America Eats Its Young

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AMG AllMusic Guide: Pop Albums:

America Eats Its Young

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  • Artist: Funkadelic
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1972
  • Total Time: 69:06
  • Genre: Rhythm & Blues

Review

A double album and worth every minute of it, America Eats Its Young makes for a freaky, funky, and aware good time. Compared to the endless slabs of double-album dreck that came out around the same time from all sources, here Funkadelic brought life, soul, and much more to the party. With George Clinton credited only for arranging and producing, here the mad cast he brought together went all out. Bernie Worrell in particular now had a new importance, credited as co-arranger with Clinton as well as handling string and horn charts on a number of songs. His surging, never-stop keyboards, meanwhile, took control from the start, with his magnificent lead break on the opening "You Hit the Nail on the Head" making for one of the best performances ever on Hammond organ. Bootsy Collins (credited as William) is also somewhere in the crowd on bass and vocals, while old favorites like Eddie Hazel and Tiki Fulwood, among many others, can be found. Perhaps to fill in the time, a few numbers from the first Parliament album, Osmium, two years before cropped up, namely "Loose Booty" and the hilariously sleazy "I Call My Baby Pussycat," here performed with a noticeably slower, dirty groove. The straightforward social call to arms appears throughout, with one song title saying it all -- "If You Don't Like the Effects, Don't Produce the Cause." Other winners include the vicious title track, combining everything from mysterious, doom-laden voices and weeping wails to slow, sad music, and the concluding "Wake Up," while "Everybody Is Going to Make It This Time" is a lovely, gospel-informed ballad that heads for the skies and hearts. There are more mundane concerns as well, such as "There Was My Girl," a quirky weeper, and the weird if smoothly delivered "Miss Lucifer's Love," with more than one target in mind. ~ Ned Raggett, Rovi

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Wikipedia on Answers.com:

America Eats Its Young

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America Eats Its Young
Studio album by Funkadelic
Released 1972
Genre Funk, psychedelic soul
Length 69:06
Label Westbound Records
Producer George Clinton
Funkadelic chronology
Maggot Brain
(1971)
America Eats Its Young
(1972)
Cosmic Slop
(1973)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3/5 stars [1]
Blender 2/5 stars [2]
Robert Christgau C+ [3]
Ink Blot favorable [4]
Mojo 4/5 stars [5]
Pitchfork Media (8.1/10) [6]
Rolling Stone 3/5 stars [7]

America Eats Its Young is the fourth album (a double album) by Funkadelic, released in 1972. This was the first album to include the whole of the House Guests, including Bootsy Collins, Catfish Collins, Chicken Gunnels, Rob McCollough and Kash Waddy. It also features the Plainfield based band U.S.(United Soul), which consisted of guitarist Garry Shider and bassist Cordell Mosson, on most of the tracks. Unlike previous Funkadelic albums, America Eats Its Young was recorded in Toronto, Canada, and in the UK. The original vinyl version contained a poster illustrated by Cathy Abel. The bottom of the poster features the first widespread appearance of the Funkadelic logo, which would later appear on the cover of the album Standing On The Verge Of Getting It On.

Contents

Track listing

  1. "You Hit the Nail On the Head" (George Clinton, Clarence Haskins, Bernie Worrell)
  2. "If You Don't Like the Effects, Don't Produce the Cause" (Clinton, Garry Shider)
  3. "Everybody Is Going To Make It This Time" (Clinton, Worrell)
  4. "A Joyful Process" (Clinton, Worrell)(released as the B-side to "Loose Booty")
  5. "We Hurt Too" (Clinton)
  6. "Loose Booty" (Clinton, Harold Beane)(released as a single-Westbound 205)
  7. "Philmore" (Bootsy Collins)
  8. "I Call My Baby Pussycat" (Clinton, Billy Bass Nelson, Eddie Hazel)
  9. "America Eats Its Young" (Beane, Clinton, Worrell)
  10. "Biological Speculation" (Clinton, Ernie Harris)
  11. "That Was My Girl" (Clinton, Sidney Barnes)
  12. "Balance" (Clinton, Worrell)
  13. "Miss Lucifer's Love" (Clinton, Haskins)
  14. "Wake Up" (Clinton, James W. Jackson, Worrell)

Songs

You Hit the Nail on the Head

This song is vaguely political, with the central lyrical thrust of the song quoted above. Typically, the lyric functions on both a political and personal level: 'victory in any dispute doesn't confer any moral advantage.'

If You Don't Like the Effects, Don't Produce the Cause

This song has two interrelated themes. The beginning focuses on hypocrites who want to change reality without accepting the blame if anything goes wrong. This is extended in the latter part of the song to those who make half-hearted attempts at social change, and who protest the "big" problems but are not willing to make changes in their own lives to respect what they claim is right for all of society.

Everybody Is Going to Make It This Time

The song was recorded in London in 1968, with the assistance of Ginger Baker of Cream, who was one of Clinton's favorite drummers.

This song proclaims that the human race (the titular "everybody") is capable of growing and reforming, but at the present, nobody is willing to learn from past mistakes, and has sacrificed wisdom for material comfort.

Personnel:

A Joyful Process

This song starts off borrowing the music from the children's Christian song, "Jesus Loves Me".

  • String and horn arrangements by Bernie Worrell
  • Drums: Zachary Frazier

We Hurt Too

This song claims that men are also capable of crying (presumably, in addition to women) and feel just as sad as the other sex.

Loose Booty

This is widely considered one of the better songs off what is essentially a transitional album. It was a remake of a Parliament song.

This song is an obscene nursery rhyme. This would eventually become a whole group of P funk songs, all with the same nursery rhyme-quality, yet obscene and perverse lyrics.

"Loose Booty" itself was a slang term for a heroin addict-presumably taken from either not being able to sit straight while nodding, or the laxative effects of heroin withdrawal.

Philmore

This song seems to be about the singer's sexual prowess, as he woos a woman who is uncaring and cruel. This song represents the first major songwriting effort of Bootsy Collins as a member of Parliament-Funkadelic, and is widely considered the introduction to his musical persona.

I Call My Baby Pussycat

The song is, essentially, about lust and its tremendous power over the singer, who is incapable of resisting his (perhaps former) lover.

George Clinton sang lead vocals, with Frank Waddy on drums.

The song's deliberately suggestive (but oblique) lyrics such as "I'm the tomcat and you're my li'l ol' pussy" and "Wild and warm is my pussy/ My pussy is where it's at" are common for the genre, a tradition followed in R&B.

The song is a remake of a faster version, titled "I Call My Baby Pussycat", recorded by Parliament on their 1970 album Osmium. Two versions of the song (fast and slow), based on the original Parliament version, appear on the 1996 live Funkadelic release Live: Meadowbrook, Rochester, Michigan – 12 September 1971.

This later version of the song was originally retitled "Pussy," and that title appears on the cover of some vinyl versions of the album, and on some modern CD reissues. Under record company pressure, the titled was restored to "I Call My Baby Pussycat," on future Parliament-Funkadelic releases featuring the song, and some future CD pressings of America Eats Its Young. Both titles can be found on modern CD pressings of the album.

America Eats Its Young

This song has largely inscrutable lyrics that seem to be claiming that America is a "bitch" that "suck[s] the brains" of her "great grandsons and daughters."

Biological Speculation

This song is about how Mother Nature will fix any unbalanced elements of society, sooner or later. The singer's character takes the position that any oppression is only temporary, and will eventually and inevitably be destroyed by Mother Nature acting through human agents.

That Was My Girl

This is a love song, in which the singer's character describes his former girl, a beautiful woman who could always "drive the fellas wild."

The song is a remake of a 1965 version by The Parliaments.

Balance

This song asks Mother Nature basic questions about the human existence. Chorus lyric: Balance is my thing/The snow, wind and rain/Must come

  • Lead Vocals: Bootsy Collins

Miss Lucifer's Love

"Miss Lucifer's Love" features vocals by Fuzzy Haskins and string and horn arrangements by Bernie Worrell. Its songwriters are George Clinton and Fuzzy Haskins.

In Miss Lucifer's Love, the singer describes his love for "Miss Lucifer." Although she is referred to as "the devil," Miss Lucifer is not necessarily Satan (see Lucifer) as certain critics (predominantly Christian fundamentalists) have argued. The singer could be addressing a former lover, whom, in retrospect, he sees as being similar to the devil in both her exciting, passionate danger and her cruel and sadistic nature.

Wake Up

This is the only fully developed politically oriented song on the album.

This song exhorts the listener to "wake up" to political and social action. Humanity is characterized as sleeping through oppression, ignoring (by choice) what would otherwise be scandals and outrages demanding immediate action.

Personnel

References

External links


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Copyrights:

Mentioned in

The Best of the Early Years, Vol. 1 (1977 Album by Funkadelic)
Trax Sampler, Vol. 37 (2001 Album by Various Artists)
Standing on the Verge of Getting It On (1974 Album by Funkadelic)
America Eats Its Young [Bonus Tracks] (2005 Album by Funkadelic)