First Time Hearing Funkadelic- Cosmic Slop Had Me Shocked|REACTION!!!

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 13 ต.ค. 2024
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ความคิดเห็น • 15

  • @RonaldWilliams-qh7zc
    @RonaldWilliams-qh7zc 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    LOL funkadelic was wild back in those days and yes that was a diaper you saw him wearing rip Gary Snyder rhythm guitar player and vocals

  • @brianbatie6650
    @brianbatie6650 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Check the lyrics, the song is about a person recalling his childhood as the son of a prostitute, who prays nightly for forgiveness.

    • @lphillips6204
      @lphillips6204 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Those lyrics man…haunting!! Amazing song

    • @ScottDavis-go7br
      @ScottDavis-go7br 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I wish more people knew that! THANKS 4 PUTTING THAT OUT THERE

  • @aamazintribe
    @aamazintribe ปีที่แล้ว +4

    In the legendary comedian Charlie Murphy voice... Are they wear PAMPERS?? Are those Huggies?? Great Value Diapers?? HAHAHAHAHA...

    • @aamazintribe
      @aamazintribe ปีที่แล้ว +1

      S Nation Stay groovy babe. Shamone...

  • @romainimpallonia4864
    @romainimpallonia4864 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    👍🙏

  • @IceManLikeGervin
    @IceManLikeGervin ปีที่แล้ว +7

    A very cosmic reaction 🌠 🛰🚀🛸🌌! I see 👁👁 that you have reacted to George Clinton before: Atomic Dog. Cosmic Slop was released as the lead single from Funkadelic's 1973 album: Cosmic Slop. It was written by Bernie Worrell and George Clinton. It was produced by George Clinton. The song failed to chart reaching the Bubbling Under 100 on the R&B chart at #102. Garry "Diaperman" Shider is the lead singer on this song. Cosmic Slop is the fifth studio album by Funkadelic, released in July 1973 on Westbound Records. While it has been favorably re-evaluated by music critics long after its original release, the album was originally a commercial failure, producing no charting singles and reaching only #112 on the Billboard Pop album chart and #21 on the R&B album chart. July 2023, marked the 50th anniversary of: Cosmic Slop. That guy that's creeping you out is George Clinton lol.
    The music video was filmed in New York City's central Park. ReelBlack said: “George Clinton on LSD. Central Park in the 1970s. A Can of film. That was that was needed to make history”.
    Group Members In The Music Video 📽:
    1. Facepaint: George Clinton
    2. White guy (guitar): Ron Bykowski
    3. Diaper Man, gold belt (guitar): Garry "Diaperman" Shider
    4. Ripped longjohns, red headband: Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins
    5. Red floppy hat (melodica): Bernie Worrell
    6. Checkered jester/clown suit (drumsticks): Tyrone Lampkin
    7. Colorful sheet with white feathered headdress (bass): Calvin Simon
    8. Purple keffiyeh/headrag, black leather vest (guitar): "Shady Grady" Thomas
    9. Black tux jacket, leather codpiece, jeans, headband: Eddie Hazel
    10. Black cape, pacifier necklace, grey beard: Ray "Stingray" Davis
    11. Ruffly shoulder pads, sleeves, and shorts, pom pom hat (bass): Cordell "Boogie" Mosson
    12. Wolf mask (melodica): Ramon "Tiki" Fulwood?
    One of the most potent grooves in the P-Funk music catalogue: "Cosmic Slop", is also one of their most lyrically incisive tracks, telling the story of a woman with five children who works as a prostitute in order to feed her family. A God-fearing woman, she prays to the Lord, justifying her sins by pleading that she's doing it for her kids. The Devil hears her call, and answers:
    Would you like to dance with me? / We're doing the cosmic slop
    In a Songfacts interview with bandleader George Clinton, he said it was inspired by "women that have to prostitute themselves to take care of their kids, and feel ashamed of themselves, or feel like they're not doing God's work by having to do that". He continued: "The instinct of having to take care of your kids is a strong instinct, so that's what that whole mental thing is. You think you're dancing with the Devil, and you have to do something like that to support your family. That's what that the song: Cosmic Slop, is".
    Lyrics 📝:
    Ah hear my mother call
    I was one of five born to my mother
    An older sister and three young brothers
    We've seen it hard, we've seen it kind of rough
    But always with a smile, she was sure to try to hide
    The fact from us that life was really tough
    I can hear my mother call
    I can hear my mother call (Ah)
    Late at night I hear her call
    Oh lord, lord I hear her call
    She said, "Father, father it's for the kids (Ah)
    Any and every thing I did
    Please, please don't judge me too strong
    Lord knows I meant no wrong
    Lord knows I meant no wrong"
    Then the devil sang
    "Would you like to dance with me? We're doin' the cosmic slop"
    She was well known through the ghetto
    Tricks would come and then they'd go
    The neighbors would talk and call her Jezebel
    But always with a smile, she was sure to try to hide
    The fact from us that she was catching hell, hey!
    Hear my mother call
    I can hear my mother call
    Late at night I hear her call
    Oh lord, lord I hear her call
    She says, "Father, father it's for the kids
    Any and every thing I did
    Please, please don't judge me too strong
    Lord knows I meant no wrong
    Lord!
    Hear my mother call
    (Ah)
    Hear my mother call
    She says, "Father, father it's for the kids
    Any and every thing I did
    Please, please don't judge me too strong
    Hear my mother call
    Hear my mother call
    I can hear my mother call
    Hey!
    I can hear my mother call (ooh-ah-ooh)
    Mother, mother
    Late at night
    Calling me
    Mother
    I can hear my
    I can hear my mother calling me
    Late at night I hear my mother
    Hey!
    Funkadelic Info 📰:
    George Clinton was born on July 22, 1941 in Kannapolis, North Carolina and grew up in Plainfield, New Jersey. He is musician, singer, songwriter, bandleader, actor and record producer.
    Funkadelic was an American Funk Rock band formed in Plainfield, New Jersey in 1968 and active until 1982. As one of the two flagship groups of George Clinton's P-Funk collective, they helped pioneer the funk music culture of the 1970s. Funkadelic initially formed as a backing band for George Clinton's vocal group The Parliaments (later the full-fledged band Parliament), but eventually pursued a heavier, Psychedelic Rock-oriented sound in their own musical recordings. Parliament-Funkadelic (abbreviated as P-Funk) is a music collective of rotating musicians headed by George Clinton, primarily consisting of the Funk bands Parliament and Funkadelic, both active since the 1960s.
    Their distinctive Funk style drew on Psychedelia, outlandish fashion, science-fiction and surreal humor. They would have an influential effect on subsequent Funk, Post-P, Hip-Hop and Techno artists of the 1980s and 1990s, while their collective mythology would help pioneer Afrofuturism (a cultural aesthetic that combines science-fiction, history and fantasy to explore the African-American experience and aims to connect those from the black diaspora with their forgotten African ancestry).
    The collective released widely acclaimed albums including: Maggot Brain (1971), Mothership Connection (1975) and One Nation Under A Groove (1978), to critical praise, and scored charting hits with singles including: "Give Up The Funk" (1975), "Flash Light" (1978), "One Nation Under A Groove" (1978) and "(Not Just) Knee Deep" (1979) . Overall, the collective achieved thirteen top ten hits on the R&B music charts between 1967 and 1983, including six number one hits.
    The collective's origins date back to the doo-wop group the Parliaments, formed by Clinton during the late 1950s in suburban New Jersey. By the late 1960s, Clinton had gained experience as a producer-writer for Motown Records and, under the influence of artists such as Jimi Hendrix, Sly Stone, and Frank Zappa, he relocated to Detroit and enlisted musicians from his New Jersey days in his own two sister bands Parliament and Funkadelic; the first would go on to develop a commercially successful style of science fiction-inspired Funk, while the second pursued a heavier sound which blended Funk with Psychedelic Rock.
    The name "Parliament-Funkadelic" became the catch-all term for the dozens of related musicians recording and touring different projects in George Clinton's orbit, including the female vocal spinoff groups including: The Brides Of Funkenstein and Parlet. In 1985 George Clinton participated in the music project: "Sun City: Artists United Against Apartheid", along with Steven Van Zandt, David Ruffin, Eddie Kendricks, Bob Dylan, Darlene Love, Run DMC, Bobby Womack, Ringo Starr, Gil Scott-Heron, Bonnie Raitt, Hall & Oates, Nona Hendryx, Kashif, The Fat Boys, Jackson Browne, Bono, Kurtis Blow, Peter Wolf, Keith Richards and more.
    Financial and record label issues slowed Parliament-Funkadelic's recorded output in the 1980s while George Clinton and other members began solo and outside group careers under various aliases, with George Clinton also consolidating the collective's multiple projects and touring under names such as George Clinton And The P-Funk All-Stars. In the 1990s, their sound became the chief inspiration for the West Coast Hip-Hop subgenre G-Funk promoted most notably by Dre Dre, Ice Cube, Warren G among others.
    Prominent Parliament-Funkadelic group members have included guitar bassist Bootsy Collins, keyboardist Bernie Worrell, guitarists Eddie "Maggot Brain" Hazel, Michael Hampton, Garry "Diaper Man" Shider, and horn players Fred Wesley and Maceo Parker. Some former members of Parliament perform under the name "Original P". Sixteen members of Parliament-Funkadelic were inducted to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997. In 2019, the group was given the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.
    George Clinton retired from touring in 2019 but has hinted at a potential Parliament-Funkadelic goodbye tour in 2023 or 2024.
    ****CONTINUE BELOW****

    • @IceManLikeGervin
      @IceManLikeGervin ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Television, Documentary And Films 🎬:
      Funkadelic Documentaries 📼: TV One Unsung George Clinton (2010), Tear The Roof Off- The Untold Story Of Parliament Funkadelic (2016), Parliament Funkadelic; One Nation Under A Groove (2005), The George Clinton Documentary (2018), The Story Of Funk: One Nation Under A Groove (2014), Finding The Funk (2013), Maceo (1995) and CBC Radio: Funkadelic: Funk Getting Ready To Roll (2012).
      George Clinton has appeared in many films including 🎥: The Night Before (1988), Graffiti Bridge (1990), House Party (1990), Cosmic Slop (1994), Good Burger (1997), Butter (1998), Love Hurts (2002), Kuso (2017), G Funk (2017), Trolls World Tour (2020) and more.
      George Clinton has appeared on some television shows including 📺: Martin (1997), Happily Ever After Fairy Tales For Every Child (1999), The Bernie Mac Show (2004), NPR Tiny Desk Concert (2018), How I Met Your Mother (2006), The Roaches (2006), George Clinton's Gongafunkadine (2013), The Masked Singer (2022), Agent Elvis (2023) and more.
      Cosmic Slop is a 1994 American anthology television film executive produced by Reginald and Warrington Hudlin. The film is hosted by musician and Parliament-Funkadelic frontman George Clinton, and derives its title from the 1973 album and song of the same name by George Clinton and Funkadelic. Cosmic Slop features three short stories, directed by Reggie Hudlin, Warrington Hudlin and Kevin Rodney Sullivan. The first and third segments are based on the short stories: "The Space Traders" by Derrick Bell and "Tang" by Chester Himes, respectively. The film's ensemble cast includes: Robert Guillaume, Brock Peters, Kelly Jo Minter, Franklin Cover, John Witherspoon, Reno Wilson, Jason Bernard, Darryl Mitchell, Casey Kasem, Roxie Roker, Bowlegged Lou, Edward Edwards, Larry Anderson, Nicholas Turturro, Richard Herd, Paula Jai Parker and Chi McBride.
      Funkadelic Group Key Members 👨🏾‍🎤🎤🎸🥁🎺🪘🎷🎹🎸🥁🎹🎸:
      1. George Clinton (band leader, vocals, songwriter, producer; born July 22, 1941). George Clinton has been, since its inception, the driving force behind the development of the P-Funk sound, having led the collective since forming The Parliaments as a doo-wop group in the late 1950s. The funk sound, socially conscious lyrics, and P-Funk mythology developed primarily by George Clinton have been especially influential for later R&B, Hip-Hop and Rock music. He also had a very successful solo career including his #1 R&B hit song: Atomic Dog, in 1982. He retired from touring in 2019 but in 2023 he has been hinting of a final reunion tour with Parliament-Funkadelic.
      2. Bernie Worrell (keyboards, vocals, songwriter, arranger; producer; April 19, 1944 - June 24, 2016). Bernie Worrell officially joined Funkadelic after the release of their first album and became an integral member of the Parliament-Funkadelic collective thereafter. His classical training on piano and innovative use of synthesizers has proven to be extremely influential, particularly his pioneering use of the Moog synthesizer, which replaced the conventional electric bass on songs like: "Flash Light" and "Aqua Boogie". He was responsible for many P-Funk rhythm and (with trombonist Fred Wesley) horn arrangements. Bernie Worrell left the band in 1981, but continued to contribute to P-Funk studio albums and occasionally appear live with Parliament-Funkadelic as a special guest.
      3. William "Bootsy" Collins (bass guitar, vocals, drums, songwriter, producer; born October 26, 1951). William "Bootsy" Collins was a major songwriter, rhythm arranger, and bassist for Parliament-Funkadelic during the seventies and was a major influence in the band's sound during that time. His style of bass playing has become especially influential. William "Bootsy" Collins later focused his attention on his own Bootsy's Rubber Band but continues to make occasional contributions to studio albums by members of the Parliament-Funkadelic collective.
      4. Eddie Hazel (guitar, vocals, songwriter; April 10, 1950 - December 23, 1992). Eddie Hazel was the original lead guitarist for Funkadelic and was a major force on the first several albums by that group. His Hendrix-inspired style has become very influential. After the early 1970s he contributed sporadically to various Parliament-Funkadelic musical projects. A key early Funkadelic song that captured both the band's unique sound and Eddie Hazel's talent was the ten-minute guitar solo: "Maggot Brain", from the 1971 Funkadelic album of the same title.
      5. Maceo Parker (saxophone; born February 14, 1943). Maceo Parker joined James Brown's band with brother Melvin Parker in 1964. In 1970, Maceo Parker, his brother Melvin Parker, and a few of James Brown's band members left to establish the band Maceo & All The King's Men, which toured for two years. In January 1973, Maceo Parker rejoined with James Brown. He also charted a single: "Parrty - Part I" (#71 Pop singles), with Maceo & The Macks that same year. In 1975, Maceo Parker and some of James Brown's band members, including Fred Wesley, left to join George Clinton's band Parliament-Funkadelic.
      6. Walter "Junie" Morrison (keyboards, multi-instrumentalist, vocals, songwriter, arranger, producer; born June 28, 1954 - January 21, 2017 ). Walter "Junie" Morrison joined P-Funk in early 1978 as musical director after having success in the early Ohio Players and as a solo artist. Though primarily a keyboardist, Walter "Junie" Morrison composed or co-wrote several of the band's hits at the height of their popularity and served as a lead vocalist, producer, and arranger on many songs for the collective. Walter "Junie" Morrison stopped touring with the band after 1981, but contributed to many subsequent albums. During his time with P-Funk, some of his work was credited under the name J.S. Theracon.
      7. Garry "Diaperman" Shider (vocals, guitar; July 24, 1953 - June 16, 2010). As a child, Garry "Diaperman" Shider was a customer at the barbershop where The Parliaments rehearsed and performed, and after some time with his own group United Soul, he was recruited by George Clinton into Funkadelic in 1972. Garry "Diaperman" Shider became a frequent lead vocalist on several Parliament and Funkadelic albums and along with his "Gospel" vocal and guitar style, was most recognized for wearing his trademark hotel-towel "diaper".
      8. Michael "Kidd Funkadelic" Hampton (guitar; born November 15, 1956). Michael "Kidd Funkadelic" Hampton has been the lead guitarist for P-Funk since 1973, when he was recruited at age 17 to replace Eddie Hazel, after an impromptu performance of Eddie Hazel's signature song "Maggot Brain". Michael "Kidd Funkadelic" Hampton is known for his advancement of Rock and Heavy Metal guitar used by Parliament-Funkadelic and later the P-Funk All Stars, leaving the collective in 2015.
      9. Glenn Goins (vocals, guitar; January 2, 1954 - July 29, 1978). Glenn Goins was recruited into Parliament-Funkadelic in 1975 and was an important contributor, and like bandmate Garry "Diaperman" Shider, was known for his "Gospel" singing and guitar style. In 1978, Glenn Goins and bandmate Jerome "Bigfoot" Brailey departed acrimoniously, and immediately began recording and producing a new band Quazar featuring his younger brother Kevin Goins. Shortly after his departure, Glenn Goins passed away from Hodgkin's lymphoma at age 24.
      ****CONTINUE BELOW****

    • @IceManLikeGervin
      @IceManLikeGervin ปีที่แล้ว +2

      10. Jerome "Bigfoot" Brailey (drums and percussion; born August 20, 1950). Jerome "Bigfoot" Brailey was the most prominent drummer in the Parliament-Funkadelic collective during their period of greatest success in the mid-to-late 1970s. Jerome "Bigfoot" Brailey (and bandmate Glenn Goins) left the collective acrimoniously, forming his own band Mutiny, in which he criticized George Clinton's management style.
      11. Ramon "Tiki" Fulwood (drums, vocals; May 23, 1944 - October 29, 1979). Ramon "Tiki" Fulwood was the original drummer for Funkadelic. He originally quit the band in 1971 but reappeared on several Parliament-Funkadelic releases during the remainder of the 1970s. After also working briefly for Miles Davis, Ramon "Tiki" Fulwood passed away from cancer in 1979.
      12. "Billy Bass" Nelson (bass, guitar; born January 28, 1951). "Billy Bass" Nelson was a teenage employee at George Clinton's barbershop in the 1960s and was the first musician hired to back The Parliaments in the band that would eventually become Funkadelic. "Billy Bass" Nelson then brought his friend Eddie Hazel into the band and coined the name "Funkadelic" when George Clinton moved the collective to Detroit. "Billy Bass" Nelson quit Funkadelic in 1971 but contributed to P-Funk releases sporadically for the next few years. Starting in 1994, he toured with the P-Funk All Stars for ten years.
      13. Cordell "Boogie" Mosson (bass, guitar, drums; October 16, 1952 - April 18, 2013). Cordell "Boogie" Mosson joined Funkadelic in 1972 along with his friend and previous United Soul bandmate Garry "Diaperman" Shider. Cordell "Boogie" Mosson was the primary bassist for Funkadelic starting in 1972 and Parliament starting a few years after Bootsy Collins began to focus on his solo career. Since the late 1970s, Cordell "Boogie" Mosson most frequently played rhythm guitar and continued to tour with the P-Funk All Stars until his passing.
      14. Ray "Stingray" Davis (vocals; March 29, 1940 - July 5, 2005). Ray "Stingray" Davis was the bass singer and a member of The Parliaments. His distinctive voice can be heard on the song: "Give Up The Funk (Tear The Roof Off The Sucker)" and on George Clinton's solo hit single: "Atomic Dog". Aside from Clinton, he was the only original member of The Parliaments not to leave in 1977. In the eighties, Ray "Stingray" Davis recorded and toured with George Clinton and the P-Funk Allstars in support of "Atomic Dog" and with Zapp in support of "I Can Make You Dance", but his vocal range made him an obvious choice as replacement bass vocalist for Melvin Franklin in The Temptations. Ray "Stingray" Davis left the Temptations in 1995 (after being diagnosed with cancer), but continued to perform with former P-Funk members Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins, Calvin Simon and " Shady Grady" Thomas under the name Original P.
      15. Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins (vocals, guitar, drums; June 8, 1941 - March 17, 2023). Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins was a member and first tenor of The Parliaments. In addition to writing, playing drums and guitar, Haskins is known for his "gospel" singing style. He left P-Funk in 1977. In the nineties, he formed Original P with the other Parliaments (Raymond Davis, Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins, and Calvin Simon), and retired in 2011.
      16. Calvin Simon (vocals, percussion; May 22, 1942 - January 6, 2022). Calvin Simon was an original member of The Parliaments, before leaving in 1977. In the nineties, he formed Original P with the other Parliaments (Raymond Davis, Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins, and Calvin Simon), and retired in 2005. He was the owner of an independent record label.
      17. "Shady Grady" Thomas (vocals; born January 5, 1941). In the late 1950s, "Shady Grady" Thomas started as bass vocalist for The Parliaments. When Parliament members moved from Newark to Plainfield, New Jersey to "conk" hair at The Silk Palace, The Parliaments began a friendly rivalry with local Doo-Wop group Sammy Campbell And Thee Del-Larks, who featured bass vocalist Raymond Davis. "Shady Grady" Thomas persuaded Raymond Davis to take over as bass vocalist in The Parliaments, which enabled "Shady Grady" Thomas to move to baritone. "Shady Grady" Thomas (along with Bernie Worrell) is responsible for the addition of drummer Jerome "Bigfoot" Brailey. After "Shady Grady" Thomas, Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins and Calvin Simon left P-Funk in 1977, "Shady Grady" Thomas formed his own band called The Shady Bunch. Word of "Shady Grady" Thomas' drummer Dennis Chambers and bassist Rodney "Skeet" Curtis got back to George Clinton, and Dennis Chambers and Rodney "Skeet" Curtis were invited, and joined Parliament-Funkadelic. After "Shady Grady" Thomas' brief return to The P-Funk Allstars in the nineties, "Shady Grady" Thomas cofounded Original P with original Parliaments (Raymond Davis, Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins, and Calvin Simon). "Shady Grady" Thomas is the leader of Original P.
      Notable Parliament-Funkadelic Songs 📻:
      "Maggot Brain" (Funkadelic 1971)
      "Up For The Down Stroke" (Parliament 1974)
      "Chocolate City" (Parliament 1975)
      "P-Funk (Wants To Get Funked Up)" (Parliament 1975)
      "Give Up The Funk (Tear The Roof Off The Sucker)" (Parliament 1975)
      "Do That Stuff" (Parliament 1976)
      "I'd Rather Be With You" (Bootsy's Rubber Band 1976)
      "Bop Gun (Endangered Species)" (Parliament 1977)
      "Funkentelechy" (Parliament), 1977
      "The Pinocchio Theory" (Bootsy's Rubber Band), 1977
      "Aqua Boogie (A Psychoalphadiscobetabioaquadoloop)" (Parliament), 1978
      "Bootzilla" (Bootsy's Rubber Band), 1978
      "Flash Light" (Parliament), 1978
      "One Nation Under A Groove" (Funkadelic), 1978
      "(Not Just) Knee Deep" (Funkadelic), 1979
      "The Electric Spanking Of War Babies" (Funkadelic), 1981
      Parliament-Funkadelic Spin-Off Bands, Artists And Groups 📝:
      Parlet
      Praxis
      Quazar
      Mutiny
      Zillatron
      Well Red
      Hardware
      Lige Curry
      Godmoma
      Mico Wave
      Eddie Hazel
      Sweat Band
      Eramus Hall
      Starr Cullars
      Chops Horns
      Space Cadets
      Maceo Parker
      Bernie Worrell
      Phillipe Wynne
      P-Funk All Stars
      Science Faxtion
      Bootsy's Rubber Band
      Heavy Metal Funkason
      Andre "Foxxe" Williams
      Garry "Diaperman" Shider
      Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins
      INCorporated Thang Band
      The Brides Of Funkenstein
      Bootsy's New Rubber Band
      Jimmy G And The Tackheads
      Fred Wesley And The Horny Horns
      Tal Ross (aka Detrimental Vasoline)
      Colonel Claypool's Bucket Of Bernie Brains
      Parliament-Funkadelic Albums (*Parliament) 📀:
      Funkadelic (1970)
      *Osmium (1970)
      Free Your Mind... And Your Ass Will Follow (1970)
      Maggot Brain (1971)
      America Eats Its Young (1972)
      Cosmic Slop (1973)
      *Up For The Down Stroke (1974)
      Standing On The Verge Of Getting It On (1974)
      *Chocolate City (1975)
      *Mothership Connection (1975)
      Let's Take It To The Stage (1975)
      *The Clones Of Dr Funkenstein (1976)
      Tales Of Kidd Funkadelic (1976)
      Hardcore Jollies (1976)
      *Funkentelechy vs The Placebo Syndrome (1977)
      *Motor Booty Affair (1978)
      One Nation Under A Groove (1978)
      Uncle Jam Wants You (1979)
      *Gloryhallastoopid (1979)
      Connections & Disconnections (1980)
      *Trombipulation (1980)
      The Electric Spanking Of War Babies (1981)
      (The Life Of The) Funkshipz Captain (Funk To The Max) w/ Octavepussy (2004)
      By Way Of The Drum (2007)
      Toys (2008)
      First Ya Gotta Shake The Gate (2014)
      *Medicaid Fraud Dogg (2018)
      George Clinton Albums 📀:
      Computer Games (1982)
      You Shouldn't-Nuf Bit Fish (1983)
      Some of My Best Jokes Are Friends (1985)
      R&B Skeletons In The Closet (1986)
      The Cinderella Theory (1989)
      Go Fer Yer Funk (1992)
      Plush Funk (1992)
      P Is The Funk (1993)
      Hey, Man, Smell My Finger (1993)
      Testing Positive 4 The Funk (1993)
      A Fifth Of Funk (1993)
      Dope Dogs (1994)
      T.A.P.O.A.F.O.M. (1996)
      How Late Do U Have 2BB4UR Absent? (2005)
      George Clinton And His Gangsters Of Love (2008)
      Parlet Albums 📀:
      Pleasure Principle (1978)
      Invasion Of Thee Booty Snatchers (1979)
      Play Me Or Trade Me (1980)
      The Brides Of Funkenstein Albums 📀:
      Funk Or Walk (1978)
      Never Buy Texas From A Cowboy (1979)
      Live at the Howard Theatre (1994)
      INCorporated Thang Band Albums 📀:
      Lifestyles Of The Roach And Famous (1988)
      Lige Curry Albums 📀:
      An Introspective (2002)
      4-Track Treasure Part II "And It Don't Stop Now!! (2002)
      Tal Ross (aka Detrimental Vasoline) Albums 📀:
      Giant Shirley (1995)
      Garry "Diaperman" Shider Albums 📀:
      Diaperman Goes Starchild (2002)
      Diaperman, The Second Coming (2002)
      Chops Horns Albums 📀:
      Chops (1984)
      Blowout (2005)
      Andre "Foxxe" Williams Albums 📀:
      I'm Funk And I'm Proud (1994)
      The Foxxe Files: A Dossier On Sex & Animals (2001)
      Myllenium (2002)
      Andre Foxxe & The Psychedelic Ghetto Pimpz (2004)
      Starr Cullars Albums 📀:
      Starr Cullars (2007)
      Michael "Kidd Funkadelic" Hampton Albums 📀:
      Under The 6 w/ Slave Master
      The Domestic Grip w/ Heavy Metal Funkason (2002)
      Quazar Albums 📀:
      Funk 'N' Roll (Dancin In The Funkshine) (1978)
      P-Funk All Stars Albums 📀:
      Urban Dancefloor Guerillas (1983)
      Mico Wave Albums 📀:
      Cookin' From The Inside Out!!! (1987)
      Jimmy G And The Tackheads Albums 📀:
      Federation Of Tackheads (1985)
      Well Red Albums 📀:
      Respect Due (1988)
      Space Cadets Albums 📀:
      Space Cadets (1981)
      Godmoma Albums 📀:
      Godmoma Is Here (1981)
      Eramus Hall Albums 📀:
      Your Love Is My Desire (1980)
      Gohead (1984)
      Phillipe Wynne Albums 📀:
      Wynne Jammin' (1980)
      Swaet Band Albums 📀:
      Sweat Band (1980)
      Mutiny Albums 📀:
      Mutiny On The Mamaship (1979)
      Fred Wesley And The Horny Horns Albums 📀:
      A Blow For Me, A Toot For You (1977)
      Say Blow By Blow Backwards (1979)
      The Final Blow (1994)
      ****CONTINUE BELOW****

    • @IceManLikeGervin
      @IceManLikeGervin ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins Albums 📀:
      A Whole Nother Thang (1976)
      Radio Active (1978)
      A Whole Nother Radio Active Thang (1994)
      Bernie Worrell Albums 📀:
      All The Woo In The World (1978)
      Funk Of Ages (1990)
      Blacktronic Science (1993)
      Pieces Of Woo: The Other Side (1993)
      Free Agent: A Spaced Odyssey (1997)
      The Big Eyeball In The Sky w/ Colonel Claypool's Bucket Of Bernie Brains (2004)
      Improvisczario (2007)
      Christmas Woo (2009)
      I Don't Even Know (2010)
      Standards (2011)
      BWO Is Landing w/ The Bernie Worrell Orchestra (2013)
      Elevation: The Upper Air (2014)
      Retrospectives (2016)
      Bootsy Collins Albums 📀:
      Stretchin' Out In Bootsy's Rubber Band w/ Booty's Rubber Band (1976)
      Ahh... The Name Is Bootsy, Baby! w/ Booty's Rubber Band (1977)
      Bootsy? Player Of The Year w/ Booty's Rubber Band (1978)
      This Boot Is Made For Fonk-N w/ Booty's Rubber Band (1979)
      Ultra Wave (1980)
      The One Giveth, The Count Taketh Away (1982)
      What's Bootsy Doin'? (1988)
      Jungle Bass w/ Booty's Rubber Band (1990)
      Future Of The Funk EP w/ Ground Zero (1991)
      Third Eye Open w/ Hardware (1992)
      Blasters Of The Universe w/ Booty's New Rubber Band (1994)
      Lord Of The Harvest (1994)
      Sacrifist (1994)
      Keepin' Dah Funk Alive 4-1995 w/ Booty's New Rubber Band (1995)
      Fresh Outta 'P' University (1997)
      Play With Bootsy (2002)
      Christmas Is 4 Ever (2006)
      Living on Another Frequency w/ Science Faxtion (2007)
      The Official BootLeggedBootsyCD (2009)
      Tha Funk Capital Of The World (2011)
      World Wide Funk (2017)
      The Power Of The One (2020)
      Nobody's Perfect Experience (2021)
      Eddie Hazel Albums (*Posthumous Album) 📀:
      Game, Dames And Guitar Thangs (1977)
      *A Night For Jimi Hendrix Live At "Lingerie Club" (1990)
      *Jams From The Heart (1994)
      *Rest In P EP (1994)
      *At Home With Family (2006)
      *The Basement Rehearsals (2014)
      Maceo Parker Albums 📀:
      Doing Their Own Thing w/ Maceo & All The King's Men (1970)
      Funky Music Machine w/ Maceo & All The King's Men (1972)
      Us (1974)
      For All The King's Men (1989)
      Roots Revisited (1990)
      Mo' Roots (1991)
      Life On Planet Groove (1992)
      Southern Exposure (1993)
      Maceo (1994)
      Funk Overload (1998)
      Dial: M-A-C-E-O (2000)
      Made By Maceo (2003)
      My First Name Is Maceo (2004)
      School's In! (2005)
      Roots & Grooves (2005)
      Soul Classics (2012)
      Life On Planet Groove - Revisited (2018)
      Soul Food: Cooking With Maceo (2020)
      Some good Parliament-Funkadelic songs 🎶: Mommy What's A Funkadelic?, Maggot Brain, One Nation Under A Groove, Nappy Dugout, (Not Just) Knee Deep, Smokey, I'll Bet You, Loose Booty, Into You, What Is Soul, Good Old Music, Sexy Ways, Balance, Wake Up, P#ssy, Who Says A Funk Band Can't Play Rock?!, I Got A Thing You Got A Thing, Everybody's Got A Thing, Uncle Jam, Open Our Eyes, Qualify And Satisfy, Funky Dollar Bill, Can't Shake It Loose, Free Your Mind And Your Ass Will Follow, As Good As I Can Feel, Can Stand The Strain, Some More, Trash-A-Go-Go, Electro-Cuties, Funk Gets Stronger (Part I), Funk Gets Stronger (Killer Millimeter Longer Version), Whole Lot Of BS, Friday Night August 14th, Eulogy And Light, Fish Chips And Sweat, Brettino's Bounce, Icka Prick, Shockwaves, I Wanna Know If It's Good To You?, Field Maneuvers, Can You Get To That, Super Stupid, I Miss My Baby, America Eats Its Young, Groovallegiance, Biological Speculation, That Was My Girl, You And Your Folks Me And My Folks, Foot Soldiers (Star-Spangled Funky), The Electric Spanking Of War Babies, Adolescent Funk, Hardcore Jollies, If You Got Funk You Got Style, Wars Of Armageddon, You Hit The Nail On The Head, If You Don't Like The Effects Don't Produce The Cause, A Joyful Process, Everybody Is Going To Make It This Time, We Hurt Too, You Can't Miss What You Can't Measure, Let's Make It Last, March To The Witch's Castle, No Compute, This Broken Heart, Red Hot Momma, I'll Stay, Alice In My Fantasies, Jimmy's Got A Little Bit Of B!tch In Him, Good To Your Earhole, Better By The Pound, Atmosphere, Be My Beach, No Head No Backstage Pass, Let's Take It To The Stage, Get Off Your Ass And Jam, I Owe You Something Good Stuffs & Things, The Song Is Familiar, You Scared The Lovin' Outta Me, Soul Mate, Let's Take It To The People, Undisco Kidd, I'm Never Gonna Tell It, Some Fresh Delic, Tales Of Kidd Funkadelic (Opusdelite Years), How Do Yeaw View You?, Cholly (Funk Getting Ready To Roll!), By Way Of The Drum, Chant (Think It Ain't Illegal Yet!), Primal Instinct, YaDaDaDa, PE Squad, Lunchmeataphobia (Think! It Ain't Illegal Yet!), Hit It And Quit It, On Back In Our Minds, Freak Of The Week, Sunshine Of Your Love, Promentalshitbackwashpsychosis Enema Squad (The Doo Doo Chasers), Holly Wants To Go To California, Slide On In (2nd Tune Olympic), Philmore, Standing On The Verge Of Getting It, Nose Bleed, Oh I, Comin' Round The Mountain, Take Your Dead Ass Home! (Say Som'n Nasty), Butt-To-Buttresuscitation, Good Thoughts Bad Thoughts, Artists United Against Apartheid Sun City (George Clinton) and 2 Dollars & 2 Dimes.
      Fun Fact 🕵🏾‍♂: George Clinton was inducted as an honorary member of Omega Psi Phi on July 30, 2020. His 1982 song: Atomic Dog, is Omega Psi Phi's official theme song.

    • @honeycombz34
      @honeycombz34 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Wow! Thank you!

    • @IceManLikeGervin
      @IceManLikeGervin 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@honeycombz34 You're welcome 😁

  • @jamesgreenhow108
    @jamesgreenhow108 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The song is amazing....and the video is kinda creepy. But there are live versions of this classic available. The best is from the "HARDCORE JOLLIES" album. Even though the lead guitarist on this studio version of Cosmic Slop was LEAD VOCALIST Gary Shider. The headliner of FUNKADELIC was the legendary Eddie Hazel. Classic solo's from Hazel I will give you my Top 10. #1 Maggot Brain (studio version) 2. Super Stupid 3. Red Hot Mama 4. Miss Lucifer's Love 5. I Want You ( From his first solo album) 6. I wanna Know If its Good To You 7. California Dreamin' 8. Coming Around The Mountain 9. I Owe You Something Good 10. P. U. S. S. Y. 11. Free Your Mind 12. I Bet You 13. You and Your Folks 14. Hit It and Quit It 15. Good Thoughts Bad Thoughts. Enjoy the Journey

  • @iamPROTOTYPE
    @iamPROTOTYPE ปีที่แล้ว +3

    da baby wore diapers as a gimmick got ppl talking. so did they