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| Funkadelic | Primary Artist |
| Bernie Worrell | Keyboards |
| Eddie Hazel | Guitar, Band |
| Walter "Junie" Morrison | Keyboards |
| Philippe Wynne | Background Vocals |
| Dennis Chambers | Drums |
| Bootsy Collins | Bass, Guitar, Drums |
| Greg Boyer | Background Vocals |
| Linda Brown | Background Vocals |
| Jessica Cleaves | Background Vocals |
| George Clinton | Vocals |
| Lige Curry | Background Vocals |
| Rodney Curtis | Bass |
| Raymond Davis | Vocals |
| Ron Ford | Vocals |
| Mallia Franklin | Background Vocals |
| Lawrence Fratangelo | Drums |
| Ramon Tiki Fulwood | Drums |
| Glen Goins | Guitar |
| Michael Hampton | Guitar |
| Sheila Horne | Vocals |
| Gary Hudgins | Keyboards |
| Tyrone Lampkin | Drums |
| Dewayne Blackbyrd McKnight | Guitar |
| Cordell Mosson | Bass |
| Garry Shider | Guitar, Vocals |
| Dawn Silva | Vocals |
| Greg Thomas | Vocals |
| J. Wesley | Background Vocals |
| Michael "Clip" Payne | Vocals |
| Jeannette McGruder | Vocals |
| Billy "Bass" Nelson | Bass |
| Larry Heckstall | Vocals |
| J.S. Theracon | Keyboards |
| Jerome Rogers | Keyboards, Background Vocals |
| Bernie Worrell | Composer |
| Philippe Wynne | Composer |
| Bootsy Collins | Composer |
| George Clinton | Composer, Producer |
| Brian Gardner | Mastering |
| Michael Iacopelli | Engineer |
| Garry Shider | Composer |
| Greg Ward | Engineer |
| Allen Zentz | Mastering |
| Pedro Bell | Illustrations |
| Clive Anderson | Liner Notes |
| Arpil Wildflower | Illustrations |
| Greg Ward | Engineer |
| Thrill Sergeant Dr.Funkenstein | Producer |
| P. Bishop | Composer |
Editorial Reviews
All Music Guide - Ned Raggett
Almost as if Clinton and company wanted to atone for parts of One Nation Under a Groove, Uncle Jam Wants You takes not merely a more daring musical approach but a more forthright political stance. The cover art alone is brilliant, front and back showing Clinton in Huey P. Newton's famous Black Panther pose. The main goal is the cover subtitle's stated claim to "rescue dance music 'from the blahs,'" and "Uncle Jam" itself does a pretty funny job at doing that, starting out like a parody of patriotic recruitment ads before hitting its full, funky stride. It's still very much a disco effort, but one overtly spiking the brew even more than before with P-Funk's own particular ...