Let's Take It to the Stage

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Let's Take It to the Stage album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 40:53

eMusic Review 0

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Michelangelo Matos

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Get off your ass and jam.
Label: Westbound Records / Alpha Pup

In 1974, George Clinton was given back the Parliament name (previously tied up in paperwork), and issued Up for the Down Stroke, the album that marked the beginning of P-Funk's popular ascendance. While the idea was always that Parliament was the horn-focused soul band and Funkadelic the guitar-based rock one, the reality as the '70s progressed was that Funkadelic sounded more like Parliament than like its early self. The final Funkadelic album where the split remained basically intact was Let's Take It to the Stage, the group's most consistent album on or off Westbound even if it doesn't reach the heights of Maggot Brain or Uncle Jam Wants You. The title cut challenges to a play-off everyone else in the funk pantheon at the time, like “Snoofus” (Rufus) and “Godmother” (James Brown). And the snarling guitar of Michael Hampton and the rumpus-room chants of the too brief, self-explanatory “Get Off Your Ass and Jam” would serve as a threat by themselves.

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Funkadelics finest

dan2ine

This is my favourite Funkadelic album and in my opinion is a great place to start. It is a mixture of loud fuzzy guitars, deep grooves and downright funk. My favourite track is Let's Take It to the Stage closely followed in second place by all the remaining tracks :-)

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Who influenced who?

stuartb67

Nothing much to add to the other reviews - it's Funkadelic, what's not to like - but just a question that's always puzzled me. Was George Clinton a massive influence on Frank Zappa, or was it the other way round? ;)

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genre-bending at its funkiest

dsalas

I'm a R&B/soul/funk novice who got introduced to Funkadelic via eMusic, and this is by far my favorite record of theirs on this site. Defenitely the one I'd recommend to beginners, as the tight little three minute tracks are a little less challening than the epic jam sessions on other albums. "No Head No Backstage Pass" sounds like the boys managed to invent System of a Down twenty odd years before the CA metal band existed (and sound better to boot). "Good To Your Earhole" is just straightforward good times, and "Baby I Owe You Something Good" is heave-ho, anguished soul. But really, it's all good.

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My favorite Funkadelic album

ddbonair

This album defines the Funkadelic concept for me...hard rock, nazzty funk, sweet soul, and just the right amount of weirdness! Of all the Westbound albums, this one is probably the most consistant IMO. I've been listening to this album since I was nine, and I still love it. Best trax: "Good to Your Earhole", "Get Off Your Ass...", "Be My Beach" (Bootsy's debut!), "No Head...". Horror movie fans, check out "Atmosphere"!

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They Say All Music Guide

One of Funkadelic’s goofiest releases, Let’s Take It to the Stage also contains more P-Funk all-time greats as well, making for a grand balance of the serious and silly. Perhaps the silliest is at the end — there’s not much else one can call the extended oompah/icing rink start of “Atmosphere.” The title track is as much a call to arms as “Free Your Mind and Your Ass Will Follow” is, but with a more direct musical performance and a more open nod to party atmospheres (not to mention the source of one of Andrew Dice Clay’s longest-running bits). The targets of the band’s good-natured wrath are, in fact, other groups — “Hey, Fool and the Gang! Let’s take it to the stage!” There’s no mistaking the track that immediately follows makes it even more intense — “Get off Your Ass and Jam” kicks in with one bad-ass drum roll and then scorches the damn place down, from guitar solo to the insanely funky bass from Bootsy Collins. It may only be two and a half minutes long, but it alone makes the album a classic. Hearing Collins’ unmistakable tones is usually enough to get anything on the crazy tip, but “Be My Beach” just makes it all the more fun, as does the overall air of silly romance getting nuttier as it goes. “Good to Your Earhole” sets the outrageous mood just right — it’s one of the band’s tightest monsters of funk, guitars sprawling all over the place even as the heavy-hitting rhythm doesn’t let one second of groove get lost. Of course, there’s also one totally notorious number to go with it, but “No Head No Backstage Pass” has one of the craziest rhythms on the whole album, not to mention lip-smackingly nutty lines delivered with the appropriate leer. [The 2005 reissue features excellent remastered sound, a thick booklet, and a U.S. Music track that features Funkadelic.] – Ned Raggett

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