A list of puns related to "Maggot Brain"
VG+ Media and Cover Art
$23.45 Serge Gainsbourg ββ Comic Strip *read discogs notes about this bootleg, to which I add my opinion: "sounds great"
$23.45 Serge Gainsbourg & Michel Colombier ββ Le Pacha (Original Music From The Movie)
Fifty American Dollars Mikhail Chekalin* - Postβ§Pop - Nonβ§Pop Those of you who look into stuff https://youtu.be/DogBsxDcNQM this is a Saturday morning record made in '89USSR. discogs has a guy in Soloman Islands, one in Lituhania, a copy in Netherlands... and good 'ole LuckyPettyπ
$32.45 Sons Of Kemet ββ Lest We Forget What We Came Here To Do
$49.45 Ted Hawkins ββ The Next Hundred Years
$45.45 The Halo Benders ββ God Don't Make No Junk
$45.45 Hefner ββ The Fidelity Wars
$95.45 Marianne Faithfull ββ Before The Poison
$98.45 Little Richard ββ Little Richard archival
$75.45 Herman DΓΌne ββ Switzerland Heritage
SOLD 45.45 Cornershop ββ When I Was Born For The 7th Time $45.45 Cornershop ββ Handcream For A Generation includes 12"white label
SOLD45.45 U2 ββ Zooropa
SOLD115.45 Funkadelic ββ Maggot Brain
From Midwest Media Mail to US Included
International Shipping At Cost
Thank You,
Lucky Petty
Hey, Im trying to learn this incredible song but theres only one guy one youtube wich explains it but hes very fast and it makes hard for me to learn.
In the past ive seen a 40 min of a guy wich explained very well but i cant seem to find it now...
Decode in Base64:
aHR0cHM6Ly9kcml2ZS5nb29nbGUuY29tL2RyaXZlL2ZvbGRlcnMvMXo0MDNxemlaNVRRWjlIaDV6c1g2ZVVzam5ubkpuSHBoP3VzcD1zaGFyaW5n
Version: https://www.discogs.com/Funkadelic-Maggot-Brain/release/6406827
Setup: Rega Planar 3 (AT-VM95SH cartridge) --- Rega Elex-R --- Scarlett Focusrite 2i2 (3rd Gen)
Processing: Minimal click removal
Vinyl State Class Code: NM
Enjoy!
Just heard this amazing track on BBC 6music. It's from 1971, has clear Floyd and Hendrix influence. Might also have influenced Gilmour...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JOKn33-q4Ao
https://preview.redd.it/msnba33orxq61.png?width=651&format=png&auto=webp&s=7745f37e8416430f275f40887b1908f53516f3e6
To fill my boredom here is a short thread on the story behind one of my favorite songs: Funkadelic - Maggot Brain
This eponymous track from the famous album "Maggot Brain", released on July 12, 1971, is today a classic that has become one of the greatest music in history. Known to stand out from the rest of their delirious funky compositions, Maggot Brain has nevertheless become one of the most emblematic of the group. So much so that it is the track that many would evoke if someone quoted Funkadelic.
Its composer, Eddie Hazel, was only seventeen years old when he composed this piece. George Clinton, the mythical leader of Parliament-Funkadelic wanted a melancholy piece to pay tribute to Jimi Hendrix, who died two years earlier on September 18, 1970. Clinton, on LSD at the time (it must be said that the whole band was continuously on the drug) asked young Eddie to imagine his mother's death in the first half of the sound, and to imagine being told that she survived in the second half of the sound.
This was followed by a thirteen-minute recording session, which was enough to create the legend Eddie Hazel. I would describe this intoxicating piece as an emotional journey that instantly transports the listener. Moving from a first phase reminding us of fear and sadness, before delicately settling down on a cloud of sweetness, a welcome relief that the listener will know how to savor after this first melancholic melody. Enclosed is a version performed by the artist on the occasion of a party celebrating the birthday of the late Hendrix, almost twenty years after his death.
Eddie Hazel passed away two years later on December 23, 1992. The piece Maggot Brain was played at his funeral, his compositions are however not ready to stop being listened to all over the world.
My all time favorite record. Enjoy! Fuck Boladian.
Looking forward to enjoying /u/anerbikic's personal rip of the album too
2X for twice the fun :D YUhSMGNITTZMeTh4Wm1samFHbGxjaTVqYjIwdlAzTjNkWFowYnpSeE1USm5ZMjV5ZUhadU5XOW4=
Somehow, almost 30 years of music obsession, I have overlooked Funkadelic's incredible 1971 album MaggotBrain until recently (feel free to shame me).
How have Phish not thought of covering this album? Was this in the running the year they did that countdown?
It has all the makings for a great Halloween album -- incredible, soaring, soulful guitar solo to open and close the record, plus some sick funk tracks in between.
Edit:
I found the complete list they posted: http://www.monsterfresh.com/2009/09/29/phish-festival-8-halloween-cover/
I'm shocked it's not on there.
SOLD
early 2000's 180g mega fancy gatefold. Cover is as close to NM- as you can get, vinyl might as well be NM- but I played this out so there are some paper scuffs/etc. so graded a nice strong VG+.
$25 ppd
$0 shipping
To fill my boredom here is a short thread on the story behind one of my favorite songs: Funkadelic - Maggot Brain
This eponymous track from the famous album "Maggot Brain", released on July 12, 1971, is today a classic that has become one of the greatest music in history. Known to stand out from the rest of their delirious funky compositions, Maggot Brain has nevertheless become one of the most emblematic of the group. So much so that it is the track that many would evoke if someone quoted Funkadelic.
Its composer, Eddie Hazel, was only seventeen years old when he composed this piece. George Clinton, the mythical leader of Parliament-Funkadelic wanted a melancholy piece to pay tribute to Jimi Hendrix, who died two years earlier on September 18, 1970. Clinton, on LSD at the time (it must be said that the whole band was continuously on the drug) asked young Eddie to imagine his mother's death in the first half of the sound, and to imagine being told that she survived in the second half of the sound.
This was followed by a thirteen-minute recording session, which was enough to create the legend Eddie Hazel. I would describe this intoxicating piece as an emotional journey that instantly transports the listener. Moving from a first phase reminding us of fear and sadness, before delicately settling down on a cloud of sweetness, a welcome relief that the listener will know how to savor after this first melancholic melody. Enclosed is a version performed by the artist on the occasion of a party celebrating the birthday of the late Hendrix, almost twenty years after his death.
Eddie Hazel passed away two years later on December 23, 1992. The piece Maggot Brain was played at his funeral, his compositions are however not ready to stop being listened to all over the world.
To fill my boredom here is a short thread on the story behind one of my favorite songs: Funkadelic - Maggot Brain
This eponymous track from the famous album "Maggot Brain", released on July 12, 1971, is today a classic that has become one of the greatest music in history. Known to stand out from the rest of their delirious funky compositions, Maggot Brain has nevertheless become one of the most emblematic of the group. So much so that it is the track that many would evoke if someone quoted Funkadelic.
Its composer, Eddie Hazel, was only seventeen years old when he composed this piece. George Clinton, the mythical leader of Parliament-Funkadelic wanted a melancholy piece to pay tribute to Jimi Hendrix, who died two years earlier on September 18, 1970. Clinton, on LSD at the time (it must be said that the whole band was continuously on the drug) asked young Eddie to imagine his mother's death in the first half of the sound, and to imagine being told that she survived in the second half of the sound.
This was followed by a thirteen-minute recording session, which was enough to create the legend Eddie Hazel. I would describe this intoxicating piece as an emotional journey that instantly transports the listener. Moving from a first phase reminding us of fear and sadness, before delicately settling down on a cloud of sweetness, a welcome relief that the listener will know how to savor after this first melancholic melody. Enclosed is a version performed by the artist on the occasion of a party celebrating the birthday of the late Hendrix, almost twenty years after his death.
Eddie Hazel passed away two years later on December 23, 1992. The piece Maggot Brain was played at his funeral, his compositions are however not ready to stop being listened to all over the world.
To fill my boredom here is a short thread on the story behind one of my favorite songs: Funkadelic - Maggot Brain. Maggot Brain
This eponymous track from the famous album "Maggot Brain", released on July 12, 1971, is today a classic that has become one of the greatest music in history. Known to stand out from the rest of their delirious funky compositions, Maggot Brain has nevertheless become one of the most emblematic of the group. So much so that it is the track that many would evoke if someone quoted Funkadelic.
Its composer, Eddie Hazel, was only seventeen years old when he composed this piece. George Clinton, the mythical leader of Parliament-Funkadelic wanted a melancholy piece to pay tribute to Jimi Hendrix, who died two years earlier on September 18, 1970. Clinton, on LSD at the time (it must be said that the whole band was continuously on the drug) asked young Eddie to imagine his mother's death in the first half of the sound, and to imagine being told that she survived in the second half of the sound.
This was followed by a thirteen-minute recording session, which was enough to create the legend Eddie Hazel. I would describe this intoxicating piece as an emotional journey that instantly transports the listener. Moving from a first phase reminding us of fear and sadness, before delicately settling down on a cloud of sweetness, a welcome relief that the listener will know how to savor after this first melancholic melody. Enclosed is a version performed by the artist on the occasion of a party celebrating the birthday of the late Hendrix, almost twenty years after his death.
Eddie Hazel passed away two years later on December 23, 1992. The piece Maggot Brain was played at his funeral, his compositions are however not ready to stop being listened to all over the world.
Please note that this site uses cookies to personalise content and adverts, to provide social media features, and to analyse web traffic. Click here for more information.