Them or Us | |
Type: | Album |
Longtype: | with live elements |
Artist: | Frank Zappa |
Cover: | Zappa Them or Us.jpg |
Released: | October 18, 1984 |
Recorded: | November 1981 – June 1984 (elements of "Ya Hozna" and "Planet Of My Dreams" were recorded between 1967 and 1976) |
Label: | Barking Pumpkin |
Producer: | Frank Zappa |
Prev Year: | 1984 |
Next Title: | Francesco Zappa |
Next Year: | 1984 |
Them or Us is an album by American musician Frank Zappa, released in October 1984 by Barking Pumpkin Records.
Its opening and closing songs were not written by Zappa: "The Closer You Are", was written by Earl Lewis and Morgan Robinson and originally released by the Channels; and "Whippin' Post", originally performed by the Allman Brothers Band.
"Ya Hozna" includes backward vocals taken from "Sofa No. 2" (from One Size Fits All, 1975), "Lonely Little Girl" (from We're Only in It for the Money, 1968) and unreleased outtakes of "Valley Girl" (vocals by Moon Zappa). "Planet of My Dreams" (featuring Bob Harris on vocals) is a 1981 studio recording taken from the score of Zappa's unrealized 1972 stage musical Hunchentoot (other titles from this show appear on the first-CD edition of the Sleep Dirt reissue from 1991). "Be in My Video", described as the best song on the album,[1] pokes fun at the cliches in music videos, particularly David Bowie's 1983 hit single "Let's Dance".
As with other Zappa rock albums of this era, many of the tracks are sourced from live recordings. Later studio overdubs were liberally applied, although there is no mention of this on the album notes.[2]
Following problems with the album Thing-Fish, which MCA Records refused to distribute,[3] Zappa made a deal with EMI Records, which would allow Them or Us and Thing-Fish to be distributed by Capitol Records in the United States.[3] Zappa wrote a "warning" which appeared on the inner sleeves of these albums, as well as Frank Zappa Meets the Mothers of Prevention (1985), which stated that the albums contained content "which a truly free society would neither fear nor suppress", and a "guarantee" which stated that the lyrics would not "cause eternal torment in the place where the guy with the horns and pointed stick conducts his business."[3]