Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Clones of Dr. Funkenstein is the fifth album by funk band Parliament, released on July 20, 1976. The album is notable for featuring horn arrangements by ex- James Brown band member Fred Wesley . The album charted at No. 3 on the Billboard R&B Albums chart, No. 20 on the Billboard pop chart, and became Parliament's second album to be ...
Clones of Dr. Funkenstein (1976) Children Of Production is the fourth track from the 1976 Parliament album The Clones of Dr. Funkenstein , [ 2 ] featuring rich and Christmassy swinging brass hooks, and trippy and sometimes controversial lyrics sung by the Clones themselves.
Live: P-Funk Earth Tour is a live double album by Parliament that documents the band's 1977 P-Funk Earth Tour.The performances include songs from Parliament's albums through The Clones of Dr. Funkenstein as well as songs from the Funkadelic repertoire.
Parliament was an American funk band formed in 1968 by George Clinton as a flagship act of his P-Funk collective. Evolving out of an earlier vocal group , Parliament became associated with a more commercial and less rock -oriented sound than its sister act Funkadelic .
George Clinton: The Mothership Connection is a DVD released in 1998 and then reissued in 2001, featuring George Clinton and Parliament-Funkadelic.The DVD features a concert performed by Parliament-Funkadelic at The Summit in Houston, Texas on October 31, 1976.
P-Funk Mothership at the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C. Dr. Funkenstein emerging from the Mothership – 1975 album art The P Funk Mothership, also known as The Mothership or The Holy Mothership, is a space vehicle model belonging to Dr. Funkenstein, an alter ego of funk musician George Clinton.
Motor Booty Affair is the seventh album by funk band Parliament, released in 1978. [1] It contains two of the group's most popular tracks, "Rumpofsteelskin" and "Aqua ...
The P-Funk Earth Tour was a concert tour by Parliament-Funkadelic in 1976–1977, featuring absurd costumes, lavish staging and special effects, and music from both the Parliament and Funkadelic repertoires. The P-Funk Earth Tour was ambitious from the start.