Frank Zappa & The Mothers of Invention
We're Only In It For The Money
Label ©  Rykodisc
Release Year  1968
Length  39:09
Genre  Art Rock
Personal Star Rating [1-5]  
  Ref#  F-0034
Bitrate  192 Kbps
  Other  
  Info  
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Are You Hung Up?  
       1:24  
      2.  
      Who Needs The Peace Corps?  
       2:34  
      3.  
      Concentration Moon  
       2:22  
      4.  
      Mom & Dad  
       2:16  
      5.  
      Telephone Conversation  
       0:48  
      6.  
      Bow Tie Daddy  
       0:33  
      7.  
      Harry, You're A Beast  
       1:21  
      8.  
      What's The Ugliest Part Of Your Body?  
       1:03  
      9.  
      Absolutely Free  
       3:24  
      10.  
      Flower Punk  
       3:03  
      11.  
      Hot Poop  
       0:26  
      12.  
      Nasal Retentive Calliope Music  
       2:02  
      13.  
      Let's Make The Water Turn Black  
       2:01  
      14.  
      The Idiot Bastard Son  
       3:18  
      15.  
      Lonely Little Girl  
       1:09  
      16.  
      Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance  
       1:32  
      17.  
      What's The Ugliest Part Of Your Body? (reprise)  
       1:02  
      18.  
      Mother People  
       2:26  
      19.  
      The Chrome Plated Megaphone Of Destiny  
       6:25  
    Additional info: | top
      The Mothers of Invention answer the sentiments of the suits, the suburb dwellers, and flower children of the 60's with a big fat raspberry. Considered by many to be the Mothers' (and some would say Zappa's) best album, We're Only in it for the Money deals with harsh subject matter in a seemingly glib and light-hearted fashion (eventually a Zappa trademark), sparing no targets with catchy melodies and high-pitched vocals. Zappa applies the same aggressive studio techniques he did on Lumpy Gravy, creating a jarring collage of sound that still sounds avant-garde today. Highlights from this flawless album are numerous and include the hippie bashing "Who Needs thePeace Corps," the bedroom science of "Let's Make the Water Turn Black," the anthematic "Mother People," and the perfect payoff of "What's the Ugliest Part of Your Body?" Quite simply one of the best rock albums of all time. --Andrew Boscardin

      Review by Steve Huey

      From the beginning, Frank Zappa cultivated a role as voice of the freaks -- imaginative outsiders who didn't fit comfortably into any group. We're Only in It for the Money is the ultimate expression of that sensibility, a satirical masterpiece that simultaneously skewered the hippies and the straights as prisoners of the same narrow-minded, superficial phoniness. Zappa's barbs were vicious and perceptive, and not just humorously so: his seemingly paranoid vision of authoritarian violence against the counterculture was borne out two years later by the Kent State killings. Like Freak Out, We're Only in It for the Money essentially devotes its first half to satire, and its second half to presenting alternatives. Despite some specific references, the first-half suite is still wickedly funny, since its targets remain immediately recognizable. The second half shows where his sympathies lie, with character sketches of Zappa's real-life freak acquaintances, a carefree utopia in "Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance," and the strident, unironic protest "Mother People." Regardless of how dark the subject matter, there's a pervasively surreal, whimsical flavor to the music, sort of like Sgt. Pepper as a creepy nightmare. Some of the instruments and most of the vocals have been manipulated to produce odd textures and cartoonish voices; most songs are abbreviated, segue into others through edited snippets of music and dialogue, or are broken into fragments by more snippets, consistently interrupting the album's continuity. Compositionally, though, the music reveals itself as exceptionally strong, and Zappa's politics and satirical instinct have rarely been so focused and relevant, making We're Only in It for the Money quite probably his greatest achievement. [Rykodisc's 1987 reissue restored passages censored on the LP, but included re-recorded rhythm tracks and sounded quite different. Their 1995 re-reissue contains both the original music and content edits.]
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