In 1967, a year after debuting with the groundbreaking “Freak Out”, the immense Frank Zappa released one of his masterpieces, almost a manifesto of total music. In less than 40 minutes, the ultimate freak, assisted by his prodigious “Mothers of Invention,” mixes all imaginable and possible sounds, instruments, styles, genres, and musical civilizations, undertaking a surreal journey through space and time, sparing no era or region of the world. That said, it must be emphasized that, despite the ostentatious encyclopedism, the parodic nature of the operation led Zappa to harshly target, with particular sarcasm, all those musical idioms belonging to American bourgeois culture: easy listening, kitsch, advertising jingles, soundtracks, vocal pop, teen idols, etc. What makes this satire of the consumer society successful in every facet is the synthesis ability with which Zappa shows he can organize such exuberant sonic material.

The opener, “Plastic People,” targets the rhetorical emphasis with which politicians of all stripes announce their slogans: in a fragmented structure, characterized by continuous pauses and restarts, the bold manners of village bands alternate with atonal phrasings and free-jazz dissonances, revealing how Zappa’s work goes beyond mere collage and connects with the avant-garde.
“The Duke of Prunes” opens with a fragrant guitar arpeggio, with Zappa launching into one of his demented croonings, doubled by a distant horn; the entry of the bass and a grating guitar brings dynamism to a piece that reaches its climax in a pathetic chorus, before unfolding into cerebral evolutions, precious anticipations of progressive music; “Amnesia Vivace” is instead a cacophonous frenzy of winds and percussions, introduced by an operatic tenor air and driven at a frenzied rhythm.
“Call Any Vegetable” draws from Mexican folk, with a grotesque call’n’response and a nagging flute accompaniment; after two verses, Zappa sketches a yodeling song, leading the piece in another direction: now it’s time for an atonal guitar and clarinet base to support a silly chant, which Zappa performs with his cavernous voice. “Young Pumpkin” is instead a driving instrumental jam of free-jazz inspiration, steeped in exotic aromas, with all instruments free to improvise and follow their own path; side A closes with “Soft-Cell Conclusion,” in which cheerful little guitars and carefree choruses give way to a plaintive voice and a blues parody complete with an offbeat harmonica.

Side B opens with “America Drinks,” a preview of the last track, with a lazy double bass and a charleston waiting for the sudden break, where a frenetic circus motif is followed by a percussion orgy. The following tracks measure the Mothers' ability to alternate tempi, styles, and discordant sounds with impressive fluidity: one finds oneself catapulted from one musical genre to another without even realizing it. And so it is that in the brief pieces “Status Back Baby,” “Uncle Bernie’s Farm,” and “Susy Creamcheese,” surf music, r’n’b, Merseybeat, chaotic voices, music box lullabies, Chinese opera breaks, hysterical rhythms, and so on alternate seamlessly.
But the sum of Zappa’s thought is found in the operetta “Brown Shoes,” 7 minutes of pure madness in which rhythm’n’blues, advertising jingles, Hollywood soundtracks, swing, doo-wop, classical jazz, swamp blues, tap dance, Christmas songs, Delta blues, noise, teen idols, kitsch, and easy listening are reviewed: all orchestrated with extended instrumentation and relying on the melodramas evoked by the union of little and big voices, perfect for mimicking opera tenors and sopranos.
The album closes with “America Drinks and Goes Home,” a detached pianobar number overlapped with cash register noises and consumer chatter: a masterpiece of concrete music, sound montage, Brechtian theater. And a very bitter apology for society then and now.

(genre: avant-rock; total music)

Tracklist and Lyrics

01   Plastic People (03:42)

02   The Duke of Prunes (02:13)

A moon beam through the prune In June
Reveals your chest I see your lovely beans
And in that magic go-kart I bite your neck
The cheese I have for you, my dear
Is real and very new
A moon beam through the prune In June
Reveals your chest I see your lovely beans
And in that magic go-kart I bite your neck
The love I have for you, my dear
Is real and very new

Prune! (pa-da-dah!)
If it is a real prune Knows no cheese
(cheeky chanky, cheeky chanky)
And stands (Oh no!)
Taller or softer than any tree (or bush)
And I know The love I have for you
Will grow and grow And grow, I think
And so my love I offer you
A love that is strong A prune that is true

03   Amnesia Vivace (01:01)

La-la-la-la
Oooo...
ah-ah-ah
(My darling
You mean so very much to me
And I feel so deeply...
ah-ah-ah...

Duke, Duke, Duke, Duke of Prunes
I'll never forget you darling
I'll never forget your ballads
I'll never forget your rat race. In fact I might...
Oh, I suppose I'll forget you eventually
What is your name?
Nice to see you again)

04   The Duke Regains His Chops (01:48)

05   Call Any Vegetables (02:19)

06   Invocation and Ritual Dance of the Young Pumpkin (07:00)

07   Soft‐Sell Conclusion (01:40)

08   Big Leg Emma (02:31)

There's a big dilemma
About my Big Leg Emma, uh-huh, oh yeah
There's a big dilemma
About my Big Leg Emma, uh-huh, oh yeah
She was my steady date
Until she put on weight

There's a big dilemma
About my Big Leg Emma, uh-huh, oh yeah
There's a big dilemma
About my Big Leg Emma, uh-huh, oh yeah
She used to knock me out
Until her face broke out

ma-ma-ma-ma
ma-ma-ma-ma
ma-ma-ma-ma
ma-ma-ma-ma
ma-ma-ma-ma
ma-ma My Emma

ma-ma-ma-ma
ma-ma-ma-ma
ma-ma-ma-ma
ma-ma-ma-ma
ma-ma-ma-ma
ma-ma My Emma

There's a big dilemma
About my Big Leg Emma, uh-huh, oh yeah
There's a big dilemma
About my Big Leg Emma, uh-huh, oh yeah
She used to knock me out
Until her face broke out

09   Why Don’tcha Do Me Right (02:37)

10   America Drinks (01:53)

(one, two, buckle my shoe)
(do-dos, and yips yips, assorted improv)

I tired to find how my heart could be so blind,
(wanna buy some penzo? )
Dear
How could I be fooled just like the rest
You came on strong with your
Fast car and your class ring
Sad eyes and your ... ...
I fell for the whole thing
I don't regret for having met
Up with a girl who breaks hearts
Like they were nothing at all (here's one for mother)
I've done it too
Now I know just what it feels like

11   Status Back Baby (02:53)

12   Uncle Bernie’s Farm (02:10)

13   Son of Suzy Creamcheese (01:34)

14   Brown Shoes Don’t Make It (07:30)

15   America Drinks and Goes Home (02:46)

16   Camarillo Brillo (03:59)

17   I’m the Slime (03:34)

18   Dirty Love (02:58)

19   Fifty‐Fifty (06:10)

20   Zomby Woof (05:10)

21   Dinah‐Moe Humm (06:02)

22   Montana (06:33)

Loading comments  slowly