record-store loudspeakers up and down Market Streetan unleashed torrent of nonstop, sweaty nonsense. And on and on they came, all right there on an immediate level: "Hot pants ... smokin' ... she's got to use what she got to get what she wants." James Brown was the epitome of funk.
William "Bootsy" Collins was 16 when James Brown corralled him to play in his band. It was 1969 and James Brown hits for the year included not only "Mother Popcorn" but "Ain't It Funky (Now)" and "Let a Man Come In and Do the Popcorn" (parts I and II). Bootsy stayed with the James Brown band for two years and learned his lessons well. Now, with James Brown in seemingly irrevocable decline, Bootsy and his Rubber Band are just about the silliest thing happening.
Bootsy's Rubber Band has about as much intellectual content as a Saturday morning cartoon show, which really doesn't separate it from most other funk and grind bands (or power-rock groups). What makes Bootsy stand out is a low-grade, comic-book sense of humor that producer George Clinton is able to fuse with some of the most lyrical post-James Brown funk this side of Parliament/Funkadelic. In fact, it's impossible to mention Bootsy Collins without bringing up Parliament/Funkadelic, the band Bootsy has helped shape since his departure from James Brown.
It's rumored that Collins helped develop many of Brown's hits during his tenurewithout receiving credit. As a member of Parliament/Funkadelic, Bootsy's name is featured prominently, along with George Clinton's, on many of the group's most memorable songs. Two of the songs he helped write set the stage for Bootsy's Rubber Band. "Be My Beach," from Funkadelic's Let's Take It to the Stage, had the typical wacky lyric and, perhaps more importantly, "Chocolate City," which has its roots in old fashioned, bottom-heavy James Brown funk. But this concoction has textures, changes and instrumental interplay that Brown (or even Sly Stone) never dreamed of. By song's end, Bernie Worrell and an unnamed alto player (Maceo Parker?) are locked in a spasmodic, outside duet that would be a credit to any number of celebrated free jazz players. The conception is stunning.
Describing Bootsy's Rubber Band isn't so easy. Both Bootsy albums have been produced jointly by Collins and George Clinton. Like Clinton's work with Parliament/Funkadelic, both records are a mixture of pop-music genius and