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Thread started 07/09/06 1:54pm

churchbruva

TOP 5 R&B Multi-Instrumentalist of this ERA

Of course, we know that Prince is the most celebrated ( and rightfully so ) of this topic. He would be my #1 vote getter. A lot of you probably dont know trhis but BOOTSY ALSO played drums on Knee Deep (Parliament Funkadelic) as well as some keys. Well, here's my list as goes

1. Prince (the MAN)
2. Stevie Wonder (the originator)
3. Chuckii Booker (he's truly a genius, underrated & overlooked bigtime)
4. Lenny Kravitz (although he isnt hardcore R&B.. still talented)
5. Bryan Loren (another underrated whiz kid)

would love to get your outlook on these guys and / or if there is anyone else i may have missed
[Edited 7/9/06 13:55pm]
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Reply #1 posted 07/09/06 2:13pm

sinisterpentat
onic



walter Junie Morrison


Walter Morrison
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Walter "Junie" Morrison or simply Junie Morrison is a musician and producer born in Dayton, Ohio. Morrison was a producer, writer, keyboardist and vocalist for the funk band the Ohio Players in the early 70's, where he wrote and produced their first major hit, "Funky Worm" (1971). He left the band in 1974 to release three solo albums on Westbound Records in the mid 1970s (When We Do, Freeze, and Suzie Supergroupie).

Around 1977, he joined George Clinton's P-Funk (Parliament-Funkadelic) where he became musical director. He brought a unique sound to P-Funk as a producer, songwriter, vocalist, keyboardist, guitarist, bassist and drummer, and played a very dominant role during the time of the Parliament-Funkadelic's greatest popularity from 1978 through 1980, in particular on the platinum-selling album, One Nation Under a Groove and the ever funky "(Not Just) Knee Deep." Morrison also produced some of P-Funk's well known hits as alter ego J.S. Theracon. He went on to record solo albums including 1980's Bread Alone, 1981's Junie 5, and 1984's Evacuate Your Seats.

In 1997 Junie was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Parliament-Funkadelic.

Junie has continued to periodically contribute to P-Funk albums, most recently in 1996. Junie produced other artists throughout the nineties and released a new solo album, When the City, in 2005.
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Reply #2 posted 07/10/06 1:11pm

churchbruva

sinisterpentatonic said:



walter Junie Morrison


Walter Morrison
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Walter "Junie" Morrison or simply Junie Morrison is a musician and producer born in Dayton, Ohio. Morrison was a producer, writer, keyboardist and vocalist for the funk band the Ohio Players in the early 70's, where he wrote and produced their first major hit, "Funky Worm" (1971). He left the band in 1974 to release three solo albums on Westbound Records in the mid 1970s (When We Do, Freeze, and Suzie Supergroupie).

Around 1977, he joined George Clinton's P-Funk (Parliament-Funkadelic) where he became musical director. He brought a unique sound to P-Funk as a producer, songwriter, vocalist, keyboardist, guitarist, bassist and drummer, and played a very dominant role during the time of the Parliament-Funkadelic's greatest popularity from 1978 through 1980, in particular on the platinum-selling album, One Nation Under a Groove and the ever funky "(Not Just) Knee Deep." Morrison also produced some of P-Funk's well known hits as alter ego J.S. Theracon. He went on to record solo albums including 1980's Bread Alone, 1981's Junie 5, and 1984's Evacuate Your Seats.

In 1997 Junie was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Parliament-Funkadelic.

Junie has continued to periodically contribute to P-Funk albums, most recently in 1996. Junie produced other artists throughout the nineties and released a new solo album, When the City, in 2005.



Ah man... you are SO RIGHT with Junie.. Dang.. how could i forget him? Junie sung on "Ecstacy" by the Ohio Players and that is STILL my Jam for real. Yeah, Junie is ridiculous. Thanks for the infohttp://www.prince.org...5606&pg=1#
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Reply #3 posted 07/10/06 1:22pm

theAudience

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I'd throw Marcus Miller (not an R&B artist) & Lewis Taylor into the mix.


tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #4 posted 07/10/06 3:43pm

paligap

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...


Yeah, Most of the ones I'm thinking of have already been listed:


Prince
Lewis Taylor
Marcus Miller
Stevie Wonder
Junie Morrison

I thought of Sly, but I guess he's not of this era , though his shadow certainly looms large over it...

If I was allowed to go back some years , I'd add Shuggie Otis , on the strength of Inspiration Information alone...

If I could step out of R&B, I'd throw in Todd Rundgren...

I guess it makes sense that most of these guys listed would really go beyond the R&B categorization-- most 'em straddle Jazz, Rock and Pop and R&B...




...
[Edited 7/10/06 15:44pm]
" I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout
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