independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Music: Non-Prince > George Clinton Hospitalized
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 3 of 3 <123
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Reply #60 posted 06/02/11 1:22pm

whitechocolate
brotha

avatar

Bow wow wow, yippey yo yippey YAYYYYYYYYYYYY!!! Glad he's okay. smile

Hungry? Just look in the mirror and get fed up.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #61 posted 06/02/11 3:28pm

funkpill

free2bfreeda said:

DakutiusMaximus said:

DakutiusMaximus said: (forth line from top of quote)

"I saw The Prliaments perform Testify in '67 at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago on a triple bill with Baby Huey and the Babysitters and Cream.

They was wearin' their Temptations style sharkskin suits but from the size of their pupils I would say they were just about to break out of that mold and go all P-Funk on us. Hallelujah!"

cool

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #62 posted 06/02/11 4:20pm

physco185

omg!!!! i hope he recovers!!!

i luv George Clinton!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #63 posted 06/03/11 10:19am

Dogsinthetrees

George and heroin? Tell me it isn't so. I know the man likes to smoke reefer, nothing wrong with that. He sure seemed to be enjoying the spliff I tossed to him onstage two years ago.

I'm just saying...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #64 posted 06/03/11 11:13am

Timmy84

Dogsinthetrees said:

George and heroin? Tell me it isn't so. I know the man likes to smoke reefer, nothing wrong with that. He sure seemed to be enjoying the spliff I tossed to him onstage two years ago.

Huh? What makes you think he's using or was using heroin???

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #65 posted 06/03/11 11:25am

Dogsinthetrees

Somebody above this post said he was a functional junkie. The term "junkie" usually refers to somebody who does herion. It was probably a youngin' who doesn't know any better. Nothing ever even made me consider George and heroin in the same thought before.

I'm just saying...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #66 posted 06/03/11 11:27am

Timmy84

Dogsinthetrees said:

Somebody above this post said he was a functional junkie. The term "junkie" usually refers to somebody who does herion. It was probably a youngin' who doesn't know any better. Nothing ever even made me consider George and heroin in the same thought before.

Wait? So if someone says that, that means they're on heroin? neutral We all know he still uses cocaine every now and then. confused So I didn't get that memo that it meant he was on the needle. I think George is scared of needles anyway. neutral

Fuck it, I'll apologize for this. I did look it up and yeah it's usually referred to heroin users but I sure didn't mean anything demeaning by it. neutral Again, sorry for looking like a douche for that response. Let bygones be bygones.

[Edited 6/3/11 20:27pm]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #67 posted 06/03/11 12:42pm

free2bfreeda

So now's the time to start shredding?

I hope this thread doesn't morph into a negative side-bar resulting in a pseudo-type edition of the National Enquire.

I also hope (as on topic) Mr. George Clinton aka principal architect of P-Funk is feeling better and better each moment of everyday. I'm so glad he's out of the hospital, and hug to him and all his well wishers.

“Transracial is a term that has long since been defined as the adoption of a child that is of a different race than the adoptive parents,” : https://thinkprogress.org...fb6e18544a
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #68 posted 06/03/11 12:50pm

Timmy84

free2bfreeda said:

So now's the time to start shredding?

I hope this thread doesn't morph into a negative side-bar resulting in a pseudo-type edition of the National Enquire.

I also hope (as on topic) Mr. George Clinton aka principal architect of P-Funk is feeling better and better each moment of everyday. I'm so glad he's out of the hospital, and hug to him and all his well wishers.

Exactly lol

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #69 posted 06/03/11 7:31pm

Dogsinthetrees

Who said anything about a memo? Your sarcasm is duly noted. As is the fact that you are being a douche about it. Google the term "junkie". I was not pleased by the thought of George using "junk", I'm sure he can handle his coke and reefer. I am glad he's ok, he is a hell of a guy.

I'm just saying...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #70 posted 06/03/11 8:15pm

Timmy84

[Edited 6/3/11 20:28pm]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #71 posted 06/03/11 8:19pm

Timmy84

Anyways, moving on...

George Clinton to speak at British Library

Funk legend will discuss science fiction, Afro-futurism and 'all things galactic' at an event called Space Children

George Clinton of Parliament-Funkadelic
Preparing to board the mothership ... George Clinton in 2008. Photograph: Sipa Press/Rex Features

Funk legend George Clinton is to make a one-off appearance at the British Library in London. The Parliament-Funkadelic founder will speak about science fiction, Afro-futurism and, er, gettin' down.

Clinton will appear at an event titled Space Children, part of the library's ongoing science fiction exhibition. Together with Nona Hendryx, who sang Lady Marmalade as a member of Labelle, Clinton will appear on 18 June to discuss his love of spaceships, funk and "all things galactic". "[Clinton's] P-funk mythology turned his whole band into characters from a wild space opera," explained a press release, and Labelle's "concerts and extraordinary styling in the mid-70s had to be seen to be believed."

News of Clinton's forthcoming appearance follows reports that the 69-year-old was admitted to hospital for a staph infection in one of his legs. After a routine check-up, the singer was reportedly treated for the infection. "[George] will be just fine," his spokesman said. "Thank you for all your prayers and concern." On Saturday 28 May, it was reported on Clinton's Twitter feed that he had been released from hospital "and is getting ready to board the Mothership for tour".

The British Library event will include a "special film" featuring Janelle Monáe, described as an heiress to the Afro-futurist movement, and a screening of John Akomfrah's documentary The Last Angel of History. Tickets are on sale for £7.50.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #72 posted 06/04/11 4:58am

PDogz

avatar

Timmy84 said:

The weirdness of the whole vibe of this song really epitomizes FUNKADELIC for me. Parliament was a whole other vibe all by itself, but FUNKADELIC was hard, edgy, freaky, and quite frankly; WEIRD, lol.

"There's Nothing That The Proper Attitude Won't Render Funkable!"

star
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #73 posted 06/04/11 1:38pm

sosgemini

avatar

Me thinks functioning junkie is a lot nicer than Crack Head....jusy saying. lol

Space for sale...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #74 posted 06/04/11 3:18pm

HuMpThAnG

sosgemini said:

Me thinks functioning junkie is a lot nicer than Crack Head....jusy saying. lol

lol

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #75 posted 06/07/11 11:41am

HAPPYPERSON

Sunday, 29 May 2011

More influential than the Beatles; Meet George Clinton

George Clinton onstage at the Indigo2, 2007
Picture: James Newman




"Do a search for the greatest rock bands of all time and you won't see mention of Parliament-Funkadelic. I know that rock critics like to fight over whether the Rolling Stones or the Beatles deserve the number one spot but in my eyes neither of them can hold a candle to what P-Funk brought to the music. As far as I'm concerned, P-Funk rocked harder than all of them combined... It's funny that the greatest rock group is always assumed to be white."

André Torres - Editor-in-Chief, Wax Poetics


News of George Clinton's hospitalisation shocked music lovers around the world this week but perhaps none more so than me, for the hospitalisation came just days after I enjoyed a 75-minute interview with George, during which he seemed to be perfectly fine.

Alarm bells sounded among funk fans after Bootsy Collins reported the news on his facebook page and asked his followers to pray for George Clinton's recovery. Fortunately the hospitalisation wasn't too serious - a staph infection was discovered in George's leg as he underwent a routine check-up. He's already checked out and is now busy preparing to embark on yet another international concert tour.

The level of media interest was surprising given that George Clinton is one of the most unsung music pioneers still walking among us. Fusing the hard funk of James Brown with the psychedelic edge of Sly and the Family Stone and the blistering rock of Jimi Hendrix, George and his group Parliament-Funkadelic cultivated a groundbreaking sound.

According to Rolling Stone their output, which "[mixed] funk polyrhythms, psychedelic guitar, jazzy horns [and] vocal-group harmonies" was "some of pop's most adventurous music of the Seventies." Their unique sound ultimately laid the foundations for much of the hip-hop that now dominates the musical landscape.

Despite achieving three platinum albums, Parliament-Funkadelic never quite reached chart blockbuster status. Nonetheless, their danceable beats and affirmative lyrics resonated with a huge audience and today they're considered one of the most influential groups of the last century.

Flourishing in the early 1970s, P-Funk's music was often laced with political commentary but delivered it in a far less divisive way than 1960s protest songs like James Brown's 'Say It Loud, I'm Black And I'm Proud'. Instead the tunes often focused on music as a uniting factor. P-Funk sang of 'One Nation Under A Groove'. Music could make barriers melt away into insignificance; 'Free Your Mind And Your Ass Will Follow' read their 1970 album cover.

Even the compositions were about unity. When Bootsy Collins migrated to P-Funk from James Brown's revue he brought with him the concept of 'the one': the one-and-three beat Brown popularised during the 1960s and early 1970s. "When everybody's playing it in unison instead of harmony, it's as one," George said in 2010. "That's strong... It's in unison so it's like it'll be around forever. It's in your genes... Then we're all together as one... The entity of one as a life form - as life. One DNA. I'm for you, you for me. We for trees and we for the planet."

In a stroke of genius, Clinton devised a distinct, space-age image with which the band's music became synonymous. Dressed in otherworldly costumes and starring in comic strips on their album artwork, the group presented themselves as a band of black superheroes - an empowering and cutting edge move so far ahead of its time, in fact, that we're now halfway into 2011 and there's still never been a major movie about a black superhero (bar Hancock, in which the black superhero was an inept drunkard).

By fusing searing social commentary with radio-friendly grooves and comic book imagery, Clinton and his band were able to rail against social ills in a non-threatening way. Clinton's ideology crept past the same DJs who dropped James Brown from their playlists when he released 'Say It Loud'. 'Cosmic Slop' became a club smash, filling dancefloors all over America, despite telling the story of a woman who becomes a prostitute to feed her children.

Combining their pioneering funk-rock fusion and their distinctive visual presentation, P-Funk enjoyed enormous success as a touring act, selling out stadiums throughout the 1970s with an elaborate concert experience in which Clinton would descend in a million-dollar spaceship to bestow the gift of funk upon his audience. That spaceship - the mothership - has now been acquired by the Smithsonian.

Often dismissed as clownish figures at the height of their fame, in more recent years George Clinton and P-Funk have been acknowledged as some of the most respected and influential musicians of all time. From Prince to the Red Hot Chilli Peppers (who recruited George in 1985 to produce and write for their album 'Freaky Styley') a lot of the biggest acts to have emerged since the early 1980s have cited P-Funk as one of their greatest influences. In 1997 the group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and in 2009 George was handed the BMI Icon Award.

P-Funk's influence on several generations of hip-hop musicians is self-evident in the number of times their music has been sampled, which runs into the thousands. In fact, P-Funk are thought to be the second most sampled act of all time, beaten only by James Brown. Academic Vladimir Gutkovich has described them as "the key predecessor of hip-hop music."

Indeed, there is a very strong argument to be made that George and P-Funk have had more impact on the contemporary musical landscape than even the Beatles. Wax Poetics editor André Torres wrote in 2006:


"While most critics want to put the holy trinity [Beatles, Stones, Zeppelin] on a pedestal, with the world domination of hip-hop culture and the large role that P-Funk has played in the sound of hip-hop, I dare say that P-Funk's impact can be felt much more strongly thirty years later than that of those three bands. When I asked Dr Dre, the quintessential post-modern producer who has changed the course of pop music three times in two decades, who he listened to growing up and was his biggest influence, he said P-Funk. Not the Beatles."

Presently, though, George is troubled. While his pioneering music continues to form the basis for so much contemporary output, he's getting the props but he's not getting the cash. Like many black musicians of his era, he was hoodwinked by the very music industry figures who were supposed to be looking out for his best interests.

George's financial problems began in the 1980s and have continued on-and-off ever since. In 2005 a court ruled that a man called Armen Boladian had forged George's signature on numerous documents in order to falsely assert ownership of some of George's masters. The masters in question were returned to George but Boladian still controls much of the P-Funk catalogue and George contests his ownership of those masters too.

George's investigations into the corporate skullduggery around him and his music have turned up what could be one of the biggest known conspiracies in the history of the music business. His losses over the last 25 years or so could total as much as $100million. Just one sample can be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars and George is one of the most sampled artists in music history. For more than two decades artists have been paying for the rights to sample his work and that money has been landing straight into other people's bank accounts. But the injustice doesn't even end there.

His albums hop labels when he's not looking. At an album signing a few years ago a fan handed him a CD he'd released on Sony and he noticed that instead of saying 'Sony' on the artwork, it said 'Westbound'. He'd never sanctioned nor profited from this apparent re-release. Somebody else was getting paid for it. There's more, too.

Type George's name into iTunes and you'll notice that a lot of his tracks show up as having been written by 'George S. Clinton'. That's not George Clinton. Every time you buy one of those tracks, somebody else gets paid for it.

During a recent trip to the US Copyright Office, arranged by Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, George discovered documents showing that his songs had been repeatedly re-registered without his knowledge or permission, with original songwriters missing and new songwriters added.

Deceased P-Funk members' catalogues had been re-registered as though they were still alive, years after they passed away. At one point somebody went to NYC to re-register George's entire catalogue in one hit. George has even obtained a signed declaration from a man who says he was paid thousands of dollars to pretend he'd written some of George's material.

George's legal disputes are ongoing with no resolution in sight. The scale of the battle facing George is almost beyond comprehension. It could take years to unpick - meanwhile, other people continue to profit from his record sales and samples.

Outside of this troubling issue, though, George remains upbeat. At 69-years-old, he is appalled by the mere mention of retirement. He plays roughly 200 gigs every year and is horrified by the idea of stopping. He loves gigging and the proceeds allow him to pursue his often overlooked humanitarian efforts. Just last year he was involved in fundraising efforts for Haiti and donated 25% of all future P-Funk royalties to the Barrack Obama Green Charter High School in his home town of Plainfield, New Jersey.

During our interview we also covered more emotional topics. In the last year and a half he has lost his son and his mother, as well as P-Funk bandmates Garry Shider and Phelps 'Catfish' Collins. He told me how getting onstage 200 nights a year and spreading his positive message helps him to cope with the loss. He also spoke candidly about the aging process, his periods of drug abuse and checking into rehab with Sly Stone, with whom he's recently been in the studio working on new music.

There was more positive chat, too, including discussion of a planned Motown album and a flash drive in the shape of George's hand, the finger of which will plug into your home computer giving access to almost every track the group has ever recorded, including demos and live recordings.

Despite this week's health scare, George is still very much alive and kicking. He works constantly in the studio down the street from his home and is about to embark on a grueling concert tour around America and Europe. These aren't rigid, untaxing oldies gigs either. P-Funk gigs are perhaps the best value for money around. George and the band routinely play for three hours or more and the shows often consist of long improvisations. No two gigs are the same.

In the background George is relentlessly pursuing years of unpaid royalties for himself and his P-Funk collaborators as well as restored ownership of his masters. He also intends to start a legal fund for artists facing similar copyright problems and has agreed to give lessons at the Barrack Obama Green Charter High School, teaching music students how to avoid getting ripped off in the same way. So fear not, funkateers - it's going to take a lot more than a staph infection to slow him down.

For news on the publication of my interview with George Clinton, keep an eye on my blog. For details of George's upcoming gigs, click here.


(Click to enlarge)
Charles Thomson and George Clinton at the Indigo2, 2007
Picture: James Newman

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #76 posted 06/07/11 12:07pm

Timmy84

HAPPYPERSON said:

Sunday, 29 May 2011

More influential than the Beatles; Meet George Clinton

George Clinton onstage at the Indigo2, 2007
Picture: James Newman




"Do a search for the greatest rock bands of all time and you won't see mention of Parliament-Funkadelic. I know that rock critics like to fight over whether the Rolling Stones or the Beatles deserve the number one spot but in my eyes neither of them can hold a candle to what P-Funk brought to the music. As far as I'm concerned, P-Funk rocked harder than all of them combined... It's funny that the greatest rock group is always assumed to be white."

André Torres - Editor-in-Chief, Wax Poetics


News of George Clinton's hospitalisation shocked music lovers around the world this week but perhaps none more so than me, for the hospitalisation came just days after I enjoyed a 75-minute interview with George, during which he seemed to be perfectly fine.

Alarm bells sounded among funk fans after Bootsy Collins reported the news on his facebook page and asked his followers to pray for George Clinton's recovery. Fortunately the hospitalisation wasn't too serious - a staph infection was discovered in George's leg as he underwent a routine check-up. He's already checked out and is now busy preparing to embark on yet another international concert tour.

The level of media interest was surprising given that George Clinton is one of the most unsung music pioneers still walking among us. Fusing the hard funk of James Brown with the psychedelic edge of Sly and the Family Stone and the blistering rock of Jimi Hendrix, George and his group Parliament-Funkadelic cultivated a groundbreaking sound.

According to Rolling Stone their output, which "[mixed] funk polyrhythms, psychedelic guitar, jazzy horns [and] vocal-group harmonies" was "some of pop's most adventurous music of the Seventies." Their unique sound ultimately laid the foundations for much of the hip-hop that now dominates the musical landscape.

Despite achieving three platinum albums, Parliament-Funkadelic never quite reached chart blockbuster status. Nonetheless, their danceable beats and affirmative lyrics resonated with a huge audience and today they're considered one of the most influential groups of the last century.

Flourishing in the early 1970s, P-Funk's music was often laced with political commentary but delivered it in a far less divisive way than 1960s protest songs like James Brown's 'Say It Loud, I'm Black And I'm Proud'. Instead the tunes often focused on music as a uniting factor. P-Funk sang of 'One Nation Under A Groove'. Music could make barriers melt away into insignificance; 'Free Your Mind And Your Ass Will Follow' read their 1970 album cover.

Even the compositions were about unity. When Bootsy Collins migrated to P-Funk from James Brown's revue he brought with him the concept of 'the one': the one-and-three beat Brown popularised during the 1960s and early 1970s. "When everybody's playing it in unison instead of harmony, it's as one," George said in 2010. "That's strong... It's in unison so it's like it'll be around forever. It's in your genes... Then we're all together as one... The entity of one as a life form - as life. One DNA. I'm for you, you for me. We for trees and we for the planet."

In a stroke of genius, Clinton devised a distinct, space-age image with which the band's music became synonymous. Dressed in otherworldly costumes and starring in comic strips on their album artwork, the group presented themselves as a band of black superheroes - an empowering and cutting edge move so far ahead of its time, in fact, that we're now halfway into 2011 and there's still never been a major movie about a black superhero (bar Hancock, in which the black superhero was an inept drunkard).

By fusing searing social commentary with radio-friendly grooves and comic book imagery, Clinton and his band were able to rail against social ills in a non-threatening way. Clinton's ideology crept past the same DJs who dropped James Brown from their playlists when he released 'Say It Loud'. 'Cosmic Slop' became a club smash, filling dancefloors all over America, despite telling the story of a woman who becomes a prostitute to feed her children.

Combining their pioneering funk-rock fusion and their distinctive visual presentation, P-Funk enjoyed enormous success as a touring act, selling out stadiums throughout the 1970s with an elaborate concert experience in which Clinton would descend in a million-dollar spaceship to bestow the gift of funk upon his audience. That spaceship - the mothership - has now been acquired by the Smithsonian.

Often dismissed as clownish figures at the height of their fame, in more recent years George Clinton and P-Funk have been acknowledged as some of the most respected and influential musicians of all time. From Prince to the Red Hot Chilli Peppers (who recruited George in 1985 to produce and write for their album 'Freaky Styley') a lot of the biggest acts to have emerged since the early 1980s have cited P-Funk as one of their greatest influences. In 1997 the group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and in 2009 George was handed the BMI Icon Award.

P-Funk's influence on several generations of hip-hop musicians is self-evident in the number of times their music has been sampled, which runs into the thousands. In fact, P-Funk are thought to be the second most sampled act of all time, beaten only by James Brown. Academic Vladimir Gutkovich has described them as "the key predecessor of hip-hop music."

Indeed, there is a very strong argument to be made that George and P-Funk have had more impact on the contemporary musical landscape than even the Beatles. Wax Poetics editor André Torres wrote in 2006:


"While most critics want to put the holy trinity [Beatles, Stones, Zeppelin] on a pedestal, with the world domination of hip-hop culture and the large role that P-Funk has played in the sound of hip-hop, I dare say that P-Funk's impact can be felt much more strongly thirty years later than that of those three bands. When I asked Dr Dre, the quintessential post-modern producer who has changed the course of pop music three times in two decades, who he listened to growing up and was his biggest influence, he said P-Funk. Not the Beatles."

Presently, though, George is troubled. While his pioneering music continues to form the basis for so much contemporary output, he's getting the props but he's not getting the cash. Like many black musicians of his era, he was hoodwinked by the very music industry figures who were supposed to be looking out for his best interests.

George's financial problems began in the 1980s and have continued on-and-off ever since. In 2005 a court ruled that a man called Armen Boladian had forged George's signature on numerous documents in order to falsely assert ownership of some of George's masters. The masters in question were returned to George but Boladian still controls much of the P-Funk catalogue and George contests his ownership of those masters too.

George's investigations into the corporate skullduggery around him and his music have turned up what could be one of the biggest known conspiracies in the history of the music business. His losses over the last 25 years or so could total as much as $100million. Just one sample can be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars and George is one of the most sampled artists in music history. For more than two decades artists have been paying for the rights to sample his work and that money has been landing straight into other people's bank accounts. But the injustice doesn't even end there.

His albums hop labels when he's not looking. At an album signing a few years ago a fan handed him a CD he'd released on Sony and he noticed that instead of saying 'Sony' on the artwork, it said 'Westbound'. He'd never sanctioned nor profited from this apparent re-release. Somebody else was getting paid for it. There's more, too.

Type George's name into iTunes and you'll notice that a lot of his tracks show up as having been written by 'George S. Clinton'. That's not George Clinton. Every time you buy one of those tracks, somebody else gets paid for it.

During a recent trip to the US Copyright Office, arranged by Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, George discovered documents showing that his songs had been repeatedly re-registered without his knowledge or permission, with original songwriters missing and new songwriters added.

Deceased P-Funk members' catalogues had been re-registered as though they were still alive, years after they passed away. At one point somebody went to NYC to re-register George's entire catalogue in one hit. George has even obtained a signed declaration from a man who says he was paid thousands of dollars to pretend he'd written some of George's material.

George's legal disputes are ongoing with no resolution in sight. The scale of the battle facing George is almost beyond comprehension. It could take years to unpick - meanwhile, other people continue to profit from his record sales and samples.

Outside of this troubling issue, though, George remains upbeat. At 69-years-old, he is appalled by the mere mention of retirement. He plays roughly 200 gigs every year and is horrified by the idea of stopping. He loves gigging and the proceeds allow him to pursue his often overlooked humanitarian efforts. Just last year he was involved in fundraising efforts for Haiti and donated 25% of all future P-Funk royalties to the Barrack Obama Green Charter High School in his home town of Plainfield, New Jersey.

During our interview we also covered more emotional topics. In the last year and a half he has lost his son and his mother, as well as P-Funk bandmates Garry Shider and Phelps 'Catfish' Collins. He told me how getting onstage 200 nights a year and spreading his positive message helps him to cope with the loss. He also spoke candidly about the aging process, his periods of drug abuse and checking into rehab with Sly Stone, with whom he's recently been in the studio working on new music.

There was more positive chat, too, including discussion of a planned Motown album and a flash drive in the shape of George's hand, the finger of which will plug into your home computer giving access to almost every track the group has ever recorded, including demos and live recordings.

Despite this week's health scare, George is still very much alive and kicking. He works constantly in the studio down the street from his home and is about to embark on a grueling concert tour around America and Europe. These aren't rigid, untaxing oldies gigs either. P-Funk gigs are perhaps the best value for money around. George and the band routinely play for three hours or more and the shows often consist of long improvisations. No two gigs are the same.

In the background George is relentlessly pursuing years of unpaid royalties for himself and his P-Funk collaborators as well as restored ownership of his masters. He also intends to start a legal fund for artists facing similar copyright problems and has agreed to give lessons at the Barrack Obama Green Charter High School, teaching music students how to avoid getting ripped off in the same way. So fear not, funkateers - it's going to take a lot more than a staph infection to slow him down.

For news on the publication of my interview with George Clinton, keep an eye on my blog. For details of George's upcoming gigs, click here.


(Click to enlarge)
Charles Thomson and George Clinton at the Indigo2, 2007
Picture: James Newman

I dig this article and I agree...

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #77 posted 06/08/11 3:04pm

HuMpThAnG

yup

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #78 posted 06/13/11 2:25pm

allsmutaside

Timmy84 said:

sosgemini said:

Screw the mental part of it. I'm wondering how someone's body doesn't give up after the years of abuse. I have a friend who stopped partying in her early thirties only to die in her fourties from a stroke. Then there are people who continue (like Clinton) and they keep on ticking. He is one lucky kat. cool

Like I said "functional". This is a guy who used to get high on acid and shrooms for crying out loud. lol

"Acid and Shrooms" get a bad rap. Like another form of flying, in planes, the actual safety facts of the matter are counterintuitive to Amerian beliefs. But for the bizarre and occasional death from some unverified anecdotal acid trip, Acid is a safe experience for the most part.

Charlie Sheen was a functional drug taker. It all came to a crescendo in the last 6 months and we can no longer project much about his drug taking. Rick James, say, died at least 15 years younger than George. While Slick did not die of an overdose, his behavior surrounding drug use is likely to have contributed to his early passing on some level. What SOS is observing is that at the age of 69, George is still ruling the night, which is amazing, considering that many of the folks that he was running and gunning with are not alive today.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #79 posted 06/13/11 2:45pm

Timmy84

allsmutaside said:

Timmy84 said:

Like I said "functional". This is a guy who used to get high on acid and shrooms for crying out loud. lol

"Acid and Shrooms" get a bad rap. Like another form of flying, in planes, the actual safety facts of the matter are counterintuitive to Amerian beliefs. But for the bizarre and occasional death from some unverified anecdotal acid trip, Acid is a safe experience for the most part.

Charlie Sheen was a functional drug taker. It all came to a crescendo in the last 6 months and we can no longer project much about his drug taking. Rick James, say, died at least 15 years younger than George. While Slick did not die of an overdose, his behavior surrounding drug use is likely to have contributed to his early passing on some level. What SOS is observing is that at the age of 69, George is still ruling the night, which is amazing, considering that many of the folks that he was running and gunning with are not alive today.

Yeah I see what you mean. hmmm You know I'm thinking about it and it don't even seem like George's an addict. But yeah George is gonna keep funkin' forever. I can't see him dying anytime soon. pray ufo We need Dr. Funkenstein. cool

[Edited 6/13/11 14:46pm]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #80 posted 06/13/11 2:59pm

free2bfreeda

Timmy84 said:

Dogsinthetrees said:

Somebody above this post said he was a functional junkie. The term "junkie" usually refers to somebody who does herion. It was probably a youngin' who doesn't know any better. Nothing ever even made me consider George and heroin in the same thought before.

Wait? So if someone says that, that means they're on heroin? neutral We all know he still uses cocaine every now and then. confused So I didn't get that memo that it meant he was on the needle. I think George is scared of needles anyway. neutral

Fuck it, I'll apologize for this. I did look it up and yeah it's usually referred to heroin users but I sure didn't mean anything demeaning by it. neutral Again, sorry for looking like a douche for that response. Let bygones be bygones.

[Edited 6/3/11 20:27pm]

allsmutaside said:

Timmy84 said:

Like I said "functional". This is a guy who used to get high on acid and shrooms for crying out loud. lol

"Acid and Shrooms" get a bad rap. Like another form of flying, in planes, the actual safety facts of the matter are counterintuitive to Amerian beliefs. But for the bizarre and occasional death from some unverified anecdotal acid trip, Acid is a safe experience for the most part.

Charlie Sheen was a functional drug taker. It all came to a crescendo in the last 6 months and we can no longer project much about his drug taking. Rick James, say, died at least 15 years younger than George. While Slick did not die of an overdose, his behavior surrounding drug use is likely to have contributed to his early passing on some level. What SOS is observing is that at the age of 69, George is still ruling the night, which is amazing, considering that many of the folks that he was running and gunning with are not alive today.

Timmy84 said:

Yeah I see what you mean. You know I'm thinking about it and it don't even seem like George's an addict. But yeah George is gonna keep funkin' forever. I can't see him dying anytime soon. We need Dr. Funkenstein.

rolleyes

“Transracial is a term that has long since been defined as the adoption of a child that is of a different race than the adoptive parents,” : https://thinkprogress.org...fb6e18544a
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #81 posted 06/13/11 4:13pm

JoeTyler

biggrin

tinkerbell
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #82 posted 06/14/11 1:00pm

Meloh9

avatar

George is definitely alive and well and feeling better. I am from the south side of Chicago but I moved for a little while to a small town called Salina KS. When I lived there all I did was eat, sleep, meditate and listen to Funkadelic. I must have left my energy behind because Saturday the mothership landed in a small town called Salina Kansas for The Smokey Hill Music Fest and tour the roof off the mother sucka. Some would call it synchronicity George calls it Cosmic Slop. I damned near yelled the opening monologue of Maggot Brain louder than George was saying it. I was staying in the same hotel.. and I ended up talking to Mike Hampton and Kendra Foster and a few others.. It was so funny i was talking to Peanut all that time and I thought he was somebody else local I knew LOL Even got my favorite album of all time Standing On The Verge Of Getting It On signed by Dr Funkenstien himself!


We were headed to the show when the elevator popped open, I was like Geroge!? George was like what's up brother! LOL I told him I am one of his biggest funkateers, George was like what you doing out here? LOL I told him I am glad he recovered and that we were praying for him, and that Funk lives forever.. He seemed to not be bothered like he knows he will be ok. He looked really healthy and he was dancing and everything once he got on stage... but he seemed like he wanted to hang out with us more than he wanted to head out to the show biggrin



[img:$uid]http://i54.tinypic.com/dvontj.jpg[/img:$uid]


[img:$uid]http://i55.tinypic.com/2wg6get.jpg[/img:$uid]


[img:$uid]http://i54.tinypic.com/9lad04.jpg[/img:$uid]

[img:$uid]http://i54.tinypic.com/2qjyr7p.jpg[/img:$uid]



  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #83 posted 06/14/11 1:08pm

funkpill

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #84 posted 06/14/11 1:50pm

Timmy84

funkpill said:

cool

Kendra could get it love

[img:$uid]http://i55.tinypic.com/2wg6get.jpg[/img:$uid]

Yeah she's real cute. smile

^^ Glad you had a good time. biggrin

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #85 posted 06/14/11 2:22pm

Meloh9

avatar

Timmy84 said:

funkpill said:

cool

Kendra could get it love

[img:$uid]http://i55.tinypic.com/2wg6get.jpg[/img:$uid]

Yeah she's real cute. smile

^^ Glad you had a good time. biggrin

and she's a big flirt too wink

She was in a band with a friend of mine once, I would like to do some songs with her, I can tell she is a really sweet girl.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #86 posted 06/17/11 1:34pm

Bfunkthe1

avatar

^

Meloh that's very, very cool. Glad to hear GC is doing a lot better.smile Now release that Motown covers album you been promising! Heck release anything new I don't care. Lol

Btw, George Clinton/P-Funk will be playing Summerfest in Milwaukee, WI on Thursday night June 30th on one of the free stages. Seeing that my dad and his side of the family live in Milwaukee, I think I need to pay a visit on the 30th. Plus my dad has never seen GC before. I think he would really dig it. He's cool like that. cool

[Edited 6/17/11 13:35pm]

[Edited 6/17/11 17:02pm]

Fantasy is reality in the world today. But I'll keep hangin in there, that is the only way.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 3 of 3 <123
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Music: Non-Prince > George Clinton Hospitalized