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Jimmy Carl Black: Drummer and vocalist with The Mothers of Invention
"Hi
boys and girls, I'm Jimmy Carl Black, and I'm the Indian of the
group". This was how the drummer and occasional singer with the
original line-up of The Mothers of Invention would introduce himself
on stage and on record. Led by the guitarist, composer and singer Frank
Zappa, this incarnation of the Mothers, as they were known, to the
dismay of their record label MGM, released five ground-breaking
albums and three compilations between 1966 and 1970. Zappa and his
cohorts waged "a war against apathy", asking "Who Are The Brain
Police?" on their 1966 debut album, the double-set Freak Out! Then,
when all around them were singing about peace and love, they turned
on the hippies and took a caustic, contrary stance with We're Only
in it for the Money in 1968. Not only did the lyrics to "Who Needs
The Peace Corps?" lampoon the flower power movement – the line "I
will love the police as they beat the shit out of me on the streets"
was only reinstated on the CD reissue in 1986 – but the gatefold
sleeve was a pastiche of the Beatles' Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts
Club Band with the dress-wearing, long-haired and moustachioed Black
at its centre. "I didn't like that dress 'cause it didn't fit but
I thought it was a great picture," the drummer said in a recent
interview. "We weren't the first band to do a picture in drag, the
Rolling Stones were. If it was good enough for them, then it had to
be good enough for us. I had no idea that We're Only in it for the
Money would be considered a classic piece of musical history and I
don't think Frank did either." Black sang lead on the "Big Leg Emma" single in
1967 and also played on the albums Absolutely Free (1967), Lumpy
Gravy – nominally a Zappa solo project (1968) – the doo-wop homage
Cruising With Ruben & The Jets (also 1968) and Uncle Meat (1969) as
well as the compilations Mothermania (1969), Burnt Weeny Sandwich
and Weasels Ripped My Flesh (both 1970). He featured on many
subsequent releases from the Zappa archives and appeared in Zappa's
movie 200 Motels (1971) as "Lonesome Cowboy Burt". He enjoyed
filming 200 Motels in the UK, especially since two of his favourite
drummers, Ringo Starr and Keith Moon, were involved. Though Zappa led two more incarnations of The
Mothers in the Seventies, the original personnel helped fashion the
experimental sound and inventive style the composer explored
throughout his career. "It was a challenge but I loved it," Black
said. "He [Frank] very patiently taught me how to play all those
rhythms and time signatures. He knew I could do it." Away from Zappa, the drummer worked with Geronimo
Black, a short-lived group he formed with Bunk Gardner of The
Mothers, with Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band, appearing with
them at the 1975 Knebworth festival, with the British vocalist
Arthur Brown, and with the avant-garde instrumentalist Eugene
Chadbourne. He also played Zappa's music with various Mothers alumni
in The Grandmothers and toured with The Muffin Men, the Liverpool
group who revisit Zappa and Beefheart material. Born James Inkanish Jnr in 1938 to Native American
parents, he was adopted by Carl Black, who his mother married the
following year. He grew up in Texas and played the piano as a child,
but took up the trumpet in his teens and was the soloist in his
school band. He switched to drums after seeing Elvis Presley in
concert and enlisted in the US Air Force in 1958. In 1964, he moved to Los Angeles, fell in with the
bassist Roy Estrada and the vocalist Ray Collins and formed The Soul
Giants. Zappa replaced their original guitarist and assumed
leadership of the group, renaming it The Mothers. "Frank was kind of freaky-looking, but I liked him
a lot," Black recalled. "Frank said, 'If you guys learn my music,
I'll make you rich and famous'. He took care of half that promise. I
got famous, but I damn sure didn't get rich!" Within a year, the group secured a deal with Verve
after they were spotted performing "Trouble Every Day" at the
Whisky-A-Go-Go. By the time they recorded Freak Out! they had
evolved far from their roots as a cover band and were taking pot
shots at the emptiness of American culture and consumerism. Their
mélange of jazz, rhythm 'n' blues, rock, sound collages and musique
concrète went against the grain of most pop music in the Sixties
but, much like their label-mates the Velvet Underground, they have
proved hugely influential. In particular, they informed the skewed,
satirical world view of the Simpsons creator Matt Groening and
strongly influenced the European underground in the late Sixties and
early Seventies. Despite a residency in New York through much of
1967, and a successful European tour the following year – which
included an appearance on the BBC television show Colour Me Pop –
the Mothers, whose line-up had swelled to a nine-piece, broke up in
1969 under the financial strain and Zappa's dictatorial approach. "Frank was the BOSS," Black said. "There were no
arguments about music because if you did, he would show you where
the door was. Period. We just got a phone call from him stating that
he had decided to break up the band and your salary has ended as of
last week. That is pretty cold in my opinion, after all the loyalty
we had given him through the years of starving for his music." Following the failure of Geronimo Black he went
back to Texas in 1973 and worked in a doughnut factory while playing
the odd gig with The Valley Loboys. In 1980, he guested on five
tracks on Zappa's You Are What You Is, including "I Don't Want To
Get Drafted" and a revival of the Lonesome Cowboy Burt character on
"Harder Than Your Husband" – "I even got paid," Black quipped. He subsequently hooked up with Brown to perform as
well as run a painting company in Austin called The Gentlemen of
Color. "We would paint anything that didn't move – but mostly
houses," he said. "We painted a shitload of them, and sometimes
people who knew who we were from the old days would have us sign the
house after the job was done." In the mid-Nineties, Black moved to Europe and
lived in Italy and Germany. He toured with Chadbourne and various
incarnations of the Grandmothers and also played with the Muffin Men
as well as making sandstone sculptures. A charity concert in his
memory will be held at the Bridge House 2 in Canning Town, London,
on 9 November. James Inkanish Jnr (Jimmy
Carl Black), drummer, singer and songwriter: born El Paso, Texas 1
February 1938; three times married (three sons, three daughters);
died Siegsdorf, Germany 1 November 2008.
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