Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Frank Zappa Available Now
Not long ago we discovered the secret to separating the men from the boys on side one: TRANSPARENCY.
On the lively, punchy, dynamic copies — which are of course the best ones — you can follow the drumming at the beginning of ‘Big Swifty’ note for note: every beat, every kick of the kick drum, every fill, every roll.
It’s all there to be heard and appreciated. If that track on this copy doesn’t make you a huge fan of Aynsley Dunbar, I can’t imagine what would. The guy had a real gift.
Big Swifty!
The 17-plus-minute-long Big Swifty is a suite in which each section slowly, almost imperceptibly blends into the next, so that you find yourself in a completely new and different section without knowing how you got there — that is, until you go back and play the album and listen for just those transistions, which is what makes it worth playing hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of times.
Big Swifty is a jazz suite with amazingly innovative work by Sal Marquez on trumpet. He single-handedly turns this music into a work of brilliance. I can’t imagine a more talented player.
Zappa on guitar is excellent as well. Aynsley Dunbar plays his ass off, only falling short when it comes time to do his drum solo on Waka/Jawaka.
The interplay of each of these rock musicians is in the tradition of the greatest jazz artists stretching all the way back to the 50s.
And since the drumming throughout this record is so crucial to the music itself, a copy that really gets that right is one that probably gets everything right.




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Hot Stamper Jazz Recordings Featuring the Saxophone Available Now