Mostrando postagens com marcador George Clinton. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador George Clinton. Mostrar todas as postagens

14.5.20

FUNKADELIC – Funkadelic (1970-2005) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Funkadelic's self-titled 1970 debut is one of the group's best early- to mid-'70s albums. Not only is it laden with great songs -- "I'll Bet You" and "I Got a Thing..." are obvious highlights -- but it retains perhaps a greater sense of classic '60s soul and R&B than any successive George Clinton-affiliated album. Recording for the Detroit-based Westbound label, at the time Funkadelic were in the same boat as psychedelic soul groups such as the Temptations, who had just recorded their landmark Cloud Nine album across town at Motown, and other similar groups. Yet no group had managed to effectively balance big, gnarly rock guitars with crooning, heartfelt soul at this point in time quite like Funkadelic. Clinton's songs are essentially conventional soul songs in the spirit of Motown or Stax -- steady rhythms, dense arrangements, choruses of vocals -- but with a loud, overdriven, fuzzy guitar lurking high in the mix. And when Clinton's songs went into their chaotic moments of jamming, there was no mistaking the Hendrix influence. Furthermore, Clinton's half-quirky, half-trippy ad libs during "Mommy, What's a Funkadelic?" and "What Is Soul" can be mistaken for no one else -- they're pure-cut P-Funk. Successive albums portray Funkadelic drifting further toward rock, funk, and eventually disco, especially once Bernie Worrell began playing a larger role in the group. Never again would the band be this attuned to its '60s roots, making self-titled release a revealing and unique record that's certainly not short on significance, clearly marking the crossroads between '60s soul and '70s funk. Jason Birchmeier  
Tracklist :
1 Mommy, What's A Funkadelic 9:06
Written-By – George Clinton
2 I'll Bet You 6:11
Written-By – George Clinton, Sidney Barnes, Theresa Lindsey
3 Music For My Mother 5:38
Written-By – William Nelson, Edward Hazel, George Clinton
4 I Got A Thing, You Got A Thing, Everybody's Got A Thing 3:54
Written-By – Clarence Haskins
5 Good Old Music 8:04
Written-By – George Clinton
6 Qualify And Satisfy 6:18
Written-By – Eddie Hazel, George Clinton
7 What Is Soul 7:40
Written-By – George Clinton
- Bonus Tracks -
8 Can't Shake It Loose 2:28
Written-By – George Clinton, Joanne Jackson, Rose Marie McCoy, Sidney Barnes
9 I'll Bet You 4:10
Written-By – George Clinton, Sidney Barnes, Theresa Lindsey
10 Music For My Mother 5:17
Written-By – William Nelson, Edward Hazel, George Clinton
11 As Good As I Can Feel 2:31
Written-By – Clarence Haskins, George Clinton
12 Open Our Eyes 3:58
Written-By – Leon Lumpkins
13 Qualify And Satisfy (45 Version) 3:00
Written-By – Eddie Hazel, George Clinton
14 Music For My Mother (Instrumental 45 Version) 6:14
Written-By – William Nelson, Edward Hazel, George Clinton
Credits :
Bass, Vocals – Bill Nelson
Drums, Vocals – Tiki Fulwood
Guitar – Tawl Ross
Lead Guitar, Vocals – Ed Hazel
Organ – Mickey Atkins
Producer – George Clinton

FUNKADELIC – Free Your Mind ... And Your Ass Will Follow (1970-2005) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

It's one of the best titles in modern musical history, for song and for album, and as a call to arms mentally and physically the promise of funk was never so perfectly stated. If it were just a title then there'd be little more to say, but happily, Free Your Mind lives up to it throughout as another example of Funkadelic getting busy and taking everyone with it. The title track itself kicks things off with rumbling industrial noises and space alien sound effects, before a call-and-response chant between deep and chirpy voices brings the concept to full life. As the response voices say, "The kingdom of heaven is within!" The low and dirty groove rumbles along for ten minutes of dark fun, with Bernie Worrell turning in a great keyboard solo toward the end -- listening to it, one gets the feeling that if Can were this naturally funky, they'd end up sounding like this. From there the band makes its way through a total of six songs, ranging from the good to astoundingly great. "Funky Dollar Bill" is the other standout track from the proceedings, with a great, throw-it-down chorus and rhythm and a sharp, cutting lyric that's as good to think about as it is to sing out loud. The closing "Eulogy and Light," meanwhile, predates Prince with its backward masking and somewhat altered version of the Lord's Prayer and Psalm 23. At other points, even if the song is a little more straightforward, there's something worthwhile about it, like the random stereo panning and Eddie Hazel's insane guitar soloing on "I Wanna Know If It's Good for You," with more zoned and stoned keyboard work from Worrell to top things off. The amount of drugs going down for these sessions in particular must have been notable, but the end results make it worthy. Ned Raggett  
Tracklist :
1 Free Your Mind And Your Ass Will Follow 10:04
Written-By – Edward Hazel, George Clinton, Raymond Davis
2 Friday Night, August 14th 5:21
Written-By – George Clinton
3 Funky Dollar Bill 3:15
Written-By – Edward Hazel, George Clinton, Raymond Davis
4 I Wanna Know If It's Good To You 5:59
Written-By – William Nelson, Clarence Haskins, George Clinton, Raymond Davis
5 Some More 2:56
Written-By – George Clinton
6 Eulogy And Light 3:31
Written-By – Eugene Harris
- Bonus Tracks -
7 Fish, Chips And Sweat 3:22
Written-By – William Nelson, Edward Hazel, George Clinton
8 Free Your Mind Radio Advert (Spoken Word) 0:55
9 I Wanna Know If It's Good To You 2:50
Written-By – William Nelson, Edward Hazel, Clarence Haskins, George Clinton
10 I Wanna Know If It's Good To You (Instrumental) 3:12
Written-By – William Nelson, Clarence Haskins, George Clinton, Raymond Davis

FUNKADELIC – America Eats Its Young (1972-2005) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

A double album and worth every minute of it, America Eats Its Young makes for a freaky, funky, and aware good time. Compared to the endless slabs of double-album dreck that came out around the same time from all sources, here Funkadelic brought life, soul, and much more to the party. With George Clinton credited only for arranging and producing, here the mad cast he brought together went all out. Bernie Worrell in particular now had a new importance, credited as co-arranger with Clinton as well as handling string and horn charts on a number of songs. His surging, never-stop keyboards, meanwhile, took control from the start, with his magnificent lead break on the opening "You Hit the Nail on the Head" making for one of the best performances ever on Hammond organ. Bootsy Collins (credited as William) is also somewhere in the crowd on bass and vocals, while old favorites like Eddie Hazel and Tiki Fulwood, among many others, can be found. Perhaps to fill in the time, a few numbers from the first Parliament album, Osmium, two years before cropped up, namely "Loose Booty" and the hilariously sleazy "I Call My Baby Pussycat," here performed with a noticeably slower, dirty groove. The straightforward social call to arms appears throughout, with one song title saying it all -- "If You Don't Like the Effects, Don't Produce the Cause." Other winners include the vicious title track, combining everything from mysterious, doom-laden voices and weeping wails to slow, sad music, and the concluding "Wake Up," while "Everybody Is Going to Make It This Time" is a lovely, gospel-informed ballad that heads for the skies and hearts. There are more mundane concerns as well, such as "There Was My Girl," a quirky weeper, and the weird if smoothly delivered "Miss Lucifer's Love," with more than one target in mind.  Ned Raggett   
Tracklist :
1 You Hit The Nail On The Head 7:11
2 If You Don't Like The Effects, Don't Produce The Cause 3:44
3 Everybody Is Going To Make It This Time 5:55
4 A Joyful Process 6:14
5 We Hurt Too 3:50
6 Loose Booty 4:51
7 Philmore 2:33
8 I Call My Baby Pussycat 5:09
9 America Eats Its Young 5:51
10 Biological Speculation 3:07
11 That Was My Girl 3:46
12 Balance 5:30
13 Miss Lucifer's Love 5:55
14 Wake Up 6:29
- Bonus Tracks -
15 Loose Booty (45 Version, Mono) 2:55
16 A Joyful Process (45 Version, Mono) 3:15
Credits :
Alto Saxophone, Vocals – Randy Wallace
Arranged By [String], Arranged By [Horn] – Bernie Worrell (tracks: 4, 13, 14, 16)
Arranged By [String], Arranged By [Steel Guitar] – David Van De Pitte (tracks: 2, 3, 5, 9, 10)
Arranged By, Keyboards, Melodica, Vocals – Bernard Worrell
Artwork – Paul Welson
Bass – Cordell Mosson
Bass, Vocals – Prakash John, William Collins
Cello – Peter Schenkman, Ronald Laurie
Guitar, Vocals – Ed Hazel, Gary Shider, Harold Beane, Phelps Collins
Harp [Juice] – James Wesley Jackson
Percussion – Tiki Fulwood, Tyrone Lampkin, Zachary Frazier
Percussion, Vocals – Frank Waddy
Producer, Arranged By, Cover [Concept] – George Clinton
Steel Guitar – Ollie Strong
Tenor Saxophone – Robert Chopper McCollough (tracks: Robert McCollough)
Trumpet – Al Stanwyck, Arnie Chycoski, Bruce Cassidy
Trumpet, Vocals – Clayton Gunnells, Ronnie Greenway
Viola – Stanley Solomon, Walter Babiuk
Violin – Albert Pratz, Bill Richards, Joe Sera, Victoria Polley
Vocals – Diane Brooks, Steve Kennedy

FUNKADELIC – Cosmic Slop (1973-2005) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

With a much more stripped-down version of the band, if the credits are to be believed (five regular members total, not counting any vocalists), Funkadelic continued its way through life with Cosmic Slop. A slightly more scattershot album than the group's other early efforts, with generally short tracks (only two break the five-minute barrier) and some go-nowhere ballads, Cosmic Slop still has plenty to like about it, not least because of the monstrous title track. A bitter, heartbreaking portrait of a family on the edge, made all the more haunting and sad by the sweet vocal work -- imagine an even more mournful "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone" -- the chorus is a killer, with the devil invited to the dance while the band collectively fires up the funk. Elsewhere, the band sounds like it's more interested in simply hitting a good groove and enjoying it, and why not? If introductory track "Nappy Dugout" relies more on duck calls and whistles than anything else to give it identity, it's still a clap-your-hands/stomp-your-feet experience, speeding up just a little toward the end. As for the bandmembers themselves, Bernie Worrell still takes the general lead thanks to his peerless keyboard work, but the guitar team of Gary Shider and Ron Bykowski and the rhythm duo of Tyrone Lampkin and Cordell Mosson aren't any slouches, either. George Clinton again seems to rely on the role of ringleader more than anything else, but likely that's him behind touches like distorted vocals. Certainly it's a trip to hear the deep, spaced-out spoken word tale on "March to the Witch's Castle," a harrowing picture of vets returning from Vietnam -- and then realizing that Rush ripped off that approach for a song on its Caress of Steel album a year or two later! Ned Raggett 
Tracklist :
1 Nappy Dugout 4:36
2 You Can't Miss What You Can't Measure 3:06
3 March To The Witch's Castle 6:01
4 Let's Make It Last 4:10
5 Cosmic Slop 5:21
6 No Compute 3:06
7 This Broken Heart 3:40
8 Trash A Go Go 2:27
9 Can't Stand The Strain 3:29
- Bonus Track -
10 Cosmic Slop (Single Edit) 3:24
Credits:
Artwork – George Clinton, Pedro Bell
Bass – "Boogie" Mosson
Guitar – Gary Shider, Ron Bykowski
Keyboards, Melodica – Bernard Worrell
Percussion – Tyrone Lampkin
Producer – George Clinton

FUNKADELIC – Standing on the Verge of Getting It On (1974-2003) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Expanding back out to a more all-over-the-place lineup -- about 15 or so people this time out -- Funkadelic got a bit more back on track with Standing on the Verge of Getting It On. Admittedly, George Clinton repeats a trick from America Eats Its Young via another re-recording of an Osmium track, namely leadoff cut "Red Hot Mama." However, starting as it does with a hilarious double soliloquy (with the first voice sounding like the happier brother of Sir Nose d'Voidoffunk) and coming across with a fierce new take, it's a good omen for Standing on the Verge as a whole. Eddie Hazel's guitar work in particular is just plain bad-ass; after his absence from Cosmic Slop, it's good to hear him fully back in action with Bernie Worrell, Cordell Mosson, Gary Shider, and the rest. In general, compared to the sometimes too polite Cosmic Slop, Standing on the Verge is a full-bodied, crazy mess in the best possible way, with heavy funk jams that still smoke today while making a lot of supposedly loud and dangerous rock sound anemic. Check out "Alice in My Fantasies" if a good example is needed -- the whole thing is psychotic from the get-go, with vocals as much on the edge as the music -- or the wacky, wonderful title track. There are quieter moments as well, but this time around with a little more bite to them, like the woozy slow jam of "I'll Stay," which trips out along the edges just enough while the song makes its steady way along. In an unlikely but effective turn, meanwhile, "Jimmy's Got a Little Bit of Bitch in Him" is a friendly, humorous song about a gay friend; given the rote homophobia of so much later hip-hop, it's good to hear some founding fathers had a more open-minded view. Ned Raggett  
Tracklist :
1 Red Hot Mama 4:54
Written-By – B. Worrell, E. Hazel
2 Alice In My Fantasies 2:26
Written-By – G. Cook
3 I'll Stay 7:16
Written-By – G. Cook
4 Sexy Ways 3:05
Written-By – G. Cook
5 Standing On The Verge Of Getting It On 5:07
Written-By – G. Cook
6 Jimmy's Got A Little Bit Of Bitch In Him 2:30
Written-By – G. Cook
7 Good Thoughts, Bad Thoughts 12:17
Written-By – G. Cook
Credits:
Artwork By – George Clinton, Pedro Bell
Bass – C. "Boogie" Mosson, Jimmy Calhoun
Drums – Gary Bronson
Guitar – Eddie "Smedley Smorganoof" Hazel, Gary Shider, Ron Brykowski
Keyboards – Bernard "Bernie" Worrell
Percussion – R. "Tiki" Fulwood*, Tyrone Lampkin
Piano – Leon Patillo
Producer, 
Written-By – George Clinton
Vocals – Bernard "Bernie" Worrell, Calvin Simon, C. "Boogie" Mosson, Eddie "Smedley Smorganoof" Hazel, Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins, Gary Shider, George Clinton, "Shady" Grady Thomas, Ray "Stingray" Davis, R. "Tiki" Fulwood

FUNKADELIC – Let's Take It to the Stage (1975-1992) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

One of Funkadelic's goofiest releases, Let's Take It to the Stage also contains more P-Funk all-time greats as well, making for a grand balance of the serious and silly. Perhaps the silliest is at the end -- there's not much else one can call the extended oompah/icing rink start of "Atmosphere." The title track is as much a call to arms as "Free Your Mind and Your Ass Will Follow" is, but with a more direct musical performance and a more open nod to party atmospheres (not to mention the source of one of Andrew Dice Clay's longest-running bits). The targets of the band's good-natured wrath are, in fact, other groups -- "Hey, Fool and the Gang! Let's take it to the stage!" There's no mistaking the track that immediately follows makes it even more intense -- "Get Off Your Ass and Jam" kicks in with one bad-ass drum roll and then scorches the damn place down, from guitar solo to the insanely funky bass from Cordell "Boogie" Mosson. It may only be two and a half minutes long, but it alone makes the album a classic. Hearing Bootsy Collins' unmistakable vocals is usually enough to get anything on the crazy tip, but "Be My Beach" (Collins' Funkadelic vocal debut) just makes it all the more fun, as does the overall air of silly romance getting nuttier as it goes. "Good to Your Earhole" sets the outrageous mood just right -- it's one of the band's tightest monsters of funk, guitars sprawling all over the place even as the heavy-hitting rhythm doesn't let one second of groove get lost. Of course, there's also one totally notorious number to go with it, but "No Head, No Backstage Pass" has one of the craziest rhythms on the whole album, not to mention lip-smackingly nutty lines delivered with the appropriate leer. Ned Raggett  
Tracklist :
1 Good To Your Earhole 4:30
Written-By – C. Haskins, G. Cook 
2 Better By The Pound 2:40
Written-By – G. Cook 
3 Be My Beach 2:35
Written-By – B. Worrell, W. Collins 
4 No Head No Backstage Pass 2:36
Written-By – R. Bykowski
5 Let's Take It To The Stage 3:32
Written-By – W. Collins, G. Shider
6 Get Off Your Ass And Jam 2:00
7 Baby I Owe You Something Good 5:43
8 Stuffs And Things 2:11
Written-By – G. Cook
9 The Song Is Familiar 3:05
Written-By – B. Worrell, W. Collins
10 Atmosphere 7:05
Written-By – B. Worrell, G. Shider
Credits :
Performer – Billy Bass, Bootsie, E. Hazel, Parliament, Ron Bykowski
Producer, Written-By – G. Clinton

FUNKADELIC – Hardcore Jollies (1976-2002) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Funkadelic's major-label jump brought its version of life more into line with Parliament, though the crucial difference between the two -- Funkadelic's guitars vs. Parliament's horns -- remains intact. Eddie Hazel is missed, as always, but Gary Shider and Mike Hampton do fine work. Whoever peels off the concluding solo at the end of "Comin' Round the Mountain" deserves credit, even if it's sometimes flash for flash's sake. Similar exercises in feedback can be found on the title track and elsewhere, sometimes great, sometimes timekeeping. Still, after all, the album itself is dedicated "to the guitar players of the world," so it can't be said that George Clinton and company aren't keeping the proper focus on things. Generally, things are fairly light on Hardcore Jollies, though a remake of earlier highlight "Cosmic Slop" retains the sharp sentiments, even if it's not quite as strongly delivered as before (musically it's much more centered around the bass and drums, though things get duly crazed all around toward the end). Otherwise, the emphasis is on fairly clean jams and rhythms, with more lower-key goofiness than before but still merrily out there. If it's not truly gone and great like Maggot Brain or Let's Take It to the Stage, it's still good listening at its best moments. "If You Got Fun, You Got Style" makes for a better chat-up dancefloor appreciation than most, while "Soul Mate" balances out obvious "want you bad" sentiments with squirrelly lead vocals that don't quite fit the subject at hand. And who could knock the use of the "there's a place in France/where the ladies wear no pants" melody in "You Scared the Lovin' Outta Me"? Pedro Bell does some of his best work ever for the cover and inside art, while the accompanying short story is hilarious. Ned Raggett 
Tracklist :
1 Comin' Round The Mountain 5:56
Percussion – Buddy Miles
Written-By – Grace Cook
2 Smokey 6:08
Written-By – Garry Shider
3 If You Got Funk, You Got Style 3:07
Written-By – Bernie Worrell, Bootsy Collins
4 Hardcore Jollies 5:01
Written-By – Bernie Worrell
5 Soul Mate 2:58
Written-By – Grace Cook
6 Cosmic Slop (Live) 6:30
Written-By – Bernie Worrell
7 You Scared The Lovin' Outta Me 6:28
Written-By – Glen Goins
8 Adolescent Funk 4:18
Written-By – Bernie Worrell, Michael Hampton
Credits:
Bass – Cordell Mosson
Drums – Jerome Brailey
Guitar – Garry Shider, Glen Goins, Michael Hampton
Keyboards – Bernie Worrell
Producer, Written-By – George Clinton
Vocals – Calvin Simon, Fuzzy Haskins, Garry Shider, George Clinton, Glen Goins, Grady Thomas, Ray Davis

FUNKADELIC – Tales of Kidd Funkadelic (1976-1992) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Some leftover jams, songs, and funk pieces from the Funkadelic era. George Clinton was in the midst of moving Funkadelic to another label, and the Westbound folk released a bunch of vault material to get another Funkadelic album on the market. There were still some fine cuts, but the random element prevented it from being a great album because it lacked the thematic organization and vision Clinton provided for the concept LPs. Ron Wynn
Tracklist :
1 Butt-To-Butt Resuscitation 3:51
Written-By – B Worrell, E Hazel, G Clinton
2 Let's Take It To The People 1:48
Written-By – E Hazel, G Shider, G Clinton
3 Undisco Kidd 6:34
Written-By – B Worrell, G Clinton, W Collins
4 Take Your Dead Ass Home! (Say Som'n Nasty) 7:16
Written-By – B Worrell, G Shider, G Clinton, G Gains
5 I'm Never Gonna Tell It 3:39
Written-By – B Worrell, G Clinton
6 Tales Of Kidd Funkadelic (Opusdelite Years) 12:52
Written-By – B. Worrell, G Clinton
7 How Do Yeaw View You? 3:40
Written-By – B Worrell, G Clinton, W Collins
Performer – Bernard "Da Vinci" Worrell, "Billie Bass" Nelson, Calvin "Coolcumber" Simon, Cordell "Boogie" Mosson, Cynthia Davis, Debbie Edwards, Debbie Wright, Donna Davis, Eddie "Maggot Brain" Hazel, Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins, Gary "Doo Wop" Shider, George Clinton, Glen "Slumgouster" Goins, "Shady Grady" Thomas, Jerome "Blastifying" Brailey, Jessica Cleaves, "Magusta" Mike Hampton, Pamela Vincent, "String" Ray Davis, Ron Brykowsky, Taka Kahn, William "Bootsy" Collins

FUNKADELIC – One Nation Under a Groove (1978-2002) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

One Nation Under a Groove was not only Funkadelic's greatest moment, it was their most popular album, bringing them an unprecedented commercial breakthrough by going platinum and spawning a number one R&B smash in the title track. It was a landmark LP for the so-called "black rock" movement, best-typified in the statement of purpose "Who Says a Funk Band Can't Play Rock?!"; more than that, though, the whole album is full of fuzzed-out, Hendrix-style guitar licks, even when the music is clearly meant for the dancefloor. This may not have been a new concept for Funkadelic, but it's executed here with the greatest clarity and accessibility in their catalog. Furthermore, out of George Clinton's many conceptual albums (serious and otherwise), One Nation Under a Groove is the pinnacle of his political consciousness. It's unified by a refusal to acknowledge boundaries -- social, sexual, or musical -- and, by extension, the uptight society that created them. The tone is positive, not militant -- this funk is about community, freedom, and independence, and you can hear it in every cut (even the bizarre, outrageously scatological "P.E. Squad"). The title cut is one of funk's greatest anthems, and "Groovallegiance" and the terrific "Cholly" both dovetail nicely with its concerns. The aforementioned "Who Says a Funk Band Can't Play Rock?!" is a seamless hybrid that perfectly encapsulates the band's musical agenda, while "Into You" is one of their few truly successful slow numbers. The original LP included a three-song bonus EP featuring the heavy riff rock of "Lunchmeataphobia," an unnecessary instrumental version of "P.E. Squad," and a live "Maggot Brain"; these tracks were appended to the CD reissue. In any form, One Nation Under a Groove is the best realization of Funkadelic's ambitions, and one of the best funk albums ever released. Steve Huey  
Tracklist :
1 One Nation Under A Groove 7:28
2 Groovallegiance 7:00
Written-By [Co-written] – B. Worrel
3 Who Says A Funk Band Can't Play Rock? 6:18
Written-By [Co-written] – M. Hampton 
4 Promentalshitbackwashpsychosis Enema Squad (The Doo Doo Chasers) 10:45
Written-By [Co-written] – L. Brown 
5 Into You 5:41
Written-By [Co-written] – W. Collins 
6 Cholly (Funk Getting Ready To Roll!) 4:27
Written-By [Co-written] – W. Collins 
7 Lunchmeataphobia ('Think, It Ain't Illegal Yet!) 4:12
Written-By [Co-written] – B. Worrel 
8 P.E. Squad/Doo Doo Chasers ("Going All-The-Way Off" Instrumental Version) 4:18
Written-By [Co-written] – L. Brown 
9 Maggot Brain 8:28
Written-By [Co-written] – E. Hazel 
Credits :
Banjo – Bobby Lewis
Bass – Rodney Curtis
Bass, Drums, Percussion – Bootsy Collins
Bass, Vocals – Cordell Mosson
Drums, Percussion – Jerome Brailey, Larry Fratangelo, Tyrone Lampkin
Guitar – Michael Hampton
Guitar, Vocals – Garry Shider
Keyboards – Bernie Worrell
Keyboards, Vocals – Junie Morrison
Producer, Vocals – George Clinton
Vocals – Dawn Silva, Debbie Wright, Greg Thomas, Jeanette Washington, Lynn Mabry, Mallia Franklin, Ray Davis, Ron Ford
Written-By – G. Shider (tracks: 1, 4, 8), G. Clinton, W. Morrison (tracks: 1 to 3, 5, 6)

FUNKADELIC – Uncle Jam Wants You (1976-1993) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Almost as if Clinton and company wanted to atone for parts of One Nation Under a Groove, Uncle Jam Wants You takes not merely a more daring musical approach but a more forthright political stance. The cover art alone is brilliant, front and back showing Clinton in Huey P. Newton's famous Black Panther pose. The main goal is the cover subtitle's stated claim to "rescue dance music 'from the blahs,'" and "Uncle Jam" itself does a pretty funny job at doing that, starting out like a parody of patriotic recruitment ads before hitting its full, funky stride. It's still very much a disco effort, but one overtly spiking the brew even more than before with P-Funk's own particular recipe, mock drill instructors calling out dance commands and so forth. The absolute winner and most famous track, without question, is the 15-minute deep groove of "(Not Just) Knee Deep." It'd be legend alone for being the musical basis for De La Soul's astonishing breakthrough a decade later with "Me, Myself and I," but on its own it predates the mutation of disco into electro thanks to the stiff beat and Worrell's crazy keyboards. Elsewhere there are pleasant enough jams like "Field Maneuvers," kicking around some good guitar work amidst the hop-and-skip beat, and the weepy ballad "Holly Wants to Go to California," intentionally undercut by all the cheering and noise deep in the mix. It's not to say that Funkadelic hasn't left the entire world of coke spoons and pointing to the sky behind them, as "Freak of the Week" shows, which isn't entirely far off from the early Sugar Hill party/zodiac aesthetic. Then again, lines like "disco-sadistic, that one beat up and down, it just won't do" amidst the whistles and screams have their own impact. Ned Raggett 
Tracklist:
1 Freak Of The Week 5:31
2 (Not Just) Knee Deep 15:19
3 Uncle Jam 10:24
4 Field Maneuvers 2:23
5 Holly Wants To Go To California 4:23
6 Foot Soldiers (Star Spangled Funky) 3:31
Credits :
Backing Vocals – Greg Boyer, James Wesley Jackson, Jerome Rogers, Jessica Cleaves, Lige Curry, Linda Brown, Mallia Franklin
Bass – Billy Nelson, Bootsy Collins, Cordell Mosson, Jeff Cherokee Bunn, Rodney Curtis
Drums – Bootsy Collins, Dennis Chambers, Larry Fratangelo, Tiki Fulwood, Tyrone Lampkin
Guitar – Bootsy Collins, Dewayne McKnight, Eddie Hazel, Garry Shider, Glen Goins, Michael Hampton
Keyboards – Bernie Worrell, Gary Hudgins, Jerome Rogers, Junie Morrison
Vocals – Clip Payne, Dawn Silva, Garry Shider, George Clinton, Greg Thomas, Jeanette McGruder, Larry Heckstall, Philippe Wynne, Ray Davis, Ron Ford, Sheila Horne

FUNKADELIC – The Electric Spanking of War Babies (1981-2003) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

With George Clinton, a humorous phrase could be nothing more than playful tomfoolery, or it could be a double entendre with a deep political meaning. The phrase "electric spanking of war babies" falls into the latter category -- it referred to what the funk innovator saw as the U.S. government using the media to promote imperialistic wars. To Clinton, the American media functioned as a propaganda machine during wartime. But whether or not one cares to examine its hidden political messages, Electric Spanking is an above-average party album. Spanking falls short of the excellence of One Nation Under a Groove and Uncle Jam Wants You and didn't boast a major hit single, but amusing funk smokers like "Electro-Cuties" and "Funk Gets Stronger" aren't anything to sneeze at, nor is the reggae-influenced "Shockwaves." Spanking turned out to be the last album Clinton would produce under the name Funkadelic -- when he hit the charts again in 1983, Mr. P-Funk was billing himself as a "solo artist."  Alex Henderson
Tracklist :
1 Electric Spanking Of War Babies 8:39
2 Electro-Cuties 6:12
3 Funk Gets Stronger (Part 1) 6:40
4 Brettino's Bounce 3:40
5 Funk Gets Stronger (Killer Millimeter Longer Version) / She Loves You 4:42
6 Shockwaves 5:08
7 Oh, I 4:53
8 Icka Prick 4:09


7.9.17

FUNKADELIC – Maggot Brain (1971-2005) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

It starts with a crackle of feedback shooting from speaker to speaker and a voice intoning, "Mother Earth is pregnant for the third time, for y'all have knocked her up" and talking about rising "above it all or drown in my own sh*t." This could only have been utterly bizarre back in 1971 and it's no less so decades later; though the Mothership was well on its way already, Maggot Brain really helped it take off. The instrumental title track is the key reason to listen, specifically for Eddie Hazel's lengthy, mind-melting solo. George Clinton famously told Hazel to play "like your momma had just died," and the resulting evocation of melancholy and sorrow doesn't merely rival Jimi Hendrix's work, but arguably bests a lot of it. Accompanied by another softer guitar figure providing gentle rhythm for the piece, the end result is simply fantastic, an emotional apocalypse of sound. Maggot Brain is bookended by another long number, "Wars of Armageddon," a full-on jam from the band looping in freedom chants and airport-departure announcements to the freak-out. In between are a number of short pieces, finding the collective merrily cooking up some funky stew of the slow and smoky variety. There are folky blues and gospel testifying on "Can You Get to That" (one listen and a lot of Primal Scream's mid-'90s career is instantly explained) and wry but warm reflections on interracial love on "You and Your Folks, Me and My Folks," its drum hits distorted to give a weird electronic edge to the results. "Super Stupid" is a particular killer, pounding drums and snarling guitar laying down the boogie hard and hot, while "Hit It and Quit It" has a great chorus and Bernie Worrell getting in a fun keyboard solo to boot. Ned Raggett
Tracklist :
1 Maggot Brain 10:18
Written-By – Edward Hazel, George Clinton
2 Can You Get To That 2:49
Written-By – Ernest Harris, George Clinton
3 Hit It And Quit It 3:50
Written-By – William Nelson, George Clinton
4 You And Your Folks, Me And My Folks 3:36
Written-By – Bernard Worrell, William Nelson, Clarence Haskins, George Clinton
5 Super Stupid 3:59
Written-By – William Nelson, Edward Hazel, George Clinton, Lucious Ross
6 Back In Our Minds 2:38
Written-By – Clarence Haskins
7 Wars Of Armageddon 9:43
Written-By – Bernard Worrell, George Clinton, Lucious Ross, Ramon Fulwood
– BONUS TRACKS –
8 Whole Lot Of BS (1972) 2:11
Written-By – Bernard Worrell, George Clinton
9 I Miss My Baby (1972) 5:02
Featuring – U.S. Music With Funkadelic
Written-By – Clarence Haskins
10 Maggot Brain (Alt. Mix Recorded 1971) 9:35
Written-By – Edward Hazel, George Clinton
Performer – Bernie Worrell, Billy Nelson, Calvin Simon, Eddie Hazel, Fuzzy Haskins, George Clinton, Grady Thomas, Ray Davis, Tawl Ross, Tiki Fulwood

ESBJÖRN SVENSSON TRIO — Winter In Venice (1997) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Esbjörn Svensson has stood not only once on stage in Montreux. He was already a guest in the summer of 1998 at the jazz festival on Lake Gen...