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George Clinton Tickets

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[0 of 5 customers found this review helpful]

I was very unhappy, will not attend.
By G Ma from Columbus, OH on 2/16/2010
Cons:
Poor Set List, Poor Sound Quality
Best For:
Adults

This was supposed to be an evening celebrating my best friends 60th b.d.,standing room only. Paid out almost $90.00 not to be able to see the staqe, finally got a seat in the handicap section. But all of those not handicap was standing up in front so we couldn't see, we were placed in a small corner, the music wasn't that great, The music was only 15 mins. long than a 30 min. break, no entertainment for that 30 mins. We left when the second set started. We are on set incomes, and the money spent could have brought me groceries instead. I will never attend another concert by George Clinton. I have been to other concerts by George and was very happy with them. What has happened?

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[1 of 1 customers found this review helpful]

George Clinton and PFunk is GREAT!!!!!!
By RobertaM from New York on 7/19/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, It was a PFunk Party
Cons:
Was a Small Audience
Best For:
Everyone, Into PFunk ages 30-60's

VIP is not all its cracked up to be..............

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Wowed me 2 years ago and this time also
By TONY ROME from NEW CASTLE , DE on 7/26/2007
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Did not miss a beat, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Lighting
Best For:
Die-Hards Only, Funketeers are go

I'm 52 years old and I am a funketeer from way back. George& the Allstars still give it up strong from start to finish. Adding some up to date material was a plus![...]Anthony m.

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Awesome !
By canpricorn from DC on 1/2/2007
Pros:
Could see the whole stage, Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Lighting, Our seats were fabulous, Perfect Set List
Cons:
At times poor sound qual
Best For:
Die-Hards Only

we love George Clinton and it was so great to see him lookin right at us. It doesn't get any better than where we were sitting, 2nd row center. The show was a circus, so much to see, and enjoy. These guys know how to groove; sometimes there were some sound issues but that was just Constitution Hall I think.

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George Clinton Biography

The mastermind of the Parliament/Funkadelic collective during the 1970s, George Clinton broke up both bands by 1981 and began recording solo albums, occasionally performing live with his former bandmates as the P.Funk All-Stars. Born in Kannapolis, NC, on July 22, 1940, Clinton became interested in doo wop while living in New Jersey during the early '50s. He formed the Parliaments in 1955, based out of a barbershop back room where he straightened hair. The group had a small R&B hit during 1967, but Clinton began to mastermind the Parliaments' activities two years later. Recording both as Parliament and Funkadelic, the group revolutionized R&B during the '70s, twisting soul music into funk by adding influences from several late-'60s acid heroes: Jimi Hendrix, Frank Zappa, and Sly Stone. The Parliament/Funkadelic machine ruled black music during the '70s, capturing over 40 R&B hit singles (including three number ones) and recording three platinum albums.

By 1980, George Clinton began to be weighed down by legal difficulties arising from Polygram's acquisition of Parliament's label, Casablanca. Jettisoning both the Parliament and Funkadelic names (but not the musicians), Clinton signed to Capitol in 1982 both as a solo act and as the P.Funk All-Stars. His first solo album, 1982's Computer Games, contained the Top 20 R&B hit Loopzilla. Several months later, the title track from Clinton's Atomic Dog EP hit number one on the R&B charts it stayed at the top spot for four weeks, but only managed number 101 on the pop charts. Clinton stayed on Capitol for three more years, releasing three studio albums and frequently charting singles -- Nubian Nut, Last Dance, Do Fries Go With That Shake -- in the R&B Top 40. During much of the three-year period from 1986 to 1989, Clinton became embroiled in legal difficulties (resulting from the myriad royalty problems latent during the '70s with recordings of over 40 musicians for four labels under three names). Also problematic during the latter half of the '80s was Clinton's disintegrating reputation as a true forefather of rock by the end of the decade, however, a generation of rappers reared on P-Funk were beginning to name check him.

In 1989, Clinton signed a contract with Prince's Paisley Park label and released his fifth solo studio album, The Cinderella Theory. After one more LP for Paisley Park (Hey Man, Smell My Finger), Clinton signed with Sony 550. His first release, 1996's T.A.P.O.A.F.O.M. (the awesome power of a fully operational mothership), reunited the funk pioneer with several of his Parliament/Funkadelic comrades from the '70s. Clinton's Greatest Funkin' Hits (1996) teamed old P-Funk hits with new-school rappers such as Digital Underground, Ice Cube, and Q-Tip. See Also: Parliament, Funkadelic ~ John Bush, Rovi