Tag: celebrities

The Grandmothers of Invention @ Fabrik, Hamburg – 13 November 2012

Is it just me, or are Zappa fans weird ? Or is it just German Zappa fans ? There was weirdness aplenty at Fabrik, for the Frank Zappa tribute band « The Grandmothers of Invention ». Perhaps tribute band sells them a little short. Two of the band members actually did play with Zappa back in the day, and the Grandmothers did so much more than just rehash the material and try to sound just like Zappa.

Sax player Napoleon Murphy Brock leads the Grandmothers, and on this occasion brought them to Hamburg for the « Roxy and Elsewhere and More » tour. Brock has built up what you could call a « concept band », each tour doing one of the Zappa albums on which he played. And there were a few of those. Between 1974 and 1986, Brock played on ten studio albums, probably the better known in Frank Zappa’s extensive discography.

For more videos and other bands check out the Zasph! YouTube channel

© CCC

Where are the Dukes of yesteryear?

Somewhere between not finding fresh chillies and working out where the breakfast cereals have have migrated to during the refurbishment at the local supermarket, there was a gap in the musak. Well not so much a gap, as a break between the soft-focus FM radio pitch-corrected rubbish that seeped from the speakers in the fettuccine ceiling panels. As if the clouds of modern R&B fluff pollution had parted for a moment and let through a ray of truth and light. And into this break came one song that made me stop. And listen. It’s a song I used to know well, but haven’t listened to for a long time now. I had forgotten how good it was.

So I searched it out on You Tube, and was surprised by the clip that came with it. I found the top-hat, monocle and cape kind of weird; and the gesticulating even weirder. Gene Chandler looks uncomfortable in the get-up, and disconnected from his own movements. It’s a stage-show for a negro, for white guys and house-wives, designed by a committee of white guys in ties. But the song is still great 50 years after Chandler recorded it. How many of today’s radio hits will still be played in the fresh produce department half a century from now? Will there be fresh produce? What is the secret of Soylent Green?

 

© CCC