Frank Zappa Fillmore West 11.6.70 Photo: M. Parrish |
At the Fillmores, Bill Graham was extremely fond of throwing
together eclectic mixes of performers. Some made for artistic magic and others
seemed – well – thrown together, and that was more the case for the Zappa show.
Opening were two solid touring power trios from the UK. Bottom of the bill (and absent from the poster) was
Irish band Skid Row (not to be confused with the later hair metal band), who
played the familiar loud blooz rock that Cream had adopted from Chicago
bluesmen like Buddy Guy a few years earlier. Skid Row’s guitarist was a young
Garry Moore, who later became a regular guitar foil for Cream’s Jack Bruce,.
They had briefly included future Thin Lizzy front man Phil Lynott on bass, but
he was gone by the time I saw them. I honestly don’t remember much about Skid
Row’s set – they couldn’t have played too long because of time constraints.
Next up were Liverpudlians Ashton, Gardner, and Dyke, who
are best remembered today for one significant hit – “Resurrection Rag.” A bit
proggy, A, G, & D put on a reasonable show that ended up with them doing
that “Rag.” After splitting up in 1972, Ashton, Gardner, and Dyke performed in
a number of short lived bands with former members of Deep Purple and Yes. They
put on a pretty good show, but didn’t make much of an impression.
After departing the Steve Miller Band in 1968, guitarist Boz
Scaggs disappeared for a year or so, re-emerging with his sublime eponymous
solo album on Atlantic, which he had recorded in Muscle Shoals with the studio’s crack
session team augmented by Duane Allman, who played a particularly dazzling solo
on “Loan Me a Dime,” the Fenton Robinson blues that became Scaggs’ signature
tune. After the album’s release, Scaggs assembled a large ensemble that became
one of the best live bands during their time together from 1970 to 1972. The
group’s first album together, 1970’s Moments, was quiet, elegant, and jazzy – a strong departure from much
of what was coming out at the time,
and a record that has stood the test of time much better than some of
Scagg’s later disco efforts. Scaggs built his band around a set of talented and
seasoned players, including former Mother Earth drummer George Rains, guitarist
Doug Simril, keyboard player Jymm
Joachim Young, and a horn section made up of trombone player Pat O’Hara, sax
and flute player Mel Martin, and trumpeter Bill Atwood (later replaced by Tom
Poole). Scaggs’ sets of that era relied heavily on material from his first two
solo albums, as well as a long, spacy version of“Baby’s Calling Me Home” from
the first Capitol Steve Miller Band album. The
horn section did a lot more jazz blowing than R&B punctuation, and Young’s
organ was a perfect counterpart for Scaggs and Simril’s heavily reverbed
guitars.
Jeff Simmons, Flo, and Eddie 11.6.70 Photo: M. Parrishj |
Frank Zappa’s original Mothers of Invention had been a
relatively stable group for nearly five years, and that was the ensemble I
fully expected to see at the Fillmore. However, Zappa had broken up the Mothers the previous November and, since June, had been touring with an entirely
different group of Mothers built around former Turtles vocalists Mark Volman and Howard
Kaylan (who assumed the nom de plumes of the Phlorescent Leech [later shortened to Flo] and Eddie during their tenure with Zappa). This group was as
theatrical, if not more, than the previous group, but relied much more on
physical comedy, pubescent
humor, and heavily vocal arrangements. In addition to Zappa, the group had some
very accomplished instrumentalists in jazz keyboard player George Duke,
multi-instrumentalist Ian Underwood (the sole carryover from the 'classic' Mothers), and drummer Aynsley Dunbar. Bass player
Jeff Simmons was also a solo artist on Zappa’s Straight label who had recently
released Lucille Has Messed My Mind Up, which has subsequently become a cult
classic.
Aynsley Dunbar and Zappa 11.6.70 Photo: M. Parrish |
Zappa had recently finished filming his first movie Uncle
Meat in 1969, but announced at the
Fillmore that the show was being filmed for a second movie, 200 Motels. Uncle
Meat was not released as a film until a video version came out in 1987, but the
1969 double LP of the same name was one of the best efforts by the jazzy,
middle period Mothers. 200 Motels, on the other hand, was released commercially
in 1971. The film, starred a bizarre cast including Theodore Bikel and Ringo
Starr. No footage from the Fillmore show was
included in the movie proper, but much of the material filmed showed up in a 1971 VPRO TV documentary on Zappa and was also excerpted in Zappa's 1988 documentary The Real Story of 200 Motels. When you take into account the widely distrubuted soundboard tape of much of the performance, this stands as one of Zappa's best documented concerts.
Zappa and Cameraman 11.6.70 Photo: M. Parrish |