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Maggot Brain

 
Album Review: Maggot Brain
 

  • Artist: Funkadelic
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1971
  • Total Time: 36:45
  • Genre: Rhythm & Blues

Review

It starts with a crackle of feedback shooting from speaker to speaker and a voice intoning, "Mother Earth is pregnant for the third time, for y'all have knocked her up" and talking about rising "above it all or drown in my own sh*t." This could only have been utterly bizarre back in 1971 and it's no less so decades later; though the Mothership was well on its way already, Maggot Brain really helped it take off. The instrumental title track is the key reason to listen, specifically for Eddie Hazel's lengthy, mind-melting solo. George Clinton famously told Hazel to play "like your momma had just died," and the resulting evocation of melancholy and sorrow doesn't merely rival Jimi Hendrix's work, but arguably bests a lot of it. Accompanied by another softer guitar figure providing gentle rhythm for the piece, the end result is simply fantastic, an emotional apocalypse of sound. Maggot Brain is bookended by another long number, "Wars of Armageddon," a full-on jam from the band looping in freedom chants and airport-departure announcements to the freak-out. In between are a number of short pieces, finding the collective merrily cooking up some funky stew of the slow and smoky variety. There are folky blues and gospel testifying on "Can You Get to That" (one listen and a lot of Primal Scream's mid-'90s career is instantly explained) and wry but warm reflections on interracial love on "You and Your Folks, Me and My Folks," its drum hits distorted to give a weird electronic edge to the results. "Super Stupid" is a particular killer, pounding drums and snarling guitar laying down the boogie hard and hot, while "Hit It and Quit It" has a great chorus and Bernie Worrell getting in a fun keyboard solo to boot. ~ Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Maggot Brain Eddie Hazel, George Clinton Funkadelic (10:18)
Can You Get to That George Clinton, Ernest G Harris, Jr. Funkadelic (2:49)
Hit It and Quit It George Clinton, Billy "Bass" Nelson Funkadelic (3:48)
You and Your Folks, Me and My Folks Bernie Worrell, George Clinton, Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins, Billy "Bass" Nelson Funkadelic (3:35)
Super Stupid Eddie Hazel, George Clinton, Lucius Tawl Ross, Billy "Bass" Nelson Funkadelic (3:56)
Back in Our Minds Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins Funkadelic (2:37)
Wars of Armageddon Bernie Worrell, George Clinton, Ramon Tiki Fulwood, Lucius Tawl Ross Funkadelic (9:42)

Credits

Funkadelic (Main Performer), George Clinton (Producer)
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Wikipedia: Maggot Brain
Top
Maggot Brain
Maggot Brain cover
Studio album by Funkadelic
Released July 1971
Genre Funk, funk rock, psychedelic soul
Length 36:56
Label Westbound
W-2007
Producer George Clinton
Professional reviews
Funkadelic chronology
Free Your Mind... And Your Ass Will Follow
(1970)
Maggot Brain
(1971)
America Eats Its Young
(1972)

Maggot Brain is a 1971 album by the American funk band Funkadelic. It was released on Westbound Records. The music swings through psychedelia, hard rock, gospel and soul music, with tremendous variation between each track.

In 2003, the album was ranked number 486 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time. Pitchfork Media ranked it #17 in their Top 100 Albums of the 70s[1] list.

Contents

Track listing

  1. "Maggot Brain" (George Clinton, Eddie Hazel) – 10:20
  2. "Can You Get to That" (Clinton, Ernie Harris) – 2:50 (released as a single-Westbound 185)
  3. "Hit It And Quit It" (Clinton, Billy Bass Nelson, Garry Shider) – 3:50 (released as a single-Westbound 198)
  4. "You and Your Folks, Me and My Folks" (Clinton, Judie Jones, Bernie Worrell) – 3:36 (released as a single-Westbound 175)
  5. "Super Stupid" (Clinton, Hazel, Nelson, Tawl Ross) – 3:57
  6. "Back in Our Minds" (Fuzzy Haskins) – 2:38
  7. "Wars of Armageddon" (Clinton, Tiki Fulwood, Ross, Worrell) – 9:42

2005 Re-release bonus tracks

  1. "Whole Lot of BS" (Clinton, Worrell) - 2:11
  2. "I Miss My Baby" (Haskins) - 5:02
  3. "Maggot Brain (Alt. Mix, recorded 1971) (Hazel, Clinton) - 9:35

Songs

"Maggot Brain"

See main article at Maggot Brain (song)

"Can You Get to That"

This song is a departure from the groove-oriented Funkadelic sound and is more of a traditional lyric-based acoustic rock piece. It begins with a descending acoustic guitar line which is joined by piano, bass and drums which support a cast of singers. It is a rewrite of a song by The Parliaments titled, "What You Been Growin'" and is heavily influenced by gospel music stylistically.

Where the Parliaments version was a break-up song, the singer of the Funkadelic version begins with the line 'I once had a life, or rather, life had me' (a possible reference to The Beatles' "Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)," which begins with the lines, "I once had a girl, or should I say, she once had me?"): rather than a bitter reminiscence about a woman, it becomes an account of the singer's revelation that living on principles of co-operation, sincerity and the principles of karma ('When you base your life on credit and your loving days are done / Checks you sign with love and kisses later come back signed 'Insufficient Funds' ' - interestingly, this line seems to echo part of Martin Luther King Jr.'s 'I Have a Dream' speech) mark him out from the un-enlightened crowd and exalted his life.

"Hit It and Quit It"

The song feature Bernie Worrell's vocals and organ-playing, as well as an extended Eddie Hazel solo at the end.

"You and Your Folks, Me and My Folks"

Some claim that this song is, lyrically and musically, a sequel to "Hit It And Quit It" (the previous song). It is a very class-conscious song, with the singer pleading for unity among the poor because without doing so, equality could not be achieved.

The song's refrain is very similar to an old folk rhyme that was first published in Thomas W. Talley's Negro Folk Rhymes (Wise or Otherwise) (1922):

If you and your folks love me and my folks
Like me and my folks love you and your folks
If there ever was folks
That ever ever was poor.
—Funkadelic
If you an' yo' folks likes me an' my folks,
Lak me an' my folks likes you an' yo' folks;
You's never seed folks since folks 'as been folks,
Like you an' yo' folks lak me an' my folks.
Negro Folk Rhymes

"Super Stupid"

The title of this song refers to a drug addict who buys the wrong drug accidentally. He is also referred to as having a "maggot brain". The verse of the song uses similar combination of rap singing over drum rhythm plus occasional guitar chords as is heard on "Crosstown Traffic" by Jimi Hendrix.

The supergroup Audioslave has done several live covers of this song, as well as an unreleased studio recording.

"Back in Our Minds"

This song seems to be about the singer and someone else (possibly different races, former lovers or friends) having reconciled and are now "brothers."

"Wars of Armageddon"

The music is a bizarre mix of music and special effects-type sounds, and intelligent, though unusual and abstract, lyrics.

This song is socially conscious, as the singer demands immediate freedom from oppression, as well as "power to the people" (and many more demands, many nonsensical, see above).

Whole Lot of BS

This song is a bonus track on the album, originally released as a non-album B-side to the single "Hit It and Quit It".

I Miss My Baby

This song is another bonus tracks, originally released as the B-side to an early take of "Baby I Owe You Something Good", which was later reworked for the Let's Take It to the Stage LP. The single was credited to US Music with Funkadelic, as Garry Shider's group US was featured on the recording with Funkadelic playing most of the music.

Chart positions

Billboard Music Charts (North America) - album

  • 1971 Pop Albums No. 108
  • 1971 Black Albums No. 14
  • 1990 Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums No. 92

Personnel

References

  • Maggot Brain album liner notes by Dean Rudland (2005). Westbound Records Inc.. 

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Maggot Brain" Read more

 

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