Cruising With Ruben & The Jets

Cruising With Ruben & The Jets

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byFaoisCouueFakZappaloved'50sdoowopmusic.Hegewupwihi,collecedi,adiwashefiskidofpopmusichewoe(likeMemoiesofElMoe,ecodedb......

by Franois CoutureFrank Zappa loved '50s doo wop music. He grew up with it, collected it, and it was the first kind of pop music he wrote (like Memories of El Monte, recorded by the Penguins in 1962). Cruising With Ruben & the Jets, the Mothers of Invention's fourth LP, is a collection of such music, all Zappa originals (some co-written with MOI singer Ray Collins). To the unexperienced, songs like Cheap Thrills, Deseri, and Jelly Roll Gum Drop can sound like an average doo wop song. A closer look reveals unusual chord sequences, Stravinsky quotes, and hilariously moronic lyrics -- all that wrapped in four-way harmony vocals and linear piano triplets. A handful of songs from the group's 1966 debut, Freak Out, were rearranged (How Could I Be Such a Fool and Anyway the Wind Blows give the weirdest results), old material predating the Mothers was recycled (Fountain of Love), Love of My Life, and You Didn't Try to Call Me became live staples. [For the album's first CD reissue in 1985, Zappa had bassist Scott Thunes and drummer Chad Wackerman re-recording rhythm tracks for all but one song. Since then, all reissues have followed the 1985 mix, leaving Stuff up the Cracks the only surviving example of what Cruising With Ruben & the Jets really sounded like. Unless listeners are particularly fond of Doo Wopl music, this album is definitely not the best place to start in Zappa's catalog.]