Funk Ain't Broke (feat. Rodney O.) - Bootsy Collins

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Funk Ain't Broke (feat. Rodney O.) Lyrics

Yeah
It's Rodney O
Back up in your ear hole
Gonna take you on a little ever slow
So ah, turn me up in my headphone
So I can hear what I'm
Sayin'
Yeah
Time to bust back
For
Another rhyme workshop
What rhyme's that
Beat tighter than a knot
If it's on
Then it's on
First let me say that if you got drama
It's best that you say that
I'm only
Here to bring to funk ya
If you don't like what you hear
Fool, screw ya.
Bootsy on the
Track, the homey go way back Back on
Back
Like there's a click, let's chelly back bustin'
Movin' on n' on
You know
He got the funk
Flowin' thru his chromosome
So if you don't like it
You can get the
Finger
As I tone out
Smell the food as I linger
That's
Right homes
Let you go as your partner
I treat you like a
Record company
And straight drop ya
The R O D N E Y to the O
Now what's that spell
Rodney O
Now you know
What'cha gonna do
When things get hot
Work for the heels
Cos' it's on when it pops
Let my fingers do the funkin, baby
What'cha gonna do
When things
Get hot
Work for the heels
Cos' it's on when it pops
I'm gonna
Ride 'em
N' then I'll glide 'em
And then I'll funk, funk
Funk their mind up
What's that funk comin' thru the stereo
It's Rodney O, the one that acts
Like Po Po But ya better drop
Cos' I'm hot like sweechies
When it comes to funk
I gotta sew
Like stitchies
Feelin' like pimps
Eatin' shrimps with my homies
You think you
Can run up for the O
You don't know me
I'm drippin' down the avenue
Just brought the gang a
Brew Headin' to
The studio
To kick rhymes with my crew
Oh, L.A.
That's where my homies play
All day and all night, that's right
Gotta keep the sex bangin'
Servin' usual
Customers like crap
When I'm swingin'
I'm blamin', no sit
I'm a true
Vet
Step to me wrong
Overeats like a corvette
Bet that
That I catch a check everyday
Cos' it's my company day
Now
What ya got to say
Funk ain't broke
Don't try to fix it
Give it to a DJ
So he can mix it
So what'cha gonna do
When things get hot
Work for the heels
Cos' it's on when it pops...
It's just Rodney O creepin' in your ear hole
Comin' with that funk flow, baby
He understands me
Yeah
Puttin' it down with Bootsy on the track
The homey that go way, way back
Yo O
Why don't you hit us one more time with that flow
Pump up the trunk
Keep it hump
Rollin' down the back street
Turn it up Mo'
If your ride got a ganga beat
Crank it up, fool
We got the funk anthem
When the cut is over
We wanna keep jammin'
Jam on, baby
It's on when it pops
You think not
Rodney O bro'
Straight forward like a faucet
I lost it
When I start spittin' on the track
Bootsy sell records
Like homey sell sex
It's the one y'all
Let's have a ball y'all
We got to pump, pump, pump it up y'all
I see the Bud Lights
You know we gettin' high
We got to jam, jam, jam it all night
Let's stop the killings
We can't fight that feeling
Of love
If the funk ain't broke
Don't try to fix it
Give it to a DJ
So he may mix it
Oh yeah mix it up, man
If the funk ain't broke
Don't try to fix it
Give it to a DJ
So he may mix it
Oh, I'd love to see your forest
But there's too many trees, baby
I was standin' here on the corner
With my brothers
Of the new street
One from the west coast
And one from the east
As I look up I can see a new day
Got to put all our forces together
So all the players can come to play
HIP HIP HORRAY
HIP HIP HORRAY
HIP HIP HORRAY
All the players
Wanna play
If you ain't here to funk
Then get the hell out
I'm here to make the party people
Scream n' shout
If you ain't here to funk
Then get the hell out
Well, this is the place that you wanna be
If you wanna get low down n' funky
If the funk ain't broke
Don't try to fix it
Give it to a DJ
So he may mix it
So what'cha gonna do
When things get hot
Work for the heels
Cos' it's on
When it pops
Let's stop that killings
We can't fight that feeling
Of love
Funk ain't broke
Don't try to fix it
Give it to a DJ
So he may mix it
So what'cha gonna do
When things get hot
Work for the heels
Cos' it's on when it pops

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
William "Bootsy" Collins (born October 26, 1951 in Cincinnati, Ohio) is a pioneering funk bassist, singer, and songwriter. Bootsy was instrumental in Parliament and Funkadelic together with George Clinton and Bernie Worrell. He is well known as one of the founding members of the 'P-Funk' sound. He also played a major part in resurrecting James Brown's career in the late 60s and early 70s, co-writing some of Brown's greatest hits along with his brother, Phelps "Catfish" Collins.With his older brother Catfish Collins, and Kash Waddy and Philippé Wynne, Collins formed a group called The Pacesetters in 1968.

In March 1970, after most of the members of James Brown's band quit over a pay dispute, The Pacesetters were hired as Brown's backing band and they became known as The J.B.'s. (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", "Super Bad", "Soul Power", and "Talkin' Loud and Sayin' Nothing".

It is known that the young Bootsy clashed several times with the rigid system Brown used to discipline the young band whenever he felt they stepped out of line. After leaving the band Collins then moved to Detroit, following the advice of singer and future Parliament member Mallia Franklin

After parting ways with James Brown, Bootsy returned to Cincinnati and formed House Guests with his brother Phelps Collins, Rufus Allen, Clayton "Chicken" Gunnels, Frank Waddy, Ronnie Greenaway and Robert McCullough. The House Guests released two singles on the House Guests label as well as a third as The Sound of Vision on the House Guess label.

Franklin introduced both Collins brothers to George Clinton, and 1972 saw both of the Collins brothers, along with Waddy, join Funkadelic. Bootsy played on the subsequent Funkadelic album 'America Eats Its Young', but it would be a another couple of years before he really began to make his mark on the P-Funk mob. Appearing on Funkadelic's 'Let's Take It To The Stage' and Parliament's 'Up For The Down Stroke' Bootsy soon became a defining member, both in sound and song-writing and is credited on all of the late 70s classics.

In 1976 Bootsy, Catfish, Waddy, Joel Johnson, Gary "Mudbone" Cooper, Robert Johnson and The Horny Horns formed Bootsy's Rubber Band, a separate touring unit of Clinton's P-Funk collective. The group recorded four albums together, the first three of which are often considered to be among the quintessential P-Funk recordings. The group's 1978 album "Bootsy? Player of the Year" reached the top of the R&B album chart and spawned the #1 R&B single "Bootzilla".

Like Clinton, Bootsy took on several alter egos, from "Casper the Funky Ghost" to Bootzilla, "the world's only rhinestone rockstar monster of a doll", as part of an evolving character, an alien rock star who grew gradually more bizarre as time went on (see P-Funk mythology). He also adopted his trademark space bass around this time.

Bootsy also released a 1980 album, Sweat Band, on George Clinton's Uncle Jam label with a group billed as Bootsy's Sweat Band.


[edit] 1980s and later
In 1984, Bootsy collaborated with Jerry Harrison of Talking Heads to produce "Five Minutes", a dance record sampled and edited from Ronald Reagan's infamous "Five Minutes" speech. The record was credited to "Bonzo goes to Washington" (also referenced in the 1985 Ramones song "Bonzo goes to Bitburg", derived from Reagan's starring role as Professor Peter Boyd in the 1951 comedy film Bedtime for Bonzo).

In 1990 Bootsy collaborated with Deee-Lite on their massive hit "Groove Is In The Heart" where he contributed additional vocals. Although he also appeared in the music video playing the bass, the bassline in the song is actually a sample of a Herbie Hancock song called "Bring Down the Birds". Bootsy's Rubber Band became the defacto backing musicians for Deee-Lite during a world tour.

Bootsy collaborated with bluegrass legends Del McCoury, Doc Watson and Mac Wiseman to form the GrooveGrass Boyz. They produced a fusion of bluegrass and funk that listeners either loved as a fresh take on tradition or hated as defiling that same tradition.

In 1995, Bootsy played in the remake of Jimi Hendrix's "If 6 was 9" for Axiom Funk, a funkadelic like one off super group produced by Bill Laswell and featuring the (funkadelic members) George Clinton, Bernie Worrell, Bootsy Collins, (the guitar of the late) Eddie Hazel, Gary Shider and Bill Laswell . The group released only one album and the song also appeared in the soundtrack of the movie Stealing Beauty.

Bootsy has collaborated extensively with Bill Laswell and made appearances on two Fatboy Slim records, as well as reading a poem at the end of FatBoy Slims's release in the LateNightTales dj mix series. Bootsy provided "vocal spice" on the TobyMac album Welcome to Diverse City. He also appears on Nicole C. Mullens' latest album, "Everyday People". He has also worked with the Lo-Fidelity Allstars on the album 'Don't be Afraid of Love', with Praxis, and with Buckethead on several occasions, for example on Buckethead's first album, "Bucketheadland". Bootsy was featured in the 2002 film Standing in the Shadows of Motown. In 2004 he appeared on Snoop Dogg's Rhythm & Gangsta album and on the cover of "The Joker" on the Fatboy Slim album Palookaville.[2]

In 2005, Bootsy Collins added vocals to fellow bassist Victor Wooten's album Soul Circus. He also served as "Heineken's Amsterjam 2005" curator and master of ceremonies on Randall's Island, New York and appeared with Madonna, Iggy Pop, Little Richard, and The Roots' Questlove, in an American TV commercial for the Motorola ROKR phone.

Collins' signature instrument is a custom-built star-shaped bass guitar he calls the "Space Bass". Currently built for him by Manuel "Manny" Salvador of GuitarCraft in 1998. More recently, Collins has made an agreement with Traben to make a signature Bootsy Collins model bass called the "Bootzilla".

In October, 2005, Collins co-wrote a song celebrating the resurgence of his hometown team, the Cincinnati Bengals of the National Football League called "Fear Da Tiger" which features "raps" written and performed by several Bengals players, including defensive end Duane Clemons, offensive tackle Stacy Andrews, and center Ben Wilkerson. An edited version of the song was made into a music video which features cameos by many other Bengals players. It has garnered tremendous local airplay and is viewable on Bengals.com Additionally, Cincinnati Bell is offering "Fear Da Tiger" as a free ringtone for its wireless customers in both polyphonic and MP3 formats. Collins appeared with Little Richard, Bernie Worrell, and other notable musicians as the band playing with Hank Williams, Jr. for the Monday Night Football opening during for the 2006 season. Collins was the only all star to return with Williams for the 2007 season.

He also sings "Marshal Law", the theme song of the Cincinnati Marshals indoor football team. He debuted the song on April 29, at halftime of a Marshals home game against the West Palm Beach Phantoms.

In 2006, ABC Entertainment / A Charly Films Release released a DVD/CD from Bootsy Collins and the New Rubber Band's concert at the 1998 North Sea Jazz Festival. In the same year, Collins split from long-time friend and guitarist Odhran "The Bodhran" Rameriz, citing creative differences as the reason.

Also in 2006, Collins recorded music for the animated television series Loonatics Unleashed. Collins also voiced the character Bootes Belinda in the episode The Music Villain. [3]

In April, 2007, Bootsy announced plans to begin a restaurant/club with Cincinnati area restaurateur Jeff Ruby. The restaurant is to be called "Bootsy's." It will feature live musical acts, a museum dedicated to Bootsy's musical career and Spanish, Central and South American cuisine. It is to open in December 2008.

In June 2007, Bootsy Collins, along with Phelps Collins, Clyde Stubblefield, John "Jabo" Starks, and Bernie Worrell, participated in the recording of the soundtrack for the movie Superbad.

In July 2007, Bootsy also told Billboard magazine that he's working on a project by the name of Science Faxtion and an album called Living On Another Frequency in which he serves as bassist and co-producer along with his lead vocalist Greg Hampton. The band also features guitarist Buckethead and drummer Brain.[4] The album was released in November 2008.[5]

Collins promoted Rock the Vote for its 2008 compaign together with Buckethead.[6]

Bootsy produced Junkyard Waltz by funk band Freekbass from Ohio came out October 27.

Bootsy 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 Bootsy Collins, while in the The Mighty Boosh episode "The Legend of Old Gregg" an alien creature named 'The Funk' lands on Bootsy'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. His song I'd Rather Be With You was featured in the movie Baby Boy and on January 26, 2007, Bootsy, a native of Cincinnati, gave the commencement address at the graduation ceremony at The Art Institute of Ohio - Cincinnati.. Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist Flea, who has cited Collins as one of his primary influences, appeared in unmistakably Bootsy-esque clothing in the video for RHCP's "Dani California", and Bootsy's "What's a Telephone Bill?" was sampled for 2Pac's "Str8 Ballin'" track off the THUG LIFE album..

In 2009 Collins collaborated with Talib Kweli and Hi-Tek on the track "Internet Connection".[7]


[edit] Bass technique
Collins' bass playing is driving, rhythmic and groovy, and has been very influential in the development of funk. His characteristic juicy sound, produced by envelope filters (for example the Mutron), is one of his distinguishing traits as a bass player. He also uses highly syncopated 16th note patterns combined with a very strong slap technique, highly influenced by Larry Graham.

Bootsy's bass patterns are often up-front in the mix and more often than not, drive the song (rather than the guitars or horns)
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Bootsy Collins