Black History Month on the move.
Start in Oklahoma City...
In the South it's usually a fact that if you live near the railroad tracks or by the river, you're probably live in the bad part of town. The Moore house was built on stilts, with the river on one side & the railroad tracks on the other.
According to Harold Moore Sr.: He had four children, Jr. & his three sisters who had been abandoned by their alcoholic mom. Harold Sr. worked for a very rich woman who took a liking to the kids & bought them musical instruments, even paying for lessons. She made the kids a deal that if they learned how to play at least three songs she would get them a slot on some local TV telethon. The kids took to music very quickly. Within a year they were appearing on local TV. The response was so good that the woman paid for them to record an LP but suggested they write "original" songs. This is where Harold Sr. comes in. Dad wrote all the songs that appear on the LP, with most of them being attacks on the drunken & supposedly abusive ex-Mrs. Moore… "Mama drinks Tequila / She stays drunk all the time." Once the LP was recorded & pressed, the next step was to get them in the local record stores. At least one store told Mr. Moore that they could not stock them unless they were shrink-wrapped. Harold went to a butcher shop where his brother worked. Harold used their shrink-wrap machine to seal the LPs… unfortunately, this was a high heat machine. Sr. had melted every single LP in the process. This wasn't discovered until someone bought one & took it home. All the LPs were pulled from the stores. Rather than re-press it, the woman decided to release some 45s.
These 45s were compiled to recreate the original melted LP.
all decryption codes in comments
Side One -
Thing, Do the Creep
Momma Love Tequilla
Pimp
Waw-Waw Rock
Love from Above
Flip Will
Do Your Funky Thing
Side Two -
Slow
Sweet Little One
Kewetha
Kat-Walk
Rock 'N Roll Santa
Rock Blues
Pop Junior Pop
Jr & his Soulettes: Harold M. Moore, Jr. - guitar & vocals (age 10); Jacqueln Carol Moore waw waw organ & vocals (age 6); Vinita Marie Moore - bass & organ (age 6); & Denise Marshell Moore - drummer (age 7).
Of course there's Ohio Players (I've posted Skin Tight over at digital meltd0wn blog). I'm giving some different tastes from FunkenTown so although the Players are sublime (& their covers even more sublime), you'll have to grab that Ohio elsewhere, player. Ditto Zapp (however I've added a tribute to Roger Troutman before I leave Dayton).
That's the easy ones, but do you all know Slave or Lakeside or Faze-O or Platypus?...
Steve Arrington of Slave:
“Dayton's scene was all these bands that didn't sound anything alike. Ohio Players didn't sound anything like Heatwave who didn't sound like Slave; Slave didn't sound like Zapp; Zapp didn't sound like Lakeside. What we got from the Players was, we had to find our own voice. The Dayton sound was—innovation.”
But they all had one commonality: Charles Spencer, a music teacher at Roosevelt High School, Dayton, Ohio.. Every band in Dayton that went on to sign a major label deal (including Platypus) had students of Spencer's in them. Spencer made his kids read music & study theory. He also staged battles-of-the-bands to raise money for the school. The funds were good for the musicians but so was the competition; it helped the players hone their skills & also build an audience.
Side A -
Fantastic Voyage
Your Love is on the One
I Need You
Side B -
Strung Out
Say Yes
Eveready Man
I Love Everything You Do
Say Yes (reprise)
Side One -
Snap Shot
Party Lites
Spice of Life (oh Yes, You’re the Best)
Smokin
Side Two -
Wait for Me
Steal Your Heart
For the Love of U
Funken Town
This L.P. is dedicated to Allah for the Concepts of Pure Growth!!
Faze-O was a late 70s funk group produced by Clarence Satchell of the Ohio Players,
Side One -
Breakin’ the Funk
Ya-ba-da-ba-duzie
I Still Love You
Side Two -
Let’s Rock
I’m Tankful
See You Through the Night
Side 1 -
Dancing in the Moonlight
Street Babies
Love the Way You Funk
Don’t Go Away
Side 2 -
Dance if You Can
Running from Love
Body & Soul
Victim of Love
More Bounce to the Ounce
Dance Floor
Do it Roger
Heartbreaker (Pt 1 & Pt 2)
Computer Love
Girl, Cut it Out (maxi-single)
Fire
Thrill Seekers (extended remix)
I've posted plenty Funkadelic nectar here & here & here & here, & elsewhere...you can search it out if you want it. Here's some close family representing.
Side 1 -
Ridin’ High
No Rump to Bump
Don’t Ever Stop (Lovin’ Me, Needin’ Me)
Side 2 -
Booty Snatchers
You’re Leaving
Huff-n-Puff
Parlet began as: Jeanette Washington (in 1975 she joined Parliament with...); Debbie Wright (the first female members of Parliament & Funkadelic); & Mallia Franklin (also vocalist with Parliament-Funkadelic who introduced George Clinton & Bootsy Collins in 1971 as well as bringing ex-Ohio Player Junie Morrison to P-Funk in 1978). Here Parlet is: Jeanette Washington; Shirley Hayden (replacing Debbie Wright): & Janice Evans (replacing Mallia Franklin).
Scuse Me While I Kiss the Sky - John Sinclair with Ras Kente
Purple Hazel - Eddie Hazel
Pleasure With the Dirt Devil - Blackbyrd
Positivity - Michael Hampton
Look Now Baby James Glass & the Get to Gettin’ Band
Fly On - Blackbyrd
Reflections on Jimi Part 1 - George Clinton
Funky Kazoo - Michael Hampton
The Wind Cries Colors - Ras Kente
Get to the Gettin’ - James Glass & the Get to Gettin’ Band
Future Past - Randall & Allen Lynch
Should’a Known - Randall & Allen Lynch
Reflections on Jimi Part 2 - George Clinton
Debbie Does the Voodo Child - Point Blank
Thanx Jimi - Andre Foxxe
Return of the Gypsy - Johnny Graham
Oh Say Can You See, the Red, the White, & the Blues - Johnny Graham
Father forgive Um - Mud Bone Cooper & Michael Hampton
Jimi Why D-U Have ta Go - Dee Dee "Dirty Mugg" James & Bootsy's Rubber Band
Revolutions of Jimi - Bootsy Collins
Jimi Why D-U Have ta Go (dance version) - "Dirty Mugg" & Bootsy's Rubber Band
Future Equations - The Darryl Plummer Band
What You Gonna Do? - Ras Kente
Fishin; da Sea - Menace
I Need a Man - Menace
Last Days - Menace
Crash & Burn - Andre Foxxe
Both volumes recorded New Orleans, Lousiana; East Detroit, Highland Park, Michigan USA 1994.
Funk On!
NØ
Many thanks
ReplyDeleteMost welcome. Thanks for the comment.
DeletePsychodelic Sounds
DeleteGutBP8FCSrXEyGGIJqsZF11sh5nIuj19skpHmgcnUM0
Fantastic Voyage
vbPezSD4NM23Mkadoc9UuQPCvK2OU6vksCUPQFhc8cY
Show Time
H1aX8641X-fl8Zacryg6KSYK0P1Bw06mvwaZ76PBDL8
Breakin' the Funk
A9MJ3p9k4Yr075-e9oYO85JO_RH2mVnZoMKo9ZpvE1E
Platypus
LHjMRtB4prZQbbcHx_LBq2EILiJuFdMFKELN2k0X76s
Some Troutman Tastees
f9mA5mwEygTbeBISIrOYRZZDO9Y_812GJdNsklav0Gk
Invasion of the Booty Snatchers
gE5SxaF2S8_j1t19gwbfeSbRml_hsR4ZcDy9QVpcSLw
A Tribute to Jimi Hendrix
solDvJuHJmO3XWF2DN-ePUyXlNcv-d18es7jRfJB02c
Tribute to Jimi Hendrix II: Return of the Gypsy
CHgd4qQOEiostVWCEmtz6mXF3FAFk8RkeRmTRO3V_HQ
Thanks for the 2 Jimi tributes, didnt know they existed, love Jimi, love P-funk, I’m a happy man!
ReplyDeleteYour comment has made me a happy man. Now we're two happy men, just being happy together.
DeleteHi Mr Nothinsez thanks for your comment on my blog. Keep it unreal indeed. Are you yourself an imaginary bluesman? I’m not familiar with Marvin or Clutchy but I’m certainly interested in checking out imaginary rivals in the imaginary blues cutting contest that is now kicking off in the juke joint of my mind. So far the contest is going quite well as I’ve yet to hear what them other boys got. Hit me with some heavy shots, my alter-ego can take it.
ReplyDeleteOddly enough, I stumbled upon Marvin Pontiac in January while reading Elmore Leonard's "Tishomingo Blues". In the book, fictional character Robert Taylor plays "guess that tune" with another character in the book. The tune in the novel is "I'm a Doggy" which, according to the novel, purportedly was recorded in 1952 & soon became a minor hit. In the novel, Robert Taylor reports that Mr. Pontiac only recorded one album during his career only, but only after the producer agreed to mow Pontiac's lawn. Other accounts of Mr. Pontiac life are just as mysterious. Some say he went insane after claiming to have been abducted & probed by aliens. It is said he died in 1970 at the Esmerelda State Mental Institution in Detroit. Other accounts report that he was hit & killed by a bus in June of 1977.
DeleteThe bio for Marvin Pontiac says it all...he was born "the son of an African father from Mali & a white Jewish mother from New Rochelle, New York."
The Legendary Marvin Pontiac - Greatest Hits, Strange & Beautiful Music SB-0018, 1999.
I’m a Doggy
Small Car
Now I’m Happy
Power
Runnin’ Around
Pancakes
Bring Me Rocks
Rubin
Wanna Wanna
Sleep at Night
Arms & Legs
She Ain’t Going Home
Little Fly
No Kids
https://mega.nz/file/IYtmQYpA#HCu_slslYF4jOZsVu8v3C5YZ-On_QSm08OSaiAWM-F8
Marvin Pontiac - The Asylum Tapes, Strange & Beautiful Music, 2017.
Unbelievable
I Hope She is Okay
My Bear to Cross
Hollerin’
I Don’t Have a Cow
It’s Always Something. It’s Never Nothing
We Are the Frog People
Let Me Tell You
I Am a Man
I Don’t Like to Stand on Line
Baby Pigs
You’re Going to Miss Me
I Want to Get Out of Here
Beastliness
I Am Not Crazy
Temple of Banjos
Santa Claus
Godzilla
Don’t Fuck with Me
My Little Garden Gnome
Horse Fell Down the Well
I Like to Wear Funny Outfits
Little Banjo
I Am Not Alone
https://mega.nz/file/YY1giY4L#fETgrUJhCZmrcXSuyy7NnawdtKgAMZchI_aj6F0ftIo
Clutchy Hopkins is the son of a Motown recording engineer. As a young man, Clutchy traveled the globe exploring exotic music, rhythms, & mysticism. He worked at recording studios in Bombay to Cairo. He studied musical techniques of the Cahuilla Indians, Rinzai Zen monks in Japan, as well as tribal drummers in Ethiopia. Returning to the U.S. in the ’90s, Clutchy worked as a session musician on obscure funk & jazz records; he was rumored to have collaborated with Moondog.
DeleteClutchy recorded most of the music he created throughout his journeys, but never attempted to release it. He refused to be credited for his session gigs. He only accepted cash payments for his work. There are practically no records of his existence. Sometime during the late 20th century, Clutchy Hopkins disappeared without a trace. His last known whereabouts were in Hawthorne, California.
In 2005, a crate of reel-to-reel tapes was discovered amid boxes of old, home-made musical instruments, & electronics at a flea market outside Los Angeles. The trail from these tapes led to a woman named Kelly Hopkins: Clutchy’s daughter, the only person still in contact with him. Kelly obtained his permission to release some music. She even persuaded him to collaborate with young new artists. Clutchy’s exact whereabouts remain a mystery. According to Kelly, he currently resides in a cave somewhere in the Mojave Desert.
Clutchy Hopkins - The Life of Clutchy Hopkins, Crate Digler, 2005
Side One -
3:06
3:02
4:08
3:25
2:15
3:11
Side Two -
2:07
3:26
3:34
3:05
3:14
3:24
https://mega.nz/file/Ac8Q0aYC#attsWAKyE4dHb_23Ubk68OmWt9mEkr3TSzYDdWVqiZI
Clutchy Hopkins - The Story Teller, Ubiquity URLP267, 2010.
Side One -
Giraffe Crack
Laughing Jockey
No Contact... Contact
Miles Chillin'
Nina
Side Two -
JT Goldfish
Truth Seekin'
Thinkin' of Eva
Light as a Feather
Drunk Socks
Verbal Headlock
https://mega.nz/file/cA0gFCAC#qhsOjkq2rZtPedhbaEIYeEMwMsKADLop31iI-JZFJTs
Clutchy Hopkins - Walking Sdrawkcab, Ubiquity URLP221, 2008.
Side A -
Sound of the Ghost
Song for Wolfie
Love of a Woman
3rd Element
Para los Ninos
Horny Tickle
Side B -
Percy on the One
Rocktober
Alla Oscar
Good Omen
Swap Meet Me at the Corner
Last Time for Your Mind
https://mega.nz/file/VRsEGIIB#IF1TJqjS5cJH7P6ODdj0wgs8gYwUm3SHUyEA_oVyOwk
Enjoy & happy bloggin’ & bluesin’
Thanks for these Nathan. Just grabbed them all but gonna wait to listen thru proper sound system later. Thanks for the back story info on these boys too. I need to become a lot more mysterious maybe trade my boat for a hole in the hills.
DeleteGlad you liked some of my sounds, thanks for that comment. Also noticed that you added my blog to your list, thanks. I’ve likewise added yours to mine. You have the same tagline heading your blogroll list that I used for my blog. Unreal! Does your imaginary blues self make real music? Wanna form an imaginary duo?
Thanks again for these in particular and for the freakin funk in general.
Hi Nathan ... Clutchy is my man, nice vibe, good grooves. And I like the fact that it he has a proper lo-fi home-studio vibe but a stack of melodic ideas and is actually kinda sophisticated. Also I’m not big on lyrics! Which is maybe why Marvin doesnt quite hit the spot for me. I like the band on the Hits album, and it was all an interesting listen. Thanks again for the share.
DeleteAnd thanks for your Black History month. Talkin of which I was listening to my Rocky Mountain Shakedown double on vinyl at the weekend, it’s a peach aint it! That version of Comin Round The Mountain is in my alltime top ten.
Also just read you had your first vaccine shot, me too. For me it felt like somethin .. a first step back towards jams in sweaty rooms with my oldman musician buddies and a beer or 3 in live music venues. Thems about the only things I've really missed this past year.
Visiting a few close friends & tilting a few good pints would be a great return to normalcy. Hoping that world returns without too too many scars. Thanks for the thoughts, brother.
DeleteVery glad i could inspire a detour through Ohio. I grew up just outside of Dayton (and now live in western PA), but had absolutely no idea about the legacy of funk in that town, besides the Players of course (and that Bootsy and the Isley Brothers were from just a little further south). What really grinds me in hindsight is seeing so many regional high school marching bands (outing myself as a band nerd here) playing "jazz"/"fusion"-inspired shows with music by Chicago or Bloodsweatandtears, maaaaaaybe Earth Wind & Fire once. But not a single song of Dayton funk in the four+ years i was listening! Such a gold mine beneath our feet, neglected. I'm not gonna speculate as to why, but of course I could hazard a guess or two... I think its a little better now, I think there is a Funk Museum in the works. I've corresponded with a history prof who is working on a book about it too, looking forward to it. And I'm hoping this rip of Platypus is better than the one I currently have. Anyway, thanks for all yr blogging, I've found many excellent tunes via here over the years. This is one of the best, truly. Best wishes. -aboynamedstew
ReplyDeleteThanks very much for this interesting post. The P-Funk stuff is great and new to me as well.
ReplyDeleteA tsunami of funk, quite a ride. Thanks very much.
ReplyDelete