2011

George Clinton and Parliament/Funkadelic: House of Blues, Boston, MA 2/18/11

George Clinton and his P-Funk crew have gone through countless changes since their heyday in the 70s and 80s. Along the way, their catalog became the reservoir for rap beats, with Dr. Dre and others liberally sampling their unique grooves. Clinton’s musical and biological family grew, and he now shares the stage with his rapping grandchildren and other young disciples. Key members such as Bootsy Collins parted ways with Clinton and company, and just months ago, the band lost Garry “Diaper Man” Shider.

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Smith Westerns: Dye It Blonde

Smith Westerns is a band with potential and they deserve the opportunity to develop and grow into their sound and style.  However, with the raves coming in hot and heavy for Dye It Blonde, the peak may have crested and the accolades may never be as strong as they currently are.  Here’s hoping the opposite comes true, and the youngsters are given the chance to do even bigger and better things. 

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Cage The Elephant- Unrestrained Mayhem

They have one of those names that makes you wonder what the heck they were thinking when they chose it but in actuality it fits them very well. The catchy jittery unrestrained songs that come from a happy jittery unrestrained singer that you can’t seem to well…. “cage."

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Umphrey’s Adds S2 Event @ First Ave.

The legendary First Avenue club in Minneapolis has been a favorite venue for Umphrey’s McGee since the band first performed at the venue in 2006. UM will show some love

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Marc’s Musings: The Funky Meters

Yeah THEY Right!!! aka The Funky Meters @ Brooklyn Bowl, 2/15-17

FIVE YEARS. Seems kind of crazy but when somebody said to me the other night that it had been five years since the most popular version of N’awlins’ original Funk band had played New York, I had to think about it for a minute. And then I responded with what any true fan would say: “Yeah, you right.”

[Photos by Marc Millman]


The Meters formed at the tail end of the ’60s. They released Cissy Strut  and Sophisticated Cissy in 1969. And with those songs, the four original members of the group (Art “Poppa Funk” Neville on organ, George Porter Jr. on bass, Joseph “Zigaboo” Modeliste on drums and Leo Nocentelli on guitar) helped to create a new genre in American music. Funk was born out of James Brown’s shift in style in the mid ’60s. And The Meters along with Sly & the Family Stone, George Clinton and other seminal acts like Charles Wright & the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band, the Ohio Players and Kool & the Gang brought a whole generation to the dance floor by getting people to dance “On the One,” as James used to shout at his band.

The Meters were THE backing band in New Orleans the way the Funk Brothers were at Motown or Booker T & the MGs were at Stax. But the band broke up in the mid ’70s during a dispute over recording contracts. Just over 10 years later, Porter decided to put a new version of the band together that would feature himself with Neville & Russell Batiste on drums. Guitar would be played by Brian Stoltz and sometimes by Nocentelli. And this is the version of the band that most of us grew up seeing regularly in the ’90s and beyond. But then…IT HAD BEEN FIVE YEARS!

READ ON for more from Marc on The Funky Meters…

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Umphrey’s and Grace @ Mountain Jam

Additions to this year’s Mountain Jam lineup came down today and include HT faves Umphrey’s McGee, Grace Potter & the Nocturnals and Leroy Justice. Also performing at Hunter Mountain in

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Video: The Beatles – Smack My Bitch Up

Did you realize The Beatles dropped Smack My Bitch Up on an unsuspecting Shea Stadium crowd in 1965? Okay, that didn’t really happen. But if it did, it would’ve looked

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