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Under the guiding hand of mastermind
George Clinton, the affiliated
groups Parliament and Funkadelic
established funk as an heir to
an out growth of soul. If James
Brown is funk's founding father,
Clinton has been its chief architect
and tactician. Over the decades,
he's presided over a musical empire
that's included Parliament and
Funkadelic, plus numerous offshoots
(such as the Brides of Funkenstein
and Parlet), solo careers (Clinton's
and bassist Bootsy Collins' being
the notable) and aggregates (the
P-Funk All-Stars). The pioneering
work of Parliament and Funkadelic
in the Seventies—driven
by Clinton's conceptually inventive
mind and the band members' tight
ensemble playing and stretched-out
jamming—prefigured everything
from rap and hip-hop to techno
and alternative. Clinton's latter-day
disciples include Prince and the
Red Hot Chili Peppers.
Between
them, Parliament and Funkadelic
virtually defined the melting
pot known as funk: a melding of
rhythm & blues, jazz, gospel
and psychedelic rock. With them,
Clinton has purveyed larger-than-life
characters and concepts from the
stage, culminating in such theatrical
milestones as the Mothership,
a mock flying saucer from which
the black space "aliens"
of Clinton's musical entourage
alighted onstage. Though his musical
productions have been typified
by danceable grooves and driven
by a laser-sharp sociological
wit, Clinton's ultimate goal is
serious: "I am intent on
making the word funk as legitimate
as jazz and rock and roll."
George
Clinton spent his teenage years
in Plainfield, New Jersey, where
he founded a vocal group called
the Parliaments. They recorded
as far back as 1956 but didn't
impact the charts until 1967,
when "(I Wanna) Testify"—a
prescient mix of Sixties soul,
rock and pop—went #3 R&B
and #20 pop. That year, Clinton
began listening to the new wave
of psychedelic rock by bands such
as Cream, Vanilla Fudge and Sly
and the Family Stone. The dual
influence of cutting-edge soul
and rock served as inspirations
to Funkadelic. In 1970, Clinton
dropped the "s" from
his other band, and Parliament
was born.



Each
group had a distinct identity
and alternated releases into the
late Seventies on a variety of
labels—Invictus, Westbound,
Warner Bros.—with Clinton
dividing his time between them.
Parliament was essentially a horn-based
soul group and Funkadelic a guitar-based
rock group, but both were built
on a foundation of funk. Parliament
and Funkadelic were flip sides
of the same coin, and these overlapping
entities' respective outputs were
referred to in stylistic shorthand
as "P-Funk." In Parliament's
self-referential theme song, "P-Funk
(Wants to Get Funked Up),"
Clinton and entourage referred
to themselves as "dealers
of funky music, P-Funk, uncut
funk, The Bomb."
Parliament
and Funkadelic frequently resorted
to allegorical concept albums
to make larger points about societal
injustices and ways in which a
community of like-minded souls
could liberate themselves from
its constrictions. Clinton animated
the moral conflict between opposing
forces of good (the trippy funkateer
"Starchild") and evil
(the uptight, uptight "Sir
Nose D'Void of Funk") over
the course of a five-year run
of Parliament albums, from Mothership
Connection (1976) to Trombipulation
(1981). Meanwhile, Funkadelic
gelled on one of the finest funk
albums ever produced, One Nation
Under a Groove, whose title track
was a rousing anthem of union
and community.
Parliament
and Funkadelic dominated and revolutionized
the music scene in the latter
half of the Seventies—particularly
in 1978 and 1979, when they racked
up four #1 R&B hits: "Flash
Light," "One Nation
Under a Groove," Aqua Boogie"
and "(Not Just) Knee Deep."
Clinton's main collaborators during
Parliament-Funkadelic's heyday
included keyboardists Bernie Worrell
and Walter "Junie" Morrison
and bassist William "Bootsy"
Collins. Known for his star-shaped
sunglasses, glittery "space
bass" and cartoonish demeanor,
Collins became a funk icon and
solo star in his own right. Melding
soul, funk, jazz and psychedelia,
a succession of P-Funk guitarists—including
the late Eddie Hazel, Mike Hampton
and DeWayne "Blackbyrd"
McKnight—have carried forward
the legacy of Jimi Hendrix with
their adventurous, exploratory
soloing.



During
the 1970s, Parliament, Funkadelic
and a host of related offshoots
placed roughly 60 singles on the
R&B charts and were among
the hottest attractions on the
concert circuit. They were responsible
for some of the most theatrical
tours ever undertaken, deploying
one of the largest props—the
otherworldly "Mothership"—ever
dragged from city to city. Financial,
legal and personal problems grounded
the Mothership in 1980, but Clinton
resurfaced stronger than ever
as a solo artist on Capitol Records..
"Atomic Dog," the popular
dance-funk centerpiece of 1982's
Computer Games—one of Rolling
Stone's 100 Greatest Albums of
the 80's—topped the R&B
chart for four weeks. In 1983,
Clinton also released an album
credited to "the P-Funk All-Stars,"
which drew on the talents of various
members of Parliament and Funkadelic
(including Bootsy Collins), plus
guests like Sly Stone and Bobby
Womack.
A
new generation of hip young listeners
discovered P-Funk via rap and
hip-hop records that heavily sampled
Clinton's vast body of work. By
the Nineties, Clinton was widely
recognized as a black-music patriarch
and pioneer whose contributions
put him in a league with James
Brown. In fact, Clinton is second
only to Brown as the most heavily
sampled artist. Meanwhile, the
Parliament-Funkadelic juggernaut
has shown no signs of slowing
down, remaining active on the
recording and touring fronts as
George Clinton and the P-Funk
All-Stars. One of their later
albums—The Awesome Power
of a Fully Operational Mothership
(T.A.P.O.A.F.O.M.), released in
1996—returned the funk collective
to the concept that helped establish
them as visionaries 20 years earlier.
