An Evening with Wild Man Fischer | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Wild Man Fischer |
Cover: | Aneveningwithwildmanfischer.jpg |
Released: | April 28, 1969[1] |
Recorded: | 1968 |
Studio: | Sunset Sound, Los Angeles and The Log Cabin, Los Angeles |
Genre: | Outsider music |
Length: | 82:36 |
Label: | Bizarre |
Producer: | Frank Zappa |
Next Title: | Wildmania |
Next Year: | 1977 |
An Evening with Wild Man Fischer is a 1969 double LP album by Wild Man Fischer. It was produced by Frank Zappa and released on his Bizarre record label.
The album is split into four different areas on each record side for the type of song they contain. Some of side one had audio clips of live street performances where he would ask passerby to hear a song for a dime with percussion noises from Art Tripp added in. Side two is a collection of A cappella songs from Larry, with him also occasionally using a guitar to strum or use as percussion. Side three is filled with Fischer's first songs, and his stories of making them, as well as more street performances with Art's percussion. The final side includes a "psychedelic" rock song called Circles, and The Wild Man Fischer Story, which had Fischer sing about his home life by year. The song "Merry Go Round" as well as Fischer's remark of "You call that doing your thing?" during "New Kind of Songs for Sale" were referenced in the spoken dialogue segments of both Zappa's Lumpy Gravy and Civilization Phase III.
The copyright is owned by the estate of Frank Zappa, whose widow Gail had refused to release it on compact disc.[2] After Gail's death, the album was finally issued on a double CD in 2016 on the Gonzo Multimedia label.[3] This CD version was copied from a vinyl LP.
A second CD edition was issued in 2020 by the Japanese label Wasabi Records. This release, unlike the Gonzo Multimedia edition, credits Herb Cohen as the master owner and reproduces the original Bizarre Records labels on the faces of the CD.
The opening track "Merry-Go-Round" was used as the theme for Alexei Sayle's Merry-Go-Round in 1998.