Showing posts with label George Clinton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Clinton. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

ROCK Sex: Sly Stone's "I Want To Take You Higher" And Its Unending Influence!


...with Music Player!


ROCK Sex says, "Happy Birthday to SLY STONE!".


SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE are one of the most influential bands in history.

Today, the ever-escalating influence of the song "I Want To Take You Higher" and its impact on four decades of music, with a Music Player of all!

_______________



I
W A N T
T O
T A K E
Y O U
H I G H E R



This is a Spotify player. Join up for free here.
I WANT TO TAKE YOU HIGHER
Songs in chronological order from 1966 to now.


"I Want To Take You Higher" just may be the Big Bang of Funk-Rock.

It drove half-a-million people to their feet in dancing ecstasy at Woodstock, and helped turn Funk music into the soundtrack of the '70s. From HipHop to Mixology, from Manchester to Iran to Japan, it continues to lift the world.

"I Want To Take You Higher/ Stand" 45rpm



Sly actually did it before and after he did it.

The central chant has been a work in progress across records and time. The trial run was an album track called "Higher" in 1968, and again on another epic track called "Dance To The Medley". (The Psychedelic Soul of the latter is virtually the template for Funkadelic.)

SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE -"Higher" (1968)


SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE -"Dance To The Medley" (1968) ("Higher" comes in at 7:45)



Those joyful Gospel choral chants of "Higher" finally reached fruition when the ultimate song "I Want To Take You Higher" ascended in 1969 on the essential album, STAND.

SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE -"I Want To Take You Higher" (studio version, 1969)


The roaring live performance of the song galvanized the Woodstock nation, and Sly And The Family Stone are still considered one of the crucial highlights of the Festival and the Documentary film.

SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE -"I Want To Take You Higher" (live at Woodstock, 1969)



Later he did the wry rewrite "I Get High On You" in 1975, and a playful bounce of it as "High, Y'all" in 1983.

SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE -"I Get High On You" (1975)


SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE -"High, Y'all" (1983)







H I G H E R



"I Want to Take You Higher",
by Jeff Kalish (2009)


As the Music Player above reveals, the song became an instant classic and was either covered by everyone or referenced lyrically for years to come. The core of it is the "Higher!" chant. It summed up the utopian hopes of the progressive counterculture generation, while also winking about getting high.



If it wasn't being covered by Brian Auger, Tina Turner, or Googoosh (Iran), then the "Higher" chant was popping up in originals from The Temptations, The Chambers Brothers, War, James Brown, Stevie Wonder, and beyond.

It gets a shout-out in the rapidfire pop history novelty "Life Is A Rock", gets quoted on the trail-out of "Play That Funky Music", and may be referenced sideways in Paul McCartney's banned single "Hi Hi Hi".

Into the '80s and '90s, it rises up in Grandmaster Flash's "White Lines", an unreleased song with the same name by Roger Taylor (Queen), a Curtis Mayfield homage by Lenny Kravitz, a Madchester trip-out by raving Moonflowers, a namecheck by Public Enemy, a pot anthem by Cypress Hill, and an electro resurge from Future Funk.


"I Want to Take You Higher: The Psychedelic Era 1965-1969",
The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame Museum (1997)




B O O M
S H A C K A
L A C K A
L A C K A
B O O M



As also heard on the Music Player, another key ingredient of the song that keeps coming back up is the lyric "Boom shacka lacka lacka, boom shacka lacka lacka, boom shacka lacka lacka boom". Everybody uses it, even if by now they don't know where it came from.

This chant has become a classic Reggae song, a Reggae band, and a Reggae magazine.

It jumps up in HipHop songs like "Whoomp! There It is!" and Pop hits like Was (Not Was)' "Walk The Dinosaur" and Brianna's "Boom Shaka Laka".

It's become slang in Basketball and in HipHop.

It's even been the name of a Bollywood film and an Indian fantasy TV series for kids!


BOOM SHACKA LACKA LACKA,
BOOM SHACKA LACKA LACKA,
BOOM SHACKA LACKA LACKA BOOM!



Sly Stone and George Clinton, 2008.




"Feeling that should make you move
Sounds that should help you groove
Music still flashin' me
Take your places
I WANT TO TAKE YOU HIGHER!"



© Tym Stevens



See Also:

FUNK, The True History: The 1960s, with 3 Music Players!

FUNK, The True History: 1970-1974, with 3 Music Players!


"Everyday People" - Sly Stone > Joan Jett > Arrested Development

"Shadrach, Meshach, Abednego!" - Funkadelic > Sly Stone > Beastie Boys

ROCK Orgy: "Life Is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)!"

"Sing A Simple Song" - Sly Stone > Jimi Hendrix > James Gang > P-Funk > Chili Peppers > Public Enemy

"The Same Love That Made Me Laugh" - Bill Withers > Diana Ross > Sly Stone > Zapp

"If You Want Me To Stay" - Sly Stone > Bootsy Collins > Red Hot Chili Peppers > Prince > Nikka Costa

Sly Stone > Prince, with Music Player!


The Real History of Rock and Soul!: A Music Player Checklist


Sunday, August 8, 2010

ROCK Sex: "Follow The Leader" - Bob James > Eric B + Rakim > P-Funk



ROCK Sex travels at magnificent speeds around the music-verse.

"Follow The Leader" is one of the coolest Rap songs ever made and here's where this intergalactic headtrip took off from.

_______________


This journey into sound begins with "Nautilus" by Fusion Jazz keyboardist Bob James.

Like the classic "Apache", this song is one of the most sampled ever. Over 30 different Rap songs have used portions of it, including hits by Run-DMC, Public Enemy, Slick Rick, Soul II Soul, EPMD, A Tribe Called Quest, Wu-Tang Clan, Ghostface Killah, and Jeru The Damaga, as well as singer MAary J. Blige.

It's easy to hear why. This atmospheric Funk-Jazz jam, inspired by the submarine Nautilus captained by Nemo in Jules Verne's "20,000 Leagues Under The Sea", is full of hidden depths and strange phenomena.

BOB JAMES -"Nautilus" (1974)



Another key component of "Follow The Leader" is this rare gem by BABY HUEY, who made one killer Funk Rock album in 1970 before his untimely death.

BABY HUEY -"Listen To Me" (1970)



When you combine the eerie keyboards of Bob James (1:51) with the funky rhythm from Baby Huey (1:12) and the opening drums of Coke Escovedo's "I Wouldn't Change A Thing", you get this cosmic classic.

"Follow The Leader" by ERIC B And RAKIM is a micro/macrocosmic journey unlike any vinyl out at the time or much since.

Many Rap records of the late-'80s were still about MCs battling over who was most original and who was biting their style, usually over a spare drum machine and a simple sample loop. MC Rakim leaves that local turf and loud ego stuff in the dust by taking the contest to a literally universal level. It becomes a spiritual journey that canvases the galaxy while challenging the inner self at the same time. Rakim's deft lyrics are put into interstellar overdrive by the def sonics of DJ Eric B, all alien edge and pounding momentum.

ERIC B And RAKIM -"Follow The Leader" (1988)



GEORGE CLINTON was pretty used to being sampled by the early-'90s, but he was so impressed by the sliquid words and infinite scope of this song that he paid it the ultimate compliment by covering it himself.

GEORGE CLINTON + P-FUNK ALL STARS -"Follow The Leader" (1995)



"I'm everlasting, I can go on for days and days
With rhyme displays that engrave deep as X-rays

In this journey you're the journal, I'm the journalist

You're not a slave
'Cause we was put here to be much more than that
But we couldn't see it because our mind was trapped
But I'm here to break away the chains, take away the pains
Remake the brains, reveal my name

I guess nobody told you a little knowledge is dangerous
It can't be mixed, diluted, it can't be changed or switched
Here's a lesson if you're guessing and borrowing
Hurry hurry, step right up and keep following the leader!


A furified freestyle, lyrics of fury
My third eye makes me shine like jewelry
You're just a rent-a-rapper, your rhymes are Minute Maid
I'll be here when it fades to watch you flip like a renegade

And follow and follow, because the tempo's a trail
The stage is a cage, the mic is a third rail!"



© Tym Stevens



See Also:

Cool Insane Rap: GETTOVETTS

Kraftwerk > Trouble Funk > Afrika Bambaataa > New Order


BEYOND COOL: Pedro Bell, Funkadelic's visionary!


How STAR WARS Is Changing Everything!

2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY - Its Transcendent Influence on all Pop Culture, with Music Player!


The Real History of Rock and Soul!: The Music Player Checklist


Wednesday, January 27, 2010

BEYOND COOL: Pedro Bell, Funkadelic's visionary!



Tribute to Pedro Bell; art by Tym Stevens.
Larger here


Let's set the record straight. There are three factors that made FUNKADELIC what it was:
  • The first is the brilliant musicians, particularly the 1970 and the 1975 line-ups.
  • The second is the bent vision of GEORGE CLINTON to pull it all together on record.
  • But the third is just as crucial, and just as clear to all the real fans: the album artwork of PEDRO BELL.


Pedro Bell, with original size art for
ELECTRIC SPANKING OF WAR BABIES


Funkadelic had been alarming/converting audiences for around four years before he showed up. Hindsight shows that in those years, between 1969 and 1973, they were trying anything and everything like they had nothing left to lose. Which they didn't since they were on an obscure label, an erratic tour circuit, and haphazardly building a odd cult of fans while being run out of towns.

Pedro was like many of those fans, a young person into the hothouse explosion of hybrid musics that gushed over from the expansive late '60s. Like the deepheads, he loved Frank Zappa, Captain Beefheart, Sun Ra, Sly Stone, Jimi Hendrix, The Beatles. He particularly liked the distinct and disturbing packaging of Frank Zappa albums. It gave a special identity to the artist and to the fans who dug it. It plugged you into your own special shared universe. So he sent elaborately drawn letters to Funkadelic's label with other samples. George Clinton liked the streetwise mutant style and asked him to do the COSMIC SLOP album cover in 1973.

That was the moment Funkadelic became everything we think about them being.


Detail from COSMIC SLOP album cover (1973)


Before, Funkadelic used shocking photos of afroed sirens along with liner notes lifted from the cult, Process Church Of The Final Judgement. Very sexy, very edgy. But looking a bit too much like labelmates The Ohio Players' kinky covers, and reading like a Charles Manson prescription for apocalypse. A more cartoonish cover for the fourth album AMERICA EATS ITS YOUNG (1972) along with more coherent production and song structure was a new start. But Pedro chrystallized their identity to the world with that next LP.

In 1973, there was no MTV, no internet, no VCRs, no marketing strobe in all media. An act toured, they put out an album once a year, and they were lucky to get a TV appearance lip-synching a hit. You couldn't tape it and you were lucky to even see them. As a fan, almost your whole involvement with the band came through the album cover. It was big, it opened out in a gatefold, there were inserts and photos and posters. Sitting with your big ol' headphones, you shut off the world and stared at every detail of the album art like they were paths to the other side, to the Escape. Who were all those people in the SGT. PEPPER crowd?; what alternate reality were artists Roger Dean (Yes) and Mati Klarwein (Santana, Miles Davis) from?; why are the burning businessmen shaking hands?; is it an African woman standing or a lion's face?; does it say AMERICAN REALITY or "American Beauty" or both?


Funkadelic, STANDING ON THE VERGE OF GETTING IT ON (1974)


This was an art era for an art audience. Posters, T-shirts, LPs. These were your subculture badge of honor, your spiritual battle cry, your middle finger to mediocrity. They took every cent you had saved and were even harder to come by, which made it even more personal, more rebel. Your LP was a shield, your T-shirt was armor. They got you expelled, ostracised, beat up. They scared the living hell out of the straights around you...and you loved that. It reaffirmed your faith that you were into something good, something unique.


Interior art of Funkadelic from
STANDING ON THE VERGE


What Pedro Bell had done was invert psychedelia through the ghetto. Like an urban Hieronymus Bosch, he cross-sected the sublime and the hideous to jarring effect. Insect pimps, distorted minxes, alien gladiators, sexual perversions. It was a thrill, it was disturbing. Like a florid virus, his markered mutations spilled around the inside and outside covers in sordid details that had to be breaking at least seven state laws.


Funkadelic, HARDCORE JOLLIES (1976)


More crucially, his stream-of-contagion text rewrote the whole game. He single-handedly defined the P-Funk collective as sci-fi superheroes fighting the ills of the heart, society, and the cosmos. Funk wasn't just a music, it was a philosophy, a way of seeing and being, a way for the tired spirit to hold faith and dance yourself into another day. As much as Clinton's lyrics, Pedro Bell's crazoid words created the mythos of the band and bonded the audience together.


Detail and textagraphic slams from HARDCORE JOLLIES, Funkadelic.


Half the experience of Funkadelic was the actual music vibrating out of those wax grooves. The other half was reading the covers with a magnifying glass while you listened. There was always more to scrutinize, analyze, and strain your eyes. Funkadelic covers were a hedonistic landscape where sex coursed like energy, politics underlay every pun, and madness was just a bigger overview.


Detail from ONE NATION UNDER A GROOVE cover, Funkadelic (1978)


Pedro called his work 'scartoons', because they were fun but they left a mark. He was facing the hard life in Chicago full-on everyday with all the craft and humor he could muster.


The uncensored cover for ELECTRIC SPANKING OF WAR BABIES, Funkadelic (1981)


Pedro's unschooled, undisciplined street art gave all the Suit execs fits, as when the cover for ELECTRIC SPANKING OF WAR BABIES caused such a scandel that it had to be censored before release. It also opened the door for all the great NYC graffiti artists of the late '70s, for the mainstream success of Keith Haring's bold line cartoons, and James Rizzi's marker covers and "Genius of Love" video animation for Tom Tom Club.


Cover for SOME OF MY BEST JOKES ARE FRIENDS, George Clinton (1985)


When Parliament and Funkadelic went on hiatus in the '80s, it was Pedro Bell's art that gave the P-Funk identity to George Clinton's albums like COMPUTER GAMES (1982), YOU SHOULDN'T-NUF BIT FISH (1983), SOME OF MY BEST JOKES ARE FRIENDS (1985), and R&B SKELETONS IN THE CLOSET (1986); as well as spin-offs like Jimmy G And The Tackhead's FEDERATION OF THE TACKHEADS (1985), and his clay figure art for INCorporated Thang Band's LIFESTYLES OF THE ROACH AND FAMOUS (1988).

He also did a spectacular animated scartoon of his original character, Larry Lazer, which was broadcast on MTV.

By the early '90s the game had changed and not to Pedro's favor. MTV had turned every song into a jingle, and every album into a quarterly marketing plan. Every star's face was in your face every place all over the place, milking an album for three years until the next committeed go-round. CDs shrunk the album cover experience into a coaster. The days of swimming in your LP cover were gone. (But conversely Rock concert poster design exploded, as fans were desperate to have some great art to fill the void.)

During the decade Pedro continued soldiering on with the CD covers for P-Funk-inspired bands like Maggotron's BASSMAN OF THE ACROPOLIS (1992); FUNKRONOMICON for Bill Laswell's all-star funk collective, Axiom Funk (1995); and Enemy Squad's UNITED STATE OF MIND (1998). And of course for George Clinton's DOPE DOGS (1994),"TAPOAFOM (The Awesome Power of a Fully Operational Mothership)" (1995) and "Greatest Funkin' Hits" (1996); and P-Funk's "HOW LATE DO YOU HAVE 2 B B4 U R ABSENT?" (2005).

In the meantime his style was homaged/appropriated/bit by other artists designing for Digital Underground, Miami Bass groups, and dodgy Funkadelic compilations. But he received better due with a great write-up in the countercultural art magazine Juxtapoz (#16, Fall '98). He also had a couple of his Funkadelic covers in Rolling Stones' "Greatest Album Covers Of All Time" issue.


Portrait of Sun Ra (2006),
by Pedro Bell, Seitu Hadyen, and Tym Stevens.
Larger here


During the '90s Pedro started having health difficulties, including issues with his vision. He worked with a few friends to get his creations out there to the world. One such project was this recent fine art print of Sun Ra, based on a layout he first came up with in the '70s.

Pedro Bell is still with us, but having some hard times. Though he basically 'branded' Funkadelic's entire identity, he has seen little for it financially. In a just world, Pedro would get the Juxtapoz treatment like Robert Williams and Robert Crumb and the like, with coffee table books, T-shirts, posters, figurines, and hip retrospectives in galleries. But bad faith and ill health have prevented that.

Nowadays, awake and aware young people who are sick of the packaged machine that music has become vehemently reject it. They embrace adventurous musics from before The Slickness, wear vintage weathered T-shirts, and hang LP covers on their walls as art objects. They want it rough, real, and wide open again with weird possibility. It's these brave new souls who need to free their minds with Pedro's kaleidoscopic visions.

Pedro Bell is an unsung genius who deserves his place in the sun. Let's give it up for our Brother From Other!



© Tym Stevens, 2010.



This essay has been quoted extensively, without credit, on George Clinton's website and in Rolling Stone.




See also:

FUNK, The True History: The 1960s, with 3 Music Players!

FUNK, The True History: 1970-1974, with 3 Music Players!

SLICE TONES: Sly Stone & His Infinite Influence!, with 5 Music Players!


"Shadrach, Meshach, Abednego!" - Funkadelic > Sly Stone > Beastie Boys

"Sing A Simple Song" - Sly Stone > Jimi Hendrix > James Gang > P-Funk > Chili Peppers > Public Enemy

"If You Want Me To Stay" - Sly Stone > Bootsy Collins > Red Hot Chili Peppers > Prince > Nikka Costa


The Real History of ROCK AND SOUL!: The Music Player Checklist



Sunday, December 6, 2009

ROCK Sex: "Let's Dance" - David Bowie > George Clinton > Craig David




ROCK Sex is putting on its red shoes to dance the blues.

_______________


Here's David Bowie's comeback hit "Let's Dance", which helped launch the career of guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan:

DAVID BOWIE -"Let's Dance" (1982)



Here's P-Funk commander George Clinton meeting him back at the turnaround:

GEORGE CLINTON -"Last Dance" (1983)



And here's Craig David putting some new steps in the relay:

CRAIG DAVID -"Hot Stuff (Let's Dance)" (2007)




© Tym Stevens



See Also:

"Fame" - James Brown > David Bowie > James Brown

"You Can't Hurry Love" - The Supremes > Iggy Pop > The Jam > David Bowie

"Ground Control to Major Tom" - THE LONELY ASTRONAUT Movies, with Music Player!

BEYOND COOL: Pedro Bell, Funkadelic's visionary!


The Real History of Rock and Soul!: The Music Player Checklist