This compilation features some of the best solo material from the
Parliament/
Funkadelic crew during the late '70s and '80s under the direction of
George Clinton. Ever the entrepreneur,
Clinton had farmed his aggregate of loose booties to no less than five respective (major) labels. While technically
Parliament was recording for Casablanca and
Funkadelic was signed to Warner Bros.,
Clinton's short-lived Uncle Jam imprint was issued and distributed by Columbia/Epic. It is here that listeners find the 15 tracks -- nine of which are making their debut in the digital domain -- that comprise
Six Degrees of P-Funk: The Best of George Clinton & His Funky Family (2003). While
Clinton is the central figure, his most enduring contributions to each of these projects is to simply allow all of the artists involved to develop their unique substrata of funk -- which he does and they most certainly do. The disc rightfully kicks off with a pair of cuts from
the P-Funk All Stars'
The Awesome Power of a Fully Operational Mothership (1996). "If Anybody Gets Funked Up (It's Gonna Be You)" is a sample-heavy and highly danceable side featuring new breed funk-a-teers
Erick Sermon of
EPMD and
MC Breed. "Funky Kind (Gonna Knock You Down)" contains a midtempo groove featuring a trademark full-ensemble vocal supporting
Clinton's lead. This is followed by two cuts from bassist
Bootsy Collins off of his sole Columbia long-player,
What's Bootsy Doin'? (1988). His hardcore "Party on Plastic" and
Prince sound-alike "Leakin'" are included here. Former
Ohio Player Walter "Junie" Morrison climbed aboard the Mothership in the late '70s. From his solo projects Bread Alone (1980) and Junie 5 (1981) are the melodic and synthesizer-laden "Love Have Taken Me Over" and "Rappin' About Rappin'." Although business differences put the two at odds,
Clinton and Jerome "Bigfoot" Brailey collaborated momentarily on the all-star side project Mutiny, whose hard-hittin' "Lump"and soulful "Funk 'n' Bop" come from their highly controversial and confrontational Mutiny on the Mamaship (1979).
Philippe Wynne's Wynne Jammin (1980) was the only long-player that the vocalist issued on Uncle Jam and stands as one of the rare non-
P-Funk-related projects that
Clinton produced. The former lead singer for
the Spinners includes both the ballad "Never Gonna Tell It" and the beat-heavy dance track "Breakout." The unmistakable sound of
Bootsy Collins returns for the seminal hearty party fare "Freak to Freak."This is followed by the final non-
P-Funk-related tracks from Champaign, IL, natives Micro Wave. The band -- led by multi-instrumentalist
Michael Lane -- scored a Top 15 R&B platter with one of the tunes featured here, titled "Misunderstood." ~ Lindsay Planer