1971年に公開されたフランク・ザッパのシュールリアリスティック・ドキュメンタリー映画『200 Motels』オリジナル・サウンドトラックの50周年を記念した6CDスーパー・デラックス・エディション
ブックレットとポスターを含むオリジナル・パッケージを再現しつつ、Bernie Grundmanによる最新リマスターを採用。
オリジナル・デモ、スタジオ・アウトテイク、別ミックス、インタヴュー、映画広告、独白などの未発表音源を膨大なアーカイヴの中から発掘。
映画ポスター、カスタム・キーホルダー、Do-Not-Disturbのモーテル・ドア・ハンガー等を封入。
Pamela Des Barres, Ruth Underwood、そしてアーカイヴ管理人のJoe Traversによる新ライナーノーツ掲載。
発売・販売元 提供資料(2021/09/21)
The soundtrack to Frank Zappa's strange early-'70s film 200 Motels was always doomed to be a peripheral entry in his discography. The movie's story was not easy to follow, and neither is the record (not that plot was ever a big focus of the production). It's typically wacky Zappa of the era, with unpredictable sharp turns between crunchy rock bombast, orchestration, and jazz/classical influences, as well as interjections of wacky spoken dialogue. Those who like his late-'60s/early-'70s work -- not as song-oriented as his first albums, in other words, but not as "serious" or as silly as his later records -- will probably like this fine, although it's not up to the level of Uncle Meat. It's funny in spots as well, especially the part where a disgruntled sideman gets tempted away from the band to do his own thing (a libretto that was, apparently, based on real-life incidents concerning Zappa sideman Jeff Simmons, who left during the project). On the other hand, there's a growing tendency to deploy the smutty, cheap humor that would soon dominate much of Zappa's work. ~ Richie Unterberger
Rovi