Jazz from Hell
Ostensibly "remixed" in 1990,
for the Zappa Records CDZAP 32 release, and the 1995 CD should have the same remix, but
few talk about it. Closer listening has revealed few differences. ("Jazz from Hell" is not 20 seconds shorter on the original CDs, it's just the
printed track time that is wrong.)
What We Need: Closure, pure and simple. Are there any
differences? Does anybody actually own every version of this album?
ESSENTIAL VERSIONS FOR COMPLETISTS: Depends - on how obsessive you are.
Any version will do, unless you're real obsessive and want one 1980s and one
1990s version. Read the whole page for details. (The 1995 CD
is a remaster.) [completist's guide]
Issues
- Vinyl (Barking Pumpkin ST 74205 in the US, November or January (!)
15 1986; Capitol ST-6553 in Canada; EMI EMC 064 24 0673 1 (?) in the
UK; EMI 3521 in Europe; PM 264 24 0673 in France - 1986)
- Dutch vinyl (EMI 2406731)
- Israeli vinyl (Pumpko (?!) EMC 3521, a little Hebrew print on the back cover)
- Brazilian vinyl (EMI 31C 064 240673)
- Argentine vinyl (EMI 58980, with black & white cover)
- Australian promo vinyl (EMI EMC 240673)
- Cassette (Barking Pumpkin 4XT-74205)
- Original US CD (Ryko RCD 10030, April 1987 (imported into Australia by Festival Records
and re-stickered Ryko D40709))
- Original European CD, coupled with Frank
Zappa Meets the Mothers of Prevention (EMI CDP 790078-2, 1986)
- Original Japanese CD (VACK 5050 - before or after 1990?)
- European CD re-issue (Zappa Records CDZAP 32,
September 1990)
- IRS 970.732 CD (?)
- Russian picture CD (JPCD 9712657 DORA)
- Zappa Records cassette (TZAPPA32)
- 1995 CD (Ryko RCD 10549, May 16 1995; VACK 5134 in Japan,
renumbered 5269 in 1998)
- Japanese paper-sleeve CD (Ryko/VACK 1258,
November 21 2002 - sticker included - US cover (gray border);
European cover variant (blue border) released March 2003)
Track Titles
On the twofer CD, "While You Were Art II" is listed as
the number "11" instead of "II" both in the booklet and on
the disc itself.
Vinyl
From the November 1993 issue of Record Collector Magazine, quoted by
Mikael Agardsson:
The original US and UK LPs of Jazz from Hell
differed slightly in cover design, and the variations also applies to the CD artwork. The
Barking Pumpkin LP and Ryko CD sport a grey border as opposed to a blue one on the
EMI releases. [The Canadian LP, on Capitol Records, also had a blue border -
Dan Watkins.]
Cassette
The Barking pumpkin 4XT-74205 release was an XDR Cobalt CS-1 cassette in a clear
plastic case, with the same track list as the vinyl:
1. Night School
2. The Beltway Bandits
3. While You Were Art II
4. Jazz from Hell
5. G-Spot Tornado
6. Damp Ankles
7. St. Etienne
8. Massaggio Galore
Original US CD
From Corey:
Anyway, as a new fan I've mostly been getting the 95 Ryko issues. However, I managed to find an
old Ryko version of Jazz from Hell in a cut-out bin. From what I glean from the
Jazz from Hell section of your page, this edition should be the pre-1990
remix, original version. The CD makes absolutely no mention of any remix and Bob
Stone is mentioned
only as engineer. The latest date on the inlay is the 1987 (C) Copyright to Ryko. The
(P) recording copyright is 1986 to Pumpko Industries Ltd. I presume this must mean that the master is the original 1986 version.
However, according to the Thing-Fish page, the on-disc art/label style of this disc was not produced until
around 1994 (It is the style with the purple Frank face and yellow print). Since this actual CD was
manufactured in 94, had the master switched to the remix from 1990 and the artwork just retained? Or did Ryko not have the master to the remix until
1995, even if the remix was present on other labels? (Ed: We wish we knew for
sure!)
Original European CD, coupled with Frank Zappa Meets the Mothers
of Prevention
The track list, courtesy of Dr István Fekete:
1. We're Turning Again
2. Alien Orifice
3. Yo Cats [Zappa/Mariano]
4. What's New in Baltimore
5. I Don't Even Care [Zappa/Watson]
6. One Man - One Vote
7. HR 2911
8. Little Beige Sambo
9. Aerobics in Bondage
10. Night School
11. The Beltway Bandits
12. While You Were Art 11 [sic!]
13. Jazz from Hell
14. G-Spot Tornado
15. Damp Ankles
16. St Etienne
17. Massagio Galore
Tracks 1-9 are Frank Zappa Meets the Mothers of Prevention;
tracks 10-17 are Jazz from Hell. "While You Were Art II" is listed as number "11" instead of "II". The front cover was Jazz
from Hell and the back cover Frank Zappa Meets the Mothers
of Prevention.
European CD Re-Issue
This release
would appear to have been remixed (the upper right corner of the front cover says "U.M.R.K. digital remix",
and the back cover says "Remixed 1990 by Bob Stone"), but
closer listening has revealed few differences. The 1995 CD has the same
"remix".
MARTIN HIGGS: I have the 1987 Ryko (RCD 1030) and the 1990 Zappa Records (ZAP 25). The
latter CD has "U.M.R.K DIGITAL REMIX" added to the front cover art. I can't
recall noticing any differences, but then I haven't listened A/B wise. Actually, looking
at the timings on both covers, the majority of tracks on the CD
ZAP 32 are within a second or two of the Ryko, except for "St. Etienne"
which is 20 seconds longer. Don't know what the extra is. The CD is not
in the case, hmmm.
PATRICK NEVE: Hmm indeed. I own the 1987 Ryko release. Even though both the label and
the printed disc indicate "St. Etienne" as being 06:05 long, it actually plays
out to 06:25. So, no extra material. Just a corrected timing sheet, as
reported by Ryko's '95 remaster release notes.
Mikael Agardsson also quotes the November 1993 issue of Record Collector
Magazine:
The original US and UK LPs of Jazz from Hell
differed slightly in cover design, and the variations also applies to the CD artwork. The
Barking Pumpkin LP and Ryko CD sport a grey border as opposed to a blue one on the
EMI releases.
From Jean-Marc Juilland:
I have a few versions of the album. Original EMI CD
(same as vinyl), original Ryko release
and ZAP 32. I think the sound on the remix is much improved.
1995 CD
Official Ryko statement: "New master. New timing sheet." [full statement] This is the same 1990 remix that's on
the European CD re-issue. If you know anything about this
remix, such as how different it is from the older mix, please step forward. ("St.
Etienne" is
not 20 seconds longer, it's just the printed track time that is wrong on the old CDs:
MARTIN HIGGS: Actually, looking at the timings on both covers, the majority of tracks
on the CD ZAP 32 are within a second or two of the Ryko,
except for "St. Etienne" which is 20 seconds longer. Don't know
what the extra is. The CD is not in the case, hmmm.
PATRICK NEVE: Hmm indeed. I own the 1987 Ryko release. Even though both the label and
the printed disc indicate "St. Etienne" as being 06:05 long, it actually plays
out to 06:25. So, no extra material. Just a corrected timing sheet, as
reported by Ryko's '95 remaster release notes.
From Michael Pierry:
For the benefit of Johan's FAQ, I bought the '95 edition of Jazz from
Hell today. It seems to be almost identical to the original
CD. Overall the sound is the same, with the '95 mastered with the levels
maybe slightly higher. There's about a tenth of a second of silence at the
beginning of "Night School" in the new version, and the opening kick
drum isn't halfway cut off as it was on the original CD (there is also a
shorter pause at the end of the song, making the track length 3 seconds
shorter than on the original CD). Similarly, the opening kick drum of
"St. Etienne" has been moved from the very very end of track six to
the very beginning of track seven, so that when you cue it up to track seven
the opening hit isn't cut off as it was on the old CD (try it in case you
don't believe me). Same thing with the title track although it's much harder
to hear.
This ain't no remix, but it might be worth buying if you're obsessive about
wanting to hear the attack of the opening kick drum beat in "Night
School". Hey, don't laugh, I never heard it until today and now I can't
live without it! ;)
Japanese Paper-Sleeve Version (2001-2002)
Starting in 2001, Video Arts Music released a limited-edition series (2000
copies each) of Zappa CDs in
paper sleeves - miniature LP sleeves. There was nothing special about this
series other than the covers, which were very well done - inserts and
"bonuses" were reproduced, the albums that originally had gatefold
covers got little miniature gatefolds, and cover track lists were exactly as on
the corresponding LPs, even in cases where the CD has bonus tracks or a
different track order. Included in this series were some entries that never had
"proper" LP issues, i.e. Läther. Additionally, some rarities--like the "green/gold"
cover of Chunga's Revenge--were reproduced as special items in this run.
We need to stress that the sound quality of these discs matches the US
Ryko issues, which they are clearly derived from. These are collectors
items, not new remastered editions.
Late-2012-update: It appears as if the Japanese may be warming up the
mini-LP ovens for a new batch based on the 2012 UMe remasters. We'll let you
know if this happens.
Questions
Additional Informants
- Tito Osuna
- Mikael Agardsson
- Jeffrey I Horowitz
- Victor Dubiler
- Gonçalo Falcão
- Steve Jones
- Santiago García, Spain
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