Saturday, May 26, 2012

Frank Zappa - Waka/Jawaka (1972)


Waka/Jawaka is the conceptual follow-up to Hot Rats, the precocious middle child in the Hot Rats trilogy (Hot Rats, Waka/Jawaka and The Grand Wazoo). Although Waka is very enjoyable by itself, it’s a style in transition, a more complex offering that contains beginnings of the big band sound later featured on the Grand Wazoo while retaining only impressions of the hard rock grit from Hot Rats. The band, the structure of the compositions, and the instrumentation are all in development. Overall, it is a much better approximation of jazz-rock fusion than the heavy blues rock comprising most of the Hot Rats set. “Your Mouth” features a dose of the sarcasm you’d expect from Zappa, with a slinky melody and nice slide work by Tony Duran. But it’s the bookends that really light things up. Opener “Big Swifty” and closer “Waka/Jawaka” are two long jazz suites, a form that became Zappa’s favorite vehicle. These are tightly arranged but have the loose feel of a rock band in full flight. There are some awesome solos, too: Don Preston’s escapade on the Mini-Moog during “Waka/Jawaka” is as notorious as it is entertaining: upon hearing it, inventor Bob Moog supposedly remarked that such music was impossible on his instrument. Zappa’s electric guitar colors the entire album, sounding more accomplished here than on Hot Rats, always reminding listeners of the ‘rock’ half of the ‘jazz-rock’ recipe. It’s an enjoyable spin by itself, but is best heard in context with the other albums in the trilogy. I recommend taking an afternoon and listening to Hot Rats, Waka/Jawaka, and The Grand Wazoo, in that order. When you’re finished, listen to all three again. Afterward, you’ll understand what Zappa was cooking up. It isn’t pop music. It isn’t dance music or background music or music for parties, like other music from 1972. It’s music that rewards active listening because behind the fuzz bass and swirling Mini-Moog, there are ideas. The Ryko CD release was doctored up a little bit and sounds different than the original LP. In spite digital reverb applied to the final production, it still sounds nice.

1 comment:

  1. Zappa is in his real zone here, both compositionally and instrumentally. ....http://frankzapppa.blogspot.com/2014/10/discography-wakajawaka.html

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