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The FUNK of Prince vs. Roger Troutman & Parliament Funkadelic In my days, I have come across funksters who swear by anything George Clinton did with P-Funk/Funkadelic, and dismiss Prince's music as "not being funky enough".
So my question is this to the Purple Nation......
When comparing Prince's style of heavily James Brown influenced guitar and horn arrangements, against Groups who are widely known for Funk such as Zapp & Roger, and P-Funk/Funkadelic, whats your analysis of which Brand of "funk" is best?? How do you come to that conclusion?
It's clear Zapp & Roger, & P-Funk were a much heavier influence in Hip Hop and Urban music in the late 80's and early 90's. Does that give those acts an edge in funksmanship over Prince?
Groups like Steve Arrington and Slave, Gap Band, Mtume, are well known for funky music - and P's answer to a lot of these types of groups was "The Time", and the monster Funk he composed for those albums.
We all know who the Best Musician and Songwriter is by a mile, but when we put all bets aside, and disregard the sexy genuis piano & guitar ballads, the pop megahits, where does his Purple Majesty rank in terms of Funksmanship, among the alltime perveyors of funk????
(I kind of built this out like a college essay question. Should b fun to think about and answer ya'll!)
[Edited 10/25/14 16:24pm] | |
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I believe this should answer your question... (7mins 29 seconds for the story of the funk)
Prince can pull it out anytime. It's pretty rare that he does these days, seems to be all about the slow jams. [Edited 10/25/14 17:05pm] | |
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I don't know... But Dave Grohl said his desire was to be the best disco funk drummer ever...in a punk band. He said he listens to 92.3 in his down time to bands like cameo, zapp...etc....no mention of prince. I was totally surprised to hear that. Also said he enjoyed imperfect records and that those perfect or looped ones...I e ace of bass tire his ears out. The imperfections give his ears something new to digest over time. Highly indicative of early Prince recording and style. I'm paraphrasing. It was in a fairly informative interview on the audience channel on direct TV. | |
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The difference is that Prince did not singularly focus on the funk. He did everything while Zapp and Parliament, etc focused completely on the funk (Parliament saved their rock stuff for the much less mainstream Funkadelic albums). That being said, when Prince did bring the funk, he was right there...on the same level, if not better. It's the same argument as all those folks who say The Time "turned Prince out" on the 1999 tour. The folks that say that are mostly the "brothas" who came to hear the funk...they had no interest in hearing Lisa do 6 minute keyboard interludes. [Edited 10/25/14 20:07pm] Make it so, Number One... | |
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Great responses so far. @UncleJam, I see u, ur theory makes sense, definately agree with u. | |
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prince made an absolute funk statement with controversy and lets work. and then again on dmsr and lady cab driver. he had the other funksters scared.but he was obviously inspired by roger and pfunk. | |
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You bring up a very good point.Prince plays so many styles,but in doing so,there were times when he alienated the hardcore funk fans.I have a friend who's a huge fan of funk...he loves Sly,George Clinton,James Brown,Cameo,etc.He once told me that "Prince sold out a long time ago....he don't care about funk....he only wants to do pop and rock" it's sad,but many hardcore funk fans think that way. | |
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Classic thread about Prince's funkiness here - http://prince.org/msg/7/279744 [Edited 10/27/14 8:18am] | |
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As my handle on this board here suggest I love the funk. I agree that Prince is not seen as a major funk force by most pure funk lovers. Personally I love that Prince delved into pop and other territories but fact is he didn't make many tunes that qualify as pure funk. But when he does funk he can do it as good as Roger or any of the other funkateers. I wish Prince would do funk more often though, he is very good at it! RIP Prince: thank U 4 a funky Time... | |
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[Edited 10/27/14 7:38am] | |
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Prince did the best funk stuff of the 1980s. | |
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While I love Prince's funk and think he is as funky as anyone, the problem is thinking of Prince in terms of being a "Funk Artst," and he's much more than a "Funk Artist." Now, I love Troutman and Parliament/Funkadelic, but I can only listen to about ten Troutman songs before I get bored with the similarity. Of course, Parliament/Funkadelic has a wider range/category of songs. So, while Prince is funky, his funk is often laced, cut, or watered down, if you will, with other elements. That's not a good or bad thing, just a Prince thing. So, I don't go to Prince just for Funk. Ultimately, Prince's work is like a pie chart in which funk is just one slice of the chart. The problem is when folks want the entire pie to be just funk, but that's never been Prince. So, while Prince is greatly influenced by the great funk legends, he's equally influenced by the great rock, soul, blues, and gospel legends. So, his funk will never be like anybody else's funk. As such, I enjoy his ability to amalgamate sounds into his own style, which is as much funky as it is soulful and rocking. | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Yeah I agree, it's hard to compare because is not JUST a funk artist, he has a strong pop side that was ever more proeminent in his succesful years, and there's also a very strong emotional/romantic side to his music that may be hard to understand by cold-hearted funkateers. Most of the funkateers who dislike his work hardly know it at all. I am a huge fan of funk, I'm totally into P-Funk, Zapp, James (Rick and Brown ) and everyone else but honest, in the end, the deadliest, funkiest mothafuckin' grooves I ever heard were for a good 80% of them jams by . There's no contest, he would make anyone bite the dust. I had friends who were totally into funk and quite ignorant of 's works. I made them listen to the right jams, they were blown away and became instant fans! Try it with your friends, the really agressive, long jams, u'll see they'll bite. - A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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The mozarella debate reminds me of the FLAC/lossless moralists A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Well Said! | |
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Anyone still questioning Prince's funk ability need only listen to the first two Time albums, DMSR and Erotic City. After that, they should HUSH. [Edited 10/27/14 17:26pm] Make it so, Number One... | |
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"Listen to George talk about the birth of P-Funk".....
http://live.huffingtonpost.com/r/segment/george-clinton-memoir-p-funk/53c6eeb278c90ab37500002f | |
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p funk rules when it comes to funk, pop and soul. end of thread. | |
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Prince could've easily been a pure funkateer if he wanted to but, he's so much more than that..
[Edited 10/28/14 19:35pm] | |
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a lot of Prince's best funk is unreleased or given to others in a crapper versions
Dance Electric Chocolate We Can Funk (original) Wonderful Ass G-Spot Databank Extralovable etc etc
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Not really knocking Prince but the examples you give feature Morris Day heavily and Erotic City which was an unreeased George Clinton groove that Prince just straight up helped himself to. Probably not the best examples of Prince being funky with completely original ideas of his own. | |
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The world will never really know if Prince's funk was on that elite level, because the majority of his better funk music, is badly produced. Even back in the early 80's Prince's records sounded under-powered compared to Roger or Rick James or even Parliament. It's the one-man-band effect. | |
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1. The Time's sound is Prince's Funk no matter who is singing.
2. Erotic City is unreleased George Clinton? I know the legend is that Prince wrote it after seeing George in concert, but have never heard that is is based on any George Clinton groove. Explain this more. "New Power slide...." | |
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I wish that Prince had placed "Hide The Bone" as the opening track on TGE....that's the type of hardcore,sweaty funk that I wanted him to do more of! | |
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1. I wasn't referencing singing. Morris is playing drums on The Time albums and some of the 1999 album as well as some of the Purple Rain outtakes and a lot of other stuff. The rhythm of funk is essential. That's why Prince has always credited Morris Day in interviews as his favorite drummer and stuff like that.
2. Yep. Prince went to see George Clinton live then flipped one of the unreleased jams they were playing that night into Erotic City. | |
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Let's see. Prince was not heavily sampled in hip hop because he wouldn't clear the samples so that discussion is off the table. Prince can Funk with the best of them. the difference is while Prince can funk with the best, can they do all the things that Prince can do? I d say no. PFunk focused on Funk, as did JB and a host of others. funk was just one of at least 10 or more different styles that Prince involves himself with on a regular basis. It is almost an apples and oranges comparison. FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent. | |
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