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The 1993
Playboy Interview
From Playboy, April, 1993
Frank Zappa; rock musician; Interview
a candid conversation with the
most original mind in rock music about world affairs, jewish
princesses, fighting cancer and life beyond the fringe
Few would doubt that Vaclav Havel,
the Czech playwright-turned-politician, and Matt Groening, creator
of "The Simpsons," make an odd pair. Yet in separate interviews,
when asked which person had the greatest influence on their lives,
both came up with the same name: Frank Zappa. "Who else?" wondered
Groening. "I listened to the music, I dissected the lyrics and it
transformed me."
Havel and Groening are not alone.
In this years Playboy Music Poll, our readers chose Zappa as the
43rd inductee into the Playboy Music Hall of Fame, where he joins
the likes of Frank Sinatra, John Lennon and Bruce Springsteen. But
even before the votes had been counted, Playboy's editors had
Zappa on their minds and had invited him to sit for the "Playboy
Interview." The result is an unusual coincidence: For the first
time in the magazine's history, an issue of Playboy both announces
the Hall of Fame winner and features him in the interview.
What makes this occurrence even
more unusual is that Frank Zappa is no mainstream musician. While
he is lionized in Europe, his avant-garde compositions and
pointed, satirical lyrics are seldom heard on America radio. As he
admits, people are often confused and angered by his work. As the
leader of the Mothers of Invention, one of the weirdest - and most
brilliant - experimental bands ever, Zappa earned a prominent
place in rock lore. He didn't do drugs, he fought censorship and
he distributed a poster of himself sealed nude on a toilet,
calling it "Phi Zappa Krappa." It's no wonder that the first
chapter of his autobiography is tilled "How Weird Am I, Anyway?"
Over the course of his career, few
were left unscathed by Zappa's wicked satire set to music. A Randy
Newman with fangs, Zappa went after fashion, hypocrisy and
stereotypes, managing to offend an amazing array of people. Women
were incensed over the song "Titties and Beer," parents were
horrified by such lyrics as "Watch out where the huskies go/and
don't you eat that yellow snow" and gays were furious over "He's
So Gay." The Anti-Defamation League of the B'nai B'rith denounced
"Jewish Princess" ("with overworked gums, she squeaks when she
comes") and demanded an apology. As always, Zappa refused.
Like his fans, his enemies could
take some consolation in the fact that they weren't alone. Zappa's
attacks crossed political and ideological lines; he skewered Jesse
Jackson, former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop, rednecks and
televangelists.
His music confounded his fans, too.
His range often seemed limitless, as he jumped successfully from
rock to jazz to classical. He has released more than 50 albums,
including "Freak Out," "Sheik Yerbouti," "Apostrophe," "200
Motels" (also the name of a film, now a cult classic) and "Jazz
from Hell." His classical music has been lauded in stuffy circles,
and he has released albums of his work performed by the London
Symphony Orchestra. in Frankfurt, Germany, his soon-to-be-released
"The Yellow Shark" was the highlight of a festival last fall, and
earlier this year the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in
New York presented "The Music of Frank Zappa" as part of its Great
Performers series.
Zappa was able to make enemies even
when he wasn't making music. He took on Tipper Gore and Susan
Baker, wife of former Secretary of State James Baker, when they
demanded that records be rated according to content - the same way
movies are. Zappa testified before the Senate Commerce Committee,
calling Gore, Baker and their committee "a group of bored
Washington housewives" who wanted to "housebreak all composers and
performers because of the lyrics of a few." He lost the crusade
but remained a vigorous advocate of First Amendment rights.
He has also campaigned to encourage
his audiences to vote. Voter registration booths were set up in
the lobbies of the concert halls in which he performed. In his
"Video from Hell" (the companion to "Jazz from Hell"), he included
a note that read, "Register to vote and read the Constitution
before it's void where prohibited by law. " His frustrations with
government led him to consider being part of it: In 1991 he
announced that he was running for president.
After some bad experiences in the
record business (in the song "Brown Shoes Don't Make It," he
memorialized the businessmen who screwed him), Zappa and his wife
(and manager), Gail, formed their own record labels and
merchandising operation. (There's even a Zappa hotline:
1-818-PUMPKIN.) His broad insight into economics and politics
inspired the Financial News Network to ask him to guest-host a
talk show. That gig took him to Czechoslovakia to meet with Havel,
then the president, before the country split into two republics.
Zappa's music had been smuggled
behind the iron curtain since the Sixties, and he had become a
hero to the Czech people. His song "Plastic People" was an
underground anthem. When he visited Prague, students told him that
he had been considered one of the worst enemies of the Communist
state. One student told of being arrested by the secret police,
jailed and beaten. "We are going to beat the Zappa music out of
your head," the officer screamed. Upon meeting Zappa, the boy
said, "Our dream has come true today.
Havel was so enamored of him that
he made Zappa the country's special ambassador to the West on
trade, culture and tourism. Zappa had big plans to help bridge
cultural and economic barriers with the West. The appointment,
however, was derailed by Secretary of State Baker. Columnist Jack
Anderson reported that Baker was "carrying an old grudge" from
Zappa's dismissal of Susan Baker as a "bored housewife." "When
Baker arrived in Prague," Anderson wrote, "he had his surrogates
convey his displeasure to Havel." Havel succumbed to the pressure
and canceled the appointment.
Zappa came far to have such
high-placed enemies. A song called "Son of Mr. Green Genes" made
people think his father was the character on "Captain Kangaroo,"
but in truth, he is the son of a meteorologist who did research on
poison gases for the military. Gas masks hung on a wall of the
family's home in case of an accident with the chemical weapons his
father studied.
The family moved frequently before
ending up in Lancaster, California, where Frank played drums in
the school marching band. His musical taste, however, was
eclectic; while his classmates swooned over Elvis, he listened to
composers such as Edgard Varese and Anton Webern.
In Lancaster, Zappa formed his
first garage band, the Black-Outs (so named after the night some
of his bandmates drank too much peppermint schnapps and blacked
out). He later joined the Soul Giants, which became the Mothers of
Invention. With Zappa as their guitar-wielding leader, the Mothers
were known for their excellent and innovative music - "Uncle
Meat," "Weasels Ripped My Flesh" and "The Grand Wazoo" are classic
albums - and for their antics. One of the more colorful rock
legends maintains that Zappa and Alice Cooper had a gross-out
contest onstage: After Cooper allegedly squashed some live baby
chicks, Zappa supposedly picked up a plastic spoon and ate a plate
of steaming feces. Although Zappa denies it, he's been haunted by
the story for years.
While his reputation for weirdness
is his trademark, his private life seems eminently sane. Now 52,
he has been married to Gail for 25 years and is a devoted father
to his four children - Moon Unit, 25 (she was the voice of the
obnoxious "Valley Girl" in his 1982 hit song), Dweezil, 23, Ahmet,
18, and Diva, 13. It was Moon and Dweezil who shocked their
father's fans in November 1991 when they announced that he had
been diagnosed with prostate cancer. The illness forced him to
drop his planned presidential campaign, and both work and travel
have been disrupted. His "Playboy Interview," was conducted by
Contributing Editor David Sheff, who most recently chatted with
Steve Martin for the January 1993 interview. Sheff reports:
"The Zappa home is a mock-Tudor
Pee-wee's Playhouse in fast-forward mode. In one room, a
state-of-the-art recording studio, engineers work on computers and
recording equipment, and in another room, editors pore over frames
of videotape. Various assistants dash through halls decorated with
memorabilia such as gold records and Zappa license plates. On one
wall is a poster of Ronald Reagan as Adolf Hitler.
"I waited for Zappa in a wood-paneled
room on a comfortable old couch opposite a redbrick fireplace.
When Frank came in, he attempted to sit comfortably in a large
purple leather chair. But comfort was impossible - Zappa explained
that the pain had invaded his lower back.
"The interview was interrupted
briefly by assistants bringing coffee or Frank's dinner, a bagel
and cream cheese. Gail sleepily stopped in to say hello; she was
exhausted after an all-night flight from Tokyo, where she had gone
with Diva and Moon Unit to see Dweezil play guitar with a Japanese
pop star. Later, Diva came in, flopped on her dad's lap and gave
him a big kiss, telling him how much she had missed him.
"Zappa, with his trademark mustache
and sideburns, chain-smoked while he spoke with unmistakable
passion, and urgency, about his music, his politics, his family
and his illness. Occasionally, pain overcame him and he stopped
speaking. I asked if he wanted to take a break and resume later.
No,' he said, let's keep going.'
"We finished after seven straight
hours and as we wound up, I fell both inspired and deeply
saddened. I thanked him and told him it was a good interview. He
said, As long as it goes beyond the fringe.'"
PLAYBOY: You once said that your
job is "extrapolating everything to its most absurd extreme." Does
that still hold true
ZAPPA: It's one of my jobs. I guess
it must have been my main job that day. But yes, I like carrying
things to their most ridiculous extreme because out there on the
fringe is where my type of entertainment lies.
PLAYBOY: Is it frustrating that
more people don't get it?
ZAPPA: The crux of the biscuit is:
If it entertains you, fine. Enjoy it. If it doesn't, then blow it
out your ass. I do it to amuse myself. If I like it, I release it.
If somebody else likes it, that's a bonus.
PLAYBOY: How important is it to
offend people?
ZAPPA: You mean, do I wake up and
say, "I think I'll go out and offend somebody today"? I don't do
that. I don't write lyrics much anymore, but I offend people just
as much with the music itself. I put chords together that I like,
but many people want rhythms that they can march to or dance to;
they get tangled up trying to tap their foot to my songs. Some
people don't like that, which is OK with me.
PLAYBOY: You certainly offended
people with the Phi Zappa Krappa poster.
ZAPPA: Probably. But so what?
PLAYBOY: And some of your antics
from the Mothers of Invention days, like the famed gross-out
contest.
ZAPPA: There never was a gross-out
contest. That was a rumor. Somebody's imagination ran wild.
Chemically bonded imagination. The rumor was that I went so far as
to eat shit onstage. There were people who were terribly
disappointed that I never ate shit onstage. But no, there never
was anything resembling a gross-out contest.
PLAYBOY: Another rumor was that you
peed on an audience.
ZAPPA: I never had my dick out
onstage and neither did anybody else in the band. We did have a
stuffed giraffe rigged with a hose and an industrial-strength
whipped cream dispenser. Under it we had a cherry bomb. That's how
we celebrated the Fourth of July in 1967. Somebody waved the flag,
lit the cherry bomb. It blew the ass out of the giraffe. Another
guy reached behind the giraffe and pushed the button and had this
thing shitting whipped cream all over the stage. That amused
people for some reason.
PLAYBOY: So it was simply contained
outrageousness?
ZAPPA: Stagecraft.
PLAYBOY: To entertain or just to
alleviate boredom?
ZAPPA: There was a third factor,
too. There's an art statement in whipped cream shooting out the
ass of a giraffe, isn't there? We were carrying on the forgotten
tradition of dada stagecraft. The more absurd, the better I liked
it.
PLAYBOY: The titles of your records
and songs are art statements, too.
ZAPPA: Well, you have to call them
something, so why not call them something amusing?
PLAYBOY: For example, Burnt Weeny
Sandwich?
ZAPPA: I still eat burnt weeny
sandwiches. It's one of the great things in life. At least it's a
great lunch. You take a Hebrew National, put it on a fork, burn it
on the stove, wrap two pieces of bread around it, squirt some
mustard on it, eat it and you're back to work.
PLAYBOY: You've also used your
songs to level political attacks. You wrote Rhymin' Man about
Jesse Jackson. What made you so angry?
ZAPPA: An article raised some
questions about whether or not Martin Luther King actuallyy died
in Jesse's arms. There were reports that Jackson dipped his hands
into King's blood or even used chicken blood and rubbed it on his
shirt, which we wore for a few days afterward as he met the media.
So I did this song about the idea of communicating through nursery
rhymes, as Jackson is prone to do. It rubs me the wrong way. I'm
not saying that all of Jesse's ideas are bad; I agree with some of
them. But I'm not confident that Jesse Jackson would be the person
I would look to to implement any of them. I don't want to see any
religious people in public office because they're working for
another boss.
PLAYBOY: You also assailed former
Surgeon General C. Everett Koop in a song.
ZAPPA: HBO ran something like "Dr.
Koop Answers Your Questions About AIDS." On it, I saw him explain
how AIDS got from the green monkey to the human population. He
speculated about a native who wanted to eat a green monkey, who
skinned it, cut his finger and some of the green monkey's blood
got into his blood. The next thing you know, you have this
blood-to-blood transmission of the disease. I mean, this is awful
fucking thin. It's right up there with Grimm's Fairy Tales. And
Koop was such a cartoon character with that uniform and
everything. Before Ronald Reagan, when did you ever see a surgeon
general dressed up like the guy in the Katzenjammer Kids?
PLAYBOY: Because of songs such as
Dinah Moe Humm ("I got a forty-dollar bill say you can't make me
come"), He's So Gay and many others, you have been accused of
being sexist, misogynistic and homophobic.
ZAPPA: Some people miss the joke.
In general, I was a convenient enemy and they could get exposure
for their causes by coming after me. But I'm not antigay. When
Ross Perot announced he was running for president, I wanted him to
choose Barney Frank as a vice-presidential candidate. He is one of
the most impressive guys in Congress. He is a great model for
young gay men.
PLAYBOY: But you were criticized
for Bobby Brown Goes Down and He's So Gay.
ZAPPA: But see, I'm a journalist of
a sort. I have a right to say what I want to say about any topic.
If you don't have a sense of humor, then tough titties.
PLAYBOY: is that what you said when
you were attacked by the Anti-Defamation League for Jewish
Princess?
Zappa: They wanted to convince the
world that there's no such thing as a Jewish princess, but, I'm
sorry, the facts speak for themeselves. They asked me to apologize
and I refused. I still have their letter nailed to the wall. They
got a lot of mileage out of it, but it was a tempest in a teapot.
They just wanted to give the impression that here, in the world of
rock, was this rabid anti-Semite who was besmirching the fine
reputation of everybody of the Jewish faith. Well, I didn't make
up the idea of a Jewish princess. They exist, so I wrote a song
about them. If they don't like it, so what? Italians have
princesses, too.
PLAYBOY: Is there rhyme or reason
behind the subjects you choose to attack?
ZAPPA: Whatever I'm mad at at the
time. I like things that work. If something doesn't, the first
question you have to ask is, Why? if it's not working and you know
why, then you have to ask, "Why isn't somebody doing something
about it?" The government, for starters. Most institutions. The
nation's education system is completely fucked up.
PLAYBOY: Fucked up how?
ZAPPA: The schools are worthless
because the books are worthless. They still are on the level of
George Washington and the cherry tree and "I cannot tell a lie."
The books have all been bowdlerized by committees responding to
pressure from right-wing groups to make every aspect of the
history books consistent with the cryptofascist view-point. When
you send your kids to school, that's what they're dealing with.
Your children are being presented with these documents, part of a
multibillion-dollar industry, which are absolutely fraudulent.
Kids' heads are crammed with so many nonfacts that when they get
out of school they're totally unprepared to do anything. They
can't read, they can't write, they can't think. Talk about child
abuse. The U.S. school system as a whole qualifies.
PLAYBOY: Did you find alternative
schools for your kids?
ZAPPA: In California you can take
your kids out of school at 15 if they can pass the equivalency
test, so the first three have escaped. Diva still has a couple of
years to go.
PLAYBOY: Before they escaped, how
did you deal with it?
ZAPPA: We had them in public school
and private school, back and forth, trying to find the best
possible education that we could get for them.
PLAYBOY: Regardless of what they
learned at school, they certainly must get an education around
here.
ZAPPA: There definitely is a little
stimulation around here. They meet a lot of people from all over
the world and of all different nationalities and races and
business backgrounds. The kids aren't shoveled into a room.
PLAYBOY: Did the perspective you
gave them prepare them for those bad schools?
ZAPPA: It caused them trouble,
because when they compared what qualifies as the real world here
in this house with what they experienced as the real world in
school, it was very different. Sometimes their friends think
they're weird. On the other hand, their friends like to spend the
night over here.
PLAYBOY: Were the teachers
horrified?
ZAPPA: Some of them. They had a few
teachers who were great. One could have taught a couch to read.
She was fired because she wasn't Mexican. The school had an ethnic
quota, and she was out.
PLAYBOY: If Tipper Gore was right
and exposure to an uncensored world is bad for kids, your kids
must be monsters.
ZAPPA: My kids do OK. I like them a
lot and they seem to like me and their mother. They don't use
drugs. They don't drink. They don't even eat meat.
PLAYBOY: What have you said to your
kids about drugs?
ZAPPA: All I told them was, "You
see examples of drug-crazed people on television and all you have
to do is look at those assholes." They get the point. The biggest
thing you can do for kids is give them the ability to figure
things out. I use a risk-reward program. One of my kids comes to
me and tells me he or she wants to do something. I say no if I
don't think it's a good idea. If they can convince me, logically,
that I'm wrong, they get to do it.
PLAYBOY: You're creating your worst
nightmare: a house full of lawyers.
ZAPPA: I don't think we have to
worry about any of them becoming lawyers. But it does help to
develop reasoning and communication skills - you might even call
it sales skills - to manage to get your way in a fast and
efficient manner. I don't think it hurts. Look at the alternative:
They could go "Wah-wah-wah" or break things, or sneak. We don't
have very much in the way of tantrums or sneakage problems.
I look at kids as little people.
The little people have certain assets and liabilities. They're
born with an unbound imagination. They're born without fear and
prejudice. On the other hand, they don't have the mechanical
skills to do big-person stuff. But if you treat them like people,
they'll learn. If you think of them as your precious little
commodities and you want to mold them and shape them into
something that you imagine for them, it breeds problems.
PLAYBOY: You obviously don't buy
the argument that you have to give your kids something to rebel
against.
ZAPPA: Well, my children certainly
have decided not to grow up like me. They don't smoke. They don't
eat hamburgers or bacon. They find their own way. I just want to
keep them out of trouble and make sure that they can get to
adulthood with some sort of marketable skill and a chance for a
happy life on their own terms. I don't want them to be like me or
like Gail. They should be like them. And they should be as well
equipped to be themselves as possible. As parents we have to do
everything to give them the equipment to be themselves, so that
when they go out into the world they can maintain their identity
and still survive.
PLAYBOY: Would they have been
different had you named them Sally or John?
ZAPPA: It's the last name that gets
them into trouble.
PLAYBOY: How?
ZAPPA: I'm viewed as being weird.
When somebody calls you weird, then anything you touch becomes
weird. On the other hand, they like being weird.
PLAYBOY: And their first names
distinguish them for anyone unconvinced by their last name?
ZAPPA: I want them to be different.
I know that the people in these schools will never be different
because they're afraid to be different. But my kids are
genetically different, so they might as well be different all the
way.
PLAYBOY: Chastity Bono once told a
reporter how terrible her name is. She said when she complained,
Sonny reminded her, "Be thankful we didn't name you Dweezil." Have
any of your kids threatened to change their names?
ZAPPA: No. I think they like them,
though you'd have to ask them. We all get along well. That seems
to be a rare thing in a family today. The family itself is a
vanishing artifact. In the Nineties, if you have a family and the
people inside the family have affection for one another, it's kind
of a miracle. It's mutant behavior. I mean, they yell and scream
at one another like any other kids. But most of the time they play
together.
PLAYBOY: How did you meet Gail?
ZAPPA: She was working at the
Whiskey a-Go-Go in L.A. I fell in love with her instantly.
PLAYBOY: Is it true you didn't give
her a wedding ring;
ZAPPA: I didn't have one, so when
we got married, I pinned a ballpoint pen on her dress. It was a
maternity dress because she was nine months pregnant.
PLAYBOY: These days, particularly
in your profession, twenty-five-year marriages are uncommon. Why
has yours lasted?
ZAPPA: We both are busy with what
we care about. She's good at what she does, and I leave her alone
when it comes to that. I spent so much time on the road that we
were always glad to see each other when the tours were over. The
other thing is I guess we like each other.
PLAYBOY: Is there a lot of music in
your house? What music do your kids listen to?
ZAPPA: When Ahmet was in sixth
grade, he liked Fiddler on the Roof and Oliver! Recently he
discovered Hoagy Carmichael and Johnny Mercer. Diva likes rap
music of all languages. Moon likes dance-oriented stuff. Dweezil
likes anything with a guitar in it.
PLAYBOY: How do you like his music?
ZAPPA: The best of it, I think, is
his instrumental music, which is very involved technically; the
rhythms and intervals are complicated and his execution is
spotless.
PLAYBOY: How about you? Have you
lost your interest in rock and roll?
ZAPPA: My main interest is
composition - getting an idea and manifesting it in a way that
people can listen to.
PLAYBOY: How much has technology
changed your music?
ZAPPA: Without the computer I would
still be at the mercy of musicians to play my music. I would also
be at the mercy of governmental and civic entities that fund
performances.
PLAYBOY: After your last tour, you
said you wouldn't be touring again.
ZAPPA: Well, I couldn't afford it.
I lost $ 400,000 on it and I don't wish to experience that again.
PLAYBOY: Do you ever miss the -
ZAPPA: Rock-and-roll life? No.
PLAYBOY: How about the experience
of the performance?
ZAPPA: A little bit. Every once in
a while I, feel like playing the guitar, but I stop and think what
I'd have to go through in order to do it. The urge goes away.
PLAYBOY: Is it particularly
gratifying to get commissions such as the one from the Frankfurt
Festival last year?
ZAPPA: That one was really
something. It was a whole evening of my music, which was part of a
whole week of my music, new pieces and old. It was performed in
Frankfurt, Berlin and Vienna.
PLAYBOY: Do you have any theories
about why your music has been more popular in Europe than in
America?
ZAPPA: Germans, in particular, have
a history of supporting new composition. They also have a viable
contemporary tradition of new music that gets funded and performed
regularly.
PLAYBOY: Was it always your goal to
do classical music? ZAPPA: That's where I started. I didn't write
rock and roll until I was in my twenties, but I started writing
other kinds of music. I couldn't play it, I could only write it.
PLAYBOY: Where did the interest
come from?
ZAPPA: I liked the way music looked
on paper. It was fascinating to me that you could see the notes
and somebody. who knew what they were doing would look at them and
music would come out. I thought it was a miracle. I was always
interested in graphics, and I spent most of my creative time in my
early days in school drawing pictures. I got a Speedball pen and a
jar of Higgins India ink and some music paper and, shit, I could
draw those.
PLAYBOY: It was originally about a
picture, not a sound?
ZAPPA: Yes. And then I got someone
to play it. I went to my grandmother's funeral when I was little
and I sat there looking at the candles. The choir was singing, and
when they would sing a note, the candles would respond to it. I
didn't know why. I was a little kid; what the fuck did I know
about physics? But it was a physical manifestation of a sound. I
remembered it; I put it in the memory bank to see what I could do
with it later. It shows how bored I was at the funeral.
PLAYBOY: Did your parents play
music,
ZAPPA: No. We had a very unmusical
household.
PLAYBOY: Your father worked with
poison gas for a living. Did you understand the implications of
that?
ZAPPA: Yeah. I just took it as a
fact of life. We lived in a place where we were obliged to have
gas masks hanging on the wall in case the tanks broke, because you
could die. Thinking back on it, if those tanks had broken, those
gas masks wouldn't have saved us.
PLAYBOY: How close were the tanks?
ZAPPA: There were tanks of mustard
gas next to the Army housing we lived in. We were right down the
street from this shit. We had a rack in the hall, with Daddy's
mask, Momma's mask and Frank's mask hanging on it. I used to wear
mine all the time. It was my space helmet. There was a can at the
end of the hose that had the filtration unit in it, and I always
wondered what was in it. I took a can opener and unscrewed it to
find out how it worked. My father got very upset when I opened it
up because I broke it and he would have to get me another one,
which he never did. I was defenseless.
PLAYBOY: Were your parents
religious,
ZAPPA: Pretty religious.
PLAYBOY: Church and confession?
ZAPPA: Oh, yeah. They used to make
me go. They tried to make me go to Catholic school, too. I lasted
a very short time. When the penguin came after me with a ruler, I
was out of there.
PLAYBOY: So you were headstrong.
ZAPPA: Yeah. I still went to church
regularly, though, until I was eighteen years old. Then suddenly,
the light bulb went on over my head. All the mindless mobidity and
discipline was pretty sick - bleeding this, painful that and no
meat on Friday. What is this shit?
PLAYBOY: Is the irreverence and
outrageousness in your music a reaction to being a good Catholic
boy?
ZAPPA: Well, I think it was
possible to do what I've done only because I escaped the bondage
of being a devout believer. To be a good member of the
congregation, ultimately you have to stop thinking. The essence of
Christianity is told to us in the Garden of Eden story. The fruit
that was forbidden was on the tree of knowledge. The subtext is,
All the suffering you have is because you wanted to find out what
was going on. You could still be in the Garden of Eden if you had
just kept your fucking mouth shut and hadn't asked any questions.
PLAYBOY: Did the end of your
refigiousness coincide with your step into rock and roll?
ZAPPA: It was right about the same
time. I was pretty isolated. There weren't any cultural
opportunities in Lancaster. You couldn't just go to a concert.
There was nothing.
PLAYBOY: Were you tempted by drugs?
ZAPPA: All you'd have to do was
look at the people who used them and that was enough. People would
do frightening things and think it was fantastic. Then they would
discuss it endlessly with the next guy, who had taken the same
drug. I tried marijuana and waited for something to happen. I got
a sore throat and it made me sleepy. I'd look at them and go,
"Why?" I'm not going to be Bill Clinton and say I never inhaled. I
did inhale. I couldn't understand what the big attraction was. I
liked tobacco a lot better.
PLAYBOY: Were you involved in other
aspects of the counterculture?
ZAPPA: In order to be a part of it,
you had to buy into the whole drug package. You had to have been
experienced, in the Jimi Hendrix sense of the word. And all the
people I knew who had been experienced were on the cusp of being
zombies.
PLAYBOY: Was it disconcerting that
your audiences were high much of the time?
ZAPPA: The worst part of it for me
was that I really didn't like the smell of marijuana. I had to go
into a place that had the purple haze and work for a couple of
hours in that. They were entitled to do whatever they wanted, so
long as they didn't drive into me under the influence of it.
PLAYBOY: But you told people drugs
were stupid, before Nancy Reagan did.
ZAPPA: One of the reasons we
weren't rabidly popular at that time was that I said what was on
my mind about drugs.
PLAYBOY: Did you feel like an
outsider? It's safe to say that every other major rock star in
those days was
ZAPPA: Looped. It wasn't just the
other musicians but the people in the band. The guys in the band
who wished they could do drugs couldn't because it meant
unemployment. I was unpopular for it. As for the rock stars, if
you've met them, you know that they generally have very little on
their minds. I never had any great desire to hang out with them.
PLAYBOY: Did any of the big acts of
the time interest you? How about Dylan, Hendrix, the Stones?
ZAPPA: Some of the really good
things that Hendrix did was the earliest stuff, when he was just
ripping and brutal. Manic Depression was my favorite Jimi Hendrix
song. The more experimental it got, the less interesting and the
thinner it got. As for Dylan, Highway 61 Revisited was really
good. Then we got Blonde on Blonde and it started to sound like
cowboy music, and you know what I think of cowboy music. I liked
the Rolling Stones.
PLAYBOY: Did Mick Jagger once pull
a splinter out of your toe?
ZAPPA: Yeah. He came by my house
and I was hopping around because of this splinter, so he pulled it
out. Good story, huh? I did like his attitude and the Stones'
attitude. Ultimately, though, the music was being done because it
was product. It was pop music made because there was a record
company waiting for records.
PLAYBOY: Is that why you founded
Straight Records?
ZAPPA: I naively thought that if
there was some venue for nonstandard material, the material would
find a market. But it failed because it was independent and had in
dependent distribution. We lost our butt on that one. So the only
way you can really do an independent label is to distribute
through a major that has some clout to collect from the retailers.
PLAYBOY: How are your current
labels, Barking Pumpkin and Zappa Records, doing?
ZAPPA: We have a very loyal fan
base in several countries. Although the sales figures worldwide
aren't anywhere near what the big rock stars would do if they
released an album, the people who like what we do are very
enthusiastic about it. That gives you a certain amount of leverage
with record companies. You hook up with a major distributor but
still control what you do. Since I have a record company of my own
that controls the masters, the amount I make per unit - as the
record company as opposed to the artist - is substantially more. I
can sell three units and stay in business.
PLAYBOY: What inspired you to form
your first band, the Black-Outs?
ZAPPA: In Lancaster there wasn't
any rock and roll, unless you listened to it on a record. Most of
the people who liked R&B were not the white sons and daughters of
the alfalfa farmers or defense workers who lived there. There were
a number of Mexicans and a lot of black kids, and they liked that
kind of stuff. So I put together this racially mixed ensemble that
liked to play that kind of music. We banged our heads against the
wall just like every other garage band, trying to figure out how
to play, it. There's no guidebook.
PLAYBOY: Were you playing high
school dances?
ZAPPA: No, they wouldn't let us. I
had to mount my own events. One time we rented the Lancaster
Women's Club to put on a dance. When the authorities heard that
there was going to be this rock-and-roll dance in their little
cowboy community, they arrested me at six that evening for
vagrancy. I spent the night in jail. it was right out of a teenage
movie. But the dance went off anyway.
PLAYBOY: Did that group
metamorphose into the Mothers of Invention?
ZAPPA: That was just a high school
band. After I got out of high school and moved away, I played
other kinds of gigs, like a short stint with Joe Perrino and the
Mellotones. We are allowed to play one twist number per night. The
rest was Happy Birthday, Anniversary Waltz and all the standards.
I wore a little tux and strummed chords, bored. I got sick of that
and stuck my guitar in the case and put it behind the sofa and
left it there for eight months. I got a job doing greeting card
designs, and for fun I wrote chamber music. I ran into some people
who knew a guy named Paul Buff who had a studio. I started doing
some worker over there. I met Ray Collins, who was working weekend
gigs with the Soul Giants. He got into a fistfight with the guitar
player. They needed a substitute guitar player in a hurry, so he
called me. I got really involved and learned how hard it is to run
a band, especially if you are trying to put together some
nonstandard musical offering with no money. You try to convince a
musician that it is a worth-while thing to do, when deep in his
heart every rock musician thinks that he, too, should be the
fourth member of Cream or the eighteenth Beatle. That group of
people became the Mothers, anyway.
PLAYBOY: So named because?
ZAPPA: I don't know. We chose the
name on Mother's Day.
PLAYBOY: Do you look at those as
the good old days?
ZAPPA: I look at those as the old
days. But we did have fun.
PLAYBOY: What was the music scene
like?
ZAPPA: Pretty bizarre. it was the
days of all these Sixties bands, including Jefferson Airplane and
Paul Butterfield and Johnny Rivers. We opened for Lenny Bruce at
the Fillmore West in 1966. I asked him to sign my draft card, but
he said no.
PLAYBOY: Is that when you had your
runnin with John Wayne?
ZAPPA: Yeah. He came to one show
very drunk. He saw me and picked me up and said, "I saw you in
Egypt and you were great . . and then you blew me!" Onstage I
said, "Ladies and gentlemen, it's Halloween and we were going to
have some important guests here tonight - like George Lincoln
Rockwell, head of the American Nazi Party - but unfortunately all
we could get was John Wayne." He got up and made some drunken
speech, and his bodyguards told me I'd better cool it.
PLAYBOY: There were other
characters - such as Cynthia Plaster-Caster. Tell us about her.
ZAPPA: Eric Clapton introduced me
to the Plaster-Casters. They had all these statues of the dicks of
people like Jimi Hendrix. One of them mixed the plaster stuff to
make a mold, and the other gave the guy a blow job. She took her
mouth off the guy's dick, and then the other one slammed the mold
onto it. We declined to be enshrined, so to speak.
PLAYBOY: During those years, the
Mothers were famous for being a hardworking band. You were on the
road all the time.
ZAPPA: We played everywhere. Like
the time we spent in Montreal, when we played a club called the
New Penelope and it was twenty degrees below zero. We walked from
our hotel to the club, and the snot had literally frozen in our
noses by the time we got to work. The wind instruments got so cold
that if you tried to play them, your lips and fingers would freeze
to them. The instruments couldn't even be played until they were
warmed up. It was pretty primitive. If we hadn't experienced that,
we probably wouldn't have come up with some of the more deranged
types of audience participation and audience punishment things
that we were doing at the time.
PLAYBOY: Audience punishment
things?
ZAPPA: The question became, How far
would they go? What could we get an audience to do? The answer
seemed to be anything. We'd bring someone up and go, "Take your
shoes and socks off, put your socks on your hands and lick them
while we play." Anything we could think of. So long as the person
telling them to do it was onstage, they would do it. The rest of
the people in the audience were laughing at the person who was
doing the most ridiculous things but saying at the same time, I
could do that! That could be me!" At a theater in New York, which
had once been a porno theater or something, there was a projection
booth at the far end of the stage. We ran a wire from there to the
opposite side of the stage. We had pulleys on it. Our drummer,
Motorhead, was instructed to attach objects to the line at random
times during the show and fly them down. When they would land
onstage, whatever arrived, we would improvise on it. Once, he sent
down a baby d4" a doggie-style position with its head removed. It
flew over the audience, whizzing by like in apparition over their
heads, and crashed into the post over us. It was followed shortly
by a three-foot-long Genoa salami that sodomized the doll. It
seemed to me that there was no reason to waste this perfectly good
salami, so I invited this lovely girl with very long hair, wearing
a kind of Little Miss Muffet costume, to come up onstage and eat
the whole salami. We played and she ate the salami. She started to
cry because she couldn't finish it. I told her it was OK, that we
would save it for her and she could come back and eat the rest of
it. She did.
PLAYBOY: Do you keep up with
popular music now?
ZAPPA: What's to keep up with? If
anything's sensational, it won't be on MTV, it'll be Sister
Souljah on Larry King.
PLAYBOY: You had your own talk show
on FNN for a short time. What started that brief career?
ZAPPA: I was invited to be a guest
on Bob Berkowitz' show to talk about business opportunities in the
Soviet Union, which I knew something about from my travels there.
It was a fairly amusing half hour. After that, Bob asked me to
guest-host his show while he was on vacation.
PLAYBOY: You tried to book
Czechoslovakia's president Vaclav Havel as a guest, right?
ZAPPA: I knew a guy who had been a
rock-and-roll musician who, after the revolution, was a ranking
member of the Czech parliament. I asked him whether or not he
could arrange for me to meet Havel so that I could interview him
about the country's economy for FNN. I met with Havel and found
that the minute I started talking with him about economics, he
turned me over to his advisors; he didn't know anything about it.
We didn't do the interview, but it was great meeting with him.
PLAYBOY: Why Havel;
ZAPP: I happen to think that the
Velvet Revolution was a little bit of a miracle. Since he was kind
of the focal point of the whole thing, I thought he'd be a nice
guy to talk with. He was. In the middle of everything, he
mentioned that Dan Quayle was coming to visit. I expressed my
condolences. I told him I was sorry that he was going to be forced
to have a conversation with anyone that stupid. It eventually must
have gotten back to the U.S. embassy. Instead of sending Quayle,
Jim Baker - who was on his way to Moscow - rerouted his trip and
went to Prague.
PLAYBOY: What do you think of the
breakup of Czechoslovakia?
ZAPPA: It's a big mistake. The
crash program for economic reform is part of what led to the
breakup of the country. Prime Minister Vaclav Klaus, who was the
advocate of the fast economic reform a la Poland, is a person who
is well respected by Western financial people because he talks
their language. This has a tendency to assure potential Western
backers, who are not comfortable with a guy who wants to go
slowly. But there. are factors that make it necessary to go
slowly.
Now there is no intellectual core
in charge of the revolution, and the country has divided up, which
is a mistake. Smaller entities tend to be less efficient; every
small country has to reinvent the wheel. They have to set up a new
constitution, a legislature, currency. It's happening in every one
of the small breakaway republics. It gives the people personal
gratification as a nationality, but the price is chaos.
PLAYBOY: But you're all for smaller
governments and more local control, aren't you?
ZAPPA: No, because that means more
governments.
PLAYBOY: But smaller governments
might better reflect their constituents.
ZAPPA: That's a reasonable
assumption, if it were all going to work fairly. But I think that
behind each breakaway movement is a breakaway demagogue who will
set up his breakaway demagogue government. In many breakaway
countries the governments now say, on paper, that you are free to
be an entrepreneur. Well, that's great if you have cash to invest.
But who has the cash? The party bosses who were there before are
the new entrepreneurs. Guys who got thrown out of office wound up
buying restaurants, hotels or factories. The drones who were
wandering around the streets are still wandering, even though they
have the right to be entrepreneurs. That's certainly true in
Russia, Hungary and Czechoslovakia. I haven't been to Poland yet.
PLAYBOY: Was it surprising that you
had fans behind the iron curtain?
ZAPPA: Yeah, and lots of people who
didn't like me - like the secret police.
PLAYBOY: What did the secret police
have against you?
ZAPPA: In Prague, I was told that
the biggest enemies of the Communist Czech state were Jimmy Carter
and me. A student I met said that he was arrested by the secret
police and beaten. They said they were going to beat the Zappa
music out of him.
PLAYBOY: How did Czechs know about
your music?
ZAPPA: It had been slipping in
there since 1966 or 1967. The first album that was really popular
there was Absolutely Free, the one with Plastic People on it. In
Moscow, I was in the Ministry of Culture and met a young guy with
a big Communist pin on his chest who said that he had earned his
way through school bootlegging my tapes in from Yugoslavia.
PLAYBOY: Were you glued to your TV
set when the Berlin Wall came down and the rest of the U.S.S.R.
unraveled?
ZAPPA: Yeah, and I was thrilled,
even though I'm pretty disappointed by what's happened since then.
See, in that part of the world, the average guy in the street is
like the average guy in the street anyplace else. He has the same
desires. He wants something to eat, a roof over his head. He
doesn't want to freeze, he wants to get laid, he wants to have a
long and happy life reasonably free of pain. If he has a trade or
a craft, he wants to be able to do his job. Unfortunately, these
normal people are represented by bad people, just like here. But
they want what we want. The average guy there is just like us, Joe
Six-pack, except his beer tastes better.
PLAYBOY: How do you feel about
America's reaction to the changes in the former Soviet Union?
ZAPPA: It's underwhelming. I would
call it reactionary.
PLAYBOY: What would you have the
United States do?
ZAPPA: If you really believed that
the major threat to the universe was communism, the minute you saw
it crumbling, wouldn't you do everything you could to make sure it
never came back? To make sure that the people in that part of the
world have a chance to participate in something better, so they
aren't tempted to vote communism back in? That's a real danger in
these countries. Now that they have free elections, so long as
there is any remnant of a Communist Party, even if they call it
something else, it could easily be voted back in because their
economy is in such bad shape. They don't need a tank or a gun to
regain control, they just need a ballot box.
PLAYBOY: You planned to become
involved in Russian businesses. What happened to the company you
founded to do it?
ZAPPA: Since I got sick, nothing
happened. The idea was that there are a lot of small-to
medium-sized U.S. companies that would like to have access to raw
materials, patents, processes or other things they don't know
about that exist in Russia or other countries. A nation that plays
chess that well, and where you can still get 15,000 people to show
up to hear somebody read poetry, has something going for, it.
There's a brain at work there. I suspect that because of their
economic condition they've found was to use string, chewing gum,
reprocessed turnips - whatever they use - to do things in a way
that we haven't thought of. Somebody needs to go snooping around
to find out what's there and try to put those people together with
American investors. It would help both countries. That's what I
was going to do. It was a better solution than having the Russian
scientists flock out of there to get jobs making weapons for the
Arabs or the Indians.
PLAYBOY: Sometimes you sound like a
political candidate. How serious was your plan to run for
president?
ZAPPA: I wanted to do it. It's a
bit hard to mount a campaign if you have cancer and don't feel
well.
PLAYBOY: If you hadn't been ill,
would you have run?
ZAPPA: Yeah. And it's a shame. We
got calls and mail throughout the election. Squadrons of
volunteers called.
PLAYBOY: If you had run and won,
what would President Zappa have done?
ZAPPA: I would have started by
dismantling the government. At least I would have presented the
idea to the voters.
PLAYBOY: Nothing too revolutionary?
ZAPPA: In the Beltway and places
that have large federal payrolls, the idea wouldn't be too
popular, but in other places people would think it's great. One
strong selling point is that you could do away with federal income
taxes, or at least reduce them to a point that people would have
something left at the end of the week. In the end, I think people,
in their enlightened self-interest, would consider voting for
that.
PLAYBOY: If you dismantled the
government, you'd put yourself out of a job.
ZAPPA: No, because most reasonable
people would agree that we need roads, for instance, and water you
can drink and breathable air. Most people realize that there has
to be some coordinated infrastructure and a national offense that
is commensurate with whatever threat you feel from other
countries.
PLAYBOY: National offense?
ZAPPA: I mean - well, what we have
now is national offense. We should have national defense.
PLAYBOY: You've said that you're
not a peacenik.
ZAPPA: Human nature and human
stupidity often breed violence. When violence escalates to an
international confrontation, you should be able to protect
yourself. On the other hand, to plan for it - like we did
throughout the Cold War - based on badly handled intelligence
estimates of the threat to our national security is just stupid.
Most intelligence estimates indicated that the Soviet couldn't do
shit to us, but they were ignored order to maintain the level of
employment and financial activity in the defense industry.
PLAYBOY: Do you think that our
recent election was irrelevant?
ZAPPA: Yes, because America has to
be completely restructured. We have to question every institution
in terms of efficiency. I'm serious about abandoning the federal
system.
PLAYBOY: Is there any way that it's
likely to happen?
ZAPPA: Not this week, but I wish
people would at least consider it. They think, There it is, we're
stuck with it, it will go on forever. It doesn't have to. The
Soviet Union didn't go on forever. If you want reform, the people
who've been doing a bad job have to get fired. They have to go
back to the used-car lot from where they came.
PLAYBOY: Yet you've always pushed
people to vote. Why bother?
ZAPPA: Even if you don't like the
candidates, there are issues that affect your life. Bond issues
affect your pocketbook. That's the only real reason for voting. As
far as the rest of government is concerned, forget it. The amount
of overstaffing, overlapping, wasted energy and pompous
pseudograndeur is science fiction. All of it is supported by this
universe of political talk shows. CNN is one of the worst
offenders on the planet. It maintains the fiction of the
theoretical value of the thoughts and words of these inferior
human specimens who manage to become Beltway insiders.
PLAYBOY: Do you want to name names?
ZAPPA: Do we need to see John
Sununu as a talk-show guy? Or, on CNBC, Gordon Liddy or Oliver
North? Let's face it: Some of these people are criminals. Why do
we need to be presented with them as voices of authority whose
opinions are something we should even waste our time with? Why?
PLAYBOY: What do you think is
behind it?
ZAPPA: It's a whole program
designed to modify behavior and modify thinking on a national
level. They're happy to take the slings and arrows of the outraged
minority in order to keep these voices of stupidity in your face
all the time. It's all propaganda.
PLAYBOY: How planned is it?
ZAPPA: Completely. It is the
residue of the domestic-diplomacy department that Reagan
established during the Irancontra days. The idea was to control
the news. From that office, a guy would make phone calls and
certain journalists would get fired and news stories would get
changed. Then it was the obvious control of the media we saw
during the Gulf war.
PLAYBOY: So you maintain that the
media are no more than pawns?
ZAPPA: The media are part of the
package. You think really liberal people own those outlets? I
don't. Even if they were Democrats, it wouldn't mean anything,
because who can tell the difference between those two criminal
classes?
PLAYBOY: it sounds as if you are as
cynical as ever.
ZAPPA: It's hard not to be.
PLAYBOY: Yet you feel it's
worthwhile to raise some hell?
ZAPPA: Pessimism and the natural
instinct to raise hell are not mutually exclusive. Raising hell
comes naturally to me. Still, I am not optimistic about what will
happen to this country unless some radical change is made. It's
going to take more than just firing a few bad guys.
PLAYBOY: You were involved in
politics firsthand when you tried to stop record companies from
being forced to label records, much like movies are rated. Your
opponents got their way. Has it had any impact?
ZAPPA: A chilling impact.
PLAYBOY: How? Don't you think that
the warning stickers help sales? Kids want stuff with bad words.
ZAPPA: But groups that are getting
signed to recording contracts are being told what they can and
cannot sing.
PLAYBOY: That doesn't ring true, It
seems that there is less censorship than ever. "Motherfucker" is
almost requisite to rap songs. in heavy metal, Axl Rose screams,
"Suck my fucking dick!" What's being censored?
ZAPPA: If it's some guy selling
thirty million records, the record company isn't going in with
scissors. But the new bands just signing up have no leverage. They
do what they are told.
PLAYBOY: Many of the rap artists
aren't selling millions.
ZAPPA: But they're on shaky ground.
Time Warner was ready to succumb to the protests over Cop Killer
before Ice-T backed off. It's all hanging on a cliff, ready to go
over. More frightening is the Child Protection Act. It holds
people responsible if they in any way influence someone to commit
a crime. The record companies are worried.
PLAYBOY: You obviously don't
believe songs can make people kill or rape or commit suicide.
ZAPPA: There are more love songs
than anything else. If songs could make you do something, we'd all
love one another. Violence in songs functions the same way
violence in movies does. In Lethal Weapon, people get blown up,
mashed and mutilated. The people in the audience would never do
anything like that.
PLAYBOY: Have you been censored?
ZAPPA: No. I do what I want to do,
though there are certain socially retarded areas where my records
are not to be seen. That's one of the reasons we have a mail-order
business. There's this ludicrous fear of the power of music
manifesting itself in the corruption of the youth of America. It's
idiotic. But censorship, in effect, is turning the United States
into a police state, as far as ideas go. It's not about children
learning dirty words. It's about putting a lid on ideas. Whatever
they don't want to confront, whether it's about sex or racism or
anything else, is what they want to censor. One way to shut off
the avenues of dissent is to put a lid on rock and roll. Then come
books and everything else. But censorship is communism. Why are we
buying into communist suppression at a time when everybody else in
the world has realized that it doesn't work? The people who want
to censor do not care about saving your children. They care about
one thing - getting reelected. Let's face it, folks: Politicians
in the United States are the scum of the earth. We have to go
after them individually because they're varmints. The legislation
they are passing, piece by piece, converts America into a police
state. The mentality that has existed since Reagan and Bush is
that the population of the United States has to be subjugated by
law.
PLAYBOY: Did the record industry
fight the labeling hard enough?
ZAPPA: The record companies are
interested in one thing, which is making a profit. If Cop Killer
sells millions of records, they are happy about it. They are not
happy when police officers' pension funds sell their Time Warner
stock and people boycott Time magazine.
PLAYBOY: It must have been strange
for you when Al Gore was nominated as vice president.
ZAPPA: They felt it was a good way
to counteract the Dan Quayle-family values nonsense. But why would
anybody need to counteract Dan Quayle?
PLAYBOY: They obviously didn't care
about your vote - or the vote of the people concerned about
Tipper's ratings campaign.
ZAPPA: Not necessarily. Deep in
their hearts, those politicos think they're really cagey
strategists. They figured they'd get a certain amount of column
inches because of Tipper. It was advertising they didn't have to
buy.
PLAYBOY: Your song Trouble Coming
Every Day, about the Watts riots, could have been written about
the more recent L.A. upheaval.
ZAPPA: The only part that wasn't
apropos was the woman driver getting machine-gunned in half
because she drove through a stop sign.
PLAYBOY: What were you doing during
the riots?
ZAPPA: I taped them from top to
bottom while flipping through the channels. I got it from every
angle that I could, some amazing stuff, things that weren't
reported nationally.
PLAYBOY: For instance?
ZAPPA: Shots of a group of soldiers
in a barracks in Orange County wearing Desert Storm nerve-gas
clothing. Now either the Crips and Bloods had nerve gas or there
were some plans of dealing sternly with the rioters.
PLAYBOY: What did you do with the
recordings?
ZAPPA: When I performed in Germany,
we had television sets in the bar during intermission showing the
finest of American cultural entertainment. On one set, nonstop
riot. On another, nonstop televangelists. On another, C-SPAN. On
another, Desert Storm. You got to have your light beer and watch
the American media at its finest.
PLAYBOY: You said that you couldn't
do some things you wanted to - including running for president -
because of your illness. How else has cancer affected your life?
ZAPPA: The minute somebody tells
you you have cancer, your life changes dramatically, whether you
beat it or you don't. It's like you have a fucking brand put on
you. As far as the American medical profession goes, you're just
meat. It complicates your life because you have to fight for your
life every single day, besides doing your shit. To do the music is
complicated enough, but to think of doing things that involve
travel and other kinds of physical stress is too much. Whatever
medication you take fucks you up, too.
PLAYBOY: Are you currently taking
any medication?
ZAPPA: I'm forty pounds overweight
because the stuff that I'm taking fills me up with water. I'm a
walking balloon. You can't just take an Advil or a Nuprin and
forget about it. It's a fucking battle.
PLAYBOY: Can you travel, or do you
have to stay close to your doctors?
ZAPPA: Well, you do have to be
tested periodically, every couple of months. You want to be close
to a doctor you trust. You wouldn't want to go to a Russian
hospital. That could put you out of business in a big hurry. A
friend of mine was in an auto accident there and wound up in a
Russian hospital. They had no anesthesia and no disposable
syringes. As the doctor was setting her leg without anesthesia, he
said, "Nobody ever died from pain."
PLAYBOY: How long have you known
about your cancer?
ZAPPA: I found out about it in the
spring of 1990.
PLAYBOY: It hit out of the blue?
ZAPPA: I'd been feeling sick for a
number of years, but nobody diagnosed it. Then I got really ill
and had to go to the hospital in an emergency. While I was in
there, they did some tests and found out it had been there for
anywhere from eight to ten years, growing undetected by any of my
previous doctors. By the time they found it, it was inoperable.
PLAYBOY: How about other
treatments?
ZAPPA: I went through radiation and
that fucked me up pretty good. They were supposed to give me
twelve shots of that, but I got to number eleven and I was so sick
that I said I couldn't go back.
PLAYBOY: Was it helping,
ZAPPA: I don't want to dwell on all
the morbid details of what happened to me, but I'll summarize it.
When I went into the hospital, the cancer had grown to where I
could no longer take a piss. In order for me just to survive, they
had no poke a hole in my bladder. I spent more than a year with a
hose coming out of my bladder and a bag tied to my leg. That'll
keep you from traveling. The result of the radiation was that the
tumor was shrunken to the point where I could get rid of the bag
and could piss again, but there were bad side effects. I don't
want to talk about it. It's not a picnic.
PLAYBOY: It seems that you can
still do a lot of the things you care about-composing, at least.
ZAPPA: Some days you can do more of
it than others. Part of the problem is that it hurts to sit some
days, and this work is done sitting at a computer terminal. I used
to be able to work sixteen, eighteen hours a day and just get up
from my chair and go to sleep and go back to work, and it was
fine. But some days I can't work at all. Some days I can work two
hours. Some days I can work ten.
PLAYBOY: How does it affect your
life with your family?
ZAPPA: Well, it's not a secret
around here. They're very nice to me. They take care of me.
PLAYBOY: Is it an emotional roller
coaster for you?
ZAPPA: The emotional aspect is more
influenced by the drugs than it is by the idea that you're sick.
What can you do? People get sick. Sometimes they can fix it and
sometimes they can't. But the chemicals that they give you to
treat it take a toll. The week before last I found myself in the
hospital for three days riddled with morphine. That was definitely
an experience I don't want to repeat. When I got out, it took
almost ten days to get the residue of all the drugs they'd given
me out of my body.
PLAYBOY: At a certain point it must
be confusing about what's making you sick, the drugs or the
disease.
ZAPPA: It'll really turn you
around. It's difficult if you are the boss of a company, even a
little company like mine, and you have to make decisions about
what's going on and you can't trust your own decisions because you
don't know, chemically, what's happening. It's also difficult not
to know how you're going to be one day to the next. The only
reason I agreed to do this interview at this time was I thought I
was reasonably clear enough to have a conversation. That's
debilitating. If you can't trust your own judgment, that's really
hard. When you're writing music, every note you put down is a
judgment call.
PLAYBOY: Weve been talking forr
hours and yet you seem tireless.
ZAPPA: You got me on a good day. I
mean, tomorrow I could be flat on my back in bed. So you get to be
very time-budget conscious. Certain things are time-consuming and
the time spent doing them is productive. Other things are
time-consuming and it's like being hijacked. I have a low
tolerance for wasting time. I try not to be irritable about it,
but it's my main concern. I'm trying to live my life the same way
that I lived it before, without indulging in any of the things
that would waste time.
PLAYBOY: Some people would retire -
go to live their life out on some beach.
ZAPPA: Not me. I'm less inclined to
travel, less inclined to leave the house for any reason, just
because I happen to like my life in this place, and I like my
family. PLAYBOY: How does it influence the music you're writing
now?
ZAPPA: I don't think it does now,
though it did for a while. It's so uncomfortable to work, you may
be tempted to say that something's done when it's not done. You
physically can't stand to work on it anymore. During one period, I
was working on some pieces that I let go before their time. Since
they hadn't been released yet, as I gradually felt better, I went
back and worked on them to make sure that the level of competence
was maintained.
PLAYBOY: But hasn't it affected the
mood of the music;
ZAPPA: No, I haven't started
writing sad music. Time is the thing. Time is everything. How to
spend time. We all want something to do with our minds. The
choices are a major human preoccupation. The people who find the
easiest solutions, like beer and football, might be happier if
they had just a little dimension to their lives. But most people,
once they achieve a certain level of gratification for time
disposal, don't go beyond it. They already know how good they're
going to feel when a football game comes on, and they have their
beer. They don't want to know beyond that. They build a life
around it. It's been the same for me since I got cancer as it was
before. I have to look way beyond the football game and the can of
beer. Once I've gone out there and dabbled on that fringe, I feel
as if I may as well bring some artifacts back, in case anybody
else is interested. That's what I do. I come back and go, "Here it
is. This is what happened after the football game."
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