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| Flash Light, Give Up The Funk..., Aqua Boogie..., Mothership Connection..., Dr. Funkenstein, P. Funk..., Up For The Down Stroke, 11 more. |
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| 1 Up for the Down Stroke |
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| 2 All Your Goodies Are Gone |
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| 3 Ride On |
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| 4 Chocolate City |
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| 5 Give Up the Funk (Tear the Roof off the Sucker) |
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| 6 P. Funk (Wants to Get Funked Up) |
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| 7 Mothership Connection (Star Child) |
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| 8 Do That Stuff |
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| 9 Dr. Funkenstein |
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| 10 Let's Take It to the Stage |
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| 11 Fantasy Is Reality |
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| 12 Bop Gun (Endangered Species) |
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| 13 Flash Light |
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| 14 Aqua Boogie (A Psychoalphadiscobetabioaquadoloop) |
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| 15 Theme from the Black Hole |
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| 16 Agony of Defeet |
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Album Review
"Funked Up: The Very Best of Parliament" is a full-priced, one-disc summation of Parliament's recordings for Casablanca Records (since absorbed into what is now Universal and discontinued, hence the issuance on Universal's Mercury imprint), meant to supplant the 1984 LP compilation "Greatest Hits (The Bomb)" and provide consumers with something in between the more expensive two-CD set "Tear the Roof Off 1974-1980" and the discount-priced "20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The Best of Parliament". The album's focus, writes annotator Tom Vickers, is "chart success," and it includes among its 16 tracks 14 of Parliament's 19 R&B singles chart entries on Casablanca, including all of their R&B Top 40 hits except "Party People" (which crested at number 39 in Billboard). Also included are two album tracks, "All Your Goodies Are Gone" from "Up for the Down Stroke" and "Let'S Take It To The Stage" from "Live: P-Funk Earth Tour". Parliament was more of an albums act than a singles act (and more of a live act than a recording act), and only six of these tracks reached the R&B Top Ten, with two, "Flash Light" and "Aqua Boogie (A Psychoalphadiscobetabioaquadoloop)," hitting number one, while just two, "Tear The Roof Off The Sucker (Give Up The Funk)" and "Flash Light," made the pop Top 20. So, a singles collection makes for a less definitive overview of the group's career than might be true for others. Hence, if the consumer has a few more bucks to spend, "Tear the Roof Off 1974-1980" is much the preferred compilation. But all of Parliament's big hits and most of its lesser ones are here. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
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Biography


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Other albums by: Parliament |
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