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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Funkadelic for space rock/ heavy prog?
    Posted: August 26 2008 at 22:46

This may be a long shot but it seams to me that they have at least some chance of qualifying. After listening to them for a long time I have decided that many of the aspects of a progressive rock band can be found in their albums. Fantastic musicianship, "epic" tracks drenched in atmospheric soundscapes, conceptual albums/ reacuring musical concepts and great history behind the bands evolution.

It is true that they eventually became more of a dance group later on with Parliament but their origins are truly progressive.

If you are unfamiliar with the group check out the album "Maggot brain" to hear probably their most progressive work.

What do you say?

 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 26 2008 at 23:22
Welcome TaoJones!

"Ow, we got the funk, give up the funk"


I was thinking about this topic just the other day.  I used to listen to P-Funk a lot (very big on it, an old username of mine was based on P-Funk), and I think they were influenced by Prog at one stage (when they went more rock).  I wish I still had my "Maggot Brain" album, that certainly has psyche qualities.  There was a great documentary I saw on Parliament-Funkadelic on youtube before (darn, it's gone, was useful for the history of the band).

Here's a youtube clip: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dh3bleXWaCk&feature=related

Here's an interesting topic:


Edited by Logan - August 26 2008 at 23:25
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 15:32

I would say yes. love P-Funk, and there are definitely some Prog influences in their music, their thematic elements, and their theatrics. The first 4 Funkadelic albums including Maggot Brain and Free Your Mind... were incredible. George Clinton himself is knowledgable when it comes to Prog. I recall him answering a King Crimson question on Rock & Roll Jeopardy (or is question an answer?), and in the History of Rock & Roll documentary he cited Prog as an influence in the use of synth as the bass.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 15:42
Please guys Funkadelic  IS FUNK not Prog.
 
Funkadelic enters un the category of R&B!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
BTW: Ansering a Jeopardy question about King Crimson doesn't qualify for Prog artist neither the use od synths.
 
We are crossing the line each day more.
 
Who's next.?....KC & The Sunshine Band? Or maybe Earth Wind & Fire? 
 
Iván


Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - September 05 2008 at 15:45
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 15:47
Time for a new genre then - progressive r&b ;-)
Websites I work with:

http://www.progressor.net
http://www.houseofprog.com

My profile on Mixcloud:
https://www.mixcloud.com/haukevind/
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 15:53
P-Funk is more than funk.  If only that documentary was still up on youtube, it gives a very good overview (of course r&b is a strong component).  They had what I would call a progressive funk-rock mixed with psyche phase.  I think there are  a lot of great progressive funk bands -- especially jazz-funk rock  (wish prog funk was, if not a category here, funk was a tag here).

Check out this live performance from '79.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TAn0DU3qcuo&feature=related (sure it's bluesy)

Here's a cool one: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=99pY1wcXTh4


Edited by Logan - September 05 2008 at 16:01
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 16:05
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

P-Funk is more than funk.  If only that documentary was still up on youtube, it gives a very good overview (of course r&b is a strong component).  They had what I would call a progressive funk-rock mixed with psyche phase.  I think there are  a lot of great progressive funk bands -- especially jazz-funk rock  (wish prog funk was, if not a category here, funk was a tag here).

Check out this live performance from '79.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TAn0DU3qcuo&feature=related (sure it's bluesy)
 
Logan, I'm absolutely familiar with Funkadelic, I have
 
  1. Free your Mind and your Ass will Follow
  2. Funkadelic
  3. Maggot Brain
  4. America Eats it's Young
  5. Lat's Take it to the Stage
  6. Uncle Jam Wants You
  7. Who's a Funkafelic

No traces of Prog, it's Funk with Psyche reminiscences, but nothing more, it's pure R&B. We are not Funk Archives, We are not Jazxz Archives, We are not Pop Archives, we are Prog Archives for God's sake, and each day we're abandoning everything Prog means.

There's already people talking aboout Prog Rap for God's sake.
 
Iván


Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - September 05 2008 at 16:06
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 16:13
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

P-Funk is more than funk.  If only that documentary was still up on youtube, it gives a very good overview (of course r&b is a strong component).  They had what I would call a progressive funk-rock mixed with psyche phase.  I think there are  a lot of great progressive funk bands -- especially jazz-funk rock  (wish prog funk was, if not a category here, funk was a tag here).

Check out this live performance from '79.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TAn0DU3qcuo&feature=related (sure it's bluesy)
 
Logan, I'm absolutely familiar with Funkadelic, I have
 
  1. Free your Mind and your Ass will Follow
  2. Funkadelic
  3. Maggot Brain
  4. America Eats it's Young
  5. Lat's Take it to the Stage
  6. Uncle Jam Wants You
  7. Who's a Funkafelic

No traces of Prog, it's Funk with Psyche reminiscences, but nothing more, it's pure R&B. We are not Funk Archives, We are not Jazxz Archives, We are not Pop Archives, we are Prog Archives for God's sake, and each day we're abandoning everything Prog means.

There's already people talking aboout Prog Rap for God's sake.
 
Iván


Okay.  Some albums seem prog related to me, but I have a fairly broad idea of progressive rock.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 16:14
 
Billboard.com
1971 Listen%20Now! Maggot Brain Black Albums 14
1971 Listen%20Now! Maggot Brain Pop Albums 108
1990 Listen%20Now! Maggot Brain Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums 92
 
Billboard.com
1970 Listen%20Now! Funkadelic Black Albums 8
1970 Listen%20Now! Funkadelic Pop Albums 126
1976 Listen%20Now! Funkadelic Black Albums 58
 
Billboard.com
1971 Listen%20Now! Maggot Brain Black Albums 14
1971 Listen%20Now! Maggot Brain Pop Albums 108
1990 Listen%20Now! Maggot Brain Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums 92
 
 
Billboard.com
1972 Listen%20Now! America Eats Its Young Black Albums 22
1972 Listen%20Now! America Eats Its Young Pop Albums 123
 
Nuff' said:
 
Iván


Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - September 05 2008 at 16:19
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 16:50
As I don't use the billboard charts for reference (well once I did), I'm not sure how useful they are for Prog and Prog-Related classification here.  I'd have to do a comparative analysis (look up popular prog, prog-related and proto-prog artists in the archives and see how they have been classified).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 17:18
Most of them have received awards for Rock, some for POP (Some of this bands are milsleabeled or Billboard used the generic term PÖP) but the fact that Funkadelic is R&B is undeniable, the problem os the R&B not the POP because this guys call POP to everything.
 
As a fact I don't believe Funkadelic is POP, that is silly, but neither is Prog or rrelated IMO, just Good Funk or R&B with some Psyche hints as The 5th Dimension, nothing else..
 
Iván


Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - September 05 2008 at 17:21
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 17:23
Okay, first one I thought of, Supertramp (taken from the same site you got those from -- all music)

1975Listen%20Now! Crime Of The Century
Pop Albums 38
1976Listen%20Now! Crisis? What Crisis?
Pop Albums 44
1977Listen%20Now! Even In The Quietest Moments...
Pop Albums 16
1978Listen%20Now! Supertramp
Pop Albums158
1979Listen%20Now! Breakfast In America
Pop Albums 1
1980Listen%20Now! Paris
Pop Albums 8
1982Listen%20Now! ...famous last words...
Pop Albums 5

Only mentions them as pop.

Let's try Genesis since it's your favourite band:

1974Listen%20Now! From Genesis To Revelation
Pop Albums170
1974Listen%20Now! Genesis Live
Pop Albums105
1974Listen%20Now! Selling England By The Pound
Pop Albums 70
1975Listen%20Now!The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway
Pop Albums 41
1976Listen%20Now!A Trick Of The Tail
Pop Albums 31
1977Listen%20Now! Seconds Out
Pop Albums 47
1977Listen%20Now! Wind & Wuthering
Pop Albums 26
1978Listen%20Now! And Then There Were Three...
Pop Albums 14
1980Listen%20Now! Duke
Pop Albums 11
1981Listen%20Now! Abacab
Pop Albums 7
1982  Three Sides Live
Pop Albums 10
1983Listen%20Now! Genesis
Pop Albums 9

Pop. Same for individual albums I looked up.

So not sure of the significance (either of pop or black albums)

Looks up Frank Zappa:

1967Listen%20Now! Absolutely Free
Pop Albums 41
1967Listen%20Now! Freak Out!
Pop Albums130
1968Listen%20Now! Lumpy Gravy
Pop Albums159
1968Listen%20Now! We're Only In It For The Money
Pop Albums 30
1969Listen%20Now! Cruising with Ruben & The Jets
Pop Albums110
1969Listen%20Now! Hot Rats
Pop Albums173
1969  Mothermania/The Best Of The Mothers Pop Albums151
1969Listen%20Now! Uncle Meat
Pop Albums 43
1970Listen%20Now! Burnt Weeny Sandwich
Pop Albums 94
1970Listen%20Now! Chunga's Revenge
Pop Albums119
1970Listen%20Now! Weasels Ripped My Flesh
Pop Albums189
1971Listen%20Now! Frank Zappa's 200 Motels
Pop Albums 59
1971Listen%20Now!The Mothers/Fillmore East-June 1971
Pop Albums 38
1972Listen%20Now! Just Another Band From L.A.
Pop Albums 85
1972Listen%20Now! Waka/Jawaka - Hot Rats
Pop Albums152
 etc. 

Well I'll give you that Frank Zappa, Genesis, And Supertramp aren't black.

Now looking up someone who is black:

1969Listen%20Now! In A Silent Way
Black Albums 40
1969Listen%20Now! In A Silent Way
Jazz Albums 3
1969Listen%20Now! In A Silent Way
Pop Albums134
1969  Miles Davis' Greatest Hits Jazz Albums 4
1970Listen%20Now! Bitches Brew
Black Albums 4
1970Listen%20Now! Bitches Brew
Jazz Albums 1
1970Listen%20Now! Bitches Brew
Pop Albums 35
1971Listen%20Now! Miles Davis At Fillmore
Jazz Albums 1
1971Listen%20Now! Miles Davis At Fillmore
Pop Albums123
1971Listen%20Now!A Tribute To Jack Johnson
Black Albums 47
1971Listen%20Now!A Tribute To Jack Johnson
Jazz Albums 4
1971Listen%20Now!A Tribute To Jack Johnson
Pop Albums159
1972Listen%20Now! Live-Evil
Pop Albums125
1972Listen%20Now! On The Corner
Jazz Albums 1
1972Listen%20Now! On The Corner
Pop Albums156
1973  Basic Miles - The Classic Performances Of Miles Davis Jazz Albums 21
1973  Basic Miles - The Classic Performances Of Miles Davis Pop Albums189
1973Listen%20Now! Live-Evil
Jazz Albums 4
1974Listen%20Now! Big Fun
Jazz Albums 6
1974Listen%20Now! Big Fun
Pop Albums

And another:

1968  Are You Experienced?
Black Albums 10
1968  Are You Experienced?
Pop Albums 5
1968Listen%20Now! Axis: Bold As Love
Black Albums 6
1968Listen%20Now! Axis: Bold As Love
Pop Albums 3
1968Listen%20Now! Electric Ladyland
Black Albums 5
1968Listen%20Now! Electric Ladyland
Pop Albums 1
1968  Get That Feeling Pop Albums 75
1969Listen%20Now! Smash Hits
Black Albums 22
1969Listen%20Now! Smash Hits
Pop Albums 6
1970Listen%20Now! Band Of Gypsys
Black Albums 14
1970Listen%20Now! Band Of Gypsys
Pop Albums 5

So out of that list he came up with two "black" albums.  Now I'll try to think of somebody who is black, but sings white -- lol.

1962  What Kind Of Fool Am I And Other Show-Stoppers Pop Albums 14
1963Listen%20Now! As Long As She Needs Me
Pop Albums 73
1963  Sammy Davis Jr. At The Cocoanut Grove Pop Albums 96
1964Listen%20Now! Sammy Davis Jr. Salutes The Stars Of The London Palladium
Pop Albums139
1964Listen%20Now!The Shelter Of Your Arms
Pop Albums 26
1965Listen%20Now! Our Shining Hour
Pop Albums141
1965Listen%20Now! Sammy's Back On Broadway
Pop Albums104
1969Listen%20Now! I've Gotta Be Me
Pop Albums 24
1969  Sweet Charity Pop Albums 72
1972  Portrait Of Sammy Davis, Jr. Pop Albums128
1972  Sammy Davis Jr. Now Pop Albums 11
1972Listen%20Now!The People Tree
Pop Singles 92


Ah yes, so black is a style/ genre, but can it not be be prog if classified that way (obviously the pop is meaningless as it just mean popular music)?  

Sorry, the charts are pretty  meaningless to me.

Edit: You got in as I was preparing my post. Not every P-Funk album at the charts is listed as R&B, and I'm not sure that prog-related (or even progressive rock) rock can not be strongly R&B under this site's purview.




Edited by Logan - September 05 2008 at 17:30
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 17:33
As I told you, the POP moniker is silly, my objection towards Funkadelic is not based in being POP because as I said before, they apply this term to almost anything and as I also said before I don't believe Funkaedic is POP.
.
But R&B they are, FUNK they are that's undeniable (BTW: IMO Supertramp is mainly POP).
 
And about Black albums, all the R&B, Soul, Gospel, etc albums were called Black Albums from 1969 to 1978 (If I'm not wrong about the year), stupid term but that was how it was used.
 
Iván
 
Yep I was right about the year:
 
Quote Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums is a chart published by Billboard magazine that ranks R&B and hip hop albums based on sales compiled by Nielsen SoundScan. The name of the chart was changed from Top R&B Albums in 1999. The chart debuted in the magazine as Hot R&B LPs in 1965 and were also called Top Black Albums; from 1969-1978 they were identified as Soul charts. The Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums tracks the albums of quiet storm, urban contemporary, soul music R&B, new jack swing, hip hop, and sometimes house music artists.
 
 


Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - September 05 2008 at 17:39
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 17:38

Wow! Well done, Ivan! OK, maybe P-Funk does not belong in the Archives because there is no sub-genre yet that exists for which they would classify. However,  if you insist on pigeonholing them strictly within the Funk/R&B genre, then you must admit that there was no band nor has there ever been a band like P-Funk. They funked harder than all the others, and they funked more progressively than all the others, no pun intended, including KC and EWF. Besides, no one said anything about adding the latter two to the Archives.

P-Funk's music was every bit as explorational as it was danceable. Don't fault them for being heavy on the one because they got jazzy and improvisational when it counted. Also, their thematic elements, characters, and science fiction/ space mythology would make Zeuhl Heads and Space Rockers proud. Some examples are the Children of Production, Starchild, Dr. Funkenstein, the Bop Gun, the Flashlight, the Thumpasaurus People, Sir Nose D'Voidoffunk, and of course the Mothership. That's a lot of conceptualism for a strictly Funk/ R&B band.
 
The musicians who have played with P-Funk have been top notch, especially Eddie Hazel, Bernie Worrell, Bootsy Collins, Dennis Chambers, Michael Hampton, Maceo Parker, and Fred Wesley.  Also, have you ever seen P-Funk live?  They would outlast a lot of jam bands. I saw P-Funk in 1996 in Austin, and they played an almost 4 hour set!
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 17:49
Originally posted by jimidom jimidom wrote:

Wow! Well done, Ivan! OK, maybe P-Funk does not belong in the Archives because there is no sub-genre yet that exists for which they would classify. However,  if you insist on pigeonholing them strictly within the Funk/R&B genre, then you must admit that there was no band nor has there ever been a band like P-Funk. They funked harder than all the others, and they funked more progressively than all the others, no pun intended, including KC and EWF. Besides, no one said anything about adding the latter two to the Archives.

P-Funk's music was every bit as explorational as it was danceable. Don't fault them for being heavy on the one because they got jazzy and improvisational when it counted. Also, their thematic elements, characters, and science fiction/ space mythology would make Zeuhl Heads and Space Rockers proud. Some examples are the Children of Production, Starchild, Dr. Funkenstein, the Bop Gun, the Flashlight, the Thumpasaurus People, Sir Nose D'Voidoffunk, and of course the Mothership. That's a lot of conceptualism for a strictly Funk/ R&B band.
 
The musicians who have played with P-Funk have been top notch, especially Eddie Hazel, Bernie Worrell, Bootsy Collins, Dennis Chambers, Michael Hampton, Maceo Parker, and Fred Wesley.  Also, have you ever seen P-Funk live?  They would outlast a lot of jam bands. I saw P-Funk in 1996 in Austin, and they played an almost 4 hour set!
 
 
 
Have you seen the list of Funkadelic albums I have?....It's some posts above, so there's no need to explain me how good they are as a band or as musicians individually, but that doesn't quualify them for a Prog site.
 
They can be the funkiest ever (as a fact they were) but that's not Progressive Rock, the fact that they were awesome, explorative and whatever, doesn't mean they were Prog. You seem to believe that if they are good, they should be added, that's not truth.
 
A few days ago I added a band that are simple clones of another band, I see almost no artistic merit in that, but they are Prog, so not original or even bad bands can be Prog..
 
I believe Fleetwood Mac (The poppy Buckingham & Nicks era) is one of the best bands ever, but that doesn't mean we are going to add them.
 
"if you insist on pigeonholing them strictly within the Funk/R&B genre"
 
Pigeonholing them as Funk???? Please read their name, they are called FUNKadelic!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
BTW: Earth Wind & Fire has been proposed before, and the inclusion of Funkadelic would be the perfect excuse to add them.
 
Iván


Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - September 05 2008 at 17:52
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 18:38
I've got to side with Ivan (though not nearly as ardent in my position) on this one. despite having spacey improvs on several albums, despite having George Clinton site ELP as an influence, their music is pretty straight forward funk. Yes, they are the masters of funk. Yes it is the tastiest, thickest and most artistic funk around. And I would argue that a Funkadelic/Parliament live show is a progressive experience, much like a GWAR concert is, entertaining beyond the scope of the music.  But the addition of Funkadelic to PA would be a huge stretch in the definition of progressive.  Heck, we already have Tool and the whole electronic sub-genre stretching it paper thin. Lets pull in the reigns a little.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 18:51
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

As I told you, the POP moniker is silly, my objection towards Funkadelic is not based in being POP because as I said before, they apply this term to almost anything and as I also said before I don't believe Funkaedic is POP.

Ivan: Just to clarify, you didn't say that in your post where you used the billboard charts, and that's what I was referring to.  You just said "'nuff said."  It wasn't for me becuase I didn't know the significance of labels there or how good a guide it is for judging the prog or prog-related worthiness of a band for PA.  I put the EDIT to indicate that I was preparing the post before you responded with the clarifications (took me more than five minutes to do that post, so I didn't see the appropriate post until after I posted).  You also had to edit yours in relation to my edit.  Though I know we've discussed the charts before, and how useful they are for evaluation here, I don't find their labelling very much help.  Others, seeing pop, would have assumed that it's pop music, and that was part of your argument.  Clearly the band was innolved in the greater rock music scene
.
But R&B they are, FUNK they are that's undeniable (BTW: IMO Supertramp is mainly POP).

It is funk, and more, and not just a case of funk, funk, funk and mo' funk.
 
And about Black albums, all the R&B, Soul, Gospel, etc albums were called Black Albums from 1969 to 1978 (If I'm not wrong about the year), stupid term but that was how it was used.
 
Iván
 
Yep I was right about the year:
 
Quote Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums is a chart published by Billboard magazine that ranks R&B and hip hop albums based on sales compiled by Nielsen SoundScan. The name of the chart was changed from Top R&B Albums in 1999. The chart debuted in the magazine as Hot R&B LPs in 1965 and were also called Top Black Albums; from 1969-1978 they were identified as Soul charts. The Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums tracks the albums of quiet storm, urban contemporary, soul music R&B, new jack swing, hip hop, and sometimes house music artists.
 
 


I'll quote my  EDIT when I saw your post:
"Edit: You got in as I was preparing my post. Not every P-Funk album at the charts is listed as R&B, and I'm not sure that prog-related (or even progressive rock) rock can not be strongly R&B under this site's purview."

Certianly many progressive bands in the archives have a funk element, and R&B.  It is primarily Funk of course, but I'm not convinced that a funk band can not be sufficiently on the progressive rock side, or Prog Related.  I think they're sufficiently funk-rock, and progressive, to be considerable.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 21:13
Ivan in black, Logan in red
 
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:



You also had to edit yours in relation to my edit. 

No Logan, I edited my post at:  Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - Today at 16:19

You posted your reply at: Posted: Today at 16:50
 
Others, seeing pop, would have assumed that it's pop music, and that was part of your argument.  Clearly the band was innolved in the greater rock music scene

 
NO Logan, I am passionate in my replies, but I never played a double game...Follow my posts... since my first post I never said Funkadelic is POP, because I don't believe they are POP at all, if you want I quote my first post:
 
Iván wrote:
Quote Please guys Funkadelic  IS FUNK not Prog.
 
Funkadelic enters un the category of R&B!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
BTW: Answering a Jeopardy question about King Crimson doesn't qualify for Prog artist neither the use of synths.
 
We are crossing the line each day more.
 
Who's next.?....KC & The Sunshine Band? Or maybe Earth Wind & Fire? 
 
Iván
 
Did I ever said POP?  Please accuse me of being passionate, stubborn, but not or lying, I never lie or play double games.
 
As you see, from the start my objection was because they are a R&B / Funk band; giving them an award as POP band was like giving "The Crest of the Knave" by Jethro Tull a  Grammy.in the Heavy Metal category LOL
 
BTW: I edit almost every post (like thisone) because I make a lot of typos or gramatical mistakes that I correct.

It is funk, and more, and not just a case of funk, funk, funk and mo' funk.
 
But it's Funk, that's my point, and Funk is not Prog.
 
"Edit: You got in as I was preparing my post. Not every P-Funk album at the charts is listed as R&B, and I'm not sure that prog-related (or even progressive rock) rock can not be strongly R&B under this site's purview."
But in this case we are talking about a primarilly and almost exclusively FUNK band

Certianly many progressive bands in the archives have a funk element, and R&B.  It is primarily Funk of course, but I'm not convinced that a funk band can not be sufficiently on the progressive rock side, or Prog Related.  I think they're sufficiently funk-rock, and progressive, to be considerable.

There's a difference between being Prog and having some Funk element, than having a band called FUNKadelic which is almost exclusively FUNK.

Iván

PS: I changed the last part of your reply to red, in order to separete what you wrote from my reply.




Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - September 05 2008 at 21:21
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 21:54
If Prog is about pushing the boundaries, what's wrong with discussing whether such a band as Funkadelic might be prog.
Ivan, one thing about the music charts is that generally speaking, if a band's main audience was black, it was listed in the R n B / Black charts (sometimes referred to as "Urban" now). And unless it really sold enough to get into the mainstream charts, that's where it stayed.
I'd like to hear from others ( not to be mean, just to see if there are more than two strongly held and knowledgeable views among PA denizens).
I do recall reading reviews about the early albums that mentioned Hendrix, Sun Ra, Psychedelia, rock / proto-metal influences and hues in the mix that Clinton put together. Maybe it's just that as "white" folk, we are too quick to dismiss anything rhythmic ( I mean in the shake your booty, dance your ass off sense, not the 11/8, or 7/4) as somehow simplistic and not deserving of recognition for the pushing out of boundaries that some of the best of them did accomplish. Heck, If Miles Davis can be here, I'd like to see an analysis of James Brown's 60s output and compare the rhythmic, melodic, contrapuntal and simple and complex interplay displayed by his music as opposed to many of our more "basic" proggers. (now if I can remember where I dug that nuclear bunker)
"Here I am talking to some of the smartest people in the world and I didn't even notice,” Lieutenant Columbo, episode The Bye-Bye Sky-High I.Q. Murder Case.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 05 2008 at 21:59
 ^ there's no doubt James Brown's band was extraordinary and could probably play almost anyone under the table, but until this becomes a progressive music site, he would be truly bizarre addition (and even then)


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