Categorized | Local

Someone came up to me and said 'Didn't I tell you to keep your head covered?' I

Posted by admin

"Someone came up to me and said, 'Didn't I tell you to keep your head covered?' I told him, 'I thought y'all had changed shift'."! 'T.A.P.O.A.F.O.M.' (Epic, CD/LP/tape) is out next week George Clinton & the P-Funk All-Stars tour Britain in July.. George Clinton showed Mickey a half-hour's respect and then took his hat off. This has happened a couple of times already, but this time he's out like a light. His band rouse him from his slumber with shouts of "Animation!" This word reminds him of something "Animation is a reality," he observes gnomically. "I go to Disneyland and they make me cover my head, because Mickey [Mouse] might get mad." Like many of Clinton's nuttier utterances, this one turns out to contain a healthy kernel of truth.

On a recent visit to Disneyland, his flamboyant aspect caused him to be charged with the heinous crime of "character obstruction", and he was forced to cover his head on pain of expulsion.There could only be one winner in this battle between the shocktroops of corporate leisure and the man who has done more than any other American this century (with the possible exception of Frank Zappa, but you can't dance to him) to fuse the libido and the intellect. He defines his role as somewhere "between referee and traffic cop". How about dictator? "The music dictates itself."Life in the fast lane takes its toll, however. In mid-conversation, sitting perfectly upright, Clinton's eyes close. - recalls that of the great jazz-band leaders Duke Ellington and Sun Ra.

I loaned the spaceship out and it's taken a while to get it back." Clinton's backing vocalist Gary Cooper, sitting next to him, takes up the story in a crazy helium voice "I'll bring your spaceship back ... in the next millennium!"For a man who has been associated with Clinton for almost 30 years - "I was 14 when I met him, I'll be 43 this year" - Cooper looks remarkably healthy. "I don't have a fixed income," he maintains cheerfully, "but I have a fixed outcome." Clinton's relations with an extended family of extravagantly talented sidemen - such celebrated P-funk alumni as Bootsy Collins and Bernie Worrell are among those returning on T.A.P.O.A.F.O.M. So why did he decide to relaunch the Mothership? "We're going to need a vehicle to get where we have to go ... Clinton is unequivocal: "We buffed it."The new disc invokes the name of one of Clinton's biggest successes, Mothership Connection (1975): the potent and hallucinatory cocktail of politics and porn, social allegory and sci-fi that established his P-Funk musical dynasty as a genre in its own right. "I'm still spending their money."In the title of his new album T.A.P.O.A.F.O.M.

(that's The Awesome Power Of A Fully Operational Mothership to you) there is a tacit recognition that not all of his recent releases have been quite up to scratch. From the exact science of "Mathematics" ("Any per cent of you is as good as the whole pie") to the historical accuracy of "Funky King" (with its irresistably tasteless hook-line: "When I do it, I be sticking to it, like hot grits on Al Green"), this one sounds pretty carefully polished. "Things have got a little different lately," he continues in upbeat mode. "I still look at them like this [mimes astonishment at unsuitability of corporate apparel] - 'What've you got on?' But now they know I'm supposed to look the way I do." So there's no problem with his new label Sony yet? "It hasn't got to that point," he chuckles. It's not hard to see why Clinton has had more record companies than George Michael has had hot dinners.How would he characterise his relations with the music industry over the years? "They always gave us strange looks," Clinton responds genially, between mouthfuls.

Comments are closed.

Next Articles