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Frank Zappa “Hot Rats” (1969)

If there’s one thing I’m a sucker for, it’s psychedelic wah-wah guitar; Eddie Hazel’s Game, Dame & Guitar Thangs, Randy California’s Kapt. Kopter, John McLaughlin’s Devotion. And Frank Zappa’s second solo effort, 1969’s Hot Rats, proudly belongs among this stellar mind-blowing company. Somewhat of a break from the high-concept Mothers Of Invention, it’s divided between long guitar jams, most notably “Willie The Pimp,” which re-introduced Captain Beefheart to the world in all his eccentric splendor, and fusionoid instrumentals featuring multi-reedist Ian Underwood in multiple overdubs. Interestingly, Underwood’s flat intonation here takes intriguing lyrical compositions such as “Little Umbellas” and “It Must be A Camel” out of jazz wannabe Weather Report territory into a more formal “classical” direction, always the underlying goal with Zappa anyway. But, in the end, Rats is a showcase for Frank to wail and he ain’t fooling around! –Singersaints

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