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List of Frank Zappa albums

Frank Zappa Album - Sheik Yerbouti

Frank Zappa Album - Sheik Yerbouti (Front side)
Album Information :
Customers rating: (62 ratings)
Release Date:1995-05-02
Type:Audio CD
Genre:Album Rock, Comedy Rock, Hard Rock, Jazz-Rock, Pop, Pop/Rock Music, Prog-Rock/Art Rock, Rock, Rock/Pop
Label:Zappa Records
UPC:014431052828
Approx. Price:$11.98 (USD)
Track Listing :
1 I Have Been in You [Live]
2 Flakes [Live]
3 Broken Hearts Are for Assholes [Live]
4 I'm so Cute
5 Jones Crusher
6 What Ever Happened to all the Fun in the World
7 Rat Tomago [Live][Instrumental]
8 Wait a Minute
9 Bobby Brown Goes Down [Live]
10 Rubber Shirt
11 Sheik Yerbouti Tango [Live]
12 Baby Snakes [Live]
13 Trying' to Grow a Chin [Live]
14 City of Tiny Lites [Live]
15 Dancin' Fool [Live]
16 Jewish Princess [Live]
17 Wild Love [Live]
18 Yo' Mama [Live]
Description :
Imported from Japan by Rykodisc.

Packaged in deluxe mini-album jacket sleeves, these 10 classic albums by rock legend FRANK ZAPPA are now available as limited edition Japanese Imports! These packages re-create the original vinyl packaging in miniaturized form!

Review - Amazon.com :
One of his most popular and infamous albums, Sheik Yerbouti finds Frank Zappa unleashing his unique brand of sociological documentation on the disco-injected culture of the late '70s. From crises of sexual identity to the rhythmically challenged, the songs are hilarious and occasionally close to home (The Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith didn't care much for "Jewish Princess"). The satire is some of Zappa's most scathing and unsympathetic, and the music is equally loud and unrelenting--especially when showcasing the talents of sidemen Terry Bozzio and Adrian Belew. A must-have in any Zappa collection. --Andrew Boscardin
Customer review - 1999-04-02
- Why Sheik Yerbouti?
When I look for a good Zappa album, I look for one thing above all, since just about every Zappa album (at least to me) is chock full of excellent music. It's what I call "clarity of vision". How does the album work as a whole? Is there a major theme? Is that theme brought out successfully?

Sheik Yerbouti is one of a handful of Zappa albums that manages to capture American civilization as it is (or as it will be). Zappa comments on society, government, religion, people, and music with both biting satire and insightful observation. Sheik Yerbouti's target is America in the mid-to-late 1970's. Disco is popular. Dylan is resurgent. Kiss is still wearing makeup and spitting blood. We are a nation of "Flakes", slaves to our consumerism. We are college students about to move back in with our parents.

This album takes you on a ride through 1970's musical styles, admittedly on the hard rock edge. And, last but not least, this album contains what is, in my opinion, the single greatest Frank Zappa guitar solo ever put to tape: Rat Tomago. As far as I can tell, it is a solo lifted from the middle of a live performance of The Torture Never Stops, recorded on a four-track reel-to-reel. Just guitar, bass and drums. It is whole-tone scale madness. It is Zappa unbound.

One more point on the experimental nature of some of the songs on Sheik Yerbouti: One "song", Rubber Shirt, is actually a melding of two completely separate tracks, one bass and one drums, playing in different time signatures. Also, the solo on Yo' Mama is what Frank would come to call (on the Joe's Garage album) an "imaginary guitar solo", meaning that the solo was placed over a background rhythm from an entirely different song. This experimentation cannot be emphasized enough. It led directly to Frank's re-evaluation of what it meant to improvise on the guitar. To use a Vonnegut reference, after Yo' Mama, and Joe's Garage, Frank's actual solos became "unstuck in time", leading to an entirely new form of guitar improvisation (best heard on the three-vinyl LP set Shut Up 'N Play Yer Guitar).

Customer review - 2003-07-17
- THE BEST TO BEGIN
When you listen to this album, you will notice:

1. Satirical and clever lyrics. Zappa deals with sexual ambiguity, cursing, ridiculing the disco era and dating with a Jewish girl to whom not very complimentary epithets are attached. So you might think he's nasty, homophobic, misogynistic, antisemitic and anti-disco. It might be, it might not. But he's open enough not to be politically correct, and I think it is a virtue.

2. Silly lyrics. He also sings about baby snakes and "not smoking in pajamas" because "you might start a fire'n burn yer place". Well, sometimes he relies on music, not on lyrics; the latter ones are often a medium to music, so they tend to be quite silly at times. But I find them funny.

3. Musical complexity. In "Rubber Shirt" Zappa took the bass part of a 4/4 track, and superimposed it on a slow 11/4 drum track. He did the same in the "Yo' Mama" guitar solo. That's worth noticing and listening to.

4. Musical simple, rocking straightforwardness. Which is what, in my opinion, makes the album so good. You never get lost, bored or misled. You can keep your feet stomping much of the listening time. "Baby Snakes" is a highlight of this approach, I think: short, uncomplicated, and that's it.

5. Guitar musicianship. There's more than a couple of tracks with Frank doing the virtuoso part. Great.

6. Lack of "unmitigated audacity", i.e. experimental and weird sonic adventures. This is one of the Zappa landmarks that you will miss in this one. Even so, if there's no cacophony or there aren't dislocated sound collages, it will make "Sheik Yerbouti" more acceptable for first-time listeners. You can go then for "Hot Rats" (1969) or the early Mothers stuff if you're curious about it.

Conclusion: this album is the best to begin to listen to Zappa and to know most of his traits. If it gets you bored, you won't be a Zappa fan at all.

Customer review - 2001-06-25
- Perfect album!
I want to first respond to the review by "A music fan from Ventura CA" who warned not to buy the album "unless you are a ... bashin' redneck who needs to yuck it up with your homophobic buddies" and asked, "Is he a HOMOPHOBE or what?!?!"

You should go pick up his book, The Real Frank Zappa. You may be offended by his lyrics, but his intentions are not to express hatred. He just likes to speak his mind, no matter how perverse YOU may find it. The only song that seems to mention homosexuality is "Bobby Brown Goes Down," but to me it's just a song about judging people at first sight and how the "All-American" jock-type men are really just as freaky as the rest of us except they repress themselves too much.

Secondly, the music is VERY "groovin'", the "grooviest" being "Yo' Mama," "City of Tiny Lights" and "Rat Tomago" in my opinion of course.

And humorous too! You might find them lyrically offensive, but I don't: "I Have Been in You" (a parody of the cheesiest Peter Frampton song of the '70's), "Flakes", "Baby Snakes," "Broken Hearts are for...," "Jewish Princess," and your favorite... "Bobby Brown Goes Down."

This is also one of the more "accessible" FZ albums. If you enjoyed Apostrophe ('), I recommend getting this one. If you have a free mind that likes musical and lyrical freedom, this one's for you. I love and miss you Frank!

Customer review - 2003-10-21
- Discover The Genius Of Zappa
A great mix of radio-friendly and not-so-radio-friendly songs, scorching guitar riffs, songs covering topics never before and never again covered, clever and often very humorous lyrics, and some really interesting improvisational work where you don't really know where the music's heading next -- that is the world of Frank Zappa. There is a little something for everybody. And the more Zappa you listen to, the more in awe of his talent you become.

There are so many outstanding songs on this album, and I would have to say "Flakes" is among my favorite of all Zappa's songs. Dylan fans may also appreciate the little homage to Bob in this one. "Broken Hearts," "Bobby Brown," "Dancin' Fool," and "Jewish Princess" always manage to put a smile on my face.

This is truly some unique music by an artist that can never be duplicated. If you haven't already been introduced to the world of Zappa, start soon--you are really missing out!

Customer review - 2007-05-12
- Come Back, Frank al Zappa!!
I'm going to start with a confession: I used to think that Frank Zappa was an untalented clown with nothing to offer aside from childish, scatalogical novelty tunes. And then I listened to 'Sheik Yerbouti'. I have never been so wrong about an artist in my life. I'm sorry, Frank--it took me a long time to figure it out!

This man was a musical genius! Other reveiwers, more conversant with the mechanics of music than I, have mentioned the experimental nature of 'Rubber Shirt', a 4/4 bass line melded with an 11/4 drum track. Such a thing would never even have occured to me, yet it works amazingly well, like a beautiful ballad sung in a language you cannot speak. Frank's guitar chops can easily stand up to any of the conventionaly recognized 'guitar gods', most of whom I never particularly cared for anyway. Eric Clapton? I apologize if you are a fan; I simply never saw the appeal. Frank's approach reminds me of another virtuoso, Joe Walsh. Both quite capable of laying down an aural assault of smoking hot licks; both largely unsung and relatively obscure. Who knew that 'success', at least in the conventional sense of the word, should prove such an inaccurate yardstick to measure Worth!

The piece de resistance is the lyrics. Zappa takes all our hypocritical little conventions and sneers at 'em. You can either acknowledge the extent to which you, yes YOU, have also been brainwashed and laugh along, or you can prove every point he was making by leaping on your soapbox and moralizing.

This is a breath of fresh air in the fetid, oppressive PC gulag we as a Free People have created for ourselves in this brave new century. I'm sick unto death of all the thought control, the Orwellian demands that we submit, that we agree, that we do not offend! I find 'sensitivity training' a frightening concept; how much more Thought Policing will we tolerate before rising up to cast off the velvet shackles of our Busybody Overlords!? Free your mind! Think for yourself! Americans are ALLOWED to offend; that's what Free Speech IS! I want 'Bobby Brown Goes Down' played non-stop on every radio broadcast until people begin to grasp this fact. Frank, we need you now more than ever!



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