Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Funkadelic

Funkadelic   
Artist: Funkadelic

   Genre(s): 
Jazz: Funk
   Other
   R&B: Soul
   Rock
   



Discography:


Motor City Madness (CD 2)   
 Motor City Madness (CD 2)

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 14


Motor City Madness (CD 1)   
 Motor City Madness (CD 1)

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 15


The Electric Spanking of War Babies   
 The Electric Spanking of War Babies

   Year: 1981   
Tracks: 8


Uncle Jam Wants You   
 Uncle Jam Wants You

   Year: 1979   
Tracks: 6


One Nation Under A Groove   
 One Nation Under A Groove

   Year: 1978   
Tracks: 9


Tales Of Kidd Funkadelic   
 Tales Of Kidd Funkadelic

   Year: 1976   
Tracks: 7


Hardcore Jollies   
 Hardcore Jollies

   Year: 1976   
Tracks: 8


Let's Take It To The Stage   
 Let's Take It To The Stage

   Year: 1975   
Tracks: 10


Standing On The Verge Of Getting It On   
 Standing On The Verge Of Getting It On

   Year: 1974   
Tracks: 7


Cosmic Slop   
 Cosmic Slop

   Year: 1973   
Tracks: 9


America Eats Its Young   
 America Eats Its Young

   Year: 1972   
Tracks: 14


Maggot Brain   
 Maggot Brain

   Year: 1971   
Tracks: 7


Funkadelic   
 Funkadelic

   Year: 1970   
Tracks: 7


Free Your Mind And Your Ass Will Follow   
 Free Your Mind And Your Ass Will Follow

   Year: 1970   
Tracks: 6




Though it much took a back chair to its sister grouping Parliament, Funkadelic furthered the notions of black rock begun by Jimi Hendrix and Sly Stone, blend elements of '60s psychedelia and vapors plus the deep rut of somebody and funk. The band pursued album statements of social/political comment patch Parliament stayed in the funk singles format, only Funkadelic however paralleled the more commercial artist's success, specially in the tardy '70s when the interplay betwixt bands affected the Funkadelic levelheaded closer to a co-ordinated P-Funk expressive style.


In the heroic soul custom of a patronage stripe playing funding before the star takes the stage, Funkadelic began life encouraging George Clinton's doo ginzo group, the Parliaments. After having performed for about 10 long time, the Parliaments had added a rhythm section in 1964 -- for tours and background work -- consisting of guitarist Frankie Boyce, his brother Richard on bass, and drummer Langston Booth; two years later, the trio enlisted in the Army. By mid-1967, Clinton had recruited a modern backing band, including his old friend Billy "Bass" Nelson (born January 28, 1951, Plainfield, NJ) and guitarist Eddie Hazel (born April 10, 1950, Brooklyn, NY). After respective impermanent replacements on drums and keyboards, the addition of rhythm guitar player Lucius "Tawl" Ross (born October 5, 1948, Wagram, NC) and drummer Ramon "Tiki" Fulwood (born May 23, 1944, Philadelphia, PA) completed the lineup.


The Parliaments recorded several hits during 1967, just bother with the Revilot label backed Clinton into a corner. He score upon the estimate of deserting the Parliaments' name and or else transcription their backing grouping, with the added vocal "contributions" of the former Parliaments -- like band, different name. Billy Nelson suggested the deed Funkadelic, to reflect the members' increased brainchild from LSD and psychedelic civilisation. Clinton formed the Funkadelic label in mid-1968 simply then signed the grouping to Detroit's Westbound label several months later.


Released in 1970, Funkadelic's self-titled debut album listed only producer Clinton and the basketball team members of Funkadelic -- Hazel, Nelson, Fulwood, and Ross asset organist Mickey Atkins -- just too included all the late Parliaments asset several Motown sessionmen and Rare Earth's Ray Monette. Keyboard player Bernie Worrell also appeared on the album uncredited, fifty-fifty though his ikon was included on the inner arm with the rest of the band.


Worrell (born April 19, 1944, Long Beach, NJ) was in the end credited on the second Funkadelic album (1970's Free Your Mind...and Your Ass Will Follow). He and Clinton had known each other since the early '60s, and Worrell soon became the most crucial cog in the P-Funk machine, running on arrangements and production for most later Parliament/Funkadelic releases. His stern upbringing and greco-Roman training (at the New England Conservatory and Juilliard), as well as the boom in synthesiser applied science during the early '70s, gave him the tools to make the horn arrangements and jazz fusion-inspired synth runs that later trademarked the P-Funk levelheaded. Just subsequently the release of their third album, Maggot Brain, P-Funk added so far another big contributor, Bootsy Collins. The throb bass line of Collins (born October 26, 1951, Cincinnati, OH) had antecedently been featured in James Brown's financial support band, the J.B.'s (along with his brother, guitar player Catfish Collins). Bootsy and Catfish were playing in a Detroit band in 1972 when George Clinton saw and hired them.


The Clinton/Worrell/Collins lineup premiered on 1972's America Eats Its Young, simply presently after its freeing several original members left the camp. Eddie Hazel worn-out a year in slammer after a combination dose possession/assault conviction, Tawl Ross left wing the band for medical reasons relating to an o.d. of LSD and swiftness, and Bill Nelson quit after more financial quarrels with Clinton. Funkadelic hired teenage guitar wiz Michael Hampton as a replacement, but both Hazel and Nelson would return for several later P-Funk releases.


Funkadelic affected to Warner Bros. in 1975 and delivered its major-label debut, Hard-core Jollies, one year later to lacklustre gross revenue and reviews. The same year, Westbound raided its vaults and countered with Tales of Kidd Funkadelic. Ironically, the album did better than Hardcore Jollies and included an R&B Top 30 single, "Undisco Kidd." In 1977, Westbound released The Best of the Early Years piece Funkadelic recorded what became its masterpiece (and arguably the topper P-Funk expiration ever), 1978's One Nation Under a Groove.


During the almost successful year in Parliament/Funkadelic account, Parliament strike the charts first with "Flash bulb Light," P-Funk's first R&B identification number one. "Peacock blue Boogie" would strike number one as well recent in the twelvemonth, only Funkadelic's title track to One Nation Under a Groove worn-out sixer weeks at the top of the inning spot on the R&B charts during the summer. The album, which reflected a growing consistence in styles betwixt Parliament and Funkadelic, became the first Funkadelic LP to extend to pt (the same year that Parliament's Funkentelechy Vs. the Placebo Syndrome did the same). In 1979, Funkadelic's "(Non Just) Knee Deep" strike number one as well, and its record album (Uncle Jam Wants You) reached gold status.


At just the point that Funkadelic appeared to be at the whirligig of its powers, the band began to unravel. As is sometimes the sheath, commercial-grade success began to break up several quondam friendships. In 1977, original Parliaments members Fuzzy Haskins, Calvin Simon, and Grady Thomas had left wing the P-Funk organisation to record on their possess. In early 1981, they tally the R&B charts with a single called "Connections and Disconnections," recorded as Funkadelic. To throw matters more, the original Funkadelic appeared on the charts at the same time, with the title track to The Electric Spanking of War Babies.


During 1980, Clinton began to be weighed down by legal difficulties arising from Polygram's acquisition of Parliament's label, Casablanca. Jettisoning both the Parliament and Funkadelic names (but non the musicians), Clinton began his solo calling with 1982's Computer Games. He and many late Parliament/Funkadelic members continued to tour and track record throughout the '80s as the P-Funk All Stars, simply the decade's scorn of everything to do with the '70s resulted in critical and commercial disuse for the world's biggest blue funk band, specially one which in division had spawned the heavy of disco music. During the early '90s, the come up of funk-inspired rap (courtesy of Digital Underground, Dr. Dre, and Warren G.) and funk john Rock (Primus and Red Hot Chili Peppers) re-established the status of Clinton & co., one of the nigh important forces in the late history of blackened music.





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Friday, 13 June 2008

Yves Saint Laurent's ashes scattered

Friends of Yves Saint Laurent scattered his ashes in the botanical garden in Marrakesh where the reclusive fashion designer found inspiration and refuge from fame.

More than 100 guests including French former culture minister Jack Lang and fashion designer Paloma Picasso joined the private ceremony at the garden where bulbul birds sang in the trees and sunlight bounced off pools of cool water.

Saint Laurent and long-time companion Pierre Berge bought the Majorelle Garden in 1980 and gave a new lease of life to its cobalt blue walls and lily pools standing among cacti, bamboo, palms and agave.

Today its quiet pathways and small museum of Islamic art are popular with tourists dazed from visiting the city's narrow, dusty streets crowded with donkey carts and beeping mopeds.

"I am very happy that he chose Marrakesh, this magical place, to rest for eternity," Lang said.

Saint Laurent was credited with changing forever what women wore and was the first designer to make luxury labels accessible to a wider audience through innovative read-to-wear collections.

But he also struggled with the pressure of fame and suffered from alcohol and drug addiction. Friends say he found peace and seclusion in the gardens, often retreating there after stressful fashion shows.

The designer was born and raised in the then French colony of Algeria and found something familiar in Marrakesh when he and Berge arrived there in the late 1960s.

Morocco inspired some of the daring color combinations in Saint Laurent's creations - orange with purple, pink with red - that earned him a reputation as the designer with the best color sense of the 20th century.

MEMORIAL

"I remember we used to drive up to the mountains near Marrakesh," said long-time Marrakesh resident Bill Willis, a close friend of Saint Laurent who designed his villa.

"We would see Berber peasant women carrying their bundles of firewood who wore the most wonderful color combinations - he inspired himself a lot from that."

The city's peasant lifestyle amid opulent town houses also helped inspire Saint Laurent's ethnic look that became popular with hippies.

At the height of the free-wheeling 1960s, he and Berge would entertain friends at their Marrakesh palace, including Saint Laurent's muse Loulou de la Falaise and Talitha Getty - the fashionable wife of John Paul Getty - who died of a heroin overdose in 1971.

When they bought the gardens, laid out by French painter Jacques Majorelle in the 1920s, Saint Laurent and Berge helped bring a cachet to Marrakesh that propelled it into world tourism's major league.

First adventurous Westerners moved in to restore houses in the old medina. Now construction cranes have joined the palm trees and Atlas mountains that form the city's backdrop.

Large hotels and golf resorts have sprung up, bringing much needed jobs to a poverty stricken region but removing much of the charm that drew creative foreigners in the 1960s.

After Saint Laurent's ashes were scattered, a memorial to his memory was unveiled at his villa in the garden, staff said.





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