Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 718
Length: 3:31
Plays (last 30 days): 0
I'm obsessed 'n deranged
I have existed for years
But very little has changed
I'm the tool of the Government
And industry too
For I am destined to rule
And regulate you
I may be vile and pernicious
But you can't look away
I make you think I'm delicious
With the stuff that I say
I'm the best you can get
Have you guessed me yet?
I'm the slime oozin' out
From your TV set
You will obey me while I lead you
And eat the garbage that I feed you
Until the day that we don't need you
Don't go for help... no one will heed you
Your mind is totally controlled
It has been stuffed into my mold
And you will do as you are told
Until the rights to you are sold
That's right, folks...
Don't touch that dial
Well, I am the slime from your video
Oozin' along on your livin' room floor
I am the slime from your video
Can't stop the slime, people, lookit me go
I am the slime from your video
Oozin' along on your livin' room floor
I am the slime from your video
Can't stop the slime, people, lookit me go
A "news" agency that confesses that they knowingly broadcast lies? You mean those guys?
Seems to be a "censored" album cover pictured. IIRC, my copy had at least one corn cob on it. Am I thinking of another Zappa album cover?
Looks like we're seeing only a corner of the album cover.
more Zappa - may lead to more Happiness : )
I AGREE!!!
Oddly enough, something like 88% of all English-language knock-knock jokes were written by William "Shaky-Toes" Shakespeare.
Let's hear it for FZ!
bumping=11
I couldn't agree more.
How about Penguins in Bondage or Moving To Montana or Catholic Girls or etc...?
Or how about Dynamo Hum?
Hmmm.
Oh, I would guess that FOX "News" should be in there!
"tHAT'S RIGHT FOLKS, DON'T TOUCH THAT DIAL"
You are correct. The offending cob has been removed in this version. The corn police strike again.
By design.
Maybe so, but that still doesn't make it any good.
All of them, but not Fox... who here has been brainwashed?!?
By design.
First Zappa for me on RP, so please Bill: line 'em up (wax 'em down).
Over thirty years old, and yet Frank was describing today's television media so accurately.
Oh, and with great guitar rifts, too.
Let's hear it for FZ!
Well you just have to like Zappa...kinda like phish fans...
Fox, actually.
!!!!! these are for you —> !!!!! you seem to like them!
I counted one in his post. Well within the lifetime limit.
what a sacastic snobbish twat.
Your dazzling sarcasm sure has me convinced !
Your put downs sure show your true colors as well !!!!! these are for you —> !!!!! you seem to like them!
"there are lots of decent musicians they could be paying attention to instead" ?
really? are you sure ?
thanks for letting us know.. because you see perhaps there is some place on the web to locate perhaps even listen to these "lots of" as you put it - decent musicians... a place perhaps that is like a radio station , only on the web... and perhaps these Zappa fans might be there already..... it would be someplace that plays eclectic music on the web and it would be like paradise.... I would tell you where it is but i don't want to envite you to the party .. You sound like too much fun !!!!!!!!
I'm nobody, who are you? Are you nobody too?
(I wrote that myself.) (did you really?) (how dazzling!) ( dhurrrr )
Hah!! You make me laugh!
Well, your dazzling rhetorical jabs, such as "such a load" and "his music was so underground" sure have me convinced!
And no, I'm not taking it personally at all, although it does irk me when people insist on worshipping a tin god like Zappa even though there are lots of decent musicians they could be paying attention to instead. Sorry, but since Zappa died, his stock has done nothing but fall, for good reason. It will continue to fall, and soon enough he'll be on the scrap heap with all the other overrated, self-proclaimed geniuses. Lucky for him he had a family who continue to pimp his reputation, because otherwise no one would remember him as anything other than the guy whose weirdly-named daughter sang the novelty song "Valley Girl."
what a sacastic snobbish twat.
Your dazzling sarcasm sure has me convinced !
Your put downs sure show your true colors as well !!!!! these are for you —> !!!!! you seem to like them!
"there are lots of decent musicians they could be paying attention to instead" ?
really? are you sure ?
thanks for letting us know.. because you see perhaps there is some place on the web to locate perhaps even listen to these "lots of" as you put it - decent musicians... a place perhaps that is like a radio station , only on the web... and perhaps these Zappa fans might be there already..... it would be someplace that plays eclectic music on the web and it would be like paradise.... I would tell you where it is but i don't want to envite you to the party .. You sound like too much fun !!!!!!!!
I'm nobody, who are you? Are you nobody too?
(I wrote that myself.) (did you really?) (how dazzling!) ( dhurrrr )
And just to spare us both a lot of pointless arguing: I don't accept that the lyrics were just satire, and I don't know that Zappa himself ever said they were. If he wrote a similar song about black people, he would have been ostracized from the music industry and people would have publicly burned his albums.
"Jewish Princess" came from the brilliant but uneven Sheik Yerbouti in 1978 or so. That album also features "Dancin' Fool," which cannot be seen in anything but a satirical light. Zappa's satirical prowess was well-known, but it probably reached its height on You Are What You Is.
Songs like "Teen-Age Wind," "Harder Than Your Husband," "Society Pages," "I'm a Beautiful Guy," "Drafted Again," "Suicide Chump," "Goblin Girl," and "Jumbo Go Away" all skewered some group in a politically incorrect sense. Its balance doesn't really single out any one group, and in general it comes across as a full-out assault on self-identification.
Many of the songs segue into each other, so the satire shifts from one group to another seamlessly. Remember, in this context (1981), people were just beginning to find a voice of political correctitude, and not always to accepted results. Zappa may have been over the top in criticising the dispossessed and the minorities, but the point that we're all in this game together was clear: accept who you are, don't try to pretend, and move on.
Satire is never an easy form, as some members of the audience will always take it in a literal sense. Zappa himself could be prickly, so it's no surprise he had scorn for those who demanded an accounting or a recantation. By the way, he did write a black-person counterpart to "Jewish Princess," and it appears as the title track on You Are What You Is.
*edit* I'm with BillG...it would be nice to have him around 15 years after his death to get his take on the world today. I wonder how surprised he would be to find out he was pretty darned accurate?
Loved this then, and even more now.
Quit ya bickerin' down there. This is peaches!
Oozin along on your livinroom floor
Classic FZ stuff.
Dude was way ahead of his time, love him.
Shame he didn't write anything that normal people could appreciate.
Total genius.
I'm gonna' play the music that I hear in my head and I don't give a crap if any of you people EVER gets it.
Looks like he saw Tivo coming down Broadway with the band, the balloons, and the clowns!
You're still taking this personally. You have to understand that Frank picked on everyone equally. I'm sure he had just as much bad things to say about caucasian men like me as he did about Jewish American Princesses, Blacks, whomever.
And like several others have said, he will remain famous long after his death. Your take on the Zappa spin machine is such a load. His music was so underground and still is. He has many loyal fans after his death and his music is truly brilliant.
Well, your dazzling rhetorical jabs, such as "such a load" and "his music was so underground" sure have me convinced!
And no, I'm not taking it personally at all, although it does irk me when people insist on worshipping a tin god like Zappa even though there are lots of decent musicians they could be paying attention to instead. Sorry, but since Zappa died, his stock has done nothing but fall, for good reason. It will continue to fall, and soon enough he'll be on the scrap heap with all the other overrated, self-proclaimed geniuses. Lucky for him he had a family who continue to pimp his reputation, because otherwise no one would remember him as anything other than the guy whose weirdly-named daughter sang the novelty song "Valley Girl."
You're still taking this personally. You have to understand that Frank picked on everyone equally. I'm sure he had just as much bad things to say about caucasian men like me as he did about Jewish American Princesses, Blacks, whomever.
And like several others have said, he will remain famous long after his death. Your take on the Zappa spin machine is such a load. His music was so underground and still is. He has many loyal fans after his death and his music is truly brilliant.
I do have to give him credit for writing an accurate song title, though.
You mentioned how you'd like FZ's take on what has happened in the past 15 years since his passing. I'm very certain that he'd say something to the effect of "Same sh*t, different flies".
Of course he would have — he was such a fucking narcissist that he obviously would have taken the position that anyone who criticized him was necessarily a lesser human than he was.
There's a reason you don't hear his music all that often anymore: once he died, there was no one to engage in the great self-promotion machine that was Frank Zappa, and no one cares anymore.
And horstmann, when your comments aren't simply proving my point (uh, the fact that he's talking about so-called "Jewish American Princesses" means that that song *isn't* anti-semitic? Buh?), they're so full of straw men that they're not worth responding to.
You mentioned how you'd like FZ's take on what has happened in the past 15 years since his passing. I'm very certain that he'd say something to the effect of "Same sh*t, different flies". FZ is still way ahead of his time and relevant.
DG
I do have to give him credit for writing an accurate song title, though.
Okay, How about you're so full of sh^t. Are you happy now that we can rate your comment in proper English?
Zappa picked on lots of people and those that take it personally (like I'm assuming you do) should just get over it. Freedom of expression is what is the benchmark of American society.
He was a musical genius and like others have posted before me, a lot of his music is difficult for the average person to listen to. But you and I are not average, because if we were, why would we be here at Radio Paradise?
And if you think Jewish American Princess is a slam against the Jewish state, it's more a slam against the materialism of certain East Coast Jewish women, their hairstyles, clothes, their whole makeup. I went to SUNY Binghamton in the early eighties and never knew the expression JAP until I got there. What an eye opener. That's were I was introduced to all the music of Mr. Z. Most of my friends there were Jewish and none of them expressed Frank as a bigot. Like Westslope Frank was a lot of things to a lot of people but I don't think he was a bigot.
Your so full of it! Zappa was a musical genius and was doing stuff way before many people like you were ready for it. He was playing Eddie Van Halen guitar when Eddie was in primary school! Thank you RP for playing some Zappa. I will say that there is alot of Zappa stuff out there that is unlistenable, but that should take nothing away from the man's talent.
I'd pay a lot more attention to what you had to say if you didn't have a fourth-grade level error in the very first word of your (not you're) post. Thanks anyway, though!
holborne, Too bad the man was brilliant and innovative.
"Bigot"? Care to explain? A snob, sure. An elitist? Definitely. Pretentious, probably. But where does this bigot stuff come from?
Check out the lyrics to "Jewish Princess."
And just to spare us both a lot of pointless arguing: I don't accept that the lyrics were just satire, and I don't know that Zappa himself ever said they were. If he wrote a similar song about black people, he would have been ostracized from the music industry and people would have publicly burned his albums.
I do have to give him credit for writing an accurate song title, though.
Your so full of it! Zappa was a musical genius and was doing stuff way before many people like you were ready for it. He was playing Eddie Van Halen guitar when Eddie was in primary school! Thank you RP for playing some Zappa. I will say that there is alot of Zappa stuff out there that is unlistenable, but that should take nothing away from the man's talent.
(ok, maybe not so simple, but pure.)
holborne, Too bad the man was brilliant and innovative.
"Bigot"? Care to explain? A snob, sure. An elitist? Definitely. Pretentious, probably. But where does this bigot stuff come from?
This reminds me of an interview on NPR. A woman who longed to go to Washington DC after watching all the gushing about the Obama inauguration on the telley. Frank is still a "living genius."
I do have to give him credit for writing an accurate song title, though.
Zappa's music has to be taken the context of his musical discipline and intellect. Not for everybody, for sure, but a worthwhile artistic contribution, none the less.
And Bill is right —- his take on what has happened in the media and in politics since he died would have been absolutely fascinating.
Yup! Saw them at Detroit's Grande Ballroom in '68, thinking I was going to get the usual We're Only In It For the Money and Freak Out! fare. Instead, it was a jazz fusion show. Outstanding!
much more Less David Byrne
I only saw Frank once, sometime in the later-mid-70's in Dallas. Still one of the best shows I ever saw. Non-stop music for over two hours...at the end of each song the band would just break into some jam between the songs until Frank stopped talking or goofing around on the stage and then they'd break into the next one. Expert musician-ship and incredible energy.
Yes, Indeed! how about some more Zappa, Bill?
I only saw Frank once, sometime in the later-mid-70's in Dallas. Still one of the best shows I ever saw. Non-stop music for over two hours...at the end of each song the band would just break into some jam between the songs until Frank stopped talking or goofing around on the stage and then they'd break into the next one. Expert musician-ship and incredible energy.
I Agree. A Zappa show was the most music you could see all at once.
I tuned in half way through the song, and was instantly 'Zapped' back to 1969 and Hot rats.