Frank Zappa
Joe's Garage


Rock/Pop
CD, 2   Discs, 19   Tracks, 115:07  Length
Disc I 58:27
01 Central Scrutinizer Frank Zappa 03:28
02 Joe's Garage Frank Zappa 06:09
03 Catholic Girls Frank Zappa 04:19
04 Crew Slut Frank Zappa 06:38
05 Fembot In A Wet T-Shirt Frank Zappa 04:44
06 On The Bus Frank Zappa 04:32
07 Why Does It Hurt When I Pee? Frank Zappa 02:23
08 Lucille Has Messed My Mind Up Frank Zappa 05:42
09 Scrutinizer Postlude Frank Zappa 01:34
10 A Token Of My Extreme Frank Zappa 05:29
11 Stick It Out Frank Zappa 04:34
12 Sy Borg Frank Zappa 08:55

Disc II

56:40
01 Dong Work For Yuda Frank Zappa 05:04
02 Keep It Greasey Frank Zappa 08:21
03 Outside Now Frank Zappa 05:49
04 He Used To Cut The Grass Frank Zappa 08:35
05 Packard Goose Frank Zappa 11:31
06 Watermelon In Easter Hay Frank Zappa 09:05
07 A Little Green Rosetta Frank Zappa 08:15
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Guitar Frank Zappa
Saxophone Marginal Chagrin
Bass Arthur Barrow
Drums Vinnie Colaiuta
Percussion Ed Mann
Guitar Warren Cucurullo
Guitar Denny Walley
Vocals Peter Wolf
Keyboards Tommy Mars
Producer Frank Zappa
Engineer Joe Chiccarelli
Personal Details
Index # 4024
Owner Dave
Tags Alternative Rock, Prog Rock
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
Joe's Garage was originally released in 1979 in two separate parts; Act I came first, followed by a two-record set containing Acts II & III. Joe's Garage is generally regarded as one of Zappa's finest post-'60s conceptual works, a sprawling, satirical rock opera about a totalitarian future in which music is outlawed to control the population. The narrative is long, winding, and occasionally loses focus; it was improvised in a weekend, some of it around previously existing songs, but Zappa manages to make most of it hang together. Acts II & III give off much the same feel, as Zappa relies heavily on what he termed "xenochrony" -- previously recorded guitar solos transferred onto new, rhythmically different backing tracks to produce random musical coincidences. Such an approach is guaranteed to produce some slow moments as well, but critics latched onto the work more for its conceptual substance. Joe's Garage satirizes social control mechanisms, consumerism, corporate abuses, gender politics, religion, and the rock & roll lifestyle; all these forces conspire against the title protagonist, an average young man who simply wants to play guitar and enjoy himself. Even though Zappa himself hated punk rock and even says so on the album, his ideas seemed to support punk's do-it-yourself challenge to the record industry and to social norms in general. Since this is 1979-era Zappa, there are liberal applications of his trademark scatological humor (the titles of "Catholic Girls," "Crew Slut," "Why Does It Hurt When I Pee?," and "Keep It Greasey" are self-explanatory). Still, in spite of its flaws, Joe's Garage has enough substance to make it one of Zappa's most important '70s works and overall political statements, even if it's not focused enough to rank with his earliest Mothers of Invention masterpieces. -- Steve Huey (allmusic.com)