Controversial Rock Icon Once Accused a Beatle of Stealing His Song

Controversial Rock Icon Once Accused a Beatle of Stealing His Song originally appeared on Parade.
Those who gathered at New York City's Fillmore East on June 6, 1971, were treated to a once-in-a-lifetime moment: Frank Zappasharing the stage with John Lennon. Here were two counterculture icons, joining forces and joining voices: Zappa, known for unleashing anti-establishment, avant-garde-infused rock, genius orchestral arrangements, and an outrageous (and sometimes obscene) stage show with the Mothers of Invention; and Lennon, the Beatle, performing just a few months before he'd release his landmark album, Imagine.
You think they'd get along. But four songs and one live album later, Zappa would be left seeing red, accusing Lennon and Yoko Ono of ripping off one of his compositions. "They changed the name of the song…gave themselves writing and publishing credit on it, stuck it on an album and never paid me," Zappa would scornfully say, a decade after it all went down.

Zappa and Lennon's paths crossed in 1971 when Village Voice writer Howard Smith met Frank at his hotel. "A journalist in New York City woke me up, knocked on the door and is standing there with a tape recorder and goes, 'Frank, I'd like to introduce you to John Lennon,' you know, waiting for me to gasp and fall on the floor," said Zappa in the 1984 Interview Picture Disc.
AdvertisementAdvertisement#_R_4pokr8lb2mav5ubsddbH1_ iframe AdvertisementAdvertisement#_R_8pokr8lb2mav5ubsddbH1_ iframe"I think the first thing [Lennon] said to me was, 'You're not as ugly as I thought you would be,'" said Zappa. "I thought he had a pretty good sense of humor, so I invited him to come down and jam with us."
Zappa was playing two nights of shows at the Fillmore East, one of the last performances at Bill Graham's venue before shutting down. Frank had booked a recording van to document everything, which he'd later release as a live album, Filmore East – June 1971, in August of that year.

Both Lennon and Ono were game to play and joined Zappa and the Mothers during the encore. After kicking off with a cover of The Olympics' "Well (Baby Please Don't Go)," there was a series of improvisational numbers: a variation of "King Kong," a song from the Mothers' 1969 album, Uncle Meat, and a few creations called "Scumbag" and "Aawk."
Except, when John Lennon released Sometime In New York City in 1972, he had rebranded "King Kong" as "Jamrag," a British slang term for a sanitary napkin. The album also credited the song to Lennon and Ono.
AdvertisementAdvertisement#_R_5hokr8lb2mav5ubsddbH1_ iframe AdvertisementAdvertisement#_R_9hokr8lb2mav5ubsddbH1_ iframeFrank said on Interview Picture Disc that he and Lennon had "an arrangement" that they'd both get "access to the tapes" of that night's recording at the Fillmore East. he wanted to release it with his mix, and I had the right to release my mix."

"The bad part is," Zappa would clarify, "…but they changed the name of ["King Kong"] to 'Jamrag,' gave themselves writing and publishing credit on it, stuck it on an album and never paid me."
Zappa wasn't denied that big of a paycheck. Sometime in New York City reached No. 48 on the Billboard 200 albums chart. Zappa's Fillmore East – June 1971 fared better, peaking at No. 38. And "Jamrang" was never released as a single. Zappa himself wouldn't release the Lennon/Ono collabs until 1992, on Playground Psychotics.
Still, Zappa was sore over the principle of the matter. "It was obviously not a jam session song," added Zappa. "It's got a melody, it's got a bass line; it's obviously an organized song. Little bit disappointing,"
AdvertisementAdvertisement#_R_6hokr8lb2mav5ubsddbH1_ iframe AdvertisementAdvertisement#_R_ahokr8lb2mav5ubsddbH1_ iframeAfter the jam session, Lennon would seem to have a mixed opinion of Zappa. In Jann Wenner'sLennon Remembers, the former Beatle would relate to Zappa's struggles in proving his artistic worth to an audience that didn't understand him. "I know what Zappa is going through! And a half!")
But Lennon would anchor that understanding with his healthy distrust of pretentious artists. "I admire Zappa a bit," said the Beatle, per Far Out, before cursing Zappa out for being "a [explicative] intellectual."
Related: Rare Performance of ‘60s Underground Rock Icon Found 50 Years Later
Controversial Rock Icon Once Accused a Beatle of Stealing His Song first appeared on Parade on Jul 21, 2025
This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 21, 2025, where it first appeared.