Thinman wrote:
I think when it comes to orchestral music, he artistically succeeded with what he did for Lumpy Gravy, 200 Motels and Orchestral Favourites. It was HIS style and much more radical in combination with the other elements. Which is very much to MY liking.
Thinman
I'm really curious about your opinion about the comparison between LSO and, say, 200 Motels. Nowadays I was buried into the LSO album, and found that it's really close (to me) to the orchestral parts of 200 Motels (try
Lucy's Seduction... or
Redneck Eats after LSO), and the interesting thing to me that the LSO (disc one) might be the connection point of 200 Motels, Jazz from Hell and (!) the Guitar albums, but I could mention here the band's tour-monsters, too: RDNZL, Sinister Footwear, Alien Orifice...
In all of these recordings we have non-repeating melodies running after each other, its oftentimes doubled or strenghtened with an unisono instrument or rhythm, and you get to enjoy it more and more after each listenning. The only difference to me is the orchestration: here he has a small electric band, there a huge symponic orchestra, over there a rhythm duo behind his solo...
Try it once, as a playlist:
- Redneck Eats (the piano part)
- Sad Jane Mvmt II.
- Piano-Drum duet
- RDNZL
- N-Lite
- Manx Needs Woman
- Excerpt from Revised music
- Mo'n Herb's Vacation Mvmt 1.
- (etc.. - could be continued)
(Note, that Zappa used the "written-down and re-orchestrated improvisation" method more than one might think: all 3 mvmt of Sinister Footwear could have been born this way, parts of the Little House..., sections of the Hot Rats album, very much of Revised Music - the list would be really long.)
After (the Ryko-collection) "Strictly Genteel", another "classical" selection would be nice, and with a selection like this interesting inner links could appear, interesting associations might happen. To me it worked really fine - and what I got from it is enjoying the music even more than I did before.