[ ]   [ ]   [ ]                        [ ]      [ ]   [ ]
The Mothers of Invention — Trouble Every Day
Album: Freak Out!
Avg rating:
7.2

Your rating:
Total ratings: 1773









Released: 1966
Length: 5:47
Plays (last 30 days): 0
Well I'm about to get upset
From watchin' my TV
Been checkin' out the news
Until my eyeballs fail to see
I mean they say that every day
Is just another rotten mess
And when it's gonna change, my friends
Is anybody's guess

So I'm watchin' and I'm waitin'
Hopin' for the best
Even think I'll go to prayin'
Every time I hear 'em sayin'
That there's no way to delay
That trouble comin' every day
No way to delay
That trouble comin' every day

Wednesday I watched the riot...
I seen the cops out on the street
Watched 'em throwin' rocks and stuff
And chokin' in the heat
Listened to reports
About the whisky passin' 'round
Seen the smoke & fire
And the market burnin' down
Watched while everybody
On his street would take a turn
To stomp and smash and bash and crash
And slash and bust and burn

And I'm watchin' and I'm waitin'
Hopin' for the best
Even think I'll go to prayin'
Every time I hear 'em sayin'
That there's no way to delay
That trouble comin' every day
No way to delay
That trouble comin' every day

Well you can cool it,
You can heat it...
'Cause, baby, I don't need it...
Take your TV tube and eat it
'N all that phony stuff on sports
'N all THOSE unconfirmed reports
You know I watched that rotten box
Until my head began to hurt
From checkin' out the way
The newsmen say they get the dirt
Before the guys on channel so-and-so
And further they assert
That any show they'll interrupt
To bring you news if it comes up
They say that if the place blows up
They'll be the first to tell
Because the boys they got downtown
Are workin' hard and doin' swell,
And if anybody gets the news
Before it hits the street,
They say that no one blabs it faster
Their coverage can't be beat

And if another woman driver
Gets machine-gunned from her seat
They'll send some joker with a brownie
And you'll see it all complete

So I'm watchin' and I'm waitin'
Hopin' for the best
Even think I'll go to prayin'
Every time I hear 'em sayin'
That there's no way to delay
That trouble comin' every day
No way to delay
That trouble comin' every day

Hey you know something people
I'm not black
But there's a whole lots a times
I wish I could say I'm not white

Well, I seen the fires burnin'
And the local people turnin'
On the merchants and the shops
Who used to sell their brooms and mops
And every other household item
Watched the mob just turn and bite 'em
And they say it served 'em right
Because a few of them are white,
And it's the same across the nation
Black & white discrimination
They're yellin' "You can't understand me!"
And all the other crap they hand me
In the papers and TV
'N all that mass stupidity
That seems to grow more every day
Each time you hear some nitwit say
He wants to go and do you in
Because the color of your skin
Just don't appeal to him
(No matter if it's black or white)
Because he's out for blood tonight
You know we gotta sit around at home
And watch this thing begin
But I bet there won't be many left
To see it really end
'Cause the fire in the street
Ain't like the fire in my heart
And in the eyes of all these people
Don't you know that this could start
On any street in any town
In any state if any clown
Decides that now's the time to fight
For some ideal he thinks is right
And if a million more agree
There ain't no great society
As it applies to you and me
Our country isn't free
And the law refuses to see
If all that you can ever be
Is just a lousy janitor
Unless your uncle owns a store
You know that five in every four
Won't amount to nothin' more
So watch the rats go across the floor
And make up songs about being poor
Blow your harmonica son!
Comments (301)add comment
 ugowsky wrote:

This is the first rap song ever!



Dylan did it before this.
 walk2k wrote:

Zappa 4 Prez



Some skaters on the lake have "Iggy Pop for Prez 2024" on their ramp It was 2016 and 2020 too.  If Frankie was with us, I'd likely vote for him, too.
Just a brilliant musician .. 
I love Frank Zappa and I have all is albums 
Zappa 4 Prez
 Proclivities wrote:



Very well stated!!!
 Proclivities wrote:


*BUMP*
Hot Ratz is still my favorite album of all time.
 Donar wrote:

Didn't knew this. Nice.
Guess we didn't made very much progress in the last 56 years.


Oh boy we did. It's worse now. 
Saw Zappa around 1982 or so in Gainesville, FL -- truly blew me away at how incredible an ensemble he had and WHAT A SHOW.

There are far better Zappa tunes than this, but even so..

damn... I miss what this guy's contribution to music could have continued to have been..... RIPFZ!
Didn't knew this. Nice.
Guess we didn't made very much progress in the last 56 years.
SOB. Where have I been?
Jeeezzz

This is Dylan-esque.  Subterranean Homesick Blues
Was Lowell George ever a member, before Little Feat? 
it is already here
Please play MORE Frank Zappa tunes!!!  Thank You!!
Jesus! I forgot how great Frank is. 
My most favorite artist/musician!! Sad: he can't do it on stage anymore 
Am I the only one hearing "Rebel Rebel" ?
2021 and as true as in 1966.
Is Bill making a point here as Biden takes the reigns at this very moment.
Just love RP.
 tinypriest wrote:
All I can say is that RP is playing music connected with what's going on right now, November, 2020, reflecting the turmoil post-election. The mix is unnerving at times for  its prescience, and brilliant for it.
 
January 2021...

c.
A fantastic slice of early Zappa
All I can say is that RP is playing music connected with what's going on right now, November, 2020, reflecting the turmoil post-election. The mix is unnerving at times for  its prescience, and brilliant for it.
 Steve_Bumgardner wrote:
I love Zappa! Love! Listen!!!! Even then it was today!!!
 Yeah, just like it was a thousand years ago, and beyond. Human nature. You can't will it to change.

Well, I've been around as long as this song, but this is the first I've heard it, and man...totally relevant TODAY.  Thanks RP for once again helping me find stuff I missed along the way, when I was too busy obsessing over Led Zep, Dylan, and Springsteen.

Wow, just had to amend this after hearing:

"Hey, you know something people?
  I'm not black 
  But there's a whole lots a times
   I wish I could say I'm not white".

Zappa was ahead by a century.
 Proclivities wrote:
 
Loved Mr. Zappa, but I always thought he looked like a terrier.
Help!  I'm a rock
This is the first rap song ever!
Things are still the same in 2020. 
Gr SpencerAR wrote:
My musical ignorance is definitely showing - I had no idea that Frank Zappa was ever in a band.  
 
Frank Zappa  was a band!
Blow your harmonica, son .

I love Frank!!!
I love Zappa! Love! Listen!!!! Even then it was today!!!
Plus ca feckin' change, Frank . Be cool unto each other, people.
My first thought was "wow! how prescient these lyrics from 1966 are." And then I realized with anguish that what makes these lyrics so applicable to today is how little we have advanced in civil rights.
 CoYoT51 wrote:
Sooooooooooo many good things in huge Zappa's work... and you play this??
 
I agree. With 60 albums released during his lifetime, and another 45 posthumously, there has to be easily 1200+ songs in his repertoire. This is a good one (I prefer the Roxy version), but I would add another few hundred to this library. But that's just me.
Great message. Unbearable music.
 vandal wrote:

"Hey you know something people
I'm not black
But there's a whole lots a times
I wish I could say I'm not white" 
 
I heard that too!
Awesome. Still true, today.

"Hey you know something people
I'm not black
But there's a whole lots a times
I wish I could say I'm not white" 
 CoYoT51 wrote:
Sooooooooooo many good things in huge Zappa's work... and you play this??
 

You were hoping for Valley Girl?
First time hearing this! WOW. Never got drawn to Zappa, but this is outstanding and soooooooo depressing that nothing has changed in 40 years.
Zappa-me some mo'!

(But maybe a different tune next time?)
Just bumped it up to a 9.  This was part of my political awareness way back when I was about 13 years old.... and unfortunately still relevant today.  
My musical ignorance is definitely showing - I had no idea that Frank Zappa was ever in a band.  
 obankenobi wrote:
         BBoyes wrote:
         ... What *didn't* Zappa do and do it incredibly well?

parent children
 

How do you know that?  The (few) interviews I have seen with his kids showed them to be very well adjusted kids, especially given the fact that they were born into a house of privilege.  They certainly aren't Paris Hiltons. 
Saw FZ in Freiburg West Germany 1973. The Mothers were way ahead of their time.
 BBoyes wrote:
This is basically rap! What *didn't* Zappa do and do it incredibly well?
 
parent children
Agreed, but I think the real art is knowing when to conform to the norm. 
 

Sooooooooooo many good things in huge Zappa's work... and you play this??
Amazing one of my favorites
I really appreciate that this is played here. The first bar was all it took to know what was coming. Maybe I spent too much time listening to this song and album? And it almost goes without saying that he had this country pegged and that very little has changed in this country, while some other things have transformed. A nation really should not be expected to change its long-established nature much, which this piece suggests to me tonight. 
Well past it’s due date.
Hey, Bill.  Is there any way you could possibly squeeze "Montana" into one of your sets? Not sure where it would fit, but hearing this great song brought back the nostalgia of listening to Zappa's albums with a university mate who claimed to have Zappa's entire album collection (and who indeed looked more like Zappa than any "human" I've met since those early '70s).
Astonishing. I have been a big FZ fan for 40+ years but gained a new respect for him after really listening to this song again on a sunny spring afternoon.
 
 DaidyBoy wrote:
Amazing lyrics.  Some things don't change much.
 
And they still don't, unfortunately.
 Triquel67 wrote:
Still relevant 50 yrs later
 

Yes, that.  Amazing, and rather sad.
He never gets enough credit for his guitar playing. 
Great to hear a little early Frank and the Motha's.
Would love to hear more ZAPPA, Bill
Sounds like early rap ... saying something about the way it is.
Still relevant 50 yrs later
Think about it, he was recording this amazing stuff before Sgt. Pepper.  He was one hell of an innovator.
one of the most important composers of the 20th Century in any genre.
Rap
You're kidding, right? Early Zappa is unbeatable. Dangerous stuff yesterday and today!
 sbrewer wrote:
More Zappa please.
 
I 2nd that vote!  Seen his name mentioned in a bunch of other songs' comments...yet I haven't heard many FZ or MoI songs here....maybe we'll get 'Yellow Snow' soon for the wintertime?  Long Live RP!!
Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose
More Zappa please.
This made me go out into the garage and dance like a Tool for a few minutes.   I didn't want my roommates to catch me "doing it" in the living room this morning.{#Dancingbanana_2}
 dbreese wrote:
1966. 1966!

I mean THEY RECORDED THIS IN 1966!

The lyrics, the musicianship, the engineering and production -  Ok, I get it now, the Mothers were brilliant, and Zappa may really have been a genius.

(Can you tell this is the first time I listened to this with headphones?)

 


Yeah, I was shocked when I read that this song came out before '68 or '69. But...

Frank wrote it in '65:



Frank Zappa wrote the song in 1965 at 1819 Bellevue Avenue, Echo Park, Los Angeles residence of a methamphetamine chemist referred to by Zappa as "Wild Bill the Mannequin-Fucker"[1] after watching news coverage of the Watts Riots.[2] Originally dubbed "The Watts Riot Song",[2] its primary lyrical themes are racial violence, social injustice, and sensationalist journalism.[3] The musical style—featuring multiple guitar tracks and a harmonica—much more closely resembles electric blues than mainstream rock and roll.[4]

YouTubed and saw a young Zappa play a bicycle like a xylophone on The Steve Allen Show, back in like the 50's  : P
1966. 1966!

I mean THEY RECORDED THIS IN 1966!

The lyrics, the musicianship, the engineering and production -  Ok, I get it now, the Mothers were brilliant, and Zappa may really have been a genius.

(Can you tell this is the first time I listened to this with headphones?)
Saw Zappa at the Armadillo in Austin back in the late 70s.  A mind blowing experience on all fronts.
 jbuhl wrote:
Zappa should be played immediately after every Dave Mathews track to dusche our brains.

 
I don't want to dusche my brain, thanks. I'd prefer to not douche it, either. 
There was never a better rapper than Frank Z! He was definitely light-years ahead of his time. Always remembered, forever treasured.
Zappa should be played immediately after every Dave Mathews track to dusche our brains.
Still relevant
 hayduke2 wrote:
Awesome man, 1966?!  A Powerful invention, great music with timeless lyrics I'm afraid: economic and political strife, war overseas, 
"I'm not black, but there's an awful lot of times I wish I could say I'm not white" 

 
Prophet Zappa  
 westslope wrote:
Food for thought for those heading to polls in a few days.  

...  
 
That was written in November 2016 BEFORE the presidential polls.
 
Food for thought:  America made a bad political choice because not enough Americans had listened carefully to poets like Frank Zappa.  
War every day...
There is no way to delay that trouble coming everyday..............................
Oh. Hail. Ya!
 This is excellent...Big smile  kcar wrote:

gif loop of black guy with big afro moving his head left to right

gif of hippie girl dancing at concert
Yes, it is Dylanesque...if Bob were on speed. 

 


...unconfirmed reports...   if the place blows up, they'll be the first to tell...  their coverage can't be beat  . no way to delay trouble
I'M FREAKING OUT!!!
If you don't know, go read the Wiki on how this album came to be, pretty interesting.  Regarded as one of the first concept albums, over 50 years ago.  Gets an 8 for historical value.
Isn't it a flipping TRIP how from-another-planet Frank Zappa was?! It's said that he never touched hard drugs, and he certainly poked fun at those who did — example: "Cocaine Decisions;" For sure, his stuff sure is perfect for that moment when the weed of choice starts shooting sparks through all the synapses that might have otherwise been unoccupied. His musical genius transcends, inspires!
Yeah. This. Although in my case it's not a 'touch' of grey, more like a solid 'thwack!' 

chinaski wrote:
Everything old is new again. Myself, Bill and a whole host of you others with a touch of gray in here already lived through all that the song lyrics depict fifty years ago and here we go again. Did it ever stop? 'Fraid not. *sigh* The lyrics are worth a read:   https://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/frankzappa/troubleeveryday.html

 


 chinaski wrote:
Everything old is new again. Myself, Bill and a whole host of you others with a touch of gray in here already lived through all that the song lyrics depict fifty years ago and here we go again. Did it ever stop? 'Fraid not. *sigh* The lyrics are worth a read:   https://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/frankzappa/troubleeveryday.html

 

Indeed.  The lyrics are all the proof you need that nothing ever changes.  What goes 'round comes 'round.  It's a function of the human condition that we who never learn from history are doomed to become victims of it.  Over and over and over again.  And somewhere way off in the back-ground God (and the Devil)....laughs. 

So it goes.

Highlow
American Net'Zen


{#Cowboy} frank if only u could watch the news today !
Tell it FRANK!
Everything old is new again. Myself, Bill and a whole host of you others with a touch of gray in here already lived through all that the song lyrics depict fifty years ago and here we go again. Did it ever stop? 'Fraid not. *sigh* The lyrics are worth a read:   https://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/frankzappa/troubleeveryday.html
AND ALL THAT PHONY STUFF ON SPORTS! And all those UNCONFIRMED REPORTS, and in my EXCENTRIFUGAL FORZ, I can clearly see/ that as applies to you and me/ that our country just ain't free/ and Bob blows on his harmonica but Time, it just keeps goin'
Y'know, when I was growing up, 50-year-old music was acoustic 78's of operas, popular music and jazz from the First World War ... I started listening to FZ in the early 70's, and I always liked his stuff - all of it. Damn, I feel old. He died way too soon.  
More Mothers please!
Being a political geek, I've always loved this song.  I once introduced it to my kids as the first rap song.  I don't think I convinced them but I'll maintain the thought until someone, hopefully here, proves me wrong.

Oops the subject has already been covered.  A glitch told me there were no comments yet, on this song.
still sounds good and im sure frank would have a few more lyrics to add today! take your tv tube and eat it
Love this but especially the Roxy and Elsewhere, early 70s version which came later. 
Remember, Frank was deeply inspired, even obsessed with Tricky Dick Nixon.
I would imagine Daffy Donald will inspire a few artists in similar fashion.  
HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!!!
The times are starting to demand a new revolution to match our '60's one!  Zappa said it so well back then.
Appreciated your commentary "on air", Bill. Summed it up for me... 
This is basically rap! What *didn't* Zappa do and do it incredibly well?
1966!
a true musical  genius  no one could write music  like the zappsta {#Guitarist}
play Uncle Remus, pls.! Says it all within just two minutes...
Food for thought for those heading to polls in a few days.  

I feel privileged to have seen FZ at UBC, Vancouver, BC in the mid-1970s.  I absolutely loved the skit he did about he and his band mates having to drop their drawers coming over the border.  Something similar had happened to me earlier that year at the tunnel between Windsor, Ontario and Detroit, Michigan.   
More Zappa this is almost 50 years old and still so actual!
Amazing lyrics.  Some things don't change much.
Great to hear Frank & the Mothers on RP. FZ was way ahead of his time. Saw him live in the 70's - so glad I did, truly amazing. An exceptional musician and lyricist (and humorist!). The world is much the poorer for his passing. More please Bill!
 wgsu_1978 wrote:
Hungry Freaks, Daddy!

 
gif loop of black guy with big afro moving his head left to right

gif of hippie girl dancing at concert
Yes, it is Dylanesque...if Bob were on speed. 
Your cookin' now Bill
 Not that I don't like this, but It would be really great to hear more from Zappa here than this.
Instant 10
Would it be disproportional to detect some, err, well: dylanesc influences in this one? As odd as it may sound?
And to think that Zappa wrote these lyrics 50 years ago...
Blow your harmonica, son. 
Hungry Freaks, Daddy!
Could this be part 2 of lumpy gravy
Bill, Thank you!
What a monster Zappa was...sadly still relevant lyrics.  But it reminded me I still have his vinyl out in the garage. Time to pull it back out.