Songtexte We Made Our Reputation Doing It That Way... - Frank Zappa
The
story
of
the...
The
music
of
the
Mothers
is
the
story
of,
uh...
A
combination
of
what
I
knew
about
music
from,
from
my
studies
Plus
the
musical
capabilites
of
the
players
in
the
group
as
I
found
them,
you
know
Which
had...
Somewhere
along
the
line,
I
had
to
teach
them
a
lot
of
what
they
didn′t
know
about
music
I
started
out
playing
rhythm
and
blues
when
I
was
about
14
or
15
years
old
in
San
Diego
And,
uh,
I
was
playing
nothing
but
blues
'til
I
was
18
and,
you
know
I
was
really
honking
and
I
started
out
playing
drums
with
a
band
And
got
tired
of
listening
to
other
people′s
guitar
playing
Took
up
a
guitar
and
started
playing
lead
right
away
And
then
I
spent,
uh,
the
early
part
of
my
musical
teen
childhood
Doing
the
same
thing
that
most
of
the,
uh...
White
blues
bands
are
pulling
down
heavy
bread
for
But
in
those
days
it
was,
you
know
It
was
the
underground
music,
uh,
the
unpopular
underground
music
Because
the
kids
then
wanted
to
hear,
you
know
Sweeter,
easier
stuff
They
didn't
go
for
hard,
screaming
blues
or
Chicago,
you
know,
weirdness
Nobody
knew
who
the
Howlin'
Wolf
was
Nobody,
you
know,
Muddy
Waters,
what
the
fuck
is
that?
And,
uh,
so
I
grew
up
on
that
stuff
but
simultaneously
buying
classical
albums
And
going
to
the
library
and
study
music
I
had
albums
of
Stravinsky
and
Varèse
and
Webern
and
Bartók
And
I
never
bought
anything...
I
never
bought
any
Beethoven
or
Mozart
or
anything
like
that
′Cause
I
didn′t
like
the
way
it
sounded,
it
was
too
weak
So,
eventually
I
started
hearing
a
little
folk
music
I
didn't
like
most
of
the
commercial
folk
music
that
was
around
My
taste
in
folk
music
was,
uh,
Sea
Shanties
and
Middle
Eastern
stuff
I
like
Indian
music,
I
like
Arab
music
So
that
was
all
my
own
personal
taste-making
influences
The
original
guys
in
the
band
had
been
brought
up
on
nothing
but
rhythm
and
blues
Now,
rhythm
and
blues
branches
out
into
about
four
different
categories
The
way
we
grew
up
with
it
There
was
the
ooh-wah
ballad,
you
know
With
the
high
falsetto
and
the
grunting
bass
and
all
that
stuff,
that
type
There′s
a
Chicago
blues
type
with
the
harmonica
and,
you
know,
and
the
funky-ness
There
was
a
Texas
type
with
a,
you
know
Rock,
Bobby
"Blue"
Bland
type
thing
And
then
there
was
the
hard
drive
type
James
Brown
shit
And
offshoots
of
the,
uh,
of
each
one
of
those,
like
in
the
ooh-wah
classification
You've
got
the
uptempo
singers
where
the...
Like
Hank
Ballard
and
the
Midnighters
and
the
Royales
They
had
a
different
type
of
a
thing
All
the
other
guys
in
the
group
grew
up
with
just
that
Had
no
knowledge
whatsoever
of
any
kind
of
classical
music,
uh,
or
serious
music
Above
and
beyond
Mozart
or,
uh,
Beethoven
or,
you
know
Standard
concert
hall,
uh,
warhorses
And
even
that,
they
didn′t
give
a
shit
about
and
they
weren't
interested
at
all
in
folk
music
And,
uh...
So
I
had
quite
a
bit
of
trouble
in
the
beginning,
you
know
Just
making
them
aware
that
there
were
other
kinds
of
music
that
we
could
be
playing
To
top
it
off,
we
were
in
a
very
sterile
area
We
kept
getting
fired
because
we′d
playing
anything
other
than
"Wooly
Bully"
or,
you
know...
"Twist
and
Shout"
or
the
rest
of
that
stuff
We'd
lost
job
after
job
When
is
this
that
you're
talking
about
exactly?
Two
years
ago
In
′65?
Yeah
And
so
it
was
It
was
rough
keeping
it
together
because
there′s
lots
of
times
that,
uh...
The
guys
wanted
to
quit,
I
mean,
everybody's
quit
at
least
200
times
So
we
finally
got
a
chance
to
come
into
L.A.
And
the
reason
we
stood
out
from
the
bands
in
Los
Angeles,
you
know
Why
we
would
attract
any
attention
at
all
at
that
point
′Cause
we
were
working
out
in
the
sticks,
this
whole
thing
was
developing
out,
uh,
Away
from
any,
uh,
you
know,
urban
civilization
We
were
really,
you
know,
just
out
there
with
the
Okies
And
we
got
to
town,
we
expected
to
find
all
kinds
of,
you
know...
All
the
bands
gotta
be
really
far-out
Well,
they
weren't,
they
were
bullshit
and
they
had
no
balls,
you
know
They
weren′t
funky,
they
weren't,
uh,
tasteful,
they
weren′t
nothin'
They
were
just,
you
know,
plastic,
folk-rock,
teenage
puker
bands
And
they
were
making
a
lot
of
bread
And
we
came
on
the
scene
And
we
were
loud
and
we
were
coarse
and
we
were
strange
And
if
anybody
in
the
audience
ever
gave
us
any
trouble,
we'd
tell
′em
to
fuck
off
And
we
made
our
reputation
doing
it
that
way
1 Hitch Hike (Live)
2 Pretty Pat
3 Motherly Love
4 Plastic People
5 Any Way the Wind Blows
6 I Ain't Got No Heart
7 The Phone Call / My Babe
8 Wedding Dress Song / Handsome Cabin Boy
9 I'm So Happy I Could Cry
10 Go Cry On Somebody Else's Shoulder
11 How Could I Be Such a Fool?
12 We Made Our Reputation Doing It That Way...
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