Cosmic Slop

Cosmic Slop

by Funkadelic
Cosmic Slop

Cosmic Slop

by Funkadelic

CD

$9.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Temporarily Out of Stock Online
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

With a much more stripped-down version of the band, if the credits are to be believed (five regular members total, not counting any vocalists), Funkadelic continued its way through life with Cosmic Slop. A slightly more scattershot album than the group's other early efforts, with generally short tracks (only two break the five-minute barrier) and some go-nowhere ballads, Cosmic Slop still has plenty to like about it, not least because of the monstrous title track. A bitter, heartbreaking portrait of a family on the edge, made all the more haunting and sad by the sweet vocal work -- imagine an even more mournful "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone" -- the chorus is a killer, with the devil invited to the dance while the band collectively fires up the funk. Elsewhere, the band sounds like it's more interested in simply hitting a good groove and enjoying it, and why not? If introductory track "Nappy Dugout" relies more on duck calls and whistles than anything else to give it identity, it's still a clap-your-hands/stomp-your-feet experience, speeding up just a little toward the end. As for the bandmembers themselves, Bernie Worrell still takes the general lead thanks to his peerless keyboard work, but the guitar team of Gary Shider and Ron Bykowski and the rhythm duo of Tyrone Lampkin and Cordell Mosson aren't any slouches, either. George Clinton again seems to rely on the role of ringleader more than anything else, but likely that's him behind touches like distorted vocals. Certainly it's a trip to hear the deep, spaced-out spoken word tale on "March to the Witch's Castle," a harrowing picture of vets returning from Vietnam -- and then realizing that Rush ripped off that approach for a song on its Caress of Steel album a year or two later! [The 2005 reissue features excellent remastered sound, a thick booklet, and the single edit of the title track.] ~ Ned Raggett

Product Details

Release Date: 04/25/2005
Label: Westbound
UPC: 0029667009126
Rank: 5712

Tracks

  1. Nappy Dugout
  2. You Can't Miss What You Can't Measure
  3. March to the Witch's Castle
  4. Let's Make It Last
  5. Cosmic Slop
  6. No Compute
  7. This Broken Heart
  8. Trash a Go Go
  9. Can't Stand the Strain
  10. Cosmic Slop

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Funkadelic   Primary Artist
Tyrone Lampkin   Percussion
Ramon Tiki Fulwood   Drums
Garry Shider   Guitar,Guitar (Rhythm)
Bernie Worrell   Strings,Melodica,Keyboards
Ron Bykowski   Guitar,Guitar (Rhythm)
Cordell "Boogie" Mosson   Bass

Technical Credits

Jerry   Engineer
Cordell "Boogie" Mosson   Composer
Eddie Hazel   Composer
Lee DeCarlo   Engineer
Jerry Goldstein   Engineer
"Boogie" C. Mosson   Composer
George Clinton   Design,Composer,Producer,Original Concept
Garry Shider   Composer
Sir Lleb of Funkadelia   Liner Notes
Pedro Bell   Design,Artwork,Original Concept
Neil Terk   Art Direction
Mia Krinsky   Production Coordination
William Franklin   Composer
Sidney Barnes   Composer
Bernie Worrell   Composer
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews