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Thread started 04/05/06 7:15am

mikek1

What's so great about George clinton?

I was just wondering why Prince likes him so much?

He can't sing, doesn't play anything.

Not a hate thread; i was just curious because Prince doesn't seem to respect any 'producers'normally becuase they don't actually make the music.
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Reply #1 posted 04/05/06 7:18am

IAintTheOne

because George Clinton defined Funk.... and before ya head explodes... no James Brown did not create Funk.. he defined Soul... what GC did was take soul to a higher level and take it somewhere else.
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Reply #2 posted 04/05/06 7:25am

sinisterpentat
onic

whofarted
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Reply #3 posted 04/05/06 7:27am

Graycap23

IAintTheOne said:

because George Clinton defined Funk.... and before ya head explodes... no James Brown did not create Funk.. he defined Soul... what GC did was take soul to a higher level and take it somewhere else.



I don't know man.....it seems to me that George gets the credit but Bootsy defined it.
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Reply #4 posted 04/05/06 7:29am

maleeboo

avatar

one nation under a groove is so great. and like james Brown, he's a band leader of sorts a director of sounds, and a fonky fonky suckah
'Energy cannot be created or destroyed, it can only be changed from one form to another.'- Einstein
Dance on beautiful one
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Reply #5 posted 04/05/06 7:31am

sinisterpentat
onic

Graycap23 said:

IAintTheOne said:

because George Clinton defined Funk.... and before ya head explodes... no James Brown did not create Funk.. he defined Soul... what GC did was take soul to a higher level and take it somewhere else.



I don't know man.....it seems to me that George gets the credit but Bootsy defined it.


Bootsy was nowhere around George when Funkadelic was conceived.
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Reply #6 posted 04/05/06 7:32am

IAintTheOne

sinisterpentatonic said:

Graycap23 said:




I don't know man.....it seems to me that George gets the credit but Bootsy defined it.


Bootsy was nowhere around George when Funkadelic was conceived.



he was to busy playing with James at the time.listen to the original version of "I wanna testify"
[Edited 4/5/06 7:33am]
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Reply #7 posted 04/05/06 7:37am

sinisterpentat
onic

IAintTheOne said:

sinisterpentatonic said:



Bootsy was nowhere around George when Funkadelic was conceived.



he was to busy playing with James at the time.listen to the original version of "I wanna testify"



i knew that. smile
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Reply #8 posted 04/05/06 7:38am

IAintTheOne

sinisterpentatonic said:

IAintTheOne said:




he was to busy playing with James at the time.listen to the original version of "I wanna testify"



i knew that. smile



i know u knew that... LOL..
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Reply #9 posted 04/05/06 7:53am

TheSmyrk

He invented the Chilli Peppers. I'm grateful for that.
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Reply #10 posted 04/05/06 8:00am

Graycap23

sinisterpentatonic said:

Graycap23 said:




I don't know man.....it seems to me that George gets the credit but Bootsy defined it.


Bootsy was nowhere around George when Funkadelic was conceived.


Yes.....he was busy FUNKING it up with James.
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Reply #11 posted 04/05/06 8:04am

Novabreaker

I don't know. Great music?
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Reply #12 posted 04/05/06 8:26am

paligap

avatar

...

I gotta start out by saying that P-funk now is a small shadow of their former selves...it's just not the same thing anymore...


But besides being one of the founders of Funk, and the one who came up with all these great ideas and sound (as well as visual) concepts, George in his prime, was also a great bandleader, in the same way that Duke Ellington, Count Basie, James Brown and Prince are great bandleaders--- he's not simply in front chanting (at least, that didn't USED to be the case , Lol!!) --he was dictating ideas about the overall sound, both live and on record -- mood, tempo, who's playing, who's not playing, the dynamics-- how loud/ soft, how fast/slow...you had a load of great musicians, and George knew how to best use their strengths....

--Kinda like a Quincy Jones production--Q doesn't have to touch an instrument, yet there's a recognizable sound that he has---and even if you had all those same players together, if Q wasn't producing, it would not sound quite the same...same with Prince, whether he touches an instrument or not...


My Friend LA(Elroy?) happened to be hangin' out when P-Funk was rehearsing for The Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame induction performance years ago--he said that it was a great example of how George worked and what he brought to the sound --

George was running late, but everyone else was there, including Bootsy, Mike Hampton, Garry Shider and Bernie Worrell..Bernie is taking them through the rehearsal, and apparently it sounds like what you would expect when you have a large group of people in one place just playing--kinda massive and not particularly focused.... and eventually George shows up...he sits and listens to them playing for a while, then walks over and starts giving direction-- tells some players to stop, one player to play a different kind of rhythm, and has another one start up, then brings a few others back in...basically he's got an idea for a sound, and he's putting all the puzzle pieces together...

Now, all these guys are Slammin' players on their own (and of course, many of 'em front their own bands), but when George put a frame around what they were doing, a whole new focused (and Funky) feel emerges... True, it just wouldn't be as good without those really talented players, but it would also be different if he wasn't there leading it...

having said all that though, it does seem sometimes as if George takes ALL the credit---there were other extremely important architects over the years --like Eddie Hazel, Billy "Bass" Nelson, Bernie Worrell, Bootsy, Walter "Junie" Morrison-- that haven't really gotten their props...they were all responsible for the sound, and it was never the same when they weren't there... with the exception of Bootsy, they're not household names. George is the face that everyone sees and recognizes, but it's not as if you could put him in the room by himself and get that sound...he needs his talented players...and they needed his direction...

In their prime, George, Bernie and Bootsy seemed to form a kind of sound pyramid and if any of the three were missing, the sound just wasn't the same...(for a good example of this, go to the T.A.P.O.A.F.O.M album...listen to the rest of the album--pretty cool, but then listen to the track, "Sloppy Seconds", put together by the three of them, and see the difference...)



...
[Edited 4/5/06 9:22am]
" I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout
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Reply #13 posted 04/05/06 8:36am

Graycap23

paligap said:

...

I gotta start out by saying that P-funk now is a small shadow of their former selves...it's just not the same thing anymore...


But besides being one of the founders of Funk, and the one who came up with all these great ideas and sound (as well as visual) concepts, George in his prime, was also a great bandleader, in the same way that Duke Ellington, Count Basie, James Brown and Prince are great bandleaders--- he's not simply in front chanting (at least, that didn't USED to be the case , Lol!!) --he was dictating ideas about the overall sound both live and on record -- mood, tempo, who's playing, who's not playing, the dynamics-- how loud/ soft, how fast/slow...you had a load of great musicians , and George knew how to best use their strengths....

--Kinda like a Quincy Jones production--Q doesn't have to touch an instrument, yet there's a recognizable sound, that he has---and even if you had all those same players together, if Q wasn't producing, it would not sound quite the same...same with Prince, whether he touches an instrument or not...


My Friend LA(Elroy?) happened to be hangin' out when P-Funk was rehearsing for The Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame induction performance years ago--he said that it was a great example of how George worked and what he brought to the sound --

George was running late, but everyone else was there, including Bootsy, Mike Hampton, Garry Shider and Bernie Worrell..Bernie is taking them through the rehearsal, and apparently it sounds like what you would expect when you have a large group of people in one place just playing--kinda massive and not particularly focused.... and eventually George shows up...he sits and listens to them playing for a while, then walks over and starts giving direction-- tells some players to stop, one player to play a different kind of rhythm, and has another one start up, then brings a few others back in...basically he's got an idea for a sound, and he's putting all the puzzle pieces together...

Now, all these guys are Slammin' players on their own (and of course, many of 'em front their own bands), but when George put a frame around what they were doing, a whole new focused (and Funky) feel emerges... True, it just wouldn't be as good without those really talented players, but it would also be different if he wasn't there leading it...

having said all that though, it does seem sometimes as if George takes ALL the credit---there were other extremely important architects over the years --like Eddie Hazel, Billy "Bass Nelson, Bernie Worrell, Bootsy, Walter Junie Morrison-- they were all responsible for the sound, and it was never the same when they weren't there...But with the exception of Bootsy they're not household names. George is the face that everyone sees and recognizes, as if you could put him in the room by himself and get that sound...he needs his talented players...and they needed his direction...

In their prime, George, Bernie and Bootsy seemd to form a kind of sound pyramid and if any of the three were missing, the sound just wasn't the same...(for a good example of this, go to the T.A.P.O.A.F.O.M album...listen to the rest of the album--pretty cool, but then listen to the track, "Sloppy Seconds", put together by the three of them, and see the difference...)



...
[Edited 4/5/06 8:34am]


great post. I agree.
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Reply #14 posted 04/05/06 9:22am

funkpill

Graycap23 said:

paligap said:

...

I gotta start out by saying that P-funk now is a small shadow of their former selves...it's just not the same thing anymore...


But besides being one of the founders of Funk, and the one who came up with all these great ideas and sound (as well as visual) concepts, George in his prime, was also a great bandleader, in the same way that Duke Ellington, Count Basie, James Brown and Prince are great bandleaders--- he's not simply in front chanting (at least, that didn't USED to be the case , Lol!!) --he was dictating ideas about the overall sound both live and on record -- mood, tempo, who's playing, who's not playing, the dynamics-- how loud/ soft, how fast/slow...you had a load of great musicians , and George knew how to best use their strengths....

--Kinda like a Quincy Jones production--Q doesn't have to touch an instrument, yet there's a recognizable sound, that he has---and even if you had all those same players together, if Q wasn't producing, it would not sound quite the same...same with Prince, whether he touches an instrument or not...


My Friend LA(Elroy?) happened to be hangin' out when P-Funk was rehearsing for The Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame induction performance years ago--he said that it was a great example of how George worked and what he brought to the sound --

George was running late, but everyone else was there, including Bootsy, Mike Hampton, Garry Shider and Bernie Worrell..Bernie is taking them through the rehearsal, and apparently it sounds like what you would expect when you have a large group of people in one place just playing--kinda massive and not particularly focused.... and eventually George shows up...he sits and listens to them playing for a while, then walks over and starts giving direction-- tells some players to stop, one player to play a different kind of rhythm, and has another one start up, then brings a few others back in...basically he's got an idea for a sound, and he's putting all the puzzle pieces together...

Now, all these guys are Slammin' players on their own (and of course, many of 'em front their own bands), but when George put a frame around what they were doing, a whole new focused (and Funky) feel emerges... True, it just wouldn't be as good without those really talented players, but it would also be different if he wasn't there leading it...

having said all that though, it does seem sometimes as if George takes ALL the credit---there were other extremely important architects over the years --like Eddie Hazel, Billy "Bass Nelson, Bernie Worrell, Bootsy, Walter Junie Morrison-- they were all responsible for the sound, and it was never the same when they weren't there...But with the exception of Bootsy they're not household names. George is the face that everyone sees and recognizes, as if you could put him in the room by himself and get that sound...he needs his talented players...and they needed his direction...

In their prime, George, Bernie and Bootsy seemd to form a kind of sound pyramid and if any of the three were missing, the sound just wasn't the same...(for a good example of this, go to the T.A.P.O.A.F.O.M album...listen to the rest of the album--pretty cool, but then listen to the track, "Sloppy Seconds", put together by the three of them, and see the difference...)



...
[Edited 4/5/06 8:34am]


great post. I agree.



Agree also..nod

Very well said..clapping
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Reply #15 posted 04/05/06 10:09am

Bfunkthe1

avatar

funkpill said:

Graycap23 said:



great post. I agree.



Agree also..nod

Very well said..clapping

Yes. Very Yes.
Each one teach one.
Funk is for Sharing.

cool
Fantasy is reality in the world today. But I'll keep hangin in there, that is the only way.
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Reply #16 posted 04/05/06 10:16am

jacktheimprovi
dent

paligap said:

...

I gotta start out by saying that P-funk now is a small shadow of their former selves...it's just not the same thing anymore...


But besides being one of the founders of Funk, and the one who came up with all these great ideas and sound (as well as visual) concepts, George in his prime, was also a great bandleader, in the same way that Duke Ellington, Count Basie, James Brown and Prince are great bandleaders--- he's not simply in front chanting (at least, that didn't USED to be the case , Lol!!) --he was dictating ideas about the overall sound, both live and on record -- mood, tempo, who's playing, who's not playing, the dynamics-- how loud/ soft, how fast/slow...you had a load of great musicians, and George knew how to best use their strengths....

--Kinda like a Quincy Jones production--Q doesn't have to touch an instrument, yet there's a recognizable sound that he has---and even if you had all those same players together, if Q wasn't producing, it would not sound quite the same...same with Prince, whether he touches an instrument or not...


My Friend LA(Elroy?) happened to be hangin' out when P-Funk was rehearsing for The Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame induction performance years ago--he said that it was a great example of how George worked and what he brought to the sound --

George was running late, but everyone else was there, including Bootsy, Mike Hampton, Garry Shider and Bernie Worrell..Bernie is taking them through the rehearsal, and apparently it sounds like what you would expect when you have a large group of people in one place just playing--kinda massive and not particularly focused.... and eventually George shows up...he sits and listens to them playing for a while, then walks over and starts giving direction-- tells some players to stop, one player to play a different kind of rhythm, and has another one start up, then brings a few others back in...basically he's got an idea for a sound, and he's putting all the puzzle pieces together...

Now, all these guys are Slammin' players on their own (and of course, many of 'em front their own bands), but when George put a frame around what they were doing, a whole new focused (and Funky) feel emerges... True, it just wouldn't be as good without those really talented players, but it would also be different if he wasn't there leading it...

having said all that though, it does seem sometimes as if George takes ALL the credit---there were other extremely important architects over the years --like Eddie Hazel, Billy "Bass" Nelson, Bernie Worrell, Bootsy, Walter "Junie" Morrison-- that haven't really gotten their props...they were all responsible for the sound, and it was never the same when they weren't there... with the exception of Bootsy, they're not household names. George is the face that everyone sees and recognizes, but it's not as if you could put him in the room by himself and get that sound...he needs his talented players...and they needed his direction...

In their prime, George, Bernie and Bootsy seemed to form a kind of sound pyramid and if any of the three were missing, the sound just wasn't the same...(for a good example of this, go to the T.A.P.O.A.F.O.M album...listen to the rest of the album--pretty cool, but then listen to the track, "Sloppy Seconds", put together by the three of them, and see the difference...)



...
[Edited 4/5/06 9:22am]


that's all well and good but I can see what the original posters point is. Many of prince's other idols, as well as being great directors/producers/conceptualists, were also immensely talented performers and musicians. Sly Stone for example was a great bandleader as well as a talented singer, multi-instrumentalist and composer. James Brown likewise was a great singer and frontman in addition to being the main musical director and conceptualist of his music. I will agree that George is overrated in that he's seen as the personification of P-funk when so many other people who were actual talented players and singers had major roles in the creation of the sound. How many people have any idea who Glen Goins is, for example, a man who was an incredible singer as well as playing guitar and co-writing many songs for P-funk.
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Reply #17 posted 04/05/06 10:35am

PFunkjazz

avatar

So, the leader of an immensely influential band like Parlianment-Funkadelic that in itself is greatly under-rated, is over-rated? I have issues with George taking all the credit for songwriting when he neither plays nor writes music, but there is an intuitive nature to his leadership and he is more than a producer: he always performs live with his "back up" band.

Make no mistake, Prince knows damn well who peed in his afro.
test
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Reply #18 posted 04/05/06 10:43am

paligap

avatar

PFunkjazz said:

So, the leader of an immensely influential band like Parlianment-Funkadelic that in itself is greatly under-rated, is over-rated? I have issues with George taking all the credit for songwriting when he neither plays nor writes music, but there is an intuitive nature to his leadership and he is more than a producer: he always performs live with his "back up" band.

Make no mistake, Prince knows damn well who peed in his afro.



Xactly... I just think that Prince recognizes and admires George's creativity, as well as his skills as a frontman and band leader...Bootsy and Bernie Worrell have said the same thing about George--his overall creativity appealed to them, which is why they wanted to be part of the collective...I agree that he's definitely guilty of not sharing the limelight enough(Many people have not only not gotten props, but also still haven't been properly compensated), but he came up with the concepts, the mythology, the sound and feel, the overall aural and visual package...


...
" I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout
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Reply #19 posted 04/05/06 10:44am

Graycap23

jacktheimprovident said:

paligap said:

...

I gotta start out by saying that P-funk now is a small shadow of their former selves...it's just not the same thing anymore...


But besides being one of the founders of Funk, and the one who came up with all these great ideas and sound (as well as visual) concepts, George in his prime, was also a great bandleader, in the same way that Duke Ellington, Count Basie, James Brown and Prince are great bandleaders--- he's not simply in front chanting (at least, that didn't USED to be the case , Lol!!) --he was dictating ideas about the overall sound, both live and on record -- mood, tempo, who's playing, who's not playing, the dynamics-- how loud/ soft, how fast/slow...you had a load of great musicians, and George knew how to best use their strengths....

--Kinda like a Quincy Jones production--Q doesn't have to touch an instrument, yet there's a recognizable sound that he has---and even if you had all those same players together, if Q wasn't producing, it would not sound quite the same...same with Prince, whether he touches an instrument or not...


My Friend LA(Elroy?) happened to be hangin' out when P-Funk was rehearsing for The Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame induction performance years ago--he said that it was a great example of how George worked and what he brought to the sound --

George was running late, but everyone else was there, including Bootsy, Mike Hampton, Garry Shider and Bernie Worrell..Bernie is taking them through the rehearsal, and apparently it sounds like what you would expect when you have a large group of people in one place just playing--kinda massive and not particularly focused.... and eventually George shows up...he sits and listens to them playing for a while, then walks over and starts giving direction-- tells some players to stop, one player to play a different kind of rhythm, and has another one start up, then brings a few others back in...basically he's got an idea for a sound, and he's putting all the puzzle pieces together...

Now, all these guys are Slammin' players on their own (and of course, many of 'em front their own bands), but when George put a frame around what they were doing, a whole new focused (and Funky) feel emerges... True, it just wouldn't be as good without those really talented players, but it would also be different if he wasn't there leading it...

having said all that though, it does seem sometimes as if George takes ALL the credit---there were other extremely important architects over the years --like Eddie Hazel, Billy "Bass" Nelson, Bernie Worrell, Bootsy, Walter "Junie" Morrison-- that haven't really gotten their props...they were all responsible for the sound, and it was never the same when they weren't there... with the exception of Bootsy, they're not household names. George is the face that everyone sees and recognizes, but it's not as if you could put him in the room by himself and get that sound...he needs his talented players...and they needed his direction...

In their prime, George, Bernie and Bootsy seemed to form a kind of sound pyramid and if any of the three were missing, the sound just wasn't the same...(for a good example of this, go to the T.A.P.O.A.F.O.M album...listen to the rest of the album--pretty cool, but then listen to the track, "Sloppy Seconds", put together by the three of them, and see the difference...)



...
[Edited 4/5/06 9:22am]


that's all well and good but I can see what the original posters point is. Many of prince's other idols, as well as being great directors/producers/conceptualists, were also immensely talented performers and musicians. Sly Stone for example was a great bandleader as well as a talented singer, multi-instrumentalist and composer. James Brown likewise was a great singer and frontman in addition to being the main musical director and conceptualist of his music. I will agree that George is overrated in that he's seen as the personification of P-funk when so many other people who were actual talented players and singers had major roles in the creation of the sound. How many people have any idea who Glen Goins is, for example, a man who was an incredible singer as well as playing guitar and co-writing many songs for P-funk.



Love glen but I can't find his solo project man....do u have it?
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Reply #20 posted 04/05/06 10:57am

NDRU

avatar

He's like a fountain of creativity.

George is the best singer of Parliament/Funkadelic, in my opinion--the coolest voice by far. Maybe not anymore, but he was.

He was a brilliant conceptualist, he could just talk over a song for 8 minutes, and it would all be brilliant & entertaining. Each new record introduces a new world. He was like the Beatles Prince in this sense, that he would constantly reinvent P-Funk with each album, all the while staying true to the original concept.

And if you think he couldn't write "musical" music in the traditional sense, I noticed that on Let's Take It to the Stage, the only song written by George alone is "Baby I Owe You Something Good," which is the most melodic song on the record. A very classical sounding song, not just a funk riff.

I have a feeling George could play instruments, he just doesn't need to do it with the band he has. I can't criticize him for having an incredible band, and I give him credit for unifying the amazing music like JB, Quincy Jones, Duke, Miles.

Plenty of bands have talented members, but they don't all produce brilliant music.

That said, it took great players/arrangers like Bernie & Bootsy & Fred to complete the picture. George isn't Prince in that sense.
[Edited 4/5/06 11:01am]
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Reply #21 posted 04/05/06 10:59am

PFunkjazz

avatar

There's a difference between providing direction and being the Musical Director.

James Brown was not the Musical Director of his band. That job was either assigned to Fred Wesley, Maceo Parker, Pee Wee Ellis or maybe even Bootsy. Likewise, George is not the Musical Director of PFunk. It has been Maceo, Bootsy, Bernie and currently it's Blackbyrd McKnight. Usually it's someone who can read arrangements and get the band to rehearse (Ha Pfunk rehearsing!)
test
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Reply #22 posted 04/05/06 11:06am

PFunkjazz

avatar

NDRU said:

I have a feeling George could play instruments, he just doesn't need to do it with the band he has. I can't criticize him for having an incredible band, and I give him credit for unifying the amazing music like JB, Quincy Jones, Duke, Miles.




Pigs could fly in zero gravity too.

There's plenty of factual evidence of all those named, including JB, playing an instrument. Nothing such for GC that I've seen. I have a tremendous appreciation for George Clinton, but I don't entertain this kind of science-fiction. Show me the goods.
test
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Reply #23 posted 04/05/06 11:09am

NDRU

avatar

PFunkjazz said:

NDRU said:

I have a feeling George could play instruments, he just doesn't need to do it with the band he has. I can't criticize him for having an incredible band, and I give him credit for unifying the amazing music like JB, Quincy Jones, Duke, Miles.




Pigs could fly in zero gravity too.

There's plenty of factual evidence of all those named, including JB, playing an instrument. Nothing such for GC that I've seen. I have a tremendous appreciation for George Clinton, but I don't entertain this kind of science-fiction. Show me the goods.


Oh, come now, he's a virtuoso on the pipe!
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Reply #24 posted 04/05/06 11:09am

paligap

avatar

NDRU said:



Plenty of bands have talented members, but they don't all produce brilliant music.

That said, it took great players/arrangers like Bernie & Bootsy & Fred to complete the picture. George isn't Prince in that sense.



True!!

(wave Hi, Artist Formerly Known as andyman91!!)


...
" I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout
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Reply #25 posted 04/05/06 11:11am

paligap

avatar

NDRU said:

PFunkjazz said:




Pigs could fly in zero gravity too.

There's plenty of factual evidence of all those named, including JB, playing an instrument. Nothing such for GC that I've seen. I have a tremendous appreciation for George Clinton, but I don't entertain this kind of science-fiction. Show me the goods.


Oh, come now, he's a virtuoso on the pipe!




falloff falloff falloff falloff Damn! that's true, too!! lol Plenty of factual evidence for it...



...
[Edited 4/5/06 11:15am]
" I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout
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Reply #26 posted 04/05/06 11:15am

PFunkjazz

avatar

NDRU said:

PFunkjazz said:




Pigs could fly in zero gravity too.

There's plenty of factual evidence of all those named, including JB, playing an instrument. Nothing such for GC that I've seen. I have a tremendous appreciation for George Clinton, but I don't entertain this kind of science-fiction. Show me the goods.


Oh, come now, he's a virtuoso on the pipe!



HA! I've made plenty jokes aboutGC's pharmaceutical skills. lol blunt
test
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Reply #27 posted 04/05/06 11:15am

Graycap23

NDRU said:

PFunkjazz said:




Pigs could fly in zero gravity too.

There's plenty of factual evidence of all those named, including JB, playing an instrument. Nothing such for GC that I've seen. I have a tremendous appreciation for George Clinton, but I don't entertain this kind of science-fiction. Show me the goods.


Oh, come now, he's a virtuoso on the pipe!



Ouch.....some of those classic cuts had to come from "somewhere" else cause they were too crazy to come from EARTH.
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Reply #28 posted 04/05/06 11:16am

NDRU

avatar

PFunkjazz said:

NDRU said:

I have a feeling George could play instruments, he just doesn't need to do it with the band he has. I can't criticize him for having an incredible band, and I give him credit for unifying the amazing music like JB, Quincy Jones, Duke, Miles.




Pigs could fly in zero gravity too.

There's plenty of factual evidence of all those named, including JB, playing an instrument. Nothing such for GC that I've seen. I have a tremendous appreciation for George Clinton, but I don't entertain this kind of science-fiction. Show me the goods.


I haven't seen any evidence either. But it wouldn't surprise me to see George noodle on some instrument with passable ability.

Hey Pali!
wave
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Reply #29 posted 04/05/06 11:17am

dirtyman2005

GEORGE CLINTON CREATED ATOMIC DOG!!!!

THATS ENOUGH TO BE A LEGEND!!

AND DONT FORGET "DO FRIES GO WITH THAT SHAKE!!

AND KNEE DEEP!!!

A
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Forums > Music: Non-Prince > What's so great about George clinton?