Rex Features, via
Associated Press
By BEN
SISARIO
Gail Zappa, the widow of the rock guitarist and composer Frank Zappa, who battled major record
companies and cover bands alike as a fierce steward of her husband’s musical
legacy, died on Wednesday at her home in Los Angeles. She was 70.
Her death was announced by her family, which did not disclose the cause.
Mrs. Zappa met her future husband in 1966, when she was a 21-year-old
secretary at the Whisky a Go Go nightclub in Los Angeles. He was four years
older and already establishing his reputation as a maverick musician with a
bad-boy streak as the leader of the Mothers of Invention, which had just
released its first album, “Freak Out!”
After meeting Gail, it took Zappa just “a couple of minutes” to fall in
love with her, he said in his 1989 autobiography, “The Real Frank Zappa Book,”
written with Peter Occhiogrosso. Her first impression had more to do with his
casual hygiene. She also later recalled that very early in their relationship,
Zappa had played his record collection for her and gauged her reaction.
“I didn’t know it was a test,” she said,
“and he never told me that I passed.”
She soon moved in with him, and the couple were married in 1967, just as
the Mothers of Invention were about to leave for a European tour.
In 1968 they bought a house, near Laurel Canyon in Los Angeles, that
remained her home and the family headquarters, with a basement “vault” that
houses Zappa’s voluminous recordings.
Adelaide Gail Sloatman was born in Philadelphia on Jan. 1, 1945, the
daughter of a nuclear physicist with the United States Navy. As a teenager she
lived in London, where she worked as a model. She also attended the Fashion
Institute of Technology in New York before hitchhiking to Los Angeles, where in
1966 she became part of the Sunset Strip music scene, recording a single with
the producer Kim Fowley under the name Bunny and Bear.
Mrs. Zappa was closely involved in managing her husband’s career, which
over the years included various conflicts and lawsuits with record companies
that led to the family’s recovering the rights to all of his music. She is
survived by two daughters, Moon Unit and Diva; two sons, Dweezil and Ahmet; and
four grandchildren.
Before Frank Zappa died of prostate cancer in 1993 at 52, he asked his wife
to sell his master recordings and get out of the music business, she has said.
But, she noted, he never said what to do with his publishing catalog — the
rights to his compositions — and so she defied his request and became the
keeper of his musical empire. In 2002, she created the Zappa Family Trust to
manage his intellectual property, including the rights to his image.
CreditFranka
Bruns/Associated Press
In July, the family announced that Ahmet Zappa would take over daily
operations of the trust.
After her husband’s death, Mrs. Zappa also became a top donor to the
Democratic Party in California and was a frequent guest at the Clinton White
House and a friend of Tipper Gore, who at the time was the wife of Vice
President Al Gore. In the 1980s, the two women had clashed over Mrs. Gore’s
organization Parents Music Resource Center, which advocated putting warning
labels on records that contained violent and sexually explicit lyrics.
At a Senate hearing in 1985, Zappa described that plan “an ill-conceived
piece of nonsense” that violated the First Amendment.
In her management of her husband’s legacy, Mrs. Zappa was often combative.
She denounced cover bands that played her husband’s music without permission
and in 2008 unsuccessfully sued Zappanale,
a German music festival, for appropriating the family name and even using her
husband’s signature facial hair as its logo. She once wrote Steve Jobs a profanity-laced
letter with her complaints about iTunes, she said.
She did all of this, by her account, to protect the integrity of her
husband’s work.
“My job is to make sure that Frank Zappa has the last word in terms of
anybody’s idea of who he is,” she told The Los Angeles Times in 2008. “And his
actual last word is his music."
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/09/arts/music/gail-zappa-keeper-of-her-husbands-legacy-dies-at-70.html?ref=music&_r=0
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