Zappa in New York was recorded in December 1976 at the Palladium and originally intended for release in 1977. It was held up due to arguments between Frank Zappa and his then-record label, Warner Bros. When the two-LP set finally appeared in March 1978, Warner had deleted "Punky's Whips," a song about drummer Terry Bozzio's attraction to Punky Meadows of Angel. When Zappa reacquired the album and released it as a double CD in 1991, he restored "Punky's Whips" and added four bonus tracks. The Zappa band, which includes bassist Patrick O'Hearn, percussionist Ruth Underwood, and keyboard player Eddie Jobson, along with a horn section including the two Brecker brothers, was one of the bandleader's most accomplished, which it had to be to play songs like "Black Page," even in the "easy" version presented here. Zappa also was at the height of his comic stagecraft, notably on songs like "Titties & Beer," which essentially is a comedy routine between Zappa and Bozzio, and "The Illinois Enema Bandit," which features TV announcer Don Pardo. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
when it comes to frank what can anyone say he was one of the best in the world.i met frank back stage twice once at the swing auditorium in berdoo and again at mable shaw bridges at the claremont colleges. in hollywood at the infamous ben franks i spent several hours off and on kickin it there and on the streets.sometimes at the wiskey i would hang around after hours to help clean up and talk to gail his soon to be wife. gail was so cool to me i was just a kid then and she would let me know if