Parliament Discography Blogspot

“It was funny, the others was trying to change Bernie [Worrell] to make him more funky and I'm saying, No! Leave him be! What he can bring from the Conservatory can help us compete with the Jethro Tulls and the King Crimsons.”

Parliament discography date: 2.03.2012 AUTHOR: ukmaurort parliament discography The P-Funk All-Stars continued to record and tour into the 1990s and 2000s, and regularly perform classic Parliament songs. Discography Discography of Parliament, influential George Clinton -led Funk music group. Released: July 1970 Label: Invictus Formats: Vinyl, compact disc — — 1974.

—George Clinton in 2006, forging a spiritual bond between funk and prog

You can’t have the funk unless you have the whole funk and nothing but the funk, so Discord & Rhyme is treating you to a second round of P-Funk. This time, Mike rounds out the story by discussing Parliament, who are tighter and much more orderly than the looser, rougher Funkadelic, and feature a truly excellent horn section. Their 1975 masterpiece Mothership Connection officially declared Parliament-Funkadelic as a cohesive, galactic entity, and its space-age soundscapes have massively influenced music since, even spawning the “G-Funk” subgenre of hip-hop most famously associated with Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg. Even more relevant to this podcast’s very particular tastes — it’s kind of proggy! And if you don’t believe us, read the epigraph above and then join us as soon as you are groovy.

Miscellany

  1. The definitive Parliament-Funkadelic album, Mothership Connection is where George Clinton's revolving band lineups, differing musical approaches, and increasingly thematic album statements reached an ideal state, one that resulted in enormous commercial success as well as a timeless legacy that would be compounded by hip-hop postmodernists, most memorably Dr. Dre on his landmark album The.
  2. Parliament was an American funk band formed in the late 1960s by George Clinton as part of his Parliament-Funkadelic collective. More commercial and less rock-oriented than its sister act Funkadelic, Parliament drew on science-fiction and outlandish performances in their work. The band scored a numb.
  3. Parliament, ‘Mothership Connection’ I’ve heard these goofballs a few times in their alternate incarnation as Funkadelic, a more guitar-heavy, leftfield take on funk. Here, they create a mythology of black guys in UFOs (although wasn’t that part of Sun Ra’s whole deal?) and leave most of the instrumentation to Bootsy Collins, he of the.
  4. Parliament discography; Studio albums: 10: Live albums: 2: Compilation albums: 11: Singles: 20: Discography of Parliament, influential George Clinton-led funk group.
  • The teaser is adapted from Orson Welles’ “The War of the Worlds,” which we’ve linked to below.

  • Ray Davis and Ray Davies are still not the same person.

  • And Red Hot Chili Peppers, we’re still not sorry.

  • If any of you actually write a Ph.D. dissertation on Mothership Connection, please let us know.

  • These are the wind turbines in Ontario that are definitely beaming messages to the mothership.

  • For those of you who are not Trekkies, Uhura was a character on the original series who happened to be a black woman. This was so groundbreaking that Nichelle Nichols, the actress who played her, nearly quit the show over the racism she had to face. Fortunately for all of us, she stayed with it.

  • We discussed Keith Emerson stabbing the Moog back in the ELP episode, but here’s a recap: Emerson discovered that he could get really weird sounds out of the Moog by wedging a knife blade between the keys, and that evolved into a major part of his stage performances.

  • George Clinton’s appearance on How I Met Your Mother doesn’t seem to be on YouTube, so if you haven’t seen it, you’ll just have to take our word for it that it was funny.

Other links

  • Parliament performing “Mothership Connection (Star Child)” in Houston in 1976(YouTube)

  • Evidence that Bernie Worrell and Ernest P. Worrell are related (YouTube)

  • Bootsy Collins and the Funk Brothers - Do You Love Me (YouTube)

  • The War of the Worlds (original 1938 broadcast) (YouTube)

Discord & Rhyme roll call

  • Mike DeFabio (host)

  • Amanda Rodgers (moderator)

  • Rich Bunnell

  • Ben Marlin

  • John McFerrin (special appearance)

Mothership Connection tracklist

  1. P-Funk (Wants to Get Funked Up)

  2. Mothership Connection (Star Child)

  3. Unfunky UFO

  4. Supergroovalisticprosifunkstication

  5. Handcuffs

  6. Give Up the Funk (Tear the Roof off the Sucker)

  7. Night of the Thumpasorus Peoples

Other clips used

Parliament/Funkadelic:

  • Parliament - Ride On

  • Parliament - I Call My Baby Pussycat

  • Parliament - Up for the Down Stroke

  • Parliament - Rumpofsteelskin

  • Funkadelic - (Not Just) Knee Deep

  • Parliament - Flash Light

Others:

  • Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky - Piano Concerto No. 1

  • Ween - Pink Eye (On My Leg)

  • Yes - On the Silent Wings of Freedom

  • Redman - Da Funk

  • Tone Loc - Don’t Get Close

  • Del the Funky Homosapien - Sunny Meadowz

  • Paris - Outta My Life

  • Ice Cube - Dirty Mack

  • Lower Level Organization - Here Comes the Dope Ride

  • Terminator X - High Priest of Turbulence

  • Chunk - What Waz I to Do?

  • Ice Cube - Say Hi to the Bad Guy

  • Dr. Dre - The Roach (The Chronic Outro)

  • Dr. Dre - Let Me Ride

  • Warren G & Nate Dogg - Regulate

  • Kool & the Gang - Ladies’ Night

  • Digable Planets - Escapism (Gettin’ Free)

  • Digital Underground - Tales of the Funky

  • Michael McDonald - I Keep Forgettin’ (Every Time You’re Near)

  • Gentle Giant - Free Hand

  • MC Hammer - Turn This Mutha Out

  • Schoolly D - Godfather of Funk

  • Method Man & Redman - Tear it Off

  • Jungle Brothers - What U Waitin’ 4?

  • Ice-T & Ice Cube - Trespass

  • Snoop Doggy Dogg - Who Am I (What’s My Name)?

  • The Moody Blues - Nights in White Satin

Songs we mentioned but didn’t clip

Parliament/Funkadelic:

  • Parliament - Nothing Before Me but Thang

  • Funkadelic - No Head, No Backstage Pass

  • Funkadelic - Can You Get to That

  • Funkadelic - Dipety Dipety Doo Stop the Violence

Others:

Parliament Discography Blogspot Youtube

Discography
  • David Bowie - Fame

  • The Doobie Brothers - Long Train Runnin’

  • Hava Nagila

  • Deee-Lite - Groove Is in the Heart

  • Elvis Presley - Swing Down, Sweet Chariot

  • AC/DC - For Those About to Rock (We Salute You)

  • The Beatles - I Want to Tell You

  • De La Soul - Me Myself and I

  • Procul Harum - A Whiter Shade of Pale

Band/album personnel*

  • Lead vocals - George Clinton (Lead in 'P. Funk (Wants to Get Funked Up)', 'Mothership Connection (Star Child)'), Calvin Simon, Fuzzy Haskins, Ray Davis, Grady Thomas, Gary Shider (lead in 'Handcuffs'), Glen Goins (lead in 'Unfunky UFO', 'Handcuffs'), Bootsy Collins

  • Horns - Fred Wesley, Maceo Parker, Michael Brecker, Randy Brecker, Boom, Joe Farrell

  • Bass guitar - Bootsy Collins, Cordell Mosson

  • Guitars - Garry Shider, Michael Hampton, Glen Goins, Bootsy Collins

  • Drums and percussion - Tiki Fulwood, Jerome Brailey, Bootsy Collins, Gary Cooper

  • Keyboards and synthesizers - Bernie Worrell (Minimoog, Wurlitzer electric piano, ARP Pro Soloist and String Ensemble, RMI Electra Piano, Hammond organ, grand piano, Fender Rhodes, clavinet D6)

  • Backing vocals and handclaps - Gary Cooper, Debbie Edwards, Taka Kahn, Archie Ivy, Bryna Chimenti, Rasputin Boutte, Pam Vincent, Debra Wright, Sidney Barnes

*to the best of anyone’s knowledge

Credits

“Discord & Rhyme (theme),” composed by the Other Leading Brand, contains elements of:

  • Amon Düül II - Dehypnotized Toothpaste

  • The Dukes of Stratosphear - What in the World?? ...

  • Faith No More - Midlife Crisis

  • Herbie Hancock - Hornets

  • Kraftwerk - Autobahn

  • Talking Heads - Seen and Not Seen

  • Parliament - Unfunky UFO (this episode only)

Parliament Discography Blogspot 2019

You can buy or stream Mothership Connection and other albums by Parliament — and, let’s be honest, Funkadelic — at your local Sam Goody, as well as the usual suspects such as Spotify, iTunes, YouTube, and Amazon. Follow Discord & Rhyme on Twitter @DiscordPod for news and updates, follow Rich @zonetrope, follow Amanda @MagneticInk67, and follow Ben @BenjaminM1019. Check out Ben’s book, All the Days of His Life: Listening to David Bowie, Song by Song on Amazon, and listen to his awesome podcast, Detours, wherever podcasts are available. Special thanks to our own Mike DeFabio, the Other Leading Brand, for production duties. See you next album, and be ever wonderful.


Osmium is the 1970 debut album by the funk band Parliament, led by George Clinton. The album has a psychedelic soul sound with a spirit of experimentation that is more similar to early Funkadelic than the later R&B-inspired Parliament albums.
The original vinyl release contained a glossy lyric sheet.
Since its re-release in 1990, Osmium has been distributed numerous times by various labels in the U.S., Europe and Japan, sometimes under alternative titles that have included Rhenium and First Thangs. A number of these reissues have featured material that was not included on the original album, such as unreleased tracks and singles that were recorded around the same time as Osmium.
The personnel for this album included the five Parliaments singers and the five backing musicians known as Funkadelic. The same personnel also recorded as Funkadelic, releasing that act's self-titled debut album also in 1970. After the release of Osmium, contractual difficulties prevented further recording under the name Parliament until 1974, when Clinton signed that act to Casablanca Records and positioned it as an R&B-inspired counterpoint to the more rock-oriented Funkadelic.
The yodeling that arguably uniquely identifies one of De La Soul's early hits, 'Potholes In My Lawn' (which eventually appeared on De La Soul's 3 Feet High and Rising), comes from Osmium's 'Little Old Country Boy'.
1. 'I Call My Baby Pussycat' (George Clinton, Eddie Hazel, Billy 'Bass' Nelson) – 4:24 (released as a single-Invictus 9077 under the name 'A Parliament Thang')
2. 'Put Love in Your Life' (Clinton, Vivian Lewis) – 5:07
3. 'Little Old Country Boy' (Ruth Copeland) – 3:58
4. 'Moonshine Heather' (Clinton) – 4:05
5. 'Oh Lord, Why Lord/Prayer' (Copeland, P. Trim, based on Pachelbel's Canon) – 5:00
6. 'My Automobile' (Clinton, Clarence 'Fuzzy' Haskins) – 4:45
7. 'There Is Nothing Before Me But Thang' (Clinton, Bobby Harris, Hazel, Bernie Worrell) – 3:56
8. 'Funky Woman' (Clinton, Worrell) – 2:56
9. 'Livin' the Life' (Clinton, Nelson, Worrell) – 5:57
10. 'The Silent Boatman' (Copeland) – 5:45
Up for the Down Stroke is a 1974 album by Parliament. It was the band's second album (following 1970's Osmium), and their first to be released on Casablanca Records. The album's title track was Parliament's first chart hit and remains one of the most well-known P-Funk songs. The album also contains a funk reworking of The Parliaments' song '(I Wanna) Testify' under the title 'Testify'.
1. 'Up for the Down Stroke' – 5:10
2. 'Testify' – 3:49
3. 'The Goose' – 9:13
4. 'I Can Move You (If You Let Me)' – 2:47
5. 'I Just Got Back [From the Fantasy, Ahead of Our Time in the Four Lands of Ellet]' (P Chase) – 4:33
6. 'All Your Goodies Are Gone' – 5:07
7. 'Whatever Makes Baby Feel Good' – 6:01
8. 'Presence of a Brain' – 3:19
Chocolate City is a 1975 album by the funk band Parliament. It has a theme of love of Washington, D.C., where the group was particularly popular. The album's cover includes images of the United States Capitol, the Washington Monument, and the Lincoln Memorial in the form of a chocolate medallion, as well as sticker labeled 'Washington DC'.
1. 'Chocolate City' – 5:37
2. 'Ride On' – 3:34
3. 'Together' – 4:07
4. 'Side Effects' – 3:13
5. 'What Comes Funky' – 2:23
6. 'Let Me Be' – 5:37
7. 'If It Don't Fit (Don't Force It)' – 2:07
8. 'I Misjudged You' – 5:14
9. 'Bigfootin' – 4:50
Mothership Connection is the fourth album by American funk band Parliament, released in 1975 (see 1975 in music). This concept album of P Funk mythology is usually rated as one of Parliament's best. Mothership Connection was the first P-funk album to feature Maceo Parker and Fred Wesley, who had left The J.B.'s, James Brown's backing band. 'Mothership Connection' became Parliament's first album to be certified gold and later platinum.
1. 'P-Funk (Wants to Get Funked Up)' (G. Clinton/W. Collins/B. Worrell) – 7:41
2. 'Mothership Connection (Star Child)' (G. Clinton/W. Collins/B. Worrell) – 6:13
3. 'Unfunky UFO' (G. Clinton/W. Collins/G. Shider) – 4:23
4. 'Supergroovalisticprosifunkstication' (G. Clinton/W. Collins/B. Worrell/G. Shider) – 5:03
5. 'Handcuffs' (G. Clinton/G. Goins/McLaughlin) – 3:51
6. 'Give Up The Funk (Tear The Roof Off The Sucker)' (G. Clinton/W. Collins/B. Worrell) – 5:46
7. 'Night of the Thumpasorus Peoples' (G. Clinton/W. Collins/G. Shider) – 5:10
The Clones of Dr. Funkenstein 1976 is an album by funk band Parliament, released in 1976. The album is notable for featuring horn arrangements by ex-James Brown band member, Fred Wesley. The album charted at #20 on the Billboard pop chart and became Parliament's second album to be certified gold. Two singles were released off the album, 'Do That Stuff', which charted at #22, and 'Dr. Funkenstein' which charted at #43.[1]
1. 'Prelude' – 1:40
2. 'Gamin' on Ya!' – 3:02
3. 'Dr. Funkenstein' – 5:46
4. 'Children of Productions' – 3:57
5. 'Getten' to Know You' – 5:20
6. 'Do That Stuff' – 4:47
7. 'Everything is on the One' – 3:47
8. 'I've Been Watching You (Move Your Sexy Body)' – 6:01
9. 'Funking for Fun' – 5:56
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