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Thread started 11/29/07 3:47pm

Riverpoet31

The best Funk-Rock "crossover" artists?

During the late eighties and the beginning of the nineties there were quite some bands mixing funk with rock-elements. It was often called "crossover" back then.

I really loved that period with bands like: Living Colour, The Red Hot Chilli Peppers, 24-7-spyx and Fishbone mixing pulsating, funky beats with the power of energetic rockguitars. Colourblind musicians creating eclectic, energetic and forcefull music.

Unfortunately, shallow metal-hop bands like Limp Bizkit and Linkin park, operating under the name "Nu Metal" killed the genre.

I am curious what youre favourite bands from that original period are? Here are mine.

1. Living Colour
So much talent, but unfortunately seperated to early. The brilliant guitarplaying of Vernon Road, the powerfull throat of Corey Glover, the delightfull mixture of funk, rock, metal, calypso and blues. Their peak: their second album Times Up.

2. Urban Dance Squad
Their first, catchy and concive album almost was a blueprint for Rage against the Machine, but its on their second album "Life and perspectives of a genuine crossover" that they really lift off: jumping from metal to folk, and from dirty funk to ska. Eclectic, rich, colourblind...They never bettered it.

3. King's X
This band is not automatically labelled as "crossover" but their mixture of heavy rock (very low sounding guitars), a superfat basssound, soulfull vocals, beatlesque harmonies and funky breaks makes me put them into the category. Alltough their second album: Gretchen goes to Nebraska is still their masterpiece, since then they have tried out everything: raw, grungy rock on "Dogman", colourfull pop on "Ear Candy" and Prog-rock on "Please come mr. bolbous"

What do you think about the "crossover" genre? and which bands or artists you should like to name?
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Reply #1 posted 11/29/07 3:51pm

Lovesexy82

Riverpoet31 said:

During the late eighties and the beginning of the nineties there were quite some bands mixing funk with rock-elements. It was often called "crossover" back then.

I really loved that period with bands like: Living Colour, The Red Hot Chilli Peppers, 24-7-spyx and Fishbone mixing pulsating, funky beats with the power of energetic rockguitars. Colourblind musicians creating eclectic, energetic and forcefull music.

Unfortunately, shallow metal-hop bands like Limp Bizkit and Linkin park, operating under the name "Nu Metal" killed the genre.

I am curious what youre favourite bands from that original period are? Here are mine.

1. Living Colour
So much talent, but unfortunately seperated to early. The brilliant guitarplaying of Vernon Road, the powerfull throat of Corey Glover, the delightfull mixture of funk, rock, metal, calypso and blues. Their peak: their second album Times Up.

2. Urban Dance Squad
Their first, catchy and concive album almost was a blueprint for Rage against the Machine, but its on their second album "Life and perspectives of a genuine crossover" that they really lift off: jumping from metal to folk, and from dirty funk to ska. Eclectic, rich, colourblind...They never bettered it.

3. King's X
This band is not automatically labelled as "crossover" but their mixture of heavy rock (very low sounding guitars), a superfat basssound, soulfull vocals, beatlesque harmonies and funky breaks makes me put them into the category. Alltough their second album: Gretchen goes to Nebraska is still their masterpiece, since then they have tried out everything: raw, grungy rock on "Dogman", colourfull pop on "Ear Candy" and Prog-rock on "Please come mr. bolbous"

What do you think about the "crossover" genre? and which bands or artists you should like to name?


How come Rick James--the king of Funk and Roll ain't on there? He might not be the obvious choice but I would say he falls into this category. He was doing it this before it became "popular" (i.e. crossed over).
[Edited 11/29/07 15:52pm]
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Reply #2 posted 11/29/07 3:51pm

Graycap23

Living Colour.....
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Reply #3 posted 11/29/07 3:55pm

Riverpoet31

How come Rick James--the king of Funk and Roll ain't on there? He might not be the obvious choice but I would say he falls into this category. He was doing it this before it became "popular" (i.e. crossed over).


To put it simple. Rick James doesnt sound timeless, he was to much a pimp and opportunistic person to really impress.

At least, bands like Living Colour and Urban Dance Squad had the guts to write down thoughtprovoking lyrics, to express themselves in their music, sorry but Rick James was just to dumb and drugaddicted to ever make a difference...
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Reply #4 posted 11/29/07 3:56pm

NDRU

avatar

Jane's Addiction, probably
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Reply #5 posted 11/29/07 3:59pm

Graycap23

Love Rears it's ULGY head.....
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Reply #6 posted 11/29/07 4:00pm

Riverpoet31

Really thinks "Rick James" is overrated.

Of course, he did incorporated some rock-elements into his r&B/funk music.

But it was surely not on a level of understanding and quality Sly Stone did before.

Rick James 2 or 3 years of so called "punk-funk" are definitely overrated in here. Get a grip.
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Reply #7 posted 11/29/07 4:04pm

Riverpoet31

Graycap, Living Colour were way more important when it comes to crossover-music then Rick James has ever been.

Next to that, european bands like Urban dance squad and Deus were testing new grounds way before, respectively, american artists like Rage against the machine and Beck were.

Rick James maybe gets a small side-note in the history of popular music, thats were he simply belongs.
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Reply #8 posted 11/29/07 4:04pm

PFunkjazz

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There was a tour package that had Livivng Colour, Fishbone, Public Enemy and Primus. I'm not sure of the exact order of performers, but I know LC headlined.
LC also toured out with KX. Always heard about UDS, but never really checked 'em out.


Lots of LC coming in 20008
test
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Reply #9 posted 11/29/07 4:06pm

NDRU

avatar

PFunkjazz said:

There was a tour package that had Livivng Colour, Fishbone, Public Enemy and Primus. I'm not sure of the exact order of performers, but I know LC headlined.
LC also toured out with KX. Always heard about UDS, but never really checked 'em out.


Lots of LC coming in 20008


I love Primus, though I'm not sure they ever wrote an actual melody lol
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Reply #10 posted 11/29/07 4:06pm

magnificentsyn
thesizer



i'm even tempted to say they even did it better than Fishbone!

boxed
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Reply #11 posted 11/29/07 4:46pm

Graycap23

magnificentsynthesizer said:



i'm even tempted to say they even did it better than Fishbone!

boxed

I always thought they were more FUNK than anything.....
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Reply #12 posted 11/29/07 5:11pm

paisleypark4

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Red Hot Chilli Peppers
Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #13 posted 11/29/07 9:41pm

vainandy

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So many funk acts were either crossing over or trying to cross over in the late 80s. Cameo, The Barkays, Midnight Star, Ready For The World, Kool and the Gang, etc. The late 80s were some horrible times with much weaker funk than the earlier 80s because of all the trying to cross over.

As for Living Colour, I don't have any of their albums, but from what I've heard on the radio, they were a straight out rock group, not a funk group. They were never even played on R&B radio....at least not in my area.
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #14 posted 11/29/07 9:49pm

LittleBLUECorv
ette

avatar

Fishbone?
Lenny Kravitz?
Jamiraque (or however you spell it)?
PRINCE: Always and Forever
MICHAEL JACKSON: Always and Forever
-----
Live Your Life How U Wanna Live It
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Reply #15 posted 11/29/07 10:06pm

vainandy

avatar

Riverpoet31 said:

Graycap, Living Colour were way more important when it comes to crossover-music then Rick James has ever been.


It sounds like you are confusing straight up black rock acts with funk or R&B acts that make R&B but have the capability of crossing over and pleasing both the R&B/funk and pop/rock crowd. I see acts like Living Colour or even The Bus Boys before them, as being a black rock band rather than a crossover funk/rock band. I don't have any of their albums so I don't know if they have any funk on them. But from what I've heard on the radio, their main target was a rock audience. Crossover acts are trying to please both audiences.

It wasn't hard for a black artist making rock music to get R&B airplay if they were also making funk. Just look at Prince, for example. He was getting massive R&B airplay with rock tracks like "Why You Wanna Treat Me So Bad" and "Uptown" before the pop world even discovered him. However, he was also getting major R&B radio airplay with funky tracks like "Sexy Dancer", "Partyup", "Head", "Let's Work", "Controversy", "Lady Cab Driver", etc. Prince was more a mixture of both funk and rock. Like I said earlier, I don't have any of Living Colour's albums so I don't know if there is any funk on there. However, I never heard anything coming from them on R&B radio and it wasn't hard for black artists making rock music to get R&B radio airplay as long as they were making R&B or funk also. As I said earlier, I think Living Color is more a straight up rock band than a funk band trying to cross over with rock.

Rick James maybe gets a small side-note in the history of popular music, thats were he simply belongs.


Rick James was a straight up funk act that had the capability of crossing over if he chose to. "Super Freak" is proof that he had the capability of crossing over. However, he chose to continue making straight up funk even after he had a crossover smash hit. That's to be admired because not many funk artists would keep their funk true once they've had that taste of pop success.

Saying that Rick James only deserves a small side note in the history of popular music is like saying he deserves it because he wasn't trying to please white people. That kind of thinking is exactly what killed funk in the first place. Black artists feeling like they were a nobody unless huge crowds of white people knew who they were.
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #16 posted 11/29/07 10:09pm

FuNkeNsteiN

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Riverpoet31 said:

Really thinks "Rick James" is overrated.

Of course, he did incorporated some rock-elements into his r&B/funk music.

But it was surely not on a level of understanding and quality Sly Stone did before.

Rick James 2 or 3 years of so called "punk-funk" are definitely overrated in here. Get a grip.

You, sir, are a dumbass smile
It is not known why FuNkeNsteiN capitalizes his name as he does, though some speculate sunlight deficiency caused by the most pimpified white guy afro in Nordic history.

- Lammastide
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Reply #17 posted 11/30/07 3:26am

woogiebear

Riverpoet31 said:

Really thinks "Rick James" is overrated.

Of course, he did incorporated some rock-elements into his r&B/funk music.

But it was surely not on a level of understanding and quality Sly Stone did before.

Rick James 2 or 3 years of so called "punk-funk" are definitely overrated in here. Get a grip.


OH YEAH?????PRINCE DIDN'T THINK SO!!!!!
cool cool cool cool cool
PRINCE LEARNED/STOLE EVERYTHING HE LEARNED ABOUT THE STAGE FROM RICK JAMES BACK WHEN HE USED TO OPEN FOR RICK!!!!! GET IT RIGHT!!!!! TELL THE TRUTH!!!!! PRINCE DOES NOW!!!!! RICK DID THEN!!!!!
cool cool cool cool cool cool
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Reply #18 posted 11/30/07 3:36am

woogiebear

vainandy said:

So many funk acts were either crossing over or trying to cross over in the late 80s. Cameo, The Barkays, Midnight Star, Ready For The World, Kool and the Gang, etc. The late 80s were some horrible times with much weaker funk than the earlier 80s because of all the trying to cross over.

As for Living Colour, I don't have any of their albums, but from what I've heard on the radio, they were a straight out rock group, not a funk group. They were never even played on R&B radio....at least not in my area.


I'VE HAD THE PLEASURE OF SEEING LIVING COLOUR LIVE....THEY ONLY GOT "PLAYED" ON ROCK RADIO!!!!! DRUMMER WILL CALHOUN STRAIGHT OUTTA THE SCHOOL OF JAZZ. BASSISTS MUZZ SKILLINGS AND THE LEGENDARY DOUG WIMBISH (WHO PLAYED ON ALL THOSE CLASSIC SUGARHILL RECORDS) STRAIGHT FON-KAY!!!!! GUITARIST VERNON REID WHO IS JUST AS IMPORTANT TO THE AXE AS HENDRIX & VAN HALEN. THEN U THROW IN COREY GLOVER, WHO TOOK ALL THAT IN AND WAILED LIKE HE WAS IN SUNDAY MORNIN' SERVICE. GOOD LAWD!!!! WHATTA SHOW!!!!!
SAME WITH FISHBONE.....FUNK/ROCK/SKA AT ITS FINEST WITH A BURST OF SLY & THE FAMILY STONE'S HIGH ENERGY. CAME OUT OF THE SAME SCHOOL AS JANE'S ADDICTION & THE RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS. WANNA KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THEM??? JANES ADDICTION & THE PEPPERS GOT ALL THE GLORY. THEN TO ADD INSULT TO INJURY, FOLKS SWEAR NO DOUBT IS THE BEST SKA BAND IN THE WORLD. THEY OWE THEIR WHOLE F-IN CAREERS TO FISHBONE!!!!!
KING'S X IS A POWER ROCK TRIO FRONTED BY BLACK BASSIST/VOCALIST DOUG PINNICK. SEEING THEM LIVE WILL RE-ARRANGE YOUR INNARDS!!!! THE BOTTOM END IS SO HEAVY!!!!!
cool cool cool cool cool cool
[Edited 11/30/07 3:37am]
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Reply #19 posted 11/30/07 5:14am

novabrkr

Living Colour had fuck nothing to do with funk.

There were a few funk guitar dinks on the later output, and some bouncy basslines but simply four black men with dreads do not a funk band make.
[Edited 11/30/07 9:23am]
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Reply #20 posted 11/30/07 5:21am

woogiebear

novabrkr said:

Living Colour had fuck nothing to do with funk.

There were a funk guitar dinks on the later output, and some bouncy basslines but simply four black men with dreads do not a funk band make.


IT'S ALL THERE....TRUST ME!!!!! NOT JUST LISTENING TO "CULT OF PERSONALITY"!!!!
"LOVE REARS ITS UGLY HEAD".....BLUES/ROCK
"WHAT'S YOUR FAVORITE COLOR"...FUNK/ROCK W/A JAMES BROWN TEMPO

I COULD GO ON & ON....THEY WERE SO MUCH MORE THAN A BLACK ROCK BAND!!!!! IF YOU TAKE THE TIME TO LISTEN,,,,,
cool cool cool cool cool
SAME WITH FISHBONE, 24/7 SPYZ, AND KING'S X. IN ALL THAT "ROCK" YOU hear
THERE'S A WHOLE LOTTA SOUL & BLUES & FUNK YOU'RE not hearing!!!!!
cool cool cool cool cool
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Reply #21 posted 11/30/07 5:25am

woogiebear

the best to ever do it though?????

1)SLY & THE FAMILY STONE

2)JIMI HENDRIX- WITH BAND OF GYPSYS ALONE!!!!!

3)FUNKADELIC- THE WESTBOUND YEARS, NOT WARNER BROS.

4)ISLEY BROTHERS

5)OHIO PLAYERS

6)RICK JAMES

7)PRINCE

8)JESSE JOHNSON


now please.....SHUT DOWN THIS THREAD!!!!!
cool cool cool cool cool cool
[Edited 11/30/07 5:26am]
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Reply #22 posted 11/30/07 5:41am

Najee

woogiebear said:

the best to ever do it though?????

1)SLY & THE FAMILY STONE

2)JIMI HENDRIX- WITH BAND OF GYPSYS ALONE!!!!!

3)FUNKADELIC- THE WESTBOUND YEARS, NOT WARNER BROS.

4)ISLEY BROTHERS

5)OHIO PLAYERS

6)RICK JAMES

7)PRINCE

8)JESSE JOHNSON


now please.....SHUT DOWN THIS THREAD!!!!!
cool cool cool cool cool cool


I agree with the list but not necessarily the order, and also let's not forget Mother's Finest.

Acts like Living Colour were not funk acts and they certainly were not crossover acts (namely, acts whose primary market was the black contemporary popular music market and tried to appeal to a majority white audience). This may be a first on the Org -- a person who gets his own thread idea wrong.
THE TRAFFIC JAMMERS, The Org's house band: VAINANDY -- lead singer; NAJEE -- bass; THE AUDIENCE -- guitar; PHUNKDADDY -- rhythm guitar; ALEX de PARIS -- keyboards; Da PRETTYMAN -- keyboards; FUNKENSTEIN -- drums. HOLD ON TO YOUR DRAWERS!
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Reply #23 posted 11/30/07 5:55am

woogiebear

Najee said:

woogiebear said:

the best to ever do it though?????

1)SLY & THE FAMILY STONE

2)JIMI HENDRIX- WITH BAND OF GYPSYS ALONE!!!!!

3)FUNKADELIC- THE WESTBOUND YEARS, NOT WARNER BROS.

4)ISLEY BROTHERS

5)OHIO PLAYERS

6)RICK JAMES

7)PRINCE

8)JESSE JOHNSON


now please.....SHUT DOWN THIS THREAD!!!!!
cool cool cool cool cool cool


I agree with the list but not necessarily the order, and also let's not forget Mother's Finest.

Acts like Living Colour were not funk acts and they certainly were not crossover acts (namely, acts whose primary market was the black contemporary popular music market and tried to appeal to a majority white audience). This may be a first on the Org -- a person who gets his own thread idea wrong.


thanx najee!!!! how could i forget joyce kennedy & mother's finest!!!!! and just for the heck of it, i'm gonna take y'all waaaaay back!!!!!
ready?????
MINNIE RIPERTON & ROTARY CONNECTION!!!!!
not as popular, but doin'dadamnthang nonetheless!!!!!
cool cool cool cool cool cool
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Reply #24 posted 11/30/07 8:55am

namepeace

Living Colour was a rock band, IIRC. Riverpoet31, you can't possibly tell me that, in terms of "crossover" music, Living Colour was more "important" than Rick James.

http://www.billboard.com/...mId=654441

http://en.wikipedia.org/w...mes#Albums
[Edited 11/30/07 11:06am]
Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #25 posted 11/30/07 9:07am

Bishop31

avatar

woogiebear said:

the best to ever do it though?????

1)SLY & THE FAMILY STONE

2)JIMI HENDRIX- WITH BAND OF GYPSYS ALONE!!!!!

3)FUNKADELIC- THE WESTBOUND YEARS, NOT WARNER BROS.

4)ISLEY BROTHERS

5)OHIO PLAYERS

6)RICK JAMES

7)PRINCE

8)JESSE JOHNSON


now please.....SHUT DOWN THIS THREAD!!!!!
cool cool cool cool cool cool
[Edited 11/30/07 5:26am]


Exactly. 'Nuff said. I think some people don't know what the hell true 'Funk' is. Just 'cause ur a black Rock group doesn't give u a Funk pass. neutral
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Reply #26 posted 11/30/07 9:14am

Graycap23

novabrkr said:

Living Colour had fuck nothing to do with funk.

There were a funk guitar dinks on the later output, and some bouncy basslines but simply four black men with dreads do not a funk band make.

That is TRUE.
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Reply #27 posted 11/30/07 9:58am

magnificentsyn
thesizer

Graycap23 said:

magnificentsynthesizer said:



i'm even tempted to say they even did it better than Fishbone!

boxed

I always thought they were more FUNK than anything.....


i think they qualify as a Funk-Rock crossover act. I can name tunes that showcase this if you'd like. smile

i will say the album after was, yes, more Funk though there were still a couple of tracks that rocked out. horns
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Reply #28 posted 11/30/07 10:07am

Graycap23

magnificentsynthesizer said:

Graycap23 said:


I always thought they were more FUNK than anything.....


i think they qualify as a Funk-Rock crossover act. I can name tunes that showcase this if you'd like. smile

i will say the album after was, yes, more Funk though there were still a couple of tracks that rocked out. horns

I dig it.
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Reply #29 posted 11/30/07 11:34am

Lovesexy82

Riverpoet31 said:

How come Rick James--the king of Funk and Roll ain't on there? He might not be the obvious choice but I would say he falls into this category. He was doing it this before it became "popular" (i.e. crossed over).


To put it simple. Rick James doesnt sound timeless, he was to much a pimp and opportunistic person to really impress.

At least, bands like Living Colour and Urban Dance Squad had the guts to write down thoughtprovoking lyrics, to express themselves in their music, sorry but Rick James was just to dumb and drugaddicted to ever make a difference...


This is just wrong. Some of the greatest rock legends were strung out on drugs and Mr. James was certainly not dumb. Even the smartest people make bad life choices, famous or not.
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