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<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="http://zappafan.net/csrv/utility/FeedStylesheets/rss.xsl" media="screen"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/" xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"><channel><title>Search results matching tag 'Zappa Interviews'</title><link>http://zappafan.net/csrv/search/SearchResults.aspx?o=DateDescending&amp;tag=Zappa+Interviews&amp;orTags=0</link><description>Search results matching tag 'Zappa Interviews'</description><dc:language>en-US</dc:language><generator>CommunityServer 2.1 SP2 (Build: 61129.2)</generator><item><title>Frank Zappa on Newsnight (UK tv- 10.1.83)</title><link>http://zappafan.net/csrv/blogs/news/archive/2007/08/09/frank-zappa-on-newsnight-uk-tv-10-1-83.aspx</link><pubDate>Thu, 09 Aug 2007 18:06:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="false">5a1c7ea1-1ffd-4f17-8f93-44e2721d326c:670</guid><dc:creator>tyrone</dc:creator><description>&lt;a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/HHA8ZhFif4U" title="Klikkeljen ide a blokkoláshoz (Adblock Plus segítségével)" class="abp-objtab visible"&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/HHA8ZhFif4U" title="Klikkeljen ide a blokkoláshoz (Adblock Plus segítségével)" class="abp-objtab visible"&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/HHA8ZhFif4U" height="300" width="365"&gt;</description></item><item><title>FZ Interview by Pennsylvania Cop</title><link>http://zappafan.net/csrv/blogs/news/archive/2007/06/21/fz-interview-by-pennsylvania-cop.aspx</link><pubDate>Thu, 21 Jun 2007 18:27:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="false">5a1c7ea1-1ffd-4f17-8f93-44e2721d326c:565</guid><dc:creator>tyrone</dc:creator><description>
&lt;embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/O1x3tc9BnDg" height="300" width="360"&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="display:inline;" id="vidDescRemain"&gt;Taped November 3, 1981.  Interviewer: Pennsylvania State Trooper Charles Ash.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;</description></item><item><title>Jazz From Hell (interview)</title><link>http://zappafan.net/csrv/blogs/gabor/archive/2007/06/03/jazz-from-hell-interview.aspx</link><pubDate>Sun, 03 Jun 2007 15:28:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="false">5a1c7ea1-1ffd-4f17-8f93-44e2721d326c:511</guid><dc:creator>Gabor</dc:creator><description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Interview By Robert L. Doerschuk &amp;amp; Jim Aikin&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;From A Definitive Tribute to Frank Zappa (Best of Guitar Player, 1994) &lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;i&gt;In late 1986, Zappa released &lt;/i&gt;Jazz From Hell&lt;i&gt;, an album of diabolically dense musings concocted on the Synclavier. This was all the excuse &lt;/i&gt;Keyboard&lt;i&gt; needed to feature him on their February 1987 cover.-- Editor&lt;/i&gt; &lt;br&gt; 
&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;hr&gt; &lt;br&gt;Frank
Zappa was born too soon. After years of running sidemen through
impossible charts and resigning himself to the distractions and
imperfections of live performance, he's finally got what he wants: an
instrument on which he can nail down the complex sound blends,
polyrhythms, and lines that could formerly come together only in his
head.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;  
&lt;embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/77pDQceiUus" height="300" width="365"&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;
&lt;p&gt;No, it's not a souped-up guitar. Though he is known as a
guitarist of formidable originality, Zappa hasn't touched the
instrument much during the past two years. These says you'll most
likely find him at his home studio, bent over the keyboard of a New
England Digital Synclavier. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;He's not necessarily giving up on
live gigs, mind you. In fact, his upcoming ten-album compilation of
concert performances is designed to show young listeners raised on
sequencers and drum machines that the essence of real-time playing lies
beyond the reach of studio hermits. But as far back as his first albums
with the Mothers Of Invention, Zappa displayed a double creative
mentality. As an improviser on guitar he could hold his own against
Jimi Hendrix, Jeff Beck, and the best of the era. His strongest
episodes, though, were often his written pieces, which required reading
chops and discipline to a point beyond the reach of your typical
blooz-'n'-boogie droner.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href="http://zappafan.net/csrv/blogs/gabor/archive/2007/06/03/jazz-from-hell.aspx"&gt;[Full Interview]&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</description></item><item><title>Jazz From Hell</title><link>http://zappafan.net/csrv/blogs/gabor/archive/2007/06/03/jazz-from-hell.aspx</link><pubDate>Sun, 03 Jun 2007 15:21:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="false">5a1c7ea1-1ffd-4f17-8f93-44e2721d326c:510</guid><dc:creator>Gabor</dc:creator><description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Interview By Robert L. Doerschuk &amp;amp; Jim Aikin&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;From A Definitive Tribute to Frank Zappa (Best of Guitar Player, 1994) &lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;i&gt;In late 1986, Zappa released &lt;/i&gt;Jazz From Hell&lt;i&gt;, an album of diabolically dense musings concocted on the Synclavier. This was all the excuse &lt;/i&gt;Keyboard&lt;i&gt; needed to feature him on their February 1987 cover.-- Editor&lt;/i&gt; &lt;br&gt; 
&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;hr&gt; &lt;br&gt;Frank
Zappa was born too soon. After years of running sidemen through
impossible charts and resigning himself to the distractions and
imperfections of live performance, he's finally got what he wants: an
instrument on which he can nail down the complex sound blends,
polyrhythms, and lines that could formerly come together only in his
head.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;  
&lt;embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/77pDQceiUus" height="300" width="365"&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;
&lt;p&gt;No, it's not a souped-up guitar. Though he is known as a
guitarist of formidable originality, Zappa hasn't touched the
instrument much during the past two years. These says you'll most
likely find him at his home studio, bent over the keyboard of a New
England Digital Synclavier. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;He's not necessarily giving up on
live gigs, mind you. In fact, his upcoming ten-album compilation of
concert performances is designed to show young listeners raised on
sequencers and drum machines that the essence of real-time playing lies
beyond the reach of studio hermits. But as far back as his first albums
with the Mothers Of Invention, Zappa displayed a double creative
mentality. As an improviser on guitar he could hold his own against
Jimi Hendrix, Jeff Beck, and the best of the era. His strongest
episodes, though, were often his written pieces, which required reading
chops and discipline to a point beyond the reach of your typical
blooz-'n'-boogie droner. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Music too complex, sidemen
unpredictable, don't want to compromise. What do you do? It's an old
problem. Forty years ago, as reported in last month's &lt;i&gt;Keyboard&lt;/i&gt;
[Jan. '87], Conlon Nancarrow settled it by devoting himself to writing
pieces for player piano, a much more dependable medium for realizing
his intricate ideas than a bunch of skeptical musicians. Zappa has
found a solution in the Synclavier, as heard on his most recent
releases, including &lt;i&gt;Frank Zappa Meets the Mothers of Prevention&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Francesco Zappa&lt;/i&gt;, and most recently &lt;i&gt;Jazz From Hell&lt;/i&gt;. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;The
results of this meeting of mind and machine are quintessential Zappa,
and yet they are as unpredictable as anything he has done before. By
making full use of the Synclavier's sampling, sequencing, and keyboard
assignment capabilities, he finds new sources of inspiration and gains
greater control over his resources than in any previous project. And
since control is crucial when dealing with complicated ideas, these LPs
represent a major step for Zappa the composer -- a step closer to what
he has been trying to do for years. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;On &lt;i&gt;Jazz&lt;/i&gt;, for
instance, unmistakable Zappaisms abound. The timbre and contour of the
them in "Night School," the ensemble textures and harmonies in "The
Beltway Bandits" and the title track, the quick vibraphone flurries in
"While You Were Art II," the oral-cavity percussion sounds and
alternation between long passages of simple upbeats and sudden metrical
spasms -- all these and many other elements reflect ideas he has
pursued on projects as far back as the '60s. The difference is that the
Synclavier has liberated Zappa from a lot of old shackles. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Readers of &lt;i&gt;Guitar Player&lt;/i&gt; have had several encounters with Zappa over the past couple of decades. Certainly most &lt;i&gt;Keyboard&lt;/i&gt;
regulars are familiar with his work too, if only through the long
string of brilliant keyboardists who have filed in and out of his
bands: George Duke, Eddie Jobson, Ian Underwood, Don Preston, Tommy
Mars, Peter Wolf, and so on. In the tradition of Miles Davis and Art
Blakey, Zappa has established himself -- perhaps not intentionally --
as a mentor for talented newcomers. Unfortunately, these hotshots tend
to come and go, for a simple reason: To get a gig playing Zappa music,
you have to be a Class-A whiz kid on your instrument. Word gets around,
stardom beckons for the erstwhile sideman, and suddenly it's time to
start auditioning again. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Such is life for Zappa, whose career
has taken some unorthodox turns. He has been involved in a lawsuit with
one record company, severed connections with another label when they
refused to release a song he had written about military conscription,
fired musicians for using drugs, testified before Congress, written an
article titled "Edgard Varèse: Idol of My Youth" for &lt;i&gt;Stereo Review&lt;/i&gt;,
"played" a bicycle on an old Steve Allen show, been arrested for
pornography, and been assaulted and pushed offstage by an irate fan in
London. He has composed orchestral works that have been played on both
sides of the Atlantic, performing one of them with an orchestra under
the baton of Zubin Mehta; the concert began with Zappa's spoken cue,
"Hit it, Zubin." He has also written songs that ridicule, satirize, or
(he insists) extol hippies, fascists, drunks, druggies, Scientologists,
truck drivers, disco music, Jewish girls, Catholic girls, Valley girls,
Montana, France, and the Illinois enema bandit. He started out as a
drummer with a group called the Blackouts, then began playing guitar at
age 18. He wrote his first movie soundtrack in 1960, for &lt;i&gt;The World's Greatest Sinner&lt;/i&gt;.
In addition to the previously mentioned keyboardists, his bands have
included such musical heavyweights as violinists Don "Sugarcane" Harris
and Jean-Luc Ponty, drummers Terry Bozzio and Aynsley Dunbar, and
guitarists Adrian Belew and Steve Vai. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;We Spoke with Zappa in December '86, twenty years and four months after the release of his debut album, &lt;i&gt;Freak Out!&lt;/i&gt;,
five after our June '80 interview with him and the two keyboardists he
was then working with, and just as he was assembling a new ten-LP
package, You &lt;i&gt;Can't Do That On Stage Anymore&lt;/i&gt;. This collection
features live cuts recorded over two decades by Zappa and his various
bands. Any similarity to the recent Springsteen five-album
retrospective is coincidental. When we joked that by releasing twice as
large a compilation he was doing Bruce Springsteen one better, Zappa
responded offhandedly, "Well, I don't think there will be any
comparison between his live set and this thing. This is going to be a
real musician's album. I think I'm going him at least ten better." &lt;/p&gt;
 
&lt;p&gt;*&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; *&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; *&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; *&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; *&lt;/p&gt;
  
&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Was all of &lt;i&gt;Jazz From Hell&lt;/i&gt; recorded on Synclavier?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;No.
There's one cut on there, a guitar solo, that was done with a band on
the '82 tour. That's "St. Etienne." Everything else is 100 percent
Synclavier. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;The Synclavier has direct-to-hard-disk recording
options that would let you, for example, have somebody come in and
actually play saxophone, and it would still be recorded on Synclavier.
Was any of that done, or was it all input directly?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;No, it was
all done with samples and synthesis. It was all typed in or performed
in on the keyboard, or performed in using [Roland] Octapads. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Typing it in must be a fairly slow process.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well, I worked for eight months on this album. So there's quite a bit of work in it. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;It sounds like a real breakthrough album, with the vocabulary you used before, but distilled in a very new way.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Wait
until you hear the stuff that's coming up. When I first started with
the Synclavier, we didn't have a very advanced sampling system. We had
mono sampling with not a lot of RAM. Then, at great expense, I picked
up the rest of the new sampling gear. We were doing stereo samples here
in the studio before Synclavier even had stereo sampling. We figured
out a way to do it, and it changed a lot of ways that you could write
for the instrument. So the compositions that are on &lt;i&gt;Jazz From Hell&lt;/i&gt; already sound old to me, compared to what I'm doing now. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;There
are some places where we can hear that it's an acoustic guitar sample
or a saxophone sample or something quite clearly. But in other places
it's not so clear. On "Night School," for example, there's a sustained
sound that has a piano attack and something else spliced onto it.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;It's
actually not spliced; it's simultaneous. It's a stereo sample, a
combination of trumpet with pitch-bend and grand piano. The piano notes
are not short. They attack, and then as they ring off, you get to hear
an unusual noise, which is the acoustic piano playing bends. That's a
real easy thing to do on the Synclavier. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;So even though you're calling them stereo samples, they weren't always used to create a stereo field.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well,
when I say stereo sample, on the Synclavier you have four partials. You
can have a different sound on each partial, which means that when you
strike one note, you can have four completely different sounds come
out, or you can have two stereo pairs. Or you can have a stereo pair
and two other sounds at random. In the case of that particular sound,
it is a mono piano and a mono trumpet sample. But the accompanying
keyboard sounds are all stereo grand piano. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Have you ever sampled your own guitar and used that?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;I've
sampled a few notes. I've never plugged into the thing and said, "Now
I'm going to sample myself." We extracted them from digital tapes of
live performances. A couple of good feedback notes are plopped in. I
haven't really gone hog-wild with guitar samples, but Dweezil [Zappa's
son] did a whole guitar sampling session last year, and the stereo
fuzz-tone samples are just now being trimmed and built into patches, so
I'll have a whole assortment of characteristic heavy metal noises. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Do you ever use a guitar synthesizer controller with the Synclavier?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;I've
tried it, but because of the style I play and the way my hands land on
the guitar, it has never felt comfortable to me. I've tried maybe three
or four different systems, but none of them drove me crazy. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;In
general, do you like working with samples, or if you could get good
synthetic reproductions that eliminated all of the associated problems,
would you prefer that?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;I couldn't imagine that any kind of a
synthetic reproduction would be able to give you the type of nuance
that you get out of a sample. For string pads and things like that, you
could fake it pretty good. For bogus globulant brass ensemble stuff,
that kind of orchestral cheese, you could get away with FM. And
Minimoog bass sounds and things like that usually sound best if they're
actually coming out of a Minimoog. What we've done to get those kinds
of sounds is sample the Minimoog. You see, with samples, not only are
you getting the sound of the instrument, you're getting the ability to
capture the instrument in different types of air spaces. For example,
we have both dry and ambient room sound percussion noises, and dry and
ambient wind. Even with the classical guitar, different types of
environments make a big difference. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;It also takes a lot more
work to get the multi-sample of the acoustic guitar laid out on the
keyboard, rather than just calling up. . .&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;. . . an &lt;i&gt;E&lt;/i&gt;
string, and make it stretch as far as it can go? Well, you know, I'm a
dedicated guy. I like to spend the time to get the thing right. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;How much time do you spend on that aspect of the musical process, as opposed to composing?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;It's
seasonal work. I'm not the one who actually trims the samples. Bob
Rice, my assistant, does that. I build the patches. I'll tell him that
I want a certain group of sounds. Our backlog of samples to trim is
humongous, because it's far easier to record the samples. We record
them on the [Sony] 1610, and then he puts them into the Synclavier,
left side first, then right side, and then lines them up to make stereo
samples. The easy part is recording the samples. The hard part is
transferring and trimming and cataloguing. He's probably -- let's be
kind -- eight months behind on the sample trimming. And as the samples
get trimmed and organized, I build them into various types of patches,
according to what composition I'm working on. We have things called
pintos, which are mix-and-match patches. Instead of having a patch that
is just a saxophone, for example, you can have a patch that is a few
notes of the sax, a few of a clarinet, a few of an oboe, a few of a
trombone, all different instruments, appearing on different notes, all
of them on the keyboards. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;How would you use something like that?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well,
that gives you instant orchestration. If you were to play an ordinary
piano part on the keyboard with a patch like that, depending on where
you put your finger, you'd get a different instrument coming at you
from a different stereo location. It turns what would ordinarily be a
mono-sounding keyboard part in to a whole ensemble playing stuff. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Do
you plan it out in advance, so that you know that here you're going to
want two sax notes on these two keys, or do you just put a bunch of
things on the keyboard and wing it?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well, you start off by
winging it, and then you refine it, depending on how the orchestration
is going to lay. You've got a lot of possibilities for laying things
under the keys. You can mix orchestral percussion with industrial
noises, like drills and hammers and saws and vacuum tanks and things
like that, all in the same patch. You can combine them and do some
wonderful stuff with it. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Have you released any music yet that has the drills and saws?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Oh, yeah. That's on &lt;i&gt;Jazz from Hell&lt;/i&gt;.
You'll hear a noise in there which is a sample called TANK.REL. It's
the release of a vacuum tank in a woodworking shop. And there are some
other things. Nail guns are used in there. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Is that the stuff that sounds like just a slightly strange drum set?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Yeah. That's part of our industrial percussion setup. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;What percentage of &lt;i&gt;Jazz from Hell&lt;/i&gt; was input by typing, and why would you choose one type of input over another?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;There
are three different ways to type in. One is in a language called
Script, which I don't know. I don't use that at all. Bob Rice can type
Script. But that's more like writing a computer program, so it has no
charm for me. Another way is with their Music Printing program. You can
enter or delete notes with the cursor while looking at real music on
staves. And if you want to write in tuplets -- if you have 7 over 3 or
something like that -- it's real easy to do it that way. You just make
a couple of marks and then redraw the screen. You now have edit blocks
that correspond to a septuplet over three quarters, or whatever you
want. It could be anything. Then you just enter the pitches. For that
kind of stuff, that's the easiest way for me to do it. The third way to
type is a facility called the G Page. The screen is split into three
segments, and you can display three tracks of data at the same time on
the screen. In each of those three units, you have three columns of
information. The left-hand one tells you the start time of the note. In
other words, the beginning of the piece would be beat 1, and all the
subsequent beats have numbers. This data reads out either in seconds,
beats, or SMPTE numbers; that's all selectable. The center column gives
you the name of the pitch an a number which tells you the octave that
the pitch lives in. And the right-hand column gives you the duration.
All that is editable, so you can move the cursor around, add and delete
notes, change start times, which changes the rhythm, and change the
pitch and the octave and how long the note lasts. I divide my time
between doing stuff on the G Page and doing stuff in the Music
Printing. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Does it print out the velocity of the key or tell you what voice you're addressing?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;That's
coming in the next generation of software. They're going to have a
facility on there where you can type in velocity. But we've found a way
to add velocity to something that's just typed in flat. It's a little
complicated to explain, but I can put in dynamic information after the
fact. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;So New England Digital is still dealing with velocity in an after-the-fact way.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well,
you know, they continually claim that they're understaffed and they
can't do everything all at once. They do ask users for their comments
about what they'd like to see on there. God knows, I've filled out a
batch of those comment cards, but I've yet to see any of them
implemented. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;What kinds of suggestions have you made?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Little
things that really shouldn't be that difficult. If you're looking at
the Music Printing, and you're in a certain bar, there should be a way
to hit a stroke on a key that would place a flag in the program, and
then when you hit the play command, you should be able to play right
from the point that you were looking at on the screen. And vice versa:
You should be able to listen to your sequence, stop it at a certain
point, and have it draw the actual music printing data right from that
point. That would make life a lot easier. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;And that's still not implemented?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;It's
not implemented. I'm not a programmer, but to me it just sounds like a
flag. There are a few other minor details that need to be addressed,
but they've got a heavy hardware program going. That's where they make
their money. Direct-To-Disk recording and all that, that's high-ticket
stuff, and they've been working hard to make that thing practical. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;In
the abstract, an instrument like the Synclavier is capable of doing so
much, it must be tough for them to figure out what to make their top
priority.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well, I gave a suggestion to one of their guys that
they ought to give some thought to the low end of the consumer
spectrum. I have nothing but praise for the device, except for the fact
that it's as expensive as ***. The basic synthesizer system, minus all
the sampling and the rest of that stuff, is already so unbelievably
expensive, and a DX7, generally speaking, will make a bigger variety
and cleaner variety of FM sounds than the basic Synclavier. So I
suggested that they do something about improving their tracking filter
on the FM side, so that they might be able to come up with something in
the lower price range that will introduce consumers to their way of
doing things, because once you get one and realize the different
musical things that you can do with it, the chances are very good that
you will build onto the system. If they don't pay any attention to the
low end of the scale, they're excluding all those beginners who are
first-time customers, because all the rest of the stuff is so
expensive. Before you can make it do what you hear on &lt;i&gt;Jazz from Hell&lt;/i&gt;,
you've got to spend a quarter of a million dollars. And to go direct to
disk, those prices start at $50,000, going up to a quarter of a million
dollars. So if you were to get a Michael Jackson-size unit, you could
spend close to half a million dollars, and that limits the number of
units worldwide that you can sell. That's why they ought to think about
doing something less expensive, so that they can stay in business long
enough that they can repair it when it goes down. I'm thinking ten or
15 years down the road, because I expect to still have this thing and
still be making music on it, and if there is no NED down the road, then
what have you got? &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Have you ever worked with any of the lower-end gear that has some similar functions?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well,
I had a [Yamaha] DX5 and a rack of [Yamaha] TX modules. I also use the
[Axxess Systems] Mapper, which is MIDIed to the Synclavier. We've been
able to get some truly frightening things out of that. I also have a
[Yamaha] CS-80, I've got Electrocomps, Minimoogs, Synkeys. . . . All
the heavy-duty hardware that a rock and roll touring band would use,
I've purchased and supplied to whoever the keyboard guy is who does the
tour. So I know basically what the consumer end of the synthesizer
stuff is like, even though I'm not a keyboard player and never expect
to be. I am a composer, and as a composer you deal with timbre and
other technical matters, and it pays to know what's available so that
you can write for it.. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;When you're preparing to go out on tour, do you tell your keyboard players what patches you want them to use?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well,
it depends who the keyboard player is. Some things are real specific.
If you're writing a composition and it has to be the sound of a
marimba, you're not going to want to have the sound of anything else
right there. It's got to be a marimba. If it's supposed to be brass,
it's brass. That's what the composition calls for. You don't want to
stick a string patch where the brass goes, because strings don't go
ta-da-ta-da. Basically, those are the kind of instructions that I would
give to whoever is playing it. We don't use too many Mars music
synthesizer patches. There are certain points in the show where things
get bizarre, and there are strange noises in there, but generally
there's a tune being played. The timbre used for the tune tends to
resemble a real instrument from the real world. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;So you don't have to do a lot of programming for special effects that you wouldn't otherwise be able to get.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well,
my main desire from synthesizers is to provide orchestral-type
textures, or orchestral effects that convey a musical message in the
midst of a rock and roll context. One of the most elusive musical
things that you can try and achieve in the real world is an acoustical
balance between a rock and roll band blowing its brains out and
anything that resembles a symphony orchestra. It's just not going to
happen. You have to do that by magic. And synthesizers assist in that
magic. The other thing, of course, is multi-track recording, where you
can actually record symphonic instruments on one date, and record the
fuzz-tone guitar on another. In using these tools, I'm just trying to
bring to the public some replica of what it is I hear in my head. As
technology moves along, that's getting easier and easier to do. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Has technology also made it possible to hear more things in your head than you were hearing before?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well,
let's say that a person had never heard a bassoon in his life. And the
day that he hears one he's either going to say, "That's the ugliest
thing I've ever heard," or "That's God's instrument." Or maybe
something in between. But you're going to have a response to an
instrument. Every composer has some image in his mind of what he wants
his stuff to sound like -- not just the composition, but the overall
tonal quality of what he's writing. In my head I have an audio image,
not just of the notes, but of the way the notes will sound played in an
idealized air space, which is something you can't get in the real
world. The closest you can get to it is a digital recording with
digital control over imaginary audio ambience. When you can design
rooms to your own specifications with a Lexicon, and then place your
music in that space, that's getting pretty close to what it's really
all about. It's not just the notes on paper that matter, but what they
turn into when you start making air molecules move. If it's on paper,
it's roughly the equivalent of a recipe for something to eat. The
ingredients may sound good on paper, but how do you know whether or not
you're going to like it until you eat it? It also resembles the
blueprint for a building. A good composition will take into account
that you need to have toilets, you need doors going in and out,
windows, ventilation. You need all the basic stuff, and then all the
rest of it is interior and exterior decorating. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;But as you get more involved in electronic instruments, do the things that you're hearing change?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;I
was going to get to that. Obviously, if you're dealing only with the
instruments to which most composers normally have access -- in other
words, the known instruments -- you will tend to think in terms of what
to do with a known instrument. The moment you get your hands on a piece
of equipment like this, where you can modify known instruments in ways
that human beings just never do, such as add notes to the top and
bottom of the range, or allow a piano to perform pitch-bends or
vibrato, even basic things like that will cause you to rethink the
existing musical universe. The other thing you get to do is invent
sounds from scratch. Of course, that opens up a wide range. &lt;br&gt;One of
the most intriguing things about working with a Synclavier is what it
lets you do with rhythm. That's always been one of my favorite things
to investigate. It's possible to get accurate performances of the most
ridiculous rhythmic combinations. I'll give you an example. I've been
working in large tuplets recently. If you're in 3/4, I'd put in a
tuplet -- say, a bar of 3/4 that has a 75-tuplet or 35-tuplet in it.
You can hear that there's a waltz going on, but when these things
occur, it's like, "What is that? Where do these things come from? Why
does it still have a groove to it?" It still relates mathematically to
something else that's going on in the bar. With this system, you can
pick a random number, then take any size bar of music and divide it up
into those components. You're going to have an 88-tuplet or an
87-tuplet. Or you can take a composition that has, say, ten bars of
4/4. The first bar you start with an 88-tuplet, the next bar is 87, 86,
85, 84, 83, 82, 81, something like that. You could never hand that to a
musician on a piece of paper and say, "Here, do this." &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Even
on your early albums, you were handing musicians things that were, if
not quite that difficult, at least going in the same direction.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Yeah,
that's true. You can hand this to the musician, but what you get back
is the problem. The spirit may be willing, but the flesh might say,
"Uh-uh, this ain't gonna happen." That's pretty much the rule
throughout the last twenty-odd years of my musical career. You can ask
for it, but the chances of getting it accurately performed are very,
very small. And now I don't have to worry about that any more. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;So electronic media have really freed you to get closer to your ideal, to what you're hearing.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;It's
really made that possible. The next question is whether anybody in the
audience wants to hear it. That's the big problem, because the further
out I get with these timbral combinations and the unusual rhythms, the
further away it gets from any possibility of radio play. And without
radio play or some kind of advertising for the album, nobody's even
going to know it's there, let alone pick it up. Some people, when they
hear it, they absolutely don't like it just on principle because it
doesn't have that &lt;i&gt;boom, boom, boom&lt;/i&gt; on the floor all the time.
I'm delighted that I have the opportunity to go wandering around out in
the zones of this thing. I would like it if I had some company out
there. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;You were talking about creating a specialized ambience with digital reverb, yet &lt;i&gt;Jazz from Hell&lt;/i&gt; sounds relatively dry. What kind of processing, if any, did you use on that album?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;There's
a lot of real subtle processing. It is absolutely not dry. There are
tricks to using echo. If you want something to really sound like it's
echoing, then that's an obvious effect, like yelling into a cave, that
kind of stuff. That tends to make things get soft around the edges. The
way ambience is perceived in this album is, each composition has to
exist in some sort of imaginary air space, and you don't want the air
space to fight against the musical content. You don't just pick an echo
program at random, then turn it on and say, "Now we've got air space."
What we do is, for each piece, depending on how much transient
information is in the piece or what style the piece is, we tailor at
least three different rooms. In other words, we have a live echo
chamber and two Lexicons. and that gives you the possibility of
locating different types of orchestration in different types of
imaginary rooms, and then combining those things to make the final
stereo picture. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;You're still using an actual echo chamber?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;The
reason we do that is that certain types of percussive sounds, when
introduced into a digital reverb program that may be a long program,
don't sound right. That program may be good for everything else in the
composition that is not so spikey. But the spikey stuff in there tends
to sound bogus. So what we do is use live echo quite often for the
percussion-type things, and use echo programs with more harmonic
content on the strings or brass or things whose duration you want to
increase. An echo program actually increases the duration of notes on
paper. you can write an eighth-note and play an eighth-note, and
there's no reverb; the sample itself is dry. What you get is an
eighth-note. But if you the eighth-note in a 35-meter room, that
eighth-note is extended. When you're writing you have to bear that in
mind. What you're going to do to it in the final processing and how
loud different things are going to be in the mix changes considerably
what your response is going to be to the composition as a whole. We
fuss over that very much. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;When you're starting on a very
percussion-oriented piece, do you write the rhythm groove first, or the
sustained material, or what?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;It depends on what kind of
composition it is. I work it all different ways. Sometimes I start with
a picture of a completely finished event in my head, and then just go
about achieving the event mechanically. Other times I might start with
just a little beat, then I decide to lay something on top of it, and
that grows into a monstrosity. Or I might hear three or four notes that
would represent what you could call your hook, if there is such a thing
in these tunes. And I build out from the hook. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Can you give us an example of each of those approaches on &lt;i&gt;Jazz from Hell&lt;/i&gt;?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well,
"Night School" started off with just eight chords that I played in on
the keyboard. Everything else came after that. And "While You Were Art
II," that's really got a strange story to it. There's a song on the &lt;i&gt;Shut Up 'N Play Yer Guitar&lt;/i&gt;
album called "While You Were Out." A group at Cal Arts [California
Institute of the Arts], led by a guy named Art Jarvinen, came to me and
requested an arrangement of "While You Were Out" for their ensemble, so
they could play it at a concert that they were giving in Los Angeles.
So I had David Ocker, who was my assistant at that time, type into the
Synclavier the actual transcription that Steve Vai did that is in the
guitar book [&lt;i&gt;The Frank Zappa Guitar Book&lt;/i&gt;, published by Hal
Leonard]. That just gave me the chords and the melody line, which
wasn't suitable for the instrumentation of their ensemble. Once the
data was in there, then it was a matter of arranging it so that they
could play it. So I put it through a bunch of permutations. For one
thing, I squared off the rhythm to the nearest 32nd-note, instead of
having all the tuplets and weird stuff going on. Then I hocketed the
material, so that the line was bounced from instrument to instrument.
And did a bunch of other stuff to it. &lt;br&gt;To aid in their performance,
since it was already typed into the Synclavier, I produced a little
practice cassette for them to play the piece by. When Art came to pick
up the musical parts, he listened to it and he said, "There's no way
that we can learn this in time for the show. It's too hard." So I said,
"No problem. We'll just have the machine play it. All you do is go
onstage and pretend that you're playing your instrument. You'll have
wires coming out of your instruments, leading to some speakers, and
play a cassette, and nobody will know the difference." Well, they did
it. And guess what? Nobody knew the difference! The music critics of
the &lt;i&gt;Los Angeles Times&lt;/i&gt; didn't know, the man who was in charge of
the concert series didn't know. The only person in that audience who
knew was David Ocker, because he had typed it in. Nobody Knew! We've
seen rock and roll videos where you have a model pretending to play an
instrument. In this case, you have musicians pretending to play
instruments. They were actually looking at the sheet music, and moving
their hands the way you would normally do it. &lt;br&gt;But to make matters worse, the version that is on &lt;i&gt;Jazz from Hell&lt;/i&gt;
is not the version that they played. The version that they played had
no samples. It was only FM synthesis. And even at that, nobody knew. It
doesn't even sound like the version played with samples that's on the
album. This is quite deluxe. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;What kind of reaction did this performance draw?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;It
caused a scandal, to the point where three members of the group
actually apologized to the musical community and swore that they would
never do anything like that again. Instead, they should have been
going, "Yeah, look at this! People who write about and criticize
classical music can't even recognize a cheesy cassette." It wasn't even
a digital tape that they played. It was a normal audio cassette played
through a little P.A. system in this hall. And nobody knew that these
people weren't playing the instruments. That, I think, is the real
artistic statement of the piece. That's why it is called "While You
Were Art." &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Let's turn to the &lt;i&gt;Francesco&lt;/i&gt; album, which was done before &lt;i&gt;Jazz from Hell&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Right. There are no samples on &lt;i&gt;Francesco&lt;/i&gt;. It's all straight Synclavier. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;What inspired you to do that project, other than the fact that the 18th-century composer Francesco Zappa was your namesake?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;It
was just mere curiosity. I obtained the music and David Ocker typed it
into the Synclavier. Then, on the first day, after he typed in Op. 1,
and we listened to it, I thought, "Hey, that's a nice tune. I wonder
what the rest of it sounds like." He spent about a month typing in a
huge amount of these string trios -- they were all string trios, by the
way. They sounded nice, so I thought, "Why not make an album out of
it?" &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Your approach to orchestrating it seemed quite restrained.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well,
I didn't want to go mondo on it. Basically, you're dealing with
three-voice compositions. It's two melody lines, usually in harmony,
plus the bass line. That's all I really had to work with. I didn't want
to add any other data to it. It was written for two violins and an
upright bass -- not exactly the world's most appealing audio
combination. Even if I had suitable synthesizer replicas for those
instruments, I'm not sure that would have made the most interesting
album. So I just added a little Technicolor to it and let the music
speak for itself. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Was &lt;i&gt;Francesco&lt;/i&gt; the first thing you had done with the Synclavier?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;No, the first thing I did with Synclavier is on &lt;i&gt;Thing-Fish&lt;/i&gt;.
Listen to the "Crabgrass Baby" track, which opens up Act II. The
background vocals are a repeated vocal chant with this computer voice
singing over it. The computer voice is done with a little card that
fits into an IBM computer, and the stereo background vocals were our
first attempt at stereo sampling using the mono system. The people from
Synclavier are always accusing us here at the Utility Muffin Research
Kitchen of taxing the system. But we've managed to do things that go
beyond what was originally planned when the Synclavier was put
together, because my musical needs and my desires are probably
different from those of the other people who buy the thing. You wind up
finding ways to hot-wire the machines to do what you want to do. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Since you're not primarily a keyboard player, what do you use the Synclavier keyboard for?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well,
I use it in a lot of different ways. I couldn't sit down and play
anything that really resembles a piano part. However, if you understand
how sounds can be assigned to the little black and white things in the
Synclavier, you'll understand how I play on the keyboard. On patches
for drum sets, for example, every key is actually a different drum set
stereo sample. But you can make combinations of things occur. There's
one line on &lt;i&gt;Jazz from Hell&lt;/i&gt; that is somebody blowing into a
bottle of beer to get this low noise, which is then slowed down even
more and run simultaneously with a big bass drum. When those two sounds
are hit together and split in stereo, it sounds kind of like a gong
made out of wood that exudes dust after you hit it. You can get
combinations of percussion noises that wouldn't happen in the real
world unless the entire percussion section was unbelievably psychic and
could count their butts off. You can make a whole bunch of guys hit a
whole bunch of stuff all at the same time. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Is your technique good enough that you can play these rhythms pretty exactly on the keyboard as the piece is being recorded?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;No.
If I'm playing a funk track of something like that, I'll square it off.
I'll use the resolution factor in the machine to square it off to the
nearest sixteenth or 32nd or whatever. That keeps me honest. But there
are advantages to playing it in. Usually drum parts have a lot of notes
in them, and although you can add dynamics after the fact on the
Synclavier, it's a real chore. So even if you have to wind up editing
your drum track after you've done it, it's better to play it in. The
other way to play it in is through the Octapads, because with that you
can play rolls. One of the things that seems to be inconvenient to do
on the Synclavier is to make their keyboard respond fast enough.
Repeated notes are one of the harder things to do, whereas they're one
of the most simple things to do on an Octapad. A simple roll will yield
a whole string of pitches with different dynamics on each pitch. It
gives you a much more textured drum part. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;How else do you use the Synclavier keyboard?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well,
let's say you want to comp something. You want to have some sort of
chordal aroma going on. Even though I can't play a keyboard, I got
rhythm. So by just doing punches with a patch that has pressure and
velocity, you can stylize a sketch of where the chord ought to hit in
order to accompany a part. You can hit all wrong notes, and then go
back in and change the pitches. On &lt;i&gt;Jazz from Hell&lt;/i&gt;, that's how a lot of the keyboard parts were entered. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Throughout
your career you've experimented with combining rock and roll with, for
want of a better term, serious instrumental music. And now it seems
you're doing more totally instrumental albums. Are you moving away from
weasely Fifties rock, or is that still very much part of your thought?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;To
tell you the truth, I still enjoy certain types of Fifties rock, but I
hardly ever listen to it anymore because all I do is type. I feel that
in a pure musical sense -- I mean, forget about whether anybody likes
it, but in terms of pure musical experimentation -- there are answers
to be obtained to serious musical questions with this machine, and as
long as I'm thinking about 'em, I'm going to go in there and do that.
But in a way, you put yourself in a box, because you're answering
questions that the average guy never asks. I'm having a real good time
with what I'm doing right now. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;At what point would you be
putting rock songs on an album, not because you cared about them, but
because you were trying to sell albums? And would that be right or
wrong?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;It depends on whether you want to be a purist or whether
you want to be practical. The fact of the matter is that if I do an
album that has any kind of a vocal on it from now on, the chances are
that vocal is going to be about a sociological or political topic. For
example, I thought of one that I want to do just the other day called
"Lie to Me," which would deal with a catalog of everything that the
Reagan administration has been able to get away with for the last six
years. That would be a worthwhile thing to stick in there. I'm not in
the mood right now to generate a bunch of fun-time songs, and it seems
like every time I do, all the music critics, who have absolutely no
sense of humor, despise it so much that whatever else in the album is
of a sturdier musical merit gets ignored, while these guys go on
rampages about the text of my songs. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;It's easy to focus on that stuff, particularly if it offends you.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well,
the thing is that a guy who writes usually is a word-oriented guy, and
the chances of his knowing about music, especially if he's a rock music
critic, are nil. None of the people who have reviewed my albums, with
maybe two or three exceptions in the last 20 years, had a broad enough
knowledge to know that what they were listening to was more outrageous,
in terms of how it was flying in the face of music history, than any
lyric or any individual story idea in the song could ever be. They
weren't historically equipped to understand what the references were
and to see why the music that was being done based on those references
was either utterly hilarious or completely outrageous. You've got to
know a certain amount of stuff in order to derive the maximum impact
from those albums. That's just the way it works. I hate to be a guy
sitting around saying, "I'm misunderstood," but it's not even a matter
of being misunderstood. It's a matter of being uncomprehended. &lt;br&gt;But
what do you expect? I do it because I like to do it, and if I write
"Dinah Moe Humm," that's what I want to do, and it's done. That doesn't
mean that every album's got to have "Dinah Moe Humm" or "Montana" [both
from &lt;i&gt;Over-Nite Sensation&lt;/i&gt;], and it also doesn't mean that every
album has got to be with the London Symphony Orchestra. I have a lot of
different musical questions, and I'm looking for a lot of different
musical answers, and if the audience is similarly disposed, then they
can take the course with me, because I'm learning stuff as I do these
things. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;That reminds me of something that one of the members
of Kraftwerk once said -- that they were like scientists working in a
musical laboratory, and when they found something true, they put it
down on tape.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well, I don't know whether I would go that far,
because to say that it's true is pushing it. But the albums do in a way
represent a catalog of the various experiments. Whether or not the
experiment is successful or a failure, you be the judge yourself. But
before you judge, you really should ask yourself whether you have
enough data to make that judgment. For a guy who has never heard Anton
Webern or Igor Stravinsky, or Edgard Varèse, or Takemitsu, or Ligeti,
or Penderecki. . . . If you don't know what that stuff is, where it
comes from, what it sounds like, and what the intention of it is, how
can you even attempt to take a guess at what extrapolations you may be
hearing? For example, in the song "Brown Shoes Don't Make It" [from &lt;i&gt;Absolutely Free&lt;/i&gt;]
most people hear only the words. They don't realize that there is, in
the middle of that song, a completely academic and rigorous 12-tone
string quartet going on in the background. The other thing that was
funny about that song was that by playing "God Bless America,"
"Star-Spangled Banner," and one or two other patriotic songs at the
end, all at the same time, I was making a musical joke about [Charles]
Ives. So I've been doing this stuff for a long time, but the people who
write about it are usually more interested in their bylines and the way
they can diddle their words around. If they're in the word business,
they concentrate on the words that I've written, and the results
haven't been all that enthralling. But I think that this album and the
next couple of albums are going to raise some eyebrows in different
parts of the musical world. Even if you don't understand what it is
that's going on, I think you have to appreciate that the sound quality
of what's on there is truly exceptional. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Do you have any plans to take the Synclavier on the road?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;If I ever go back out there, I'm definitely going to take the Synclavier. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Will you play it yourself?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well,
I'm not a keyboard player, remember. I would have an operator who sits
at the Synclavier and, on cue, hits the start button to provide those
parts of the orchestration which would be impossible to replicate
onstage any other way, and to kind of edit back and forth between live
musicians and the machine, where sometimes the machine is playing all
by itself and sometimes the machine is playing the accompaniment and
the soloist plays over it, or the machine is playing the whole
orchestra part and the drummer and the bass keep going. Things like
that. There are ways to do it. &lt;br&gt;It's a massively complicated
rehearsal problem, in order to make it work invariably night after
night. That's the main thing that concerns me about taking it out,
because I know other people have had them out on the road, but I don't
think anybody else has asked the machine to do what I want it to do,
and to do it without fail in a hostile environment. When you take
things on the road, they do break. Guys do drop them, and that's a big
worry. If you build your show around the machine like that, and the
machine doesn't work one day, you're going to have a lot of
dissatisfied ticket holders out there. That's one of the great things
about live music in its pure sense. If one guy gets sick, or you have
some kind of mechanical problem, a creative band will find a way to
make the show entertaining, and keep it going. If you have a very
technologically oriented show, you have to carry spares. And the
problem about carrying a spare Synclavier is it's a quarter of a
million dollars. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;The musicians you recruit are of such a high caliber that syncing with the Synclavier shouldn't be too much of a problem.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;I've
already done tests. My guys can sync with it, no problem. They latch
right on there. But that was in a studio. You take it onto a stage, and
you've got monitoring problems to deal with. What the drummer needs to
hear is vastly different than what the keyboard player or what the bass
player would need to hear. So now you're into multiple monitor feeds.
It's endless. It's a massive headache. And the solution to each
headache is in increments of five figures. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Is this kind of trend going to become so major that it will curtail a lot of live performance by a lot of different musicians?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Take
a look at what happens at a live performance now. When was the last
time you went to see a band, and what you was a band? Basically, all of
the big groups, so-called, are out there faking it with half the show
on tape and people hopping around, kind of lip-syncing to the track.
This is because people see acts on MTV and they go to a concert and
they expect they're going to get the same result, and of course the
only way to do it is to fake it. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;A lot of that music may
have been put together one track at a time, and the guys may in fact
have trouble playing a solo with any sustained intensity for 32 bars at
a stretch.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well, it's not just the solo. It's the whole way the
orchestration sounds. What you hear on television is very, very
freeze-dried. The resemblance between the modern-day rock and roll
record and what a band actually sounds like is . . . well, there is no
comparison. I mean, kids have grown up to imagine that a drum set
sounds only a certain way, and what they're hearing as a drum set
probably isn't a drum set anyway. It's a machine. So if often comes as
a shock when you find out what drums really sound like, and what a bass
really sounds like, or what anything really sounds like, because they
haven't been exposed to the real deal, which is not to say that they
would even like the real thing or prefer it to what they get on MTV. &lt;br&gt;I
think there's room for both things to exist, but the young person who
is just starting to go to concerts in the '80s has already missed out
on some of the most exciting live music that has ever happened in
history, which is what's been going on for the last 15 or 20 years.
There have been great live music events happening onstage that will
only happen that one time, in one place, and it happened because guys
were playing instruments, and they were really tearing it up that
night. Those kinds of moments are getting fewer and further between,
because of the economics of the touring business and because of the
expectations of the audiences that have been raised by video music.
People expect a different thing when they go to a concert. If you look
the most wailing band in the world onto the stage and got up there and
everybody played good, there would be a certain number of people in the
audience that would go, "Yeah, but where's the drum machine? Where's
the &lt;i&gt;boom-bap&lt;/i&gt;?" &lt;br&gt;The other problem is that the audience who
still likes live music of a daring sort, as they get older, they're
less inclined to leave their homes and go to a hockey rink and have a
15-year-old person puking on their shoes. So the base of support for
that other kind of music is mostly gone, and the younger ticket buyers
don't know what that other kind of music is, so they don't go to it,
and they don't request it. So what is being served up to them as music?
Just take a look at what's happening in the world of guitars. It's
people playing gymnastic doo-dads. Half of the things they're playing
aren't even in the key of the song, you know? It's like, "Give me a
scale I can play right here, and let me whiz up and down it a couple of
times." &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Maybe we could segue to another question of unusual Synclavier applications. On &lt;i&gt;The Mothers of Prevention&lt;/i&gt;
you use recorded excerpts from the Senate hearings about slapping
warning stickers on rock albums with questionable lyrics. Were those
excerpts sampled on the Synclavier?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Yes. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;You've been
very outspoken on issues related to efforts to ban controversial lyrics
from rock albums. What concerns should musicians have on these subjects?&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;The
first thing that they can do is to remember that art in the service of
politics usually makes for boring art. The way that I think people
should deal with this situation is to have some courage to resist the
pressure of the record companies, because the record companies are more
than delighted to sell out the First Amendment or any other historical
document in order to increase their quarterly bottom line, usually at
the expense of the rights of the artist. Let's face it, you're just a
piece of meat when it comes to a record contract. And today, most
record companies are not all that interested in building your career.
They figure if they've got one album and they can make a bunch of
bucks, they're delighted about it. Then they kiss you good-bye and pick
up the next guy with a weird hairdo and some diagonal zippers on his
body. You should fight that. People who are in the music business, when
they do interviews, instead of plugging their next album or whatever,
should actually have the courage to speak out about what they believe.
A lot of them seem to have been given the word by their managers to
keep their mouth shut. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Perhaps many musicians simply aren't concerned with political issues.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;Well,
I think it behooves them to have political thoughts, but let me make a
definition clarification here. I say politics is the entertainment
branch of industry, and government is what we need. We have a diverse
population in the United States, with all kinds of different needs that
have to be taken care of. That is the righteous function of government.
Politics is bullshit, basically. Politics is involved with
salesmanship. Government is involved with statesmanship. And I do make
a distinction between those things. If you are making political
statements, remember, you are not addressing the real needs of
government. You're just talking about the Madison Avenue aspect. So
think about that difference. Just a friendly reminder, in case somebody
does decide to speak up. &lt;/p&gt;</description></item></channel></rss>