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FRANK ZAPPA’S LEGENDARY 1973 THE ROXY PERFORMANCES CAPTURED ON DEFINITIVE SEVEN-CD BOXED SET, AVAILABLE FEBRUARY 2

For immediate release:

FRANK ZAPPA’S LEGENDARY 1973 THE ROXY PERFORMANCES CAPTURED ON DEFINITIVE
SEVEN-CD BOXED SET, AVAILABLE FEBRUARY 2

COMPLETE COLLECTION INCLUDES ALL FOUR PUBLIC SHOWS, INVITE-ONLY SOUNDCHECK, REHEARSAL AND BOLIC STUDIOS SESSION

PRE-ORDER TODAY AND RECEIVE INSTANT GRAT DOWNLOAD OF “RDNZL”

15 DECEMBER 2017 (Toronto, ON)43 years ago in December 1973, Frank Zappa played a series of legendary concerts at the famed Roxy Theatre on the Sunset Strip in Hollywood. Considered a high-water mark of his career, owing to the incredible, virtuosic performances of himself and his stellar band The Mothers, the five shows – across three nights – included a private invite-only performance/soundcheck/film shoot followed by back-to-back doubleheaders. A few days later, continuing this incredibly prolific week, Zappa brought his band and camera crew to Ike Turner’s Bolic Sound in Inglewood for a filmed recording session. In typical Zappa fashion, he recorded it all.

Announced today is the release of the new collection, The Roxy Performances, out February 2 via Zappa Records/Universal Music Canada, the country’s leading music company. Available now for pre-order, the upcoming release features a definitive seven-CD box set that collects all four public shows from December 9 - 10, 1973, and the December 8 film shoot and soundcheck. Each performance is presented in their entirety for the first time, along with bonus content featuring rarities from a rehearsal, unreleased tracks and highlights from the Bolic Studios recording session.

This complete, nearly 8-hour long collection, documents the Roxy shows as they happened and presents brand new 2016 mixes by Craig Parker Adams from new 96K 24 Bit transfers of the multi-track masters. The set is rounded out with a 48-page booklet that includes photos from the performances, extensive liner notes by Vaultmeister Joe Travers, essays from Zappa family friend, Australian writer Jen Jewel Brown, and American singer/songwriter Dave Alvin, who give their firsthand recollections about the shows, and a selection of archival press reviews. Those who pre-order the box set will receive an instant grat download of “RDNZL.”

“This is one of my favorite FZ line-ups ever. This box contains some of the best nights of music Los Angeles has ever seen with their ears at an historic venue," says Ahmet Zappa, co-producer of the collection alongside Travers. “Hold on to your hotdogs people. This box is the be-all-end-all. This is it. This is all of it. It’s time to get your rocks off for the Roxy.”

While portions of these concerts have been released in various formats over the years, the shows have never been released in their entirety until now. The first of the previously released footage arrived in 1974 on the album Roxy and Elsewhere, which mixed material from the shows with performances recorded in different locations months later, followed by 2014’s Roxy By Proxy, which featured Zappa’s 1987 digital mixes of tracks from various shows, and most recently the 2015 film Roxy The Movie and its accompanying soundtrack.

The Roxy Performances capture Zappa and The Mothers in peak condition as they play to rowdy sold-out crowds in the intimate, just-opened venue in their hometown Los Angeles following the release of Over-Nite Sensation. The extraordinary band was one of Zappa’s best, with keyboardist George Duke, bassist Tom Fowler, trombonist Bruce Fowler, tenor saxophonist and vocalist Napoleon Murphy Brock, percussionist Ruth Underwood and drummers Ralph Humphrey and Chester Thompson all flawlessly in lockstep as Zappa led them through his musically adventurous compositions filled with complicated time signatures and sudden tempo changes.

“The content of any show starring Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention is unpredictable, but the quality of the show is predictable,” the Los Angeles Times remarked in their review. “I have seen this satirical rock group many times and every show has been excellent. True to form, the group performed sensationally at the Roxy on Sunday night.” Equally impressed, was the (long-defunct) Los Angeles Herald-Examiner stating, “This time around Zappa, the counter-culture’s John Cage, has assembled a remarkable group of musicians. Tim Fowler on bass, his brother Bruce on trombone, Ralph Humphrey on drums, and George Duke, whose keyboard skills almost upstaged the leader himself. Percussionist Ruth Underwood kept up with the band’s frenetic pace without missing a single swat of the gong, and she was incredible.”

The material expertly performed across the five shows consisted mostly of songs from 1969 and beyond and included a dizzying array of stylistic diverse tracks from Uncle Meat, Hot Rats, Waka/Jawaka and Over-Nite Sensation. The shows also include a number of live favorites like, “Village Of The Sun”, “Pygmy Twylyte”, “Cheepnis”, “Penguin In Bondage”, “Echidna’s Arf (Of You)”, and “Don’t You Ever Wash That Thing”. Many of these ended up on Roxy & Elsewhere.

Jen Jewel Brown and Dave Alvin give a glimpse at what it was like to be at these historic shows in their richly detailed essays in the liner notes that accompany the recordings. Alvin reflects about meeting Zappa on the Isle of Capri in 1982 while on tour with his band The Blasters, and how Zappa’s eyes lit up when he told him he saw him at the Roxy. Beaming, Alvin writes, “You were at a Roxy show?” He goes on to say, “The Roxy Mothers were a grand combination of high art, low art, masterful technique and razor-sharp humour with a touch of wild abandon.” In Brown’s reflection, Frank and Gail’s personal friend tells about what it was like for a young girl from Australia to witness Zappa on the Sunset Strip in the ‘70s and paints a vivid picture about what the shows were like. “This material shows an absolutely sleek beast at its prime,” she pend, adding, “This is a cultural record and there’s some prime Zappanalia here. Frank had put the crippling disasters of December ’71 behind him and was plunged headlong into some of the most beautiful music and zestful, open-hearted engagement with life imaginable.”

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The Roxy Performances – Track listing:

DISC 1

(12-9-73 Show 1)

  1. Sunday Show 1 Start
  2. Cosmik Debris
  3. “We’re Makin’ A Movie”
  4. Pygmy Twylyte
  5. The Idiot Bastard Son
  6. Cheepnis
  7. Hollywood Perverts
  8. Penguin In Bondage
  9. T’Mershi Duween
  10. The Dog Breath Variations
  11. Uncle Meat
  12. RDNZL
  13. Montana
  14. Dupree’s Paradise

DISC 2

(12-9-73 Show 2)

  1. Dickie’s Such An Asshole
  2. Sunday Show 2 Start
  3. Inca Roads
  4. Village Of The Sun
  5. Echidna’s Arf (Of You)
  6. Don’t You Ever Wash That Thing?
  7. Slime Intro
  8. I’m The Slime
  9. Big Swifty

DISC 3

  1. Tango #1 Intro
  2. Be-Bop Tango (Of The Old Jazzmen’s Church)
  3. Medley:
    1. King Kong
    2. Chunga’s Revenge
    3. Son Of Mr. Green Genes

(12-10-73 Show 1)

  1. Monday Show 1 Start
  2. Montana
  3. Dupree’s Paradise
  4. Cosmik Intro
  5. Cosmik Debris

DISC 4

  1. Bondage Intro
  2. Penguin In Bondage
  3. T’Mershi Duween
  4. The Dog Breath Variations
  5. Uncle Meat
  6. RDNZL
  7. Audience Participation - RDNZL
  8. Pygmy Twylyte
  9. The Idiot Bastard Son
  10. Cheepnis
  11. Dickie’s Such An Asshole

(12-10-73 Show 2)

  1. Monday Show 2 Start
  2. Penguin In Bondage
  3. T’Mershi Duween
  4. The Dog Breath Variations
  5. Uncle Meat
  6. RDNZL

DISC 5

  1. Village Of The Sun
  2. Echidna’s Arf (Of You)
  3. Don’t You Ever Wash That Thing?
  4. Cheepnis - Percussion
  5. “I Love Monster Movies”
  6. Cheepnis
  7. “Turn The Light Off”/Pamela’s Intro
  8. Pygmy Twylyte
  9. The Idiot Bastard Son
  10. Tango #2 Intro
  11. Be-Bop Tango (Of The Old Jazzmen’s Church)

DISC 6

  1. Dickie’s Such An Asshole

Bonus Section (12-10-73 Roxy Rehearsal)

  1. Big Swifty - In Rehearsal
  2. Village Of The Sun
  3. Farther O’Blivion - In Rehearsal
  4. Pygmy Twylyte 6:17

Unreleased Track

  1. That Arrogant Dick Nixon

(12-12-73 Bolic Studios Recording Session)

  1. Kung Fu - In Session
  2. Kung Fu - with guitar overdub
  3. Tuning and Studio Chatter
  4. Echidna’s Arf (Of You) - In Session
  5. Don’t Eat The Yellow Snow - In Session
  6. Nanook Rubs It - In Session
  7. Alfonzo’s Pancake Breakfast - In Session
  8. Father O’Blivion - In Session
  9. Rollo (Be-Bop Version)

DISC 7

(12-8-73 Sound Check/Film Shoot)

  1. Saturday Show Start
  2. Pygmy Twylyte/Dummy Up*
  3. Pygmy Twylyte - Part II
  4. Echidna’s Arf (Of You)
  5. Don’t You Ever Wash That Thing?
  6. Orgy, Orgy
  7. Penguin In Bondage
  8. T’Mershi Duween
  9. The Dog Breath Variations
  10. Uncle Meat/Show End

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