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Tha Funk Capitol of the World

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Download links and information about Tha Funk Capitol of the World by Bootsy Collins. This album was released in 2011 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Soul, Rock, Funk genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 01:19:17 minutes.

Artist: Bootsy Collins
Release date: 2011
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Soul, Rock, Funk
Tracks: 17
Duration: 01:19:17
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $11.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Spreading Hope Like Dope (Intro) 1:46
2. Hip Hop @ Funk U (feat. Ice Cube, Snoop Dogg, Chuck D & Swavay) 4:10
3. Mirrors Tell Lies (feat. Jimi Hendrix) 5:10
4. JB-Still the Man (feat. Rev. Al Sharpton) 4:30
5. Freedumb (When-Love-Becomes-A-Threat) [feat. Dr. Cornel West] 4:05
6. After these Messages (feat. Samuel L. Jackson) 4:53
7. Kool Whip (feat. Phil Ade & CandiSweetz) 4:13
8. The Real Deal (feat. Sheila E., CandiSweetz & Mike Phillips) 3:54
9. Don't Take My Funk (feat. Catfish Collins & Bobby Womack) 5:24
10. If Looks Could Kill (feat. Bela Fleck, ZionPlanet-10 & Dennis Chambers) 4:06
11. Minds Under Construction (feat. Buckethead & Z-Class) 6:37
12. Siento Bombo (feat. Olvido Ruiz & Ouiwey) 4:02
13. The Jazz Greats (A Tribute to Jazz) [feat. George Duke & Ron Carter] 3:49
14. Garry Shider Tribute (feat. George Clinton & Linda Shider) 3:29
15. Stars Have No Names (They Just Shine) [feat. Nick Arnold & Chrissy Dunn] 5:10
16. Chocolate Caramel Angel (feat. Faith Daniels, Ronni Racket & Casper) 6:57
17. Yummy, I Got the Munchies 7:02

Details

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Thinking big, Bootsy Collins’ 2011 effort is a conceptual trip, a funky history lesson brought to life by the P-Funk veteran, his rock-solid band, and a slew of guest stars, ranging from rapper Ice Cube to professor Cornel West. In between, there’s funk-rock shredding from freaky and frequent collaborator Buckethead, some psychedelic storytelling by way of an old Jimi Hendrix interview, plus better-than-expected prose from both Rev. Al Sharpton (on the cultural magnificence of James Brown) and Samuel L. Jackson (on how the funk era was a Renaissance for the hood). Underneath it all, the P-Funk jams pop and stroll with that same old swagger, while Bootsy himself beams down his wild bits of Mothership wisdom, including “It’s recess time, so put a smile on your mind” (“Don't Take My Funk”) and “If you wanna lead the orchestra, you’re gonna have to turn your back to the crowd” (“Siento Bombo”). The album is a bit too fat to be considered classic, but there’s a casual charm to this free-flowing, reminiscence party which could have just as easily been an elaborate mess. A tribute to the late P-Funk guitarist Garry Shider and an appearance from Bootsy’s older brother Catfish Collins — who died before the album saw release — add poignancy to this rich and funky success.