Frank Zappa - The Michigan Muffin Man (Detroit Broadcast 1976) (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting) (2025)

  • 04 May, 11:39
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Artist:
Title: The Michigan Muffin Man (Detroit Broadcast 1976) (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting)
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: DMG
Genre: Rock, Progressive Rock, Jazz-Rock, Fusion
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:50:28
Total Size: 751 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Purple Lagoon Intro (02:32)
2. Stink Foot (07:32)
3. The Poodle Lecture (04:10)
4. Dirty Love (03:27)
5. Wind Up Working In A Gas Station (02:21)
6. Tryin' To Grow A Chin (04:20)
7. The Torture Never Stops (12:42)
8. City Of Tiny Lites (07:44)
9. Pound For A Brown (11:28)
10. Titties & Beer (07:05)
11. Black Napkins (17:23)
12. Purple Lagoon Outro (01:38)
13. Rudy Wants To Buy Yez A Drink (02:09)
14. Would You Go All The Way (02:01)
15. Daddy, Daddy, Daddy (02:06)
16. What Kind Of Girl (04:16)
17. Dinah Moe Humm (06:13)
18. Purple Lagoon Outro #2 (00:55)
19. Stranded In The Jungle (02:17)
20. Camarillo Brillo (03:39)
21. Muffin Man (03:54)
22. Purple Lagoon Outro #3 (00:24)

Composer, guitarist, singer, and bandleader Frank Zappa was a singular musical figure during a performing and recording career that lasted from the 1960s to the '90s. His disparate influences included doo wop music and avant-garde classical music; although he led groups that could be called rock & roll bands for much of his career, he used them to create a hybrid style that bordered on jazz and complicated, modern serious music, sometimes inducing orchestras to play along. As if his music were not challenging enough, he overlay it with highly satirical and sometimes abstractly humorous lyrics and song titles that marked him as coming out of a provocative literary tradition that included Beat poets like Allen Ginsberg and edgy comedians like Lenny Bruce. Nominally, he was a popular musician, but his recordings rarely earned significant airplay or sales, yet he was able to gain control of his recorded work and issue it successfully through his own labels while also touring internationally, in part because of the respect he earned from a dedicated cult of fans and many serious musicians, and also because he was an articulate spokesman who promoted himself into a media star through extensive interviews he considered to be a part of his creative effort just like his music. The Mothers of Invention, the '60s group he led, often seemed to offer a parody of popular music and the counterculture (although he affected long hair and jeans, Zappa was openly scornful of hippies and drug use). By the '80s, he was testifying before Congress in opposition to censorship (and editing his testimony into one of his albums). But these comic and serious sides were complementary, not contradictory. In statement and in practice, Zappa was an iconoclastic defender of the freest possible expression of ideas. And most of all, he was a composer far more ambitious than any other rock musician of his time and most classical musicians, as well.