America Eats Its Young

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (127 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 76:52

eMusic Review

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Nate Patrin

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Disintegration celebration!
Label: Westbound Records / Alpha Pup

By 1972 Funkadelic had become the premier funk ensemble, and this ambitious, sprawling, messy, damn near-perfect record is all the proof you'd want. It blows up right from the gate: Bernie Worrell's full-throttle organ hook on "You Hit the Nail on the Head" is his greatest performance until "Flash Light" five years later, while the brief yet massive "Philmore" and the "Jesus Loves Me"-tweaking mudslide "A Joyful Process" show off some slick group chops. The heart of the record is in its lyrical deconstruction of the titular country's disintegration: empty rhetoric is assailed in "If You Don't Like the Effects, Don't Produce the Cause," while "Everybody's Going to Make It This Time" is anxious gospel that seems to anticipate a second Nixon term. There's plenty of fun extra-political diversions, too; check out the Cadillac carousel burble of Parliaments remake "That Was My Girl" and the doom-funk slow jam "Miss Lucifer's Love," whose Satanic majesty could have left Mick Jagger shook.

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Seminal Wank!

permafrost154

Nice slab of early 70s fon-kay juice.

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Damn straight

Demygawdjr

You hit the nail on the head, Petzbrooklyn. Couldn't agree with you more. This is a perfect companion to Sly's There's a Riot Going On.

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Funkiest raw meat ever

ikehowell

I wore out my original tape listening to the first 2 tracks. "If You Don't Like the Effects" has got to be the one of the best feeling pockets recorded. Very much worth the download!

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why is it ...

Petzbrooklyn

Why is it the previous E-reviewer wrote "slice of early '70s funk"? If I didn't know better "slice" would stop me cold from downloading this rocker, its the most overtly political album Funkadelic made and it should not be dismissed as casually as someone like Christgau might dismiss it. Political complaceny is the new vietnam and this album attempts to wake you up to the political scene ... its also a deeply sensual record and it commands your cock as much as your brain.

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Juicy

McBain

Nice slice of early 70's funk.

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Nah

rockets

Trade you the whole thing for any one James Brown cut - only good one is Nail on the Head.

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Great, even with extra cheese

elliptickle

Not sure what others love about Funkadelic and Parliament. Maybe the extended jams? That's not for me, but I love the goofy playfulness of this album. Plus it rocks in a completely unsubtle way.

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No good?

PieKing

Funkadelic's finest and one of the greatest albums ever recorded.

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No good?

PieKing

Funkadelic's finest and one of the greatest albums ever recorded.

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subpar for funkadelic

fivefingers

the weakest of the funkadelic albums in my opinion. Best track has to be Balance

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They Say All Media Guide

A double album and worth every minute of it, America Eats Its Young makes for a freaky, funky, and aware good time. Compared to the endless slabs of double-album dreck that came out around the same time from all sources, here Funkadelic brought life, soul, and much more to the party. With George Clinton credited only for arranging and producing, here the mad cast he brought together went all out. Bernie Worrell in particular now had a new importance, credited as co-arranger with Clinton as well as handling string and horn charts on a number of songs. His surging, never-stop keyboards, meanwhile, took control from the start, with his magnificent lead break on the opening “You Hit the Nail on the Head” making for one of the best performances ever on Hammond organ. Bootsy Collins (credited as William) is also somewhere in the crowd on bass and vocals, while old favorites like Eddie Hazel and Tiki Fulwood, among many others, can be found. Perhaps to fill in the time, a few numbers from the first Parliament album, Osmium, two years before cropped up, namely “Loose Booty” and the hilariously sleazy “I Call My Baby Pussycat,” here performed with a noticeably slower, dirty groove. The straightforward social call to arms appears throughout, with one song title saying it all — “If You Don’t Like the Effects, Don’t Produce the Cause.” Other winners include the vicious title track, combining everything from mysterious, doom-laden voices and weeping wails to slow, sad music, and the concluding “Wake Up,” while “Everybody Is Going to Make It This Time” is a lovely, gospel-informed ballad that heads for the skies and hearts. There are more mundane concerns as well, such as “There Was My Girl,” a quirky weeper, and the weird if smoothly delivered “Miss Lucifer’s Love,” with more than one target in mind. [The 2005 reissue features excellent remastered sound, a thick booklet, and both sides of the "Loose Booty" 45.] – Ned Raggett

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