52. FRANK ZAPPA: Lumpy Gravy (Analysis/MIDI) (3:42)

A detailed analysis of the above work.
Lumpy Gravy (1968)
Zappa Records Release #3
Rykodisc RCD 10504

LP: The Old Masters, Box I (Barking Pumpkin BPR-7777-4)

The index numbers were added for the CD release. The original LP featured only two tracks: 1. Side One and 2. Side Two.

A mish-mash of random musical tidbits interspersed with incomprehensible gibberish?

or

A masterpiece of stupendous proportions, carefully edited, saturated with some of the most important musical motifs in FZ's canon?

Another gatefold cover for a single LP. Nice. A Cal Schenkel classic!

  • FRONT COVER. Famous photo of FZ in PIPCO t-shirt with suspenders and assorted regalia. On the CD, if you squint, perhaps you can read the words which follow the album title: "...a curiously inconsistent piece which started out to be a BALLET but probably didn't make it." But it would definitely require a magnifying glass to read the line which is oriented just to the left of ABNUCEALS EMUUKHA ELECTRIC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA & CHORUS, which reads: "...with maybe even some of the mothers of invention."
  • INSIDE LEFT AND RIGHT LINER, which merge together at the crease to create a very large image! This is genius Schenkel with loads of fantastic goodies to discover -- from the handwritten "& DICK" with an arrow pointing to a hand-drawn portrait after the bold-typed "MAGNIFICENTLY ENGINEERED BY: JOE, REX, PETE, JIM, BOB & GARY" to all the funky crossing out of names, etc. for the chorus (presaging that same raw, ugly look which Frank "made him do" for Fillmore East -- June 1971), to the beautiful series of FZ images which are all stuck together and forced into a narrow blackness, and which seem to be connected to some sort of APPARATUS, which of course becomes sort of a Schenkel trademark in the future! This same carefully-drawn style of machine thingies reappears in several other places this inside gatefold. The same pink circle with the diagonal "NO!" bar appears over the words: "If you want write to United Mutations, Box, etc." and the words: "NO! STOP! IGNORE!*" with the asterisk referring to: "Through the Miracles of Time and Space, we are currently available at 818 PUMPKIN, etc."
  • BACK COVER. Magnificent photo of FZ in a black tux, white bowtie, holding a white glove with a small dialogue balloon which reads: "Is this Phase 2 of: WE'RE ONLY IN IT FOR THE MONEY?"
1. Side One (15:48) [Indexes: 1. The Way I See It, Barry; 2. Duodenum; 3. Oh No; 4. Bit Of Nostalgia; 5. It's From Kansas; 6. Bored Out 90 Over; 7. Almost Chinese; 8. Switching Girls; 9. Oh No Again; 10. At The Gas Station; 11. Another Pickup; 12. I Don't Know If I Can Go Through This Again]

2. Side Two (15:51) [Indexes: 1. Very Distraughtening; 2. White Ugliness; 3. Amen; 4. Just One More Time; 5. A Vicious Circle; 6. King Kong; 7. Drums Are Too Noisy; 8. Kangaroos; 9. Envelops The Bath Tub; 10. Take Your Clothes Off]

My MIDI of the first 3:42:

Lumpy Gravy (MIDI by LS) (3:42)




00:00

The way I see it Barry...

Our LP version has a very strange bleed-through of this line BEFORE the record begins! About four seconds before we hear the line, and then again two seconds before...very strange!

00:06

4/4; 1/4-note = ca. 182; G Minor

This cute little ditty (sped up) starts things off:

Then one of the finest FZ melodies of all time:


01:22

End of melody to fade

Note this cool new ascending phrase which leads into a fade:

01:38

New slow section. Delicate flute and vibes; a lilting transition to


01:48

New section in 7; 1/4-note = ca. 88 Another gorgeous transition to

02:09

OH NO, Part 1; 1/4-note = ca. 125. The first appearance of this famous melody:

03:32

ORANGE COUNTY, PART 1 snippet in 5/4; 1/4-note = ca. 111

...And in your dreams you can see yourself...


03:41

Musique Concrète ("MC")

A short transition to little nostalgia for the old folks to a quick guitar lick

03:48

MC

A bass clarinet, two chords on the piano to

03:59

I'm advocating dark clothes

Damper pedal on the piano is depressed -- several different edits with differing resonance

05:18

Fast Dixieland jazz

Sped up with scratches and drop outs! Fades into

05:36

Bored out 90 and MC

Compare this music to the MC on We're Only In It For The Money: "Nasal Retentive Calliope Music."

06:18 Almost Chinese!

More MC. The Chinese reference is to the Pentatonic Scale, the primary scale in traditional Chinese music. This is one bar of the "Chinese" music:

You can better picture this scale by transposing that up one whole step to:

If you have a piano you can see the first three notes are all on the black keys. Continue up the black plays, playing a Bb, a Db, and finish with the octave Eb. You have learned the Pentatonic Scale!

06:35 MC

Snorks, sped-up coughs, and a beautiful celesta serve as a transition to

06:41 I keep switching girls all the time

Substitute "tempos" for "girls" -- This is our theory of Frank Zappa Tempos.

06:51 Orchestral

A short orchestral fragment, ending with a little cheesy brass fanfare, repeated at Munchkin speed...

07:02 Sped-up orchestral

in 5. Listen to the keyboard (electric piano? harpsichord?) in the last three bars!

07:12 OH NO, Part 2

Now fully and beautifully orchestrated...some new music in the 2nd ending...the underlying track is almost certainly identical to 2:0908:24ORANGE COUNTY, Part 2

This is a much longer section than the short 4-bar snippet above, played by the full orchestra. Magnificent writing, horribly recorded...a fermata over a tutti C# Minor chord moves up to an E Minor chord, leading to

09:18 I worked in a

Notice how the Louie Louie sets apart the two different atmospheres of the rap (no echo/echo)

11:05 Harmonica jam

Another sharp edit, of course! Who's playing harp?

11:26

MC/coughs/snorks/celesta

Corresponding to 06:35.

11:39 Drums and piano sped up

The onslaught of this imaginative section rushes forward -- only to be typically cut off by three AMAZING sounds: a snork (had to be Dick Barber, right? Supreme Snorker?), another sort of softer nasal snork, followed by a perfect cough. You may laugh, but these 19 seconds of manipulated sound truly exemplify FZ's incredible MC technique -- listen to it with a mind towards understanding how a composer moves from one section to another, creating transitory continuity...here, the fast drums and piano set you up for the three sounds -- seemingly SO much slower than the previous music -- and THOSE three sounds set up

11:58 Orchestral

An ominous vaguely pedestrian beat, with a bass flute and squealing Eb clarinet which sets up a Varèse "homage" in the French Horns. At one time, we believed that this was a direct quote from something, but unless we missed it, we now believe that this is completely original music, certainly with a tip of the repeated-note idea to Intégrales...then the bass flute plays an interesting little line with background squealing...

13:04 Oh man, I don't know if I can go through this again

The laughter after this line gives this short transition a real musical weight -- segue to

13:08 Orchestral

An English Horn solo of magnificent beauty!

A harmonic movement up to A Major leads to

13:45 Munchkin tempo/MC/Orchestral

Very fast sped-up music leading to a short MC section which leads to a drum riff -- woodwinds, brass and percussion in some more vaguely Varèse-type exclamations -- fantastic writing! Bass flute is again prominent. A quick brass lick is followed by three drum beats and this little gem (piccolo and oboe):

Piano and very difficult French Horn solo over shifting chords -- and finally a wicked flute lick over a very dissonant chord ends Side One...

Side Two 00:00 Ba-ba ba-dyg...ah, there it went again

The "dialogue" is now fully and organically integrated into the MC and orchestral transitions -- notice these first ten seconds, for example -- the manipulated sound: Ba-ba ba-dyg, followed by ah, there it went again; and then a yee followed by I hear you've been having trouble (delivered in the same strange monotone as the opening line on Side One)...

00:10 Three voices (including {now confirmed} Calvin AND Gail!) +

...don't I get any...just the opposite...you don't get any...that's very distraughtening...this is all blended with a strange knocking sound and two clavinet-type electric keyboards. A few squeaky MC notes lead to two awesome "tutti" downbeats, the first one instrumental and the second vocal, sort of a combination of rent and hent!

00:21

Everything in the universe
The piano pedal is depressed. Two very soft notes (A-F#) are played after the words atoms are really vibrations you know and then reversed (F#-A) after The Big Note. After right! segue to

00:51

MC

Beautiful sped-up section segues to

01:21 Merry-go-round

put a motor in yourself (this line is fully developed 25 years later as a separate track of this release's grandchild, Civilization Phaze III: "Put A Motor In Yourself.")

01:34


Rrrrrrrrrrr...ruff...

Lengthy section of dialogue. Amen segues to

03:56 Drums, piano, bass, vibes, etc.

"Free jazz" feel segues to

04:25 Orchestral

Starts with wind and French horn choir singing out some beautifully dissonant chords, then taken over by the strings in an even more dissonant section.

05:00


Vaguely similar to Le Sacre du Printemps (in the strings) -- from the Introduction to "Part II -- The Sacrifice"

05:28 Oh yeah; that's just fine

This interesting section is sped up from a deep slow bass voice, giving it a "normal speed" feel. A single snork segues to

05:34

I think I can explain

This should be interesting...vicious circle -- you got it!

06:25

Orchestral (sped up)

This dissonant lick is repeated many times:

Pony! -- Fantastic dissonances by several (acoustic) guitars and percussion. Lovely orchestral section follows...

07:39

4/4 -- King Kong

The first appearance of the King Kong theme. Notice how the 3-beat-per-bar King Kong theme is played over a 4/4 vamp! Segue to

08:21

Orchestra/timpani

A wonderful timpani/drums section, quickly augmented by French Horn, bass, piano. Drums are too noisy and you got no corners to hide in. Larry develops this statement 25 years later in Civilization Phaze III: "They Made Me Eat It." A few seconds of sped-up orchestral music leads to

09:13

So when she's beating him over the nose with a tire iron

Notice the pedal-depressed panchromatic resonance! If it's still alive segues to

09:26

Orchestral

Another gorgeous orchestral section! Oboe floats over steady pulses, with snapping pizzicato on the 12th beat and then every 10th beat thereafter until we reach a beautiful wind chorale section, identical to 04:25 above. A loud knock leads to

10:15

Envelops the bathtub

French Horns and low grumbling brass are joined by stark vibes and then a drum kit starts a rhythmic pattern, over which FZ has composed some truly stunning music, giving tantalizing tastes of future orchestral efforts. The rhythm suddenly stops for a quick piano/vibes duet; the orchestra re-enters with the flute belting out a three-note pattern; and the drum kit brings back the rhythmic pattern for a few seconds only to stop again! A few more orchestral outbursts, and again the drum kit returns with piano accompaniment. Again it stops, for a beautiful and lengthy section featuring solo violin. Eventually, the bass flute plays a jazzy lick over a sustained wind chord. Segue to

13:44

'cause round things are boring (Calvin)

The pedal-depressed resonance is supplemented by some knocking and the plucking of a low bass string, followed by a soft ahh and the sound of exhaling. Watson's analysis of all this (page 96) is pretty interesting! Segue to

14:00

"Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance"

Round things may be boring, but FZ makes certain that this particular circle is perfectly connected! This D Major ditty is so organically related to the opening G Minor section that one cannot help but imagine -- Finnegans Wake-style -- that one can turn the record over and listen to the boring round thing again! (D Major is the V, or dominant, of G Minor -- and therefore, a perfect choice of key for an immediate return to the opening G Minor key!)


Next album

Comments

Unknown said…
Great job! Precise analysis and well made.
May I ask you where did you find the score? I am studying Zappa's Lumpy Gravy and I haven't found sheets, transcriptions or something else about this album. May you help me? Thank you very much. Giada
Lewis Saul said…
Giada: [one year after your comment] =

All my transcriptions are original work. There is no score.

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