Celebrating
its golden jubilee at 50 years old is the sophomore album from George
Clinton's Parliament, Up for the Down Stroke, which was released on July
3rd, 1974. While the band had released a debut LP in 1970, Osmium,
classic Parliament really begins with this album, which was their first
release on Neil Bogart's freshly minted Casablanca Records. Along with
KISS, Parliament would help bring that label to unprecedented heights of
success in the later half of the decade, with Parliament's massive
stage show positioning them as the black music equivalent of their
makeup masked heavy metal peers on that label.
The
album's title track was released as a single and helped begin the
group's rise to stardom, remaining one of the most iconic and
recognizable tunes from the entire P-Funk discography. The album also
proved to be a pivotal reunion with bass master, Bootsy Collins, who'd
taken a two year hiatus away from the P-Funk collective prior to
recording this album. His return to the fold would solidify his
position in the group and he would remain an integral contributor
throughout the band's entire residency with Casablanca. Parliament
would run their career in tandem with Funkadelic, along with numerous
other side projects, throughout the decade, building a massive P-funk
network of performers and products.
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