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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/frankzappaunclemeat_8066.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350: ''Bizaaaaarrrre!!'']]
3
4''Uncle Meat'' is a 1969 double album released by Music/FrankZappa and the Mothers of Invention. It's generally considered to be one of his masterpieces and is most remembered for the fan favorites "Uncle Meat: Main Title Theme", "Dog Breath, in the Year of the Plague", "A Pound for a Brown on the Bus", "Mr. Green Genes", "Cruisin' for Burgers" and [[Film/KingKong1933 "King Kong"]].
5
6Zappa originally intended ''Uncle Meat'' to be the CultSoundtrack for a film "for which we [[NoBudget haven't got enough money to make yet]]", as announced on the album cover. He did include the script, ''The Story of Uncle Meat'', [[AllThereInTheManual in the album liner notes]] [[DevelopmentHell but was never able to financially secure a movie adaptation]]. Instead he released a home video in 1987 called ''Uncle Meat'', which was only available through mail order from his own company. This film had nothing whatsoever to do with the script of Zappa's album and is basically him and some friends clowning around in front of the camera, intercut with far more interesting footage from the legendary 1968 concert at the Royal Albert Hall (where the track "Louie Louie (at the Royal Albert Hall in London)" was performed). The scenes with Don Preston turning into a monster while Phyllis Altenhaus gets aroused by him and eventually eat hamburgers under the shower were filmed in 1971. The footage where Zappa interplays with Massimo Bassoli was recorded in 1987.
7
8The dialogues from the 1987 ''Uncle Meat'' movie would later be added as BonusMaterial on the CD re-release of the ''Uncle Meat'' album and are generally considered to be AlbumFiller (to the point where fans dubbed them "penalty tracks"). These bonus tracks would remain standard on all CD releases until the 2016 ''Meat Light'' entry in the ''Project/Object'' series of "audio documentaries," the first disc of which contained the original 1969 tracklist on CD for the first time. Most of the 1968 Royal Albert Hall concert performance would eventually be released on CD in 1993 as ''Ahead of Their Time''.
9
10!!Tracklist
11!!!Disc One
12[[AC:Side One]]
13# "Uncle Meat: Main Title Theme" (1:55)
14# "The Voice of Cheese" (0:26)
15# "Nine Types of Industrial Pollution" (6:00)
16# "Zolar Czakl" (0:55)
17# "Dog Breath, in the Year of the Plague" (3:59)
18# "The Legend of the Golden Arches" (3:27)
19# "Louie Louie (At the Royal Albert Hall in London)" (2:19)
20# "The Dog Breath Variations" (1:48)
21
22[[AC:Side Two]]
23# "Sleeping in a Jar" (0:51)
24# "Our Bizarre Relationship" (1:05)
25# "The Uncle Meat Variations" (4:46)
26# "Electric Aunt Jemima" (1:46)
27# "Prelude to King Kong" (3:38)
28# "God Bless America (Live at the Whisky a Go Go)" (1:11)
29# "A Pound for a Brown on the Bus" (1:29)
30# "Ian Underwood Whips It Out (Live on Stage in Copenhagen)" (5:05)
31
32!!!Disc Two
33[[AC:Side Three]]
34# "Mr. Green Genes" (3:14) - Remix
35# "We Can Shoot You" (2:03)
36# "If We'd All Been Living in California..." (1:14)
37# "The Air" (2:57)
38# "Project X" (4:49)
39# "Cruising for Burgers" (2:18)
40
41[[AC: Side Four]]
42# "Uncle Meat Film Excerpt Part I" (37:34)*
43# "Tengo na minchia tanta" (3:46)*
44# "Uncle Meat Film Excerpt Part II" (3:51)*
45# "King Kong Itself (as Played by the Mothers in a Studio)" (0:51)
46# "King Kong II (Its Magnificence as Interpreted by Don [=DeWild=])" (1:19)
47# "King Kong III (as Motorhead Explains It)" (1:45)
48# "King Kong IV (The Gardner Varieties)" (6:18)
49# "King Kong V (as Played by 3 Deranged Good Humor Trucks)" (0:34)
50# "King Kong VI (Live on a Flat Bed Diesel in the Middle of a Race Track at a Miami Pop Festival...The Underwood Ramifications)" (7:25)
51
52[-*Penalty track on CD releases (pre-''Meat Light'')-]
53
54!!Personnel
55* Music/FrankZappa: vocals, guitar, percussion
56* Ray Collins: vocals
57* Roy Estrada: vocals, electric bass
58* Don Preston: electric piano
59* Jimmy Carl Black: drums
60* Billy Mundi: drums
61* Bunk Gardner: piccolo, flute, clarinet, bass clarinet, soprano sax, alto sax, tenor sax, bassoon
62* Artie Tripp: drums, timpani, vibes, marimba, xylophone, wood blocks, bells, small chimes
63* Jim "Motorhead" Sherwood: baritone sax, tambourine
64* Ian Underwood: electric organ, piano, harpsichord, celeste, flute, clarinet, alto sax, baritone sax
65* Ruth Komanoff, aka Ruth Underwood: marimba, vibes
66* Nelcy Walker: soprano voice
67* Pamela Zarubica: vocals (as Suzy Creamcheese)
68* Cal Schenkel: album cover design
69----
70
71!! Nine Tropes of Industrial Pollution:
72* AlbumFiller: The original LP was a double album praised by every self-respecting Zappa fan. The CD release, however, had not enough tracks to make it a full double album. To compensate for that Zappa added several minutes of dialogue and a musical track, "Tengo na minchia tanta", from his low-budget film ''Uncle Meat'' (1987) to fill up CD 2 of the album. While "Tengo na minchia tanta" is enjoyable to play more than once the dialogue track isn't.
73* AlbumTitleDrop: The first track is named "Uncle Meat: Main Title Theme", but it's an instrumental composition. The name is never said by anyone on the album.
74* TheAlcoholic:
75** "Dog Breath, in the Year of the Plague"
76--> ''Picks up on my weesa, she is so divine''
77--> ''Helps me stealing hubcaps, wasted all the time''
78** The second voice during "The Air" also mentions he is "wasted":
79--> ''I got busted''
80--> ''(Wasted)''
81--> ''Coming through customs (I'm so wasted)''
82--> ''With a suitcase''
83--> ''(Wasted)''
84--> ''Full of tapes''
85--> ''(I'm so wasted)''
86* AlienGeometries: "Sleeping in a Jar"
87--> ''Mum and dad are sleeping''
88--> ''Sleeping in a jar''
89--> ''The jar is under the bed!''
90* AlliterativeTitle: "'''K'''ing '''K'''ong", "Mr. '''G'''reen '''G'''enes"
91* AllThereInTheManual: The movie script for ''Uncle Meat'' can be read in the liner notes.
92* TheBet: "A Pound for a Brown on the Bus", about a very odd bet. (See RealLifeWritesThePlot)
93* BigEater: In "Mr. Green Genes" the protagonist is eating greens, beans, celery, sauerkraut, a grape, a fig, a crumpet, but then goes on to more bizarre stuff like shoes (strings and all!), socks, the shoe box, a garbage truck, its driver and his gloves.
94* BilingualBonus: "Tengo na minchia tanta", Italian for "I've Got a Big Bunch of Dick". The lyrics continue with the line: "I'm using the chicken to measure it!". The song is sung by Italian rock journalist Massimo Bassoli, who wrote a 1982 book about Zappa called ''Zappa (e' piu' duro di tuo marito)'' [[note]] Which translates to "Harder Than Your Husband", a Zappa song [[/note]].
95* {{Brainwashed}} and MindManipulation: Uncle Meat does this to his victims in ''The Story of Uncle Meat''.
96* CallBack and ContinuityNod:
97** "King Kong" was already heard in a shorter orchestral version on ''Music/LumpyGravy''. On ''Uncle Meat'', however, it receives a full workout. As an obvious reference to ''Film/KingKong1933'' the song also continues monster movie themes regularly found in Zappa's work.
98** "The Voice of Cheese" has Suzy Creamcheese reappear, who debuted on ''Music/FreakOut (1966)'' and was referenced again on ''Music/AbsolutelyFree (1967)''.
99** "A Pound for a Brown on the Bus" is the first Zappa track about tour buses, a topic that would return in later songs of his, like "On the Bus" from ''Music/JoesGarage (1979)''.
100** "Dog Breath, in the Year of the Plague", "The Air", "Our Bizarre Relationship" and "Cruisin' for Burgers" mention car imagery. The protagonist telling his loved one that he loves her in his car is similar to the sketch "Do You Like My New Car?" on ''Music/FillmoreEastJune1971'' (1971). "Dog Breath" also evokes dog imagery again, something that would get more prevalent on later Zappa albums.
101** "Dog Breath, in the Year of the Plague" and "A Pound for a Brown on the Bus" would be performed by Zappa and the Ensemble Modern on ''Music/TheYellowShark'' (1995). "Dog Breath" was also performed on ''Music/JustAnotherBandFromLA" (1972).
102** "Cruisin' for Burgers" and "A Pound for a Brown on the Bus" would be performed live on ''Music/ZappaInNewYork (1977)''.
103** "Our Bizarre Relationship" mentions crabs. Genital diseases would be referenced in later Zappa songs again.
104** "Sleeping in a Jar" reference jar imagery, which is continued on "God Bless America/Prelude to 'King Kong'" where "the old cookie jar" is mentioned and "The Air": "Then I told you/ that I love you/ in my car/ in a jar/ in my car/ in a jar". This is also a CallBack to "Let's Make the Water Turn Black" and "The Idiot Bastard Son" from ''Music/WereOnlyInItForTheMoney'' (1968), in which Ronnie and Kenny stashed away their urine in a large jar. "Tiny Sick Tears" from "You Can't Do That on Stage Anymore, Volume 4" (1991) also mentions somebody going to the kitchen in the middle of the night to sneak up to a cookie jar and grab some cookies. During a concert cited in a 1971 Magazine/PlayboyMagazine interview article by F.P. Tullius Zappa tells a similar anecdote, adding an extra detail. It is apparently an Aunt Jemima jar, providing a link to the track "Electric Aunt Jemima" too.
105--> ''You tiptoe through the living room to the kitchen to find the cookie jar – your favorite oral gratification: oatmeal raisin cookies! They're in the Aunt Jemima cookie jar. You rip her head off and stuff your sweaty teenage hand into her body.''
106*** During "Billy the Mountain" on ''Music/JustAnotherBandFromLA (1972)'' Studebaker Hoch buys some "Aunt Jemima syrup".
107** During "Ian Underwood Whips It Out" Underwood introduces himself as "the straight member of the group." Earlier on ''Music/WereOnlyInItForTheMoney (1968)'' Jimmy Carl Black introduced himself as "the Indian of the Group".
108** "Prelude to King Kong" mentions sneakers and galoshes, evoking shoe imagery that is prominent in several of his song lyrics. The song also mentions high school, a topic Zappa criticized earlier on ''Music/FreakOut (1966)'' and ''Music/AbsolutelyFree (1967)''.
109** "God Bless America" would be covered again, briefly, on ''Music/JustAnotherBandFromLA'' (1971).
110** "Ian Underwood Whips It Out (Live on Stage in Copenhagen)" has Pamela Zarubica interrupt by saying "Wowie Zowie", which was a song from ''Music/FreakOut (1966)''.
111** "Mr. Green Genes" would receive a continuity nod on ''Music/HotRats (1969)'' with the instrumental track "Son of Mr. Green Genes". It was also played live on Zappa's ''Music/TheBestBandYouNeverHeardInYourLife'' (1991). The song advises the listener to eat all kinds of greens, which is a CallBack to the vegetable themes of ''Music/AbsolutelyFree (1967)''. It also mentions to "eat the glove". A gloved hand appears in ''The Story of Uncle Meat'' too.
112** "Prelude to King Kong" on CD 1 already alludes to the EpicRocking on CD 2 with "King Kong".
113** "Cruisin' for Burgers" was given a new instrumental arrangement during the live album ''Music/ZappaInNewYork'' (1977).
114** The movie script "The Story Of Uncle Meat" also has a lot of conceptual continuity:
115*** The plot is typical of a monster B-Movie, the kind Zappa referenced a lot in his lyrics.
116*** Uncle Meat and Bimbo kidnap a rock 'n' roll combo by disguising themselves as groupies and luring them to their garage. Rock stars lusting after groupies are a recurring plot element in Zappa's songs. The garage would reappear later in ''Music/JoesGarage (1979)'' and also brings up more car imagery, including an "old Nash", mentioned during "The Air" too.
117*** Uncle Meat drugs the kidnapped rock combo with Kool-Aid. In "Suzy Creamcheese" on ''Music/AbsolutelyFree (1967)'' we are informed that Suzy "blew her mind on too much Kool-Aid".
118*** A nasal mist squeezer makes the noses of Uncle Meat's victims erect. Zappa often used big noses in his album art work and referenced them in his lyrics too.
119*** The kidnapped rock combo is revealed to be named Ruben & the Jets, the FakeBand from ''Music/CruisingWithRubenAndTheJets'' (1968). This also explains where they got their erect noses on the album cover of that album.
120** One line mentions: ''We are travelling across the wasteland toward a huge hydro-electric dam. Dynamo hum increases as we near it'', which would later receive a CallBack on "Dinah-Moe Humm" from ''Music/OverNiteSensation (1973)''.
121** Uncle Meat would later return as a character in the liner notes of ''Music/TheGrandWazoo (1972)''.
122* TheCameo: Suzy Creamcheese returns during "The Voice of Cheese".
123* CoverIdentityAnomaly: "Cruisin' for Burgers" about the joy of having a fake ID.
124* CoverVersion: "Louie Louie" by Richard Berry and "God Bless America" by Music/IrvingBerlin.
125* CreatorProvincialism: Even though Zappa had already built up a fanbase in Europe at this point Suzy Creamcheese still addresses only "teenage America" during "The Voice of Cheese".
126* CreditsGag: Apart from naming the musicians' real musical contributions the album liner notes also add who are more comedic. Zappa is credited for "low grade" vocals, Jimmy Carl Black for "droll humor" and "poverty", Roy Estrada "cheeseburgers" and "Pachuco falsetto", Don Preston "tarot cards" and brown rice", Billy Mundi "drums on some pieces before he quit to join Rhinoceros, Bunk Gardner "bassoon (all of these electric and/or non-electric depending)", Ian Underwood "industrial relations" and "teen appeal", Artie Trupp "cheerful outlook" and "specific enquiries" and Jim "Motorhead" Sherwood with "obstinance & equipment setter-upper when he's not hustling local groupies".
127* CultSoundtrack: To a movie script that remained in DevelopmentHell forever.
128* CycleOfRevenge: In ''The Story of Uncle Meat'' it is implied that Uncle Meat the MadScientist plots revenge.
129* DepartmentOfRedundancyDepartment:
130** Near the end of "A Pound for a Brown on the Bus" someone says "Fade!"
131** The spoken word introduction of "Ian Underwood Whips It Out (Live on Stage in Copenhagen)" has Underwood tell an anecdote with the following line:
132--> (...) ''I went up to Jim Black and I said, "I like your music, and I'd like to come down and play with you." Two days later I came up to the recording session, and Frank Zappa was sitting in the control room. I walked up and said, "How'd you do, my name is Ian Underwood and I like your music and I'd like to play with your group." '' (...)
133* DepravedDwarf: Bimbo the Mexican slave of Uncle Meat in the movie script found in the liner notes.
134* EatingShoes: "Mr. Green Genes"
135--> ''Eat your shoes''
136--> ''Don't forget the strings''
137--> ''And socks''
138--> ''Even eat the box''
139--> ''You've bought 'em in''
140--> ''You can eat the truck''
141--> ''That brought 'em in''
142* DistinctDoubleAlbum: Both the LP and the CD.
143* ElectronicSpeechImpediment: Several voices and instruments have been sped up on this album, creating an often bizarre, but unique sound.
144* EpicRocking: "Nine Types of Industrial Pollution" which takes six minutes and "King Kong" which runs for over eighteen minutes and takes up the entire final side of the original vinyl release.
145* EvilLaugh: According to ''The Story of Uncle Meat'', Uncle Meat laughs when his diabolical plan gets into motion.
146* EvilUncle: Uncle Meat, who plans on ruling the world with an army of mutant monsters.
147* FadingIntoTheNextSong: As with most of Zappa's albums from this period, most of the songs fade into one another. Apart from LP side divisions, there aren't too many complete fade-outs.
148* FakeBand: Ruben and the Jets in ''The Story of Uncle Meat''.
149* FakeOutFadeOut: After the first epic rocking of "King Kong" comes to a close the piece starts again in a different variation.
150* FourthWallGreeting: "The Voice of Cheese".
151--> ''Hello, teenage America...''
152* GetOut: Near the end of "The Legend of the Golden Arches" Pamela Zarubica tells an anecdote where the sound of the amplifiers was too loud, causing people in the audience to boo them to get off stage.
153* GreenAesop: As seen below under RealLifeWritesThePlot, "Nine Types of Industrial Pollution" received its title because industrial pollution wasn't taken seriously at the time.
154* ImAHumanitarian: "Mr. Green Genes" advices the listener to eat the garbage truck driver and his gloves.
155* ImmortalitySeeker: In ''The Story of Uncle Meat'' Uncle Meat drinks a potion that will making him immortal.
156* {{Instrumentals}}: "Uncle Meat: Main Title Theme", "Nine Types of Industrial Pollution", "Zolar Czakl", "The Legend of the Golden Arches", "The Dog Breath Variations", "Prelude to King Kong", "A Pound for a Brown on the Bus", "Ian Underwood Whips It Out (Live on Stage in Copenhagen)", "We Can Shoot You", "Project X" and "King Kong".
157* KillerGorilla: "King Kong".
158* {{Lampshading}}: The imbecilic lyrics of "Mr. Green Genes" are lampshaded near the end:
159--> Nutritiousness... deliciousness... worthlessness!
160* LastChorusSlowDown:
161** "King Kong Part I-IV" starts slowing down near the end through clever tape manipulation mimicking the introduction notes.
162* LeaveTheCameraRunning:
163** "If We'd All Been Living in California": Zappa had the habit of secretly recording stuff. One of those recordings can be heard on the album where band member Jimmy Carl Black complains about the desperate need for money.
164** "We Can Shoot You" has a small interlude between Ian Underwood and Bunk Gardner before they start playing:
165--> '''Ian''': "Dee . . . dee BAH dam . . . eeeeh-dam pa-pa-pa-pa-pam . . . tee-pa pa-pa-pa-pa-pam! And just wail out the last one".
166--> '''Bunk'': "Mmm, let's [stack] here, then.
167--> '''Ian''': "Yeah."
168--> '''Bunk''': "Three, four..."
169* LiveAlbum: Three tracks are live:
170** "Louie Louie (at the Royal Albert Hall in London)".
171** "God Bless America (Live at the Whisky a Go Go)".
172** "Ian Underwood Whips It Out (Live on Stage in Copenhagen)"
173* LonersAreFreaks: Both figuratively and literally in "The Voice of Cheese", where Suzy Creamcheese claims she couldn't make it in the beatnik set, the surfin' set, or the groupie set, so she joined Zappa's freak movement instead.
174* MadeASlave: Bimbo the Mexican Slave of Uncle Meat in ''The Story of Uncle Meat''.
175* MadScientist: The script for the unfinished movie of which ''Uncle Meat'' was supposed to be the CultSoundtrack is about an evil scientist called Uncle Meat, planning to rule the universe with an army of mutant monsters.
176* {{Mooning}}: "A Pound for a Brown on the Bus" (see RealLifeWritesThePlot)
177* MundaneMadeAwesome:
178** One of the tracks was recorded live at the Royal Albert Hall in London where Don Preston climbed the ancient pipe organ of the concert hall and performed the DooWop[=/=]rock 'n' roll song "Louie Louie" on it. The audience went berserk of such hilarious musical blasphemy.
179** "A Pound for a Brown on the Bus" is an instrumental track, inspired by two of Zappa's band members engaging in a "truth or dare" game for money. Bunk Gardner bet that Jimmy Carl Black wouldn't dare to show his behind on the tour bus. Before his words were cold, Jimmy has already taken his pants off and done it, thus winning the bet.
180* MyCountryTisOfTheeThatISting:
181** "God Bless America", a PatrioticFervor song by Music/IrvingBerlin sung in the most ridiculous way possible.
182** Zappa described the instrumental track "King Kong" once in 1967 before an audience in Stockholm, Sweden with the following introduction:
183--> ''The name of this song is "King Kong". It's the story of a very large gorilla who lived in the jungle. And he was doing okay until some Americans came by and thought that they would take him home with them. They took him to the United States, and they made some money by using the Gorilla; [[KingKongClimb then they killed him]]''.
184* NeverAcceptedInHisHomeTown: "The Voice of Cheese"
185--> ''Now that I've done it all over and nobody else will accept me, I've come home to my Mothers''
186* NoTitle: "Project X".
187* AnOddPlaceToSleep: "Sleeping in a Jar" in which we are informed that mummy and daddy are sleeping in a jar and that the jar "is under the bed."
188* OneWomanSong: "Electric Aunt Jemima".
189* ThePigPen: "Our Bizarre Relationship" tells an anecdote about someone who owned a cat with fleas and people with crabs, which they "proceeded to give to everybody in Laurel Canyon".
190* ThePlague: "Dog Breath in the Year of the Plague".
191* PrecisionFStrike:
192** "Our Bizarre Relationship":
193--> ''I can remember Elmer telling me that you really had a lot of talent, but he didn't see how anyone could ever make it that insisted on saying FUCK on stage''.
194** "The Voice of Cheese":
195--> ''I never made it on the surfing set, and I never made it on the beatnik set, and I couldn't cut the groupie set either, and, um... actually, I really fucked up in Europe.''
196* RealLifeWritesThePlot:
197** "Nine Types of Industrial Pollution" was thought of by Zappa after driving through New Jersey. As he recalled during an 1988 interview with Bob Marshall:
198--> ''The funny thing is that at the time (...) there was no such thing as a concern over industrial pollution. It hadn't even been brought up as a topic.''
199** Zappa explained the anecdote behind "A Pound for a Brown on the Bus" in London in 1969:
200--> ''We have these surfers and they have this curious thing called the Brown Out, which is part of their culture. Now, the Brown Out is the thing that you do to impress your surfer friends and to make other people's eyebrows go up and down. And what you do is you get the other person's attention-- you wave at them or you say something amusing--and they turn around and look at you and then suddenly you reverse your position, drop your pants, and [[{{Mooning}} stick your buns out at them. That is a Brown Out. Also known as a Brown]]. And also known as {{Mooning}} on the East Coast. There are a number of variations on this procedure. If you Brown Out against a wire screen, its called a chipped beef. And if you do it against a plate glass window at a delicatessen, its called a pressed ham. Last year, before we did our Festival Hall show, we arrived at the airport and were provided with a touring bus with nice big windows so that everybody on the outside could see in and we could see out. The lovely ride from the airport to the Winton Hotel. During this trip, a wager was made between Jimmy Carl Black, the Indian of the group, and Bunk Gardner, our silver-haired tenor saxophone virtuoso. Jimmy Carl Black turned to Bunk Gardner and said "I'll bet you a pound you won't Brown Out on this here bus." Bunk Gardner, being the crafty silver-haired devil that he is, quickly computed the difference between a pound and a dollar and had his pants off before anybody knew what was happening.''
201* ShoutOut:
202** The line "My ship of love is ready to attack" in "Dog Breath" refers to "Ship of Love", the most famous hit by the {{Doowop}} band the Nutmegs.
203** "Zolar Czakl" is the name of a rock-climbing route in Boulder Canyon, Colorado.
204** "King Kong", a reference to ''Film/KingKong1933''.
205** "The Legend of the Golden Arches" has been interpreted as a reference to UsefulNotes/{{McDonalds}} ''M'' sign.
206** "Electric Aunt Jemima" references Aunt Jemima, the mascot of the ''Aunt Jemima'' pancakes, flour, syrup and other breakfast items. Though Zappa also nicknamed his guitar amplifier under that name. As he explained in a 1969 "International Times" interview:
207--> ''I get kind of a laugh out of the fact that other people are going to try and interpret that stuff and come up with some grotesque, I mean really grotesque, interpretations of it. It gives me a certain amount of satisfaction. You can imagine how insane that must get on a song 'Electric Aunt Jemima' which was written about an amplifier. Yes, it's a Standall amplifier, about this big, that I used on a couple of sessions. But there are some other references in the song to a meeting held in the Denny's Coffee Shop in Lancaster California about six or seven years ago at about four o'clock in the morning. Don Vliet, who is otherwise known to the world as Music/CaptainBeefheart, and I were sitting in this coffee shop discussing what we were going to do to the music business, and it's the line about 'Monza' because we were discussing the problems of lyrics in the music we were being fed on the radio. I always felt that the music I grew up with, except for the rhythm & blues, was just horrible and I didn't want to be subjected to it and I wished that I'd had something better to choose from. But I couldn't get anything better so we were talking about this and I said, 'Well I'm going to do this', and Don says, 'Well, I'm going to do that', and I said, 'OK, well let's go do that'.
208** In the photos inside the liner notes the phrase "Fast 'n' bulbous" can be read, which is a nod to ''Music/TroutMaskReplica'' by Music/CaptainBeefheart, an album produced by Zappa.
209** "Sleeping in a Jar" was sampled by hip hop duo Madvillain (consisting of Music/MFDoom and Madlib) on the track "Meat Grinder" from the album "Madvillainy" (2004) and later too by hip hop artist Tyler, The Creator from ''Music/{{OFWGKTA}}'' on his track "Fuck This Election"
210* SillyLoveSongs: "Dog Breath, in the Year of the Plague" and "Electric Aunt Jemima" are surreal love songs.
211* SlapSlapKiss: "The Air"
212--> ''I hit you''
213--> ''Then I beat you''
214--> ''Then I told you''
215--> ''That I love you''
216* SpecialGuest: Pamela Zarubica as Suzy Creamcheese during "The Voice of Cheese" and the London Philharmonic Orchestra during "Louie Louie", recorded at the Royal Albert Hall in London. Ruth Underwood has an early appearance playing marimba and vibes on "many of the tracks" and would later reappear on "Burnt Weeny Sandwich" (1969) too, but would only become a full member of Zappa's band from ''Film/TwoHundredMotels'' (1971) on.
217* SpeechBubbles: Used inside the album sleeve in the photographs.
218* SpokenWordInMusic:
219** "The Voice of Cheese"
220** "Louie Louie (at the Royal Albert Hall in London)"
221** Near the end of "The Legend of the Golden Arches"
222** "Our Bizarre Relationship"
223** The intro to "Ian Underwood Whips It Out (Live on Stage in Copenhagen)"
224** "If We'd All Been Living in California..."
225** "Prelude to King Kong"
226--> ''Here's one with your father's moustache, your old cookie jar, rubbers, sneakers, galoshes, belt buckles, and book covers with the name of your high school neatly imprinted in crimson and gold on the front with a picture of the goal post and last year's queen.''
227* StarvingArtist: "If We'd All Been Living in California"
228--> ''We're starving, man! This fucking band is starving! And we've been starving for three years.''
229* StockSoundEffects: Laughter, grunting, car horn sounds,... appear at unexpected moments during the instrumentals.
230* StraightMan: Ian Underwood introduces himself as such on "Ian Underwood Whips It Out".
231* StudioChatter: Several small pieces of dialogue are scattered throughout the album.
232* ThreewaySex: "Our Bizarre Relationship"
233--> ''No-one could ever understand our bizarre relationship because I was your intellectual frigid housekeeper. Especially when you'd be going to bed with one chick at night and I wake up in the morning and find another one there, screaming at me . . . ha ha . . . Asked me what the fuck that chick was doing in your bed and I'd walk in and you weren't with the same one you were in the night before''.
234* ToiletHumour: The origin story behind "A Pound for a Brown on the Bus".
235* UnreliableNarrator:
236--> ''I can't tell when you're telling the truth.''
237--> ''I'm not.''
238--> ''How do I know everything you say is true?''
239--> ''You don't!''
240* WordSaladLyrics: Many of the songs of the album have surreal and incomprehensible lyrics. The only ones that make a little sense are "The Air" and "Cruisin' for Burgers". Zappa said most of the lyrics on the album were in-jokes with his band members.

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