Frank Zappa Reads NSFW Passage From William Burroughs’ Naked Lunch (1978)

You may strug­gle to find two more icon­o­clas­tic coun­ter­cul­tur­al fig­ures than William S. Bur­roughs and Frank Zap­pa. The well-known names con­ceal often less well-known and at times inac­ces­si­ble or down­right infu­ri­at­ing work and per­son­al­i­ties. Despite their some­times too-easy asso­ci­a­tion with the move­ments they helped birth, nei­ther Bur­roughs nor Zap­pa fits com­fort­ably with free-wheel­ing Beat sen­si­bil­i­ties or flow­ery Cal­i­for­nia hip­pie cul­ture. They were both sim­ply too con­trary, cul­ti­vat­ed or, at times, too weird and anti­so­cial for that.

But these con­found­ing ten­den­cies make both artists peren­ni­al­ly inter­est­ing. Despite their differences—in medi­um, age, and background—both share at least two sig­nif­i­cant traits: a wry, blas­phe­mous sense of humor and descent from fam­i­lies inte­gral to U.S. tech­no­crat­ic suprema­cy: Bur­roughs the grand­son of the inven­tor of the adding machine and Zap­pa the son of a chemist and math­e­mati­cian who helped make chem­i­cal weapons. Maybe it’s his­tor­i­cal irony that the Bur­roughs and Zap­pa fam­i­lies pro­duced such errant off­spring, maybe it’s a dialec­ti­cal inevitabil­i­ty. But it’s cer­tain­ly fit­ting that the two come togeth­er in the audio above, where Zap­pa reads a par­tic­u­lar­ly fun­ny and pro­fane pas­sage from Bur­roughs’ most famous nov­el Naked Lunch.

The occa­sion of this read­ing was the Nova Con­ven­tion in 1978, three days and nights of read­ings, pan­el dis­cus­sions, film screen­ings, and per­for­mances that, The New York Times wrote at the time, “sought to grap­ple with some of the impli­ca­tions of the writ­ing” of Bur­roughs. In addi­tion to Bur­roughs and Zap­pa, the con­ven­tion fea­tured such notable coun­ter­cul­tur­al names as Ter­ry South­ern, Pat­ti Smith, Philip Glass, Brion Gysin, John Cage, Tim­o­thy Leary, and Robert Anton Wil­son. A good bit of the hap­pen­ing (includ­ing the audio above) was record­ed for pos­ter­i­ty and released as a dou­ble-LP by Giorno Poet­ry Sys­tems.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Beat Writer William S. Bur­roughs Spreads Coun­ter­cul­ture Cool on Nike Sneak­ers, 1994

William S. Bur­roughs Shows You How to Make “Shot­gun Art”

Frank Zap­pa Debates Cen­sor­ship on CNN’s Cross­fire (1986)

Josh Jones is a writer, edi­tor, and musi­cian based in Wash­ing­ton, DC. Fol­low him @jdmagness


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Comments (5)
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  • Wow. I mean, this is chal­leng­ing to the main­stream, sure. But you’ve got to won­der whether this kind of stuff is help­ing any­one to think any­thing pos­i­tive or con­struc­tive in a healthy way. You’ve real­ly got­ta ques­tion.

  • Pat Cosgrove says:

    There’s a realm of var­i­ous types of expres­sion that’s con­sid­ered trans­gres­sive art or more sim­ply put shock art. Now what’s shock­ing to one per­son is “no big deal” to some­one else. As far as “the tak­ing ass­hole” goes it uses words that are very com­mon in every day speech. No big deal but if it’s used in a nov­el on the print­ed page some­body may want to ban it. But not to wor­ry cause see­ing it in print prob­a­bly won’t cause a mur­der.

  • Pat Cosgrove says:

    There’s a realm of var­i­ous types of expres­sion that’s con­sid­ered trans­gres­sive art or more sim­ply put shock art. Now what’s shock­ing to one per­son is “no big deal” to some­one else. As far as “the tak­ing ass­hole” goes it uses words that are very com­mon in every day speech.
    But if it’s used in a nov­el on the print­ed page some­body may want to ban it.Not to wor­ry cause see­ing it in print prob­a­bly won’t cause a mur­der.

  • Pat Cosgrove says:

    There’s a realm of var­i­ous types of expres­sion that’s con­sid­ered trans­gres­sive art or more sim­ply put shock art. Now what’s shock­ing to one per­son is “no big deal” to some­one else. As far as “the tak­ing ass­hole” goes it uses words that are very com­mon in every day speech.
    If used in a nov­el on the print­ed page some­body may want to ban it.Not to wor­ry cause see­ing it in print prob­a­bly won’t cause a mur­der.

  • Little jack says:

    I was there at enter­me­dia. I knew both FZ and Burroughs.glad to hear it all these years lat­er…

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