Inspired by Motown's assembly line of sound,
George Clinton gradually put together a collective of over 50 musicians and recorded the ensemble during the '70s both as
Parliament and
Funkadelic. While
Funkadelic pursued band-format psychedelic rock,
Parliament engaged in a funk free-for-all, blending influences from the godfathers (
James Brown and
Sly Stone) with freaky costumes and themes inspired by '60s acid culture and science fiction. From its 1970 inception until
Clinton's dissolving of
Parliament in 1980, the band hit the R&B Top Ten several times but truly excelled in two other areas: large-selling, effective album statements and the most dazzling, extravagant live show in the business. In an era when Philly soul continued the slick sounds of establishment-approved R&B,
Parliament scared off more white listeners than it courted.
By the time his on-the-move family settled in New Jersey during the early '50s,
George Clinton (b. July 22, 1941, Kannapolis, NC) became interested in doo wop, which was just beginning to explode in the New York-metro area. Basing his group on
Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers,
Clinton formed
the Parliaments in 1955 with a lineup that gradually shifted to include
Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins,
Grady Thomas,
Raymond Davis, and
Calvin Simon. Based out of a barbershop backroom where
Clinton straightened hair,
the Parliaments released only two singles during the next ten years, but frequent trips to Detroit during the mid-'60s -- where
Clinton began working as a songwriter and producer -- eventually paid off their investment.
After finding a hit with the 1967 single "(I Wanna) Testify,"
the Parliaments ran into trouble with Revilot Records and refused to record any new material. Instead of waiting for a settlement,
Clinton decided to record the same band under a new name:
Funkadelic. Founded in 1968, the group began life as a smoke screen, claiming as its only members
the Parliaments' backing band -- guitarist
Eddie Hazel, bassist
Billy Nelson, rhythm guitarist
Lucius "Tawl" Ross, drummer
Ramon "Tiki" Fulwood, and organist
Mickey Atkins -- but in truth including
Clinton and the rest of the former
Parliaments lineup. Revilot folded not long after, with the label's existing contracts sold to Atlantic;
Clinton, however, decided to abandon
the Parliaments name rather than record for the major label. One previously recorded
Parliaments single, "A New Day Begins," was licensed to Atco in 1969 and became a number 44 hit that May. By 1970,
George Clinton had regained the rights to
the Parliaments name: he then signed the entire
Funkadelic lineup to Invictus Records as
Parliament. The group released one album -- 1970's
Osmium -- and scored a number 30 hit, "The Breakdown," on the R&B charts in 1971. With
Funkadelic firing on all cylinders, however,
Clinton decided to discontinue
Parliament (the name, not the band) for the time being.
Though keyboard player
Bernie Worrell (b. April 19, 1944, Long Beach, NJ) had played on the original
Funkadelic album, his first credit with the conglomeration appeared on
Funkadelic's second album, 1970's
Free Your Mind...And Your Ass Will Follow.
Clinton and
Worrell had known each other since the New Jersey barbershop days, and
Worrell soon became the most crucial cog in the P-Funk machine, working on arrangements and production for virtually all later
Parliament/
Funkadelic releases. His strict upbringing and classical training (at the New England Conservatory and Juilliard), as well as the boom in synthesizer technology during the early '70s, gave him the tools to create the synth runs and horn arrangements that later trademarked the P-Funk sound. Two years after the addition of
Worrell, P-Funk added its second most famed contributor,
Bootsy Collins. The muscular, throbbing bass line of
Collins (b. October 26, 1951, Cincinnati, OH) had already been featured in
James Brown's backing band (
the J.B.'s) along with his brother, guitarist
Catfish Collins.
Bootsy and
Catfish were playing in a Detroit band when
George Clinton saw and hired them.
Funkadelic released five albums from 1970 through early 1974, and consistently hit the lower reaches of the R&B charts, but the collective pulled up stakes later in 1974 and began recording as
Parliament. Signing with the Casablanca label,
Parliament's "Up for the Down Stroke" (number ten R&B, number 63 pop) appeared in mid-1974 and reflected a more mainstream approach than
Funkadelic, with funky horn arrangements reminiscent of
James Brown and a live feel that recalls contemporary work by
Kool & the Gang. It became the biggest hit yet for the
Parliament/
Funkadelic congregation. "Testify," a revamped version of
the Parliaments' 1967 hit, also charted in 1974. One year later,
Chocolate City continued
Parliament's success: the title track reached number 24 R&B, and "Ride On" also charted.
Clinton & co. ushered in 1976 with the April release of the third
Parliament LP in as many years:
Mothership Connection. Arguably the peak of
Parliament's power, the album made number 13 on the pop charts and went platinum, sparked by three hit singles: "P. Funk (Wants to Get Funked Up)" (number 33 R&B), "Tear the Roof Off the Sucker (Give Up the Funk)" (number five R&B, number 15 pop), and "Star Child" (number 26 R&B). In addition to
Bootsy Collins, the album featured two other
James Brown refugees: horn legends
Maceo Parker and
Fred Wesley. Just six months after the release of
Mothership Connection,
Clinton had another
Parliament album in the can,
The Clones of Doctor Funkenstein. Though it only reached gold status, the LP spawned the number 22 R&B hit "Do That Stuff" and the number 43 "Dr. Funkenstein."
Several internal squabbles during 1977 apparently didn't phase
Clinton at all; the following year proved to be the most successful in
Parliament's history. In January, "Flash Light" -- from the
Parliament album
Funkentelechy Vs. the Placebo Syndrome -- became the collective's first number one hit. It topped the R&B charts for three weeks, and was followed by the number 27 single, "Funkentelechy." The LP reached number 13 on the pop charts and became
Parliament's second platinum album. Early in 1979,
Parliament hit number one yet again with "Aqua Boogie," from its eighth album,
Motor-Booty Affair. The LP, which stalled at number 23, nevertheless became the group's fifth consecutive album to go gold or better.
Parliament's ninth album,
Gloryhallastoopid (Or Pin the Tale on the Funky), was released later in 1979 and showed a bit of a slip in the previously unstoppable
Clinton machine. The group charted in the R&B Top Ten twice during 1980 ("Theme From 'The Black Hole'" and "Agony of Defeet"), but
Clinton began to be weighed down that year by legal difficulties arising from Polygram's acquisition of Casablanca. Jettisoning both the
Parliament and
Funkadelic names (but not the musicians),
Clinton began his solo career with 1982's
Computer Games. He and many former
Parliament/
Funkadelic members continued to tour and record during the '80s as the P-Funk All Stars, but the decade's disdain of everything to do with the '70s resulted in the neglect of critical and commercial opinion for the world's biggest funk band, especially one which in part had spawned the sound of disco. During the early '90s, the rise of funk-inspired rap (courtesy of
Digital Underground,
Dr. Dre, and Warren G.) and funk rock (
Primus and
Red Hot Chili Peppers) re-established the status of
Clinton & co., one of the most important forces in the recent history of black music. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide