We’re Only in It for the Money
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We're Only in It for the Money is the third album by American rock band the Mothers of Invention, released on March 4, 1968, by Verve Records. As with the band's first two efforts, it is a concept album, and satirizes left- and right-wing politics, particularly the hippie subculture, as well as the Beatles' album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. It was conceived as part of a project called No Commercial Potential, which produced three other albums: Lumpy Gravy, Cruising with Ruben & the Jets, and Uncle Meat.

We're Only in It for the Money encompasses rock, experimental music, and psychedelic rock, with orchestral segments deriving from the recording sessions for Lumpy Gravy, which was previously issued by Capitol Records as a solo instrumental album by bandleader/guitarist Frank Zappa and was subsequently reedited by Zappa and released by Verve; the reedited Lumpy Gravy was produced simultaneously with We're Only in It for the Money and is the first part of a conceptual continuity, continued with the reedited Lumpy Gravy and concluded with Zappa's final album Civilization Phaze III (1994).

Read more on Wikipedia. Wikipedia content provided under the terms of the Creative Commons BY-SA license.

Track listing

Release details

Released
1968
Type
Album
Genres
Labels
Verve

Professional reviews

Source Rating
AllMusic (Steve Huey)
5/5 stars
Chicago Tribune (Greg Kot – June 30, 1995)
4/5 stars
Entertainment Weekly (Tom Sinclair – June 9, 1995)A
Tom Hull B−
The Village Voice (Robert Christgau – December 26, 1995)A
Fetched from Wikipedia on July 18th, 2024. Wikipedia content provided under the terms of the Creative Commons BY-SA license.

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5.0

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Last updated: September 30th, 2019

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