Latest Release
- SEP 6, 2024
- 3 Songs
- Funkentelechy vs. The Placebo Syndrome · 1977
- Mothership Connection · 1975
- Mothership Connection · 1975
- Mothership Connection · 1975
- 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The Best of Parliament · 1978
- Straight Outta Compton (Music from the Motion Picture) · 2000
- Motor-Booty Affair · 1978
- Clones Of Dr. Funkenstein · 1976
- Up For The Down Stroke (Expanded Edition) · 1974
- Funkentelechy vs. The Placebo Syndrome · 1977
Essential Albums
- The conceptual mind of George Clinton was working overtime when he came up with this funk masterpiece in 1977. After exploring outer space and cloning, George and the Funk Mob came back down to earth in a showdown between a good guy (one possessing the funk) versus a bad guy (Sir Nose d'Voidoffunk). It all culminated with "FlashLight," an unbridled dance floor rump shaker that will still rock any house party twenty-five years after it was released. In order to get Sir Nose to dance, he had to be shot with the "Bop Gun," which was pictured on the front cover, and sung by departed, but not forgotten, P-funk vocalist Glenn Goins. Blending mind and body in a way that had never been done before (or since for that matter), Clinton took the funk to unsurpassed levels on this inspired trip.
- Clones of Dr. Funkenstein is an extension of Mothership Connection, the album that codified Parliament’s mid-‘70s formula: laid-back tempos, gurgling sound effects, choral chants, and of course, a lot of comic book madness. Like most Parliament albums, Funkenstein loosely follows a story — cosmic overseer Dr. Funkenstein has dispatched Star Child and a host of clones to unlock the secrets of the funk from the pyramids. Of course, the story matters little; what drives the album is the instrumental fantasias hatched by George Clinton, and executed by such star musicians as keyboardist Bernie Worrell, bassist Bootsy Collins, and drummer Jerome Bailey. “Dr. Funkenstein,” “Children of Productions,” and “Everything Is on the One” define the band’s ability to sink into an ambling groove and milk it for everything its worth, while “Do That Stuff” shows Clinton’s talent for blending his hallucinatory R&B with pop accessibility. Funkenstein is arguably Parliament’s loosest, most easy going album. This music pours effortlessly from a group wholly united in its vision.
- With 1976's Mothership Connection, George Clinton's motley posse of costumed freaks made the quantum leap from sizzling proto-funk band to bona-fide extraterrestrial phenomenon. Featuring fantastically layered grooves and instruments making noises they weren't designed to, this is party music at its most psychedelic-and that's before delving too deep into the outer-space messiah theme. With Maceo Parker and Fred Wesley purloined from the JBs horn section; career weirdo Bootsy Collins on bass; and the brilliant Bernie Worrell on piano, Parliament fashions a funk Frankenstein from the most way-out elements of rock, R&B and jazz. Sublimely weird moments abound, from the "ga ga goo ga" chorus and farting keyboards of "Night of the Thumpasorus Peoples" to the striking and spiritual "Swing down sweet chariot" bridge that breaks up the title track. More than just a novelty band (or thieving ground for hip-hoppers' hooks), Parliament was a force of unbridled creativity unleashed on the dance floor. Booties everywhere should give thanks.
Singles & EPs
Live Albums
Compilations
Appears On
- Incidents, Westcoast Stone & George Clinton
More To Hear
- Spinna celebrates Bootsy Collins’ birthday with a P-Funk mix.
About Parliament
Led by the inimitable George Clinton, the trailblazing ’70s-era funk group Parliament combined irresistible grooves with irreverent humor and Afrofuturist imagery. They functioned as a sister act for Funkadelic, Clinton’s more rock-oriented project. • George Clinton formed the doo-wop group The Parliaments in New Jersey in 1955. They scored a Top 20 pop hit in 1967 with “(I Wanna) Testify,” but after a contractual dispute with Revilot Records, Clinton shifted his focus to Funkadelic, a new group that included the Parliaments lineup. • In 1970, after regaining the rights to the name The Parliaments, Clinton signed Funkadelic to Invictus Records under the name Parliament. The group’s debut album, Osmium, spawned the R&B hit “The Breakdown.” • Throughout the ’70s, Clinton presided over a collective of musicians that recorded as both Parliament and Funkadelic. The former generally dealt in funk, while the latter focused on psychedelic rock. • Parliament’s sci-fi–themed 1975 concept album Mothership Connection went Top 20 on the Billboard 200 en route to platinum certification. Dr. Dre famously sampled sounds from the groundbreaking LP for his 1992 hip-hop classic The Chronic. • In 1978, the group notched its first No. 1 on the Billboard R&B charts with “Flash Light.” They returned to the top spot the following year with “Aqua Boogie (A Psychoalphadiscobetabioaquadoloop).” • After 1980’s Trombipulation, Clinton dissolved Parliament and Funkadelic as recording and touring entities due to continuous legal difficulties. Throughout the decades, he put out new music under his own name and P-Funk All-Stars. • Clinton resurrected the Parliament name for 2018’s Medicaid Fraud Dogg. Legendary Houston rapper Scarface features on the track “I’m Gon Make U Sick O’Me.”
- FROM
- Detroit, MI, United States
- FORMED
- 1968
- GENRE
- R&B/Soul