Funkadelic [Bonus Tracks]Funkadelic
Release Date: 10/18/2005
Original Release:
1970
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 605859_CD
UPC # 723485720002
Label: Westbound (USA)
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Disc: 1
1.
Mommy, What's a Funkadelic?
2.
I'll Bet You
3.
Music for My Mother
4.
I Got a Thing, You Got a Thing, Everybody's Got a Thing
5.
Good Old Music
6.
Qualify and Satisfy
7.
What Is Soul
8.
Can't Shake It Loose
9.
I'll Bet You
10.
Music for My Mother
11.
As Good as I Can Feel
12.
Open Our Eyes
13.
Qualify and Satisfy
14.
Music for My Mother
Performer: Funkadelic
Producer: George Clinton Distributor: Select-O-Hits Notes: Funkadelic: Ed Hazel (vocals, guitar); Bill Nelson (vocals, bass); Tiki Fulwood (vocals, drums); George Clinton, Fuzzy Haskins, Grady Thomas, Calvin Simon, Raymond Davis (vocals); Tawl Ross (guitar); Mickey Atkins (organ). Engineers include: Milan Bogden, Russ Terrana, Ed Wolfrum. Recorded at Terra Shirma Sound Studios, Detroit, Michigan. Funkadelic's self-titled 1969 debut may not be on the same plateau as the group's later, all-encompassing masterpieces (MAGGOT BRAIN, COSMIC SLOP, etc.), but does serve as the strong foundation upon which their early 70's masterworks were built. Along with Jimi Hendrix's band, Funkadelic is one of the first units to inject funk with hard rock. Whereas funk pioneer James Brown concentrates on creating air-tight, precise grooves, Funkadelic keeps things loose, raw, and groovy. Drug experimentation also plays a prominent role in the band's early work, perhaps never as evidently as on FUNKADELIC. From the beginning, singer George Clinton has been the band's undisputed leader. He wrote or co-wrote nearly all of FUNKADELIC's seven tracks and also served as the album's producer. Bassist Billy Nelson and guitarist Eddie Hazel are superb instrumentalists, as heard on the slowly evolving "Music For My Mother," the frantic "I Got A Thing," and the album's Motown soul-inflected hit single "I Bet You" (the latter featuring great vocal interplay between all members). And the seeds for such future Funkadelic epics as "Maggot Brain" and "Wars of Armageddon" can be traced to the album's longest compositions, "Mommy, What's A Funkadelic?" and "Good Old Music."
Mojo (Publisher) (1/03, p.110) - "...It's the best blues-influenced, warped acid rock you're likely to hear..."
Established at the dawn of the '70s, Funkadelic mixed hard rock, psychedelia, soul, and funk in equal measure. Led by funk godfather George Clinton, they released a brace of enormously influential albums throughout the decade, buoyed by the liquid bass lines of Bootsy Collins and the mind-melting guitar of Eddie Hazel. Over the time, the line between Funkadelic and Clinton's other project, Parlaiment, became increasingly blurred. They've influenced everyone from rock bands (Talking Heads, Red Hot Chili Peppers) to rap acts (Dr. Dre, Ice Cube), and remain among the most distinctive funk-rockers ever.
Also Appears On:
Similar Artist:
Beastie Boys Cameo Clinton, George (Funk) Commodores (The) Con Funk Shun Davis, Betty Defunkt Dre, Dr. Earth, Wind & Fire Fatback Band (The) Fishbone Gap Band (The) Isley Brothers (The) J.B.'s (The) James, Rick (Bass) Lakeside Living Colour Mandrill Mayfield, Curtis Prince Rare Earth Red Hot Chili Peppers Slave Snoop Dogg Stooges (The) Talking Heads The Ohio Players Time (The) Voyage War Was (Not Was) Wild Cherry Williams, Tony (Drums) Wonder, Stevie
Influences:
Beatles (The) Berry, Chuck Brown, James Hawkins, Screamin' Jay Hendrix, Jimi Isley Brothers (The) Johnson, Robert Jones, Booker T. Led Zeppelin Ra, Sun Redding, Otis Richard, Little Rolling Stones (The) Temptations (R&B) (The) Zappa, Frank
Similar Genres:
Funk |