Rock Bands & Pop Stars
Bootsy Collins Pictures
Artist:
Bootsy Collins
Origin:
United States, Cincinnati - OhioUnited States
Born date:
October 26, 1951
Bootsy Collins Album: «Glory B Da' Funk's on Me! The Bootsy Collins Anthology»
Bootsy Collins Album: «Glory B Da' Funk's on Me! The Bootsy Collins Anthology» (Front side)
    Album information
  • Customers rating: (4.4 of 5)
  • Title:Glory B Da' Funk's on Me! The Bootsy Collins Anthology
  • Release date:
  • Type:Audio CD
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Customers rating
Track listing
Review - Amazon.com
William "Bootsy" Collins cut his teeth playing bass with the James Brown band in 1970, but when he landed in George Clinton's Parliament/Funkadelic crew in the mid-'70s, he quickly became a figurehead of Clinton's messier, trippier cartoon funk. Throughout the 1976-82 period condensed into this two-disc set, Bootsy and his Rubber Band were essentially P-Funk for kids. His records had all the stage-crowding chaos of the Mothership, with the politics and priapism replaced by goofy spiels about the excellence of, well, Bootsy, plus squelchy, googly sounds and his infamous star-shaped shades. The tone he got out of his star-shaped bass, like huge bubbles surfacing from the bottom of a lake, was heavy enough that he could slow things way, way down--"Jam Fan (Hot)" crawls like no other hard-funk record. That, in turn, let him be the half-serious loveman Clinton couldn't risk being (check out the wacky, spacy slow jam "Munchies for Your Love"). Glory B mostly collects unedited album tracks, though it also throws in 1980's lost demi-hit "Freak to Freak" (credited to Sweat Band) and the '82 single "Body Slam!" --Douglas Wolk
Customer review
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
- Bootsy fulfill's the Doctor of Funk's prescription

Finally! An anthology album of Bootsy's that is worthy of being released! You have all the 1970's classics on this double disc, and respect from his "The One Giveth...The Count Taketh Away" LP with "Rag Poppin'" and "Landshark (Just when You Thought It Was Safe)" and "Take A Lickin' and Keep On Kickin'". See my review on that album, a must for Bootsy fans and P-Funk fans alike. I give this album a four (Yes I am tough ranking on this one) because it doesn't have the cuts "Rubber Duckie" from the "Aaaah, The Name Is Bootsy" LP and "So Nice You Name Him Twice" from the "The One Giveth..." LP. I am quite pleased to hear "Freak To Freak". A lost classic. I actually forgotten this song. Yes, even lost funk classics slip out of the Doctor of Funk's mind too. Just like the funk Classic "Work That Sucker To Death". Yes shame shame shame on me. Anyhow, It is nice to ride around in the company van listening to Bootsy and not changing CD's just to hear all of your favorite jams. If it is a 30 minute drive somewhere, you can only listen to three or four good Bootsy-tickin' jams. Now with either one of these two CD's, you don't have to fumble around in traffic. Now if we can get the five-star CD, the ultimate Bootsy collection with other Non-Warner Jams like "Jungle Bass" and "Party on Plastic". Until next review, Keep Da Funk Alive!

Customer review
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
- glory b da' funk's on me! the bootsy collins anthology

As a teenager growing up in Ohio in the mid to late seventies, I

was exposed to funk on a regular basis. Bootsy was always one of

my crews favorites. He was the entire package, just like this

disc. If you're a true funk fan, and I am, you'll treasure this

disc like a gold bullion. I got it about 3 months ago, and I can't stop listening to it. I especially like that almost all of

the songs are the long versions, and not the single versions you

get on some greatest hits discs.

Customer review
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
- Yabba Dabba DOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!

Bootsy Collins can't ever say enough about the Genius of this Funkateer Pioneer He gets Down&Gets Right Here.all the Jams."I'd Rather Be with you" alone is as TIght as any Slow-Jam over the past Decade it's got Madd Power.Bootsy Never Faked the Funk Back in the day all the Jams that will keep your Bar-B Que Grill Blazing is here.the MusicianShip is Smoking Bootsy is Scary Creatively.in Another World Bootsy would be Given far more Love&Respect because He brings it on here.if you want the Funk this is FOr You.

Customer review
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
- Sexiest Bass Playa on the Planet!

Funk music is the original underground black pop music. Unlike soul, r and b, Motown and other pop genres, funk never really caught on popularly. Though disco borrowed from it and many new wavers paid lip service, the music itself remained stubbornly underground, even in it's most popular incarnations such as EW&F or the Average White Band. But the nasty groove, propelled by a solid bass and drums foundation with a layered stew of blues and jazz licks over top, is perhaps the most important sound in the music of the last 30 years, influencing artists as diverse as the Talking Heads, Dr. Dre, Miles Davis, Ornette Coleman and even arguably jam bands like Phish. And of course there was no bass player as important in the music as Bootsy Collins, who was responsible even more than any drummer for the "bomb" that characterized funk.

As a member of P-Funk, Bootsy was a major player in the development of late 70s funk...psychedelic funk if you will, which mixed elements of James Brown, jazz and acid rock to create a potent music for dancing and social statement. But on his own, Bootsy was perhaps less interested in creating a black mythology and was more of a down home groove merchant. This anthology is filled with some of the Rubber Band's funkiest work from the mid 70s until about 1982. Bootsy's jams are potent and fun. Tracks like Stretchin' Out, Psychoticbumpschool, Freak to Freak or Countracula are as funky as anything that came out of the P-Funk Universe and will both get your booty moving and will have enough musical content to move your mind.

But Bootsy's real strength to me is his ballad work. His love songs are slow, sexy, and very very nasty. The Rubber Band was blessed with a few wonderful singers such as Mudbone Cooper, who's falsetto dripped sex and gospel at the same time. But what makes the tracks work is the slow hypnotic grooves set up by Bootsy and drummer Kash Waddy, which build slowly but inevitably to orgasmic conclusions. Stand out tracks include Vanish In Our Sleep, which is soooo smooth that it should be X rated, What's a Telephone Bill featuring amazing vocal work from Mudbone and other singers, Can't Stay Away, in which some great nasty funk work is hidden behind what could be mistaken for a top forty hit. But the masterpiece of the anthology is Munchies for your Love. The ten minute track is deeply hypnotic, based on a long two chord jam. As the track builds Bootsy launches a bass solo that quite literally explodes with passion, and by the end the bass and drums sound as if they are making love to each other. It's the most amazing recreation of the erotic experience I've ever heard musically outside of Wagner's Liebestod.

This is a very well done double compilation. The artwork captures the visual aesthetic of the P-Funk family very well, with shots of Bootsy and his wild glasses, and other cartoon shots of the band. The pressings are excellent and selection is also top knotch. However, this should be thought of as a way to sample the Rubber Band. Once you are hooked it's important to hear the albums AS albums. Funk music is album-oriented music. Often the albums are unified by themes and concepts which are really best experienced as a whole and not in bleeding chunks. Still...if you are new to Bootsy, or just want much of the best music on two convenient CDs this is a great way to go. This CD will rock a party, or a party of just two...just what the Funk is supposed to do!

Customer review
- It's Bootsy...

This is another collection of funk that would be one for the collection. As to further your collection for the artists of their time, this a must.