Dj Mouss Funk Connection FUNK
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With their blistering live shows getting dancefloors around the UK jumping wherever they play, expect this to be a corker of a night. Followed by actor, DJ and man with the funk Craig Charles at the decks into the early Yuletide hours. Ding Dong merrily people!
Rising to prominence with James Brown in the early 1970s, and later with Parliament-Funkadelic, Collins established himself as one of the leading names and innovators in funk with his driving basslines and humorous vocals. He later formed his own P-Funk side project known as Bootsy's Rubber Band.[2] He was a frequent collaborator with other musicians from a variety of genres, including dance music (Deee-Lite's \"Groove Is in the Heart\"), electronic big beat (Fatboy Slim's \"Weapon of Choice\"), and alternative metal (Praxis), among others. He is a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, inducted in 1997 with 15 other members of Parliament-Funkadelic. In 2020, Rolling Stone magazine ranked Collins number 4 in its list of the 50 greatest bassists of all time.[3]
With his elder brother Phelps \"Catfish\" Collins, Frankie \"Kash\" Waddy, and Philippé Wynne, Collins formed a funk band, The Pacemakers, in 1968.[4] In March 1970, after most of the members of James Brown's band quit over a pay dispute, The Pacemakers were hired as Brown's backing band and they became known as The J.B.'s.[7] (They are often referred to as the \"original\" J.B.'s to distinguish them from later line-ups that went by the same name.) Although they worked for Brown for only 11 months, the original J.B.'s played on some of Brown's most intense funk recordings, including \"Get Up (I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine\", \"Bewildered (1970)\", \"Super Bad\", \"Soul Power\", \"Talkin' Loud and Sayin' Nothing\", and two instrumental singles, the much-sampled \"The Grunt\" and \"These Are the J.B.'s\". In regards to his tenure working for James Brown, Collins stated:
After a nearly five-year hiatus, he had a comeback in 1988 (with some help from producer Bill Laswell). What's Bootsy Doin' flaunted a new sound that foreshadowed the 1990s, such as the dance floor smash \"Party on Plastic\". Laswell introduced Collins to Herbie Hancock, resulting in Perfect Machine (1988). The techno-funk they recorded featured turntables for scratch appeal, and the smoothly-stylized vocals of Leroy \"Sugarfoot\" Bonner of chart-topping Ohio Players. These were the first of many collaborations between Laswell and Collins on many albums and projects, with the prolific producer using Bootsy mainly as a bassist but sometimes as a rhythm guitarist.[9]
In 1992, he joined with guitarist Stevie Salas and drummer Buddy Miles to form the funk-metal fusion group Hardware. The trio released one album, Third Eye Open, before disbanding. In the same year, Collins played bass guitar on the first Praxis album (produced by Laswell): Transmutation, alongside fellow Parliament-Funkadelic member Bernie Worrell, Bryan Mantia and Buckethead.
In July 2010, Collins, in partnership with former child actor Cory Danziger,[21] launched Funk University (\"Funk U\"), an online-only bass guitar school in which he also serves as curator and lead professor. Funk University offers an intense curriculum tailored for intermediate to advanced bass players as well as anyone interested in a deeper understanding of funk. The curriculum is based on bass theory, history of funk, and Collins's own musical history given by Collins himself, augmented by lessons and exercises in bass and rhythm from guest bassist professors such as Les Claypool, Meshell Ndegeocello, John B (Williams) and Victor Wooten. As of 2021, Funk University is now defunct.
He has been mentioned in the song \"Genius of Love\" by Tom Tom Club in the line \"Clinton's musicians such as Bootsy Collins raise expectation to a new intention\", while \"Got more bass than Bootsy Collins\" is a line in the song \"Rumble in the Jungle\" by the Fugees. His influence in popular culture is seen in that he has been referenced by a number of television series. In The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air episode \"Sooooooul Train\", Geoffrey sneaks into the Soul Train tapings posing as Collins, while in The Mighty Boosh episode \"The Legend of Old Gregg\" an alien creature named 'The Funk' lands on Collins's house, giving him his ability to play the bass guitar \"like some kinda delirious funky priest\", as well as the ability to see around corners.
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