broadway Database]</ref> entitled Absolutely Free to tie in with the [[Absolutely Free|release of the album]]. For the launch MGM and Verve executives were called in as support<ref>[[Cashbox]] 10 June 1967</ref>, although Zappa later claimed that the album and show having the same name was a mere coincidence<ref>"Zappa insists that the Verve Records' release of a Mothers' album entitled "Absolutely Free" is sheer coincidence." - [[Mother Of Two Runs Off With Uncle Meat]], Song Hits, September 1967</ref> and the press were invited to review the show: | ||
<blockquote>Their music is also, more often than not, frankly hostile – both in its headachey volume and in those lyrics that you can make out amid the roar... As pure sound, though, this approaches genius. From an electrified kitchen of percussion, saxes, guitars, flutes, etc., they produce a thick, black sound shot through with odd treble sunbursts and pinwheels – the exact aural equivalent of the nervous ever-changing abstract projections flashing on the screen behind them.<ref>The New York Times, Thursday, May 25, 1967 - [[Mothers of Invention at the Garrick]]</ref></blockquote> | <blockquote>Their music is also, more often than not, frankly hostile – both in its headachey volume and in those lyrics that you can make out amid the roar... As pure sound, though, this approaches genius. From an electrified kitchen of percussion, saxes, guitars, flutes, etc., they produce a thick, black sound shot through with odd treble sunbursts and pinwheels – the exact aural equivalent of the nervous ever-changing abstract projections flashing on the screen behind them.<ref>The New York Times, Thursday, May 25, 1967 - [[Mothers of Invention at the Garrick]]</ref></blockquote> | ||
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[[Gail Zappa]] likened the extended run at the Garrick to [[wikipedia:The Beatles in Hamburg|The Beatles in Hamburg]]<ref>[[Zappa (movie)|Zappa]] - 2020 documentary</ref> in that they were afforded the time to work out what they wanted to do and experiment with the audience to establish how much they could get away with on stage. | [[Gail Zappa]] likened the extended run at the Garrick to [[wikipedia:The Beatles in Hamburg|The Beatles in Hamburg]]<ref>[[Zappa (movie)|Zappa]] - 2020 documentary</ref> in that they were afforded the time to work out what they wanted to do and experiment with the audience to establish how much they could get away with on stage. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==The Shows== | ||
+ | Opening support for the Easter shows were Tim Buckley (23-29), Richie Havens (30-31, 1-3) | ||
+ | |||
+ | Through May The Joe Beck Jazz Ensemble | ||
+ | |||
+ | During June Eric Andersen, Luke and The Apostles | ||
+ | |||
+ | During July [[Meredith Monk]] performed with [[Don Preston]] backing her. | ||
− | + | [[image:Garrickstage.jpeg|right|thumb|200px|Mothers on stage at The Garrick]] | |
+ | [[image:GarrickAudience.png|right|thumb|200px|The audience]] | ||
+ | [[image:Bananas.jpeg|right|thumb|200px|On stage with bananas]] | ||
+ | [[image:AudienceStage.jpeg|right|thumb|200px|Audience performing on stage]] | ||
A regular attendee was [[Ruth Underwood]]: | A regular attendee was [[Ruth Underwood]]: | ||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
"One never knew what to expect, there were some nights that you just heard pure music, and other nights, [[Jim "Motorhead" Sherwood|Motorhead]]'d be talking about fixing his car, with [[Jimmy Carl Black|Jim Black]]'s drum beat in the background. Sometimes [[Biography|Frank]] would just sit in a chair and glower at the audience. Sometimes there were more people on stage than there were in the audience, and because of that, Frank even got to know some of us by name! There were so few hard-core [[The Mothers|Mothers]] freaks then, that we were all very noticeable to him. I remember [[Igor Stravinsky|Stravinsky]] being played, I remember droning music going on for ages, and then in the middle of all of that, the song that then became [[Oh No|'Oh No, I Don't Believe It']], sort of breaking through the clouds, and I mean it just shocked me, how anything could be so beautiful, and how such beautiful music could come out of such bizarre looking people." </blockquote> | "One never knew what to expect, there were some nights that you just heard pure music, and other nights, [[Jim "Motorhead" Sherwood|Motorhead]]'d be talking about fixing his car, with [[Jimmy Carl Black|Jim Black]]'s drum beat in the background. Sometimes [[Biography|Frank]] would just sit in a chair and glower at the audience. Sometimes there were more people on stage than there were in the audience, and because of that, Frank even got to know some of us by name! There were so few hard-core [[The Mothers|Mothers]] freaks then, that we were all very noticeable to him. I remember [[Igor Stravinsky|Stravinsky]] being played, I remember droning music going on for ages, and then in the middle of all of that, the song that then became [[Oh No|'Oh No, I Don't Believe It']], sort of breaking through the clouds, and I mean it just shocked me, how anything could be so beautiful, and how such beautiful music could come out of such bizarre looking people." </blockquote> | ||
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==The Venue== | ==The Venue== |
Latest revision as of 14:55, 14 October 2021
Pigs & Repugnant
With the reduction in the number of venues available to play in Los Angeles and having had a run of successful shows in New York's Balloon Farm throughout November and December 1966 the band returned to play at the Garrick Theatre, a narrow, 199 seat, performance space/cinema located on the floors above the Cafe Au Go Go, at 152 Bleecker Street, New York.[1] This covered the Easter vacation period Thursday 23 March to Monday 3 April 1967.
“We had to get out of California because we couldn’t get much more work there and on the East Coast there was a lot of opportunities to do so. There were so many big cities within a two-hour drive from New York and we had a contract to play at the Garrick Theater in Greenwich Village for two weeks over the Easter holiday.”[2]
With so many visitors around during the holiday period the shows had been very successful with weekends having three performances to accommodate the demand. Given this success Cohen and Zappa decided to rent the theatre throughout summer to September 5th. The show, occasionally entitled Pigs & Repugnant, evolved into extended musical pieces interspersed with Dada, vaudevillian theatrics. But attendance declined with, on occasions, more people on stage than in the audience.
"Of course, after Easter vacation, the crowds dwindled to zilch. Some nights there were three, maybe five people in there and we'd still play. But we would do it just for them."[3]
Towards the end of May it was decided to re-launch the show as an off-off-Broadway revue[4] entitled Absolutely Free to tie in with the release of the album. For the launch MGM and Verve executives were called in as support[5], although Zappa later claimed that the album and show having the same name was a mere coincidence[6] and the press were invited to review the show:
Their music is also, more often than not, frankly hostile – both in its headachey volume and in those lyrics that you can make out amid the roar... As pure sound, though, this approaches genius. From an electrified kitchen of percussion, saxes, guitars, flutes, etc., they produce a thick, black sound shot through with odd treble sunbursts and pinwheels – the exact aural equivalent of the nervous ever-changing abstract projections flashing on the screen behind them.[7]
"For the Mothers, which we might loosely call a rock and roll group of seven males, are wildly hirsute, sartorially shaggy and arrogant of posture. (If that brings to mind the Beatles, try to think more in terms of the Hell's Angels without their bikes.) Visual chaos is compounded by the projection of throbbing patterns on a huge screen behind the ensemble and by such distracting (and annoying) on-stage antics as smearing a banana on a dismembered doll torso....The Mothers of Invention aren't going to change your mind. But they are part of a social phenomenon, they are good at what they do, and an evening at the Garrick is emphatically instinctive. Maybe more."[8]
Gail Zappa likened the extended run at the Garrick to The Beatles in Hamburg[9] in that they were afforded the time to work out what they wanted to do and experiment with the audience to establish how much they could get away with on stage.
The Shows
Opening support for the Easter shows were Tim Buckley (23-29), Richie Havens (30-31, 1-3)
Through May The Joe Beck Jazz Ensemble
During June Eric Andersen, Luke and The Apostles
During July Meredith Monk performed with Don Preston backing her.
A regular attendee was Ruth Underwood:
"One never knew what to expect, there were some nights that you just heard pure music, and other nights, Motorhead'd be talking about fixing his car, with Jim Black's drum beat in the background. Sometimes Frank would just sit in a chair and glower at the audience. Sometimes there were more people on stage than there were in the audience, and because of that, Frank even got to know some of us by name! There were so few hard-core Mothers freaks then, that we were all very noticeable to him. I remember Stravinsky being played, I remember droning music going on for ages, and then in the middle of all of that, the song that then became 'Oh No, I Don't Believe It', sort of breaking through the clouds, and I mean it just shocked me, how anything could be so beautiful, and how such beautiful music could come out of such bizarre looking people."
The Venue
"New York weather in the summertime is pretty disgusting. Sometime around the first of June, the air conditioner died and the owner of the theater (David Lee Roth's Dad, I'm told)[10] decided that it would be too expensive to fix it."[11]
The People
"During their stay in New York, the Mothers successfully performed for six months at the Garrick Theatre doing a cleverly animated, pornographically delightful musical review. Some people liked it so much they came back repeatedly. Two Long Island school boys, affectionately dubbed Loeb and Leopold, held ticket stubs for some sixty-five performances. A classic study in compulsive behavior. But there were those who reacted rather violently to the show. One flaccid matron was sure that the Mothers were secretly anti-christ Commie swine bent upon polluting crew-cut American pubertines. Here authoritative observation was made on the basis of one evening's performance (to the tune of $3.50)." [12]
"Oh, I was probably one of those rather stiff people from the suburbs - I think some of us did understand, and we kept coming back for more, and more, and more. I remember being very upset when they finally finished their stint at the Garrick Theatre and went back to LA. I felt as if the real heart had gone out of New York City, and I had to get back on with my Conservatory music training life, which seemed very dull after this." Ruth Underwood - ? BBC doc ?
Notes
- ↑ Previously it functioned as a cinema and was known as the Garrick Theatre but it fell into disuse and was known as Upstairs at the Café Au Go Go during the initial performances. The full name and marquee restored by June 1967
- ↑ Jimmy Carl Black - For Mother's Sake
- ↑ Cruising Down Memory Lane With Frank Zappa, Trouser Press, April, 1979
- ↑ Off Broadway Database
- ↑ Cashbox 10 June 1967
- ↑ "Zappa insists that the Verve Records' release of a Mothers' album entitled "Absolutely Free" is sheer coincidence." - Mother Of Two Runs Off With Uncle Meat, Song Hits, September 1967
- ↑ The New York Times, Thursday, May 25, 1967 - Mothers of Invention at the Garrick
- ↑ 'Mothers,' Hip Style, Stephen MacDonald, Wall Street Journal, May 26, 1967
- ↑ Zappa - 2020 documentary
- ↑ David Lee Roth was the lead singer with the rock band Van Halen. Roth's father was an ophthalmologist. The confusion seems to relate to his uncle, Manny Roth, who ran Cafe Wha? in New York.
- ↑ Frank Zappa - The Real Frank Zappa Book
- ↑ C. R. Zappa, My Brother Is an Italian Mother