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"Free Your Mind" is a song by American female group En Vogue from their second album, Funky Divas (1992). The track was composed and produced by Foster and McElroy . [ citation needed ] They were inspired by the Funkadelic song " Free Your Mind and Your Ass Will Follow ."
The album and its title track, a feedback-drenched number taking a third of the album's length, introduces the subversion of Christian themes explored on later songs, describing a mystical approach to salvation in which "the Kingdom of Heaven is within" and achievable through freeing one's mind, after which one's "ass" will follow.
Foster & McElroy are best known as the founders of the group En Vogue, [3] listed by Billboard as one of the Top 10 Girl Groups of All Time. [4] In addition to producing music for various television shows, they are also credited for songs in numerous movie soundtracks including The Great White Hype , Lean on Me , and Who's That Girl .
Free Your Mind may refer to: Free Your Mind (Cut Copy album), 2013; Free Your Mind (Maliq & D'Essentials album), 2007; Free Your Mind (MTV award), an award granted by MTV "Free Your Mind" (song), a 1992 song by En Vogue; Free Your Mind, a 2009 EP by Anarbor; Free Your Mind 33, a 1998 album by Dragon Ash; Free Your Mind... and Your Ass Will ...
En Vogue is an American vocal girl group whose original lineup consisted of singers Terry Ellis, Dawn Robinson, Cindy Herron, and Maxine Jones. [1] Formed in Oakland, California, in 1989, En Vogue reached No. 2 on the US Hot 100 with the single "Hold On", taken from their 1990 debut album Born to Sing.
Connections & Disconnections is an album recorded by Fuzzy Haskins, Calvin Simon, and Grady Thomas under the name Funkadelic.. With the history of financial disputes with Clinton behind them, and backing from Westbound Records founder Armen Boladian, this album (co-produced by former Sly and the Family Stone drummer Greg Errico, without the involvement of George Clinton) was released in ...
These songs contain some of the singer-songwriter’s most biting lyrics, the kind that twist the emotional knife into anyone’s heart. Swift’s eleventh studio album is no different.
One Nation Under a Groove is the tenth studio album by American funk rock band Funkadelic, released on September 22, 1978, on Warner Bros. Records.Recording sessions took place at United Sound Studio in Detroit, with one song recorded live on April 15, 1978, at the Monroe Civic Center in Monroe, Louisiana. [10]