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==History==
==History==
In 1976 the relationship between Zappa and his manager/business partner [[Herb Cohen]] turned sour. Zappa and Cohen's company [[DiscReet Records]] was distributed by Warner Bros. When Zappa asked for a re-assignment of his contract from DiscReet to Warner in order to advance the possibility of being able to do special projects without Cohen's involvement, Warner Bros. briefly agreed. This led to the 1976 release of ''[[Zoot Allures]]'' on Warner. Later in 1976 Zappa claimed he delivered master tape copies of 4 different LP's to Warner Bros. This would have fulfilled all of Zappa's final obligations and freed him to move to another label for his next release. The four albums in question were ''Studio Tan'', ''Sleep Dirt'', ''Orchestral Favorites'', and ''Zappa In New York'' (a 2LP set.) Perhaps believing that the material was sub-standard, Warner refused to pay Zappa upon delivery of the 4 albums (5 discs) according to their contract.
In 1976 the relationship between Zappa and his manager/business partner [[Herb Cohen]] turned sour. Zappa and Cohen's company [[DiscReet Records]] was distributed by Warner Bros. When Zappa asked for a re-assignment of his contract from DiscReet to Warner in order to advance the possibility of being able to do special projects without Cohen's involvement, Warner Bros. briefly agreed. This led to the 1976 release of ''[[Zoot Allures]]'' on Warner. Later in 1976 Zappa claimed he delivered master tape copies of 4 individual LP's to Warner Bros. (see [http://www.arf.ru/Notes/Ziny/append.html]) This would have fulfilled all of Zappa's final obligations and freed him to move to another label for his next release. The four albums in question were ''Studio Tan'', ''Sleep Dirt'', ''Orchestral Favorites'', and ''Zappa In New York'' (a 2LP set.) Believing that the material was sub-standard, Warner refused to pay Zappa upon delivery of the 4 albums (5 discs) according to their contract.


Therefore in 1977 Zappa decided he was contractually free to reconfigure the material on the 5 discs into a single 4LP set called ''[[Läther]]''. Though both collections contained unique material the 4 disc set was trimmed down from the original 5 disc configuration, not the other way around as is commonly assumed. While Gail Zappa claims "[[Läther]] was always conceived as a 4 disc set", she was apparently unaware that all the material on the original 5LP configuration was already completed in 1976, a year before ''[[Läther]]''. In fact there is no evidence that Zappa ever delivered tapes for ''[[Läther]]'' to Warner, nor would a single 4LP set have fulfilled the requirements of the Zappa/Warner contract. ''Zappa In New York'' was released in 1977 and was censored and re-sequenced by Warner without Zappa's authorization.
Therefore in 1977 Zappa decided he was contractually free to reconfigure the material on the 5 discs into a single 4LP set called ''[[Läther]]''. Though both collections contained unique material the 4 disc set was trimmed down from the original 5 disc configuration, not the other way around as is commonly assumed. (see [http://www.arf.ru/Notes/Ziny/append.html]) While Gail Zappa claims "[[Läther]] was always conceived as a 4 disc set", she was apparently unaware that all the material on the original 5LP configuration was already was recorded between 1971 and 1976, and completed a year before ''[[Läther]]''. In fact there is no evidence that Zappa ever delivered tapes for ''[[Läther]]'' to Warner, nor would a single 4LP set have fulfilled the requirements of the Zappa/Warner contract. ''Zappa In New York'' was released in 1977 and was censored and re-sequenced by Warner without Zappa's authorization.


Zappa then attempted to get a distribution deal with [[Mercury Records|Mercury]]/[[Phonogram Records|Phonogram]] to release ''[[Läther]]'' on the new Zappa Records label. This led Warner Bros. to threaten legal action, preventing the release of the ''[[Läther]]'' collection. In 1978 and 1979 Warner finally decided to release the 3 remaining individual albums they had initially rejected, ''Studio Tan'', ''Sleep Dirt'', and ''Orchestra Favorites.'' The three individual albums were released with no musical credits, as Zappa had not supplied this information. Warner commissioned new sleeve art by [[Gary Panter]], which was not approved by Zappa.
Zappa then attempted to get a distribution deal with [[Mercury Records|Mercury]]/[[Phonogram Records|Phonogram]] to release ''[[Läther]]'' on the new Zappa Records label. This led Warner Bros. to threaten legal action, preventing the release of the ''[[Läther]]'' collection. In 1978 and 1979 Warner finally decided to release the 3 remaining individual albums they had initially rejected, ''Studio Tan'', ''Sleep Dirt'', and ''Orchestra Favorites.'' The three individual albums were released with no musical credits, as Zappa had not supplied this information. Warner commissioned new sleeve art by [[Gary Panter]], which was not approved by Zappa.

Revision as of 05:38, 28 August 2008

Untitled

Orchestral Favorites is an album by Frank Zappa first released in May, 1979 on his own DiscReet Records label. The album features music performed by the 37-piece Abnuceals Emuukha Electric Orchestra.

History

In 1976 the relationship between Zappa and his manager/business partner Herb Cohen turned sour. Zappa and Cohen's company DiscReet Records was distributed by Warner Bros. When Zappa asked for a re-assignment of his contract from DiscReet to Warner in order to advance the possibility of being able to do special projects without Cohen's involvement, Warner Bros. briefly agreed. This led to the 1976 release of Zoot Allures on Warner. Later in 1976 Zappa claimed he delivered master tape copies of 4 individual LP's to Warner Bros. (see [1]) This would have fulfilled all of Zappa's final obligations and freed him to move to another label for his next release. The four albums in question were Studio Tan, Sleep Dirt, Orchestral Favorites, and Zappa In New York (a 2LP set.) Believing that the material was sub-standard, Warner refused to pay Zappa upon delivery of the 4 albums (5 discs) according to their contract.

Therefore in 1977 Zappa decided he was contractually free to reconfigure the material on the 5 discs into a single 4LP set called Läther. Though both collections contained unique material the 4 disc set was trimmed down from the original 5 disc configuration, not the other way around as is commonly assumed. (see [2]) While Gail Zappa claims "Läther was always conceived as a 4 disc set", she was apparently unaware that all the material on the original 5LP configuration was already was recorded between 1971 and 1976, and completed a year before Läther. In fact there is no evidence that Zappa ever delivered tapes for Läther to Warner, nor would a single 4LP set have fulfilled the requirements of the Zappa/Warner contract. Zappa In New York was released in 1977 and was censored and re-sequenced by Warner without Zappa's authorization.

Zappa then attempted to get a distribution deal with Mercury/Phonogram to release Läther on the new Zappa Records label. This led Warner Bros. to threaten legal action, preventing the release of the Läther collection. In 1978 and 1979 Warner finally decided to release the 3 remaining individual albums they had initially rejected, Studio Tan, Sleep Dirt, and Orchestra Favorites. The three individual albums were released with no musical credits, as Zappa had not supplied this information. Warner commissioned new sleeve art by Gary Panter, which was not approved by Zappa.

Much of the material on the album was made available to the public again when Läther was finally released to the public in 1996. Orchestral Favorites was reissued in a digitally remastered version on CD by Barking Pumpkin in 1991; this edition was reissued again in 1995 by Ryko.

Track listing

Side one

  1. "Strictly Genteel" – 7:04
  2. "Pedro's Dowry" – 7:41
  3. "Naval Aviation In Art?" – 1:22

Side two

  1. "Duke Of Prunes" – 4:20
  2. "Bogus Pomp" – 13:27

Charts

Album - Billboard (North America)

Year Chart Position
1979 Pop Albums 168[1]

References

  1. ^ "Charts and Awards for Orchestral Favorites". Allmusic. Retrieved 2008-08-22.