Detroit Opera orchestra to set George Clinton, Parliament-Funkadelic hits to classical music
- - Detroit Opera orchestra to set George Clinton, Parliament-Funkadelic hits to classical music
COREY WILLIAMS January 30, 2026 at 6:05 AM
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1 / 2George Clinton-Detroit OrchestraFILE - George Clinton appears at MusiCares Person of the Year honoring Jon Bon Jovi in Los Angeles on Feb. 2, 2024. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File)Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP
DETROIT (AP) â âI was strung out on Bach, and Beethoven was my thing. I dug jazz, I dug rock, anything with a swingâ â or so goes Funkadelic's 1978 groove âCholly (Funk Getting Ready to Roll!).â
Now Parliament-Funkadelic is going orchestral.
The Detroit Opera will showcase some of funk maestro George Clinton 's and P-Funk's greatest hits this weekend, performed by violins, cellos, horns and other instruments tuned more for arias or sonatas than for tunes like âFlash Light,â â(Not Just) Knee Deepâ and âOne Nation Under a Groove.â
Ray Chew, arranger and conductor of âSymphonic PFunk: Celebrating the Music of Parliament Funkadelic,â believes Saturday's show will be the first time an orchestra has performed the iconic group's music.
Chew, himself a musician, has performed and arranged music for some of the industry's biggest names. He's also a fan of the funk.
âThe arrangements that I'm making are going to really be key to how we bring it all together,â he said of Saturday's performance. âGeorge's and P-Funk's music is just waiting to explode through that orchestra.â
For Clinton, it was inevitable.
âIâve been waiting on it to happen over the years,â the 84-year-old founder and frontman told The . âWe knew we were going to be doing this one day. We expected to gravitate into classical or something.â
Creating the âParliafunkadelicamentthangâ
Clinton formed The Parliaments in Plainfield, New Jersey, in 1955. The doo wop group's â(I Wanna) Testifyâ became a hit in 1967 for Detroit-based Revilot Records.
Funkadelic was founded the following year after a naming rights issue with Revilot, though Clinton later regained rights to The Parliaments name.
Virtually the same stable of singers and musicians would record albums and perform live under both monikers throughout the 1970s.
Where Parliament was the engine for funk â highlighted by stacked harmonies and overlapping vocals â Funkadelic played the rawest of rock, emphasizing electric and bass guitars, heavy drum beats and (often) NSFW lyrics.
âIt started out as a singing group, then a band and a group, and then it became a âthang,ââ Clinton said. âWe call it Parliafunkadelicamentthang.â
Some of the era's top musicians, vocalists and songwriters carved out roles in the âthang,â including keyboardist Bernie Worrell, guitarist and lead singer Garry Shider and Walter âJunieâ Morrison. All wrote and arranged some of P-Funkâs greatest jams.
While setting the group's catalog to classical might seem unusual, Chew says it's âjust a different discipline,â adding that he believes some P-Funk members would have excelled in the genre if they'd chosen that route.
But can an orchestra play funk?
Rickey Vincent, professor of African American Studies and lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley, says yes.
âMusicians are stumped by how seriously complex this funky music is,â said Vincent, who authored âFunk: The Music, the People, and the Rhythm of The One.â âYou can take an orchestra and do all kinds of funky things with it.â
âAudacity of sophistication, thatâs what funk plays with,â he added. âJunie Morrison ⊠one of those people like Bernie (Worrell) who could manipulate a string ensemble for fun. They were top-shelf musicians who basically snuck that into their arrangements.â
Legendary Motown musician and arranger Paul Riser says itâs about integrating all the parts.
âYou take what theyâve done,â Riser said of Parliament-Funkadelic. âYou donât try to make it different. You just try to add to it. You donât try to make it your thing.â
Vincent pointed out that bagpipes and banjo were used on Parliamentâs 1970 debut album, âOsmium.â
âAnd they work with that stuff. Itâs not just a gimmick,â Vincent said. âFunk has always been about toying with institutions, manipulating canon.â
Chew declined to say which P-Funk songs would be performed, but said 47 players have been assembled in the orchestra. They will play standard orchestral instruments, including a full string section and a harp, and saxophones. About a half-dozen musicians, including a keyboardist and guitarists, will join them on stage.
âThe colors that are already in the music are going to be spoken through violins and French horns and everything. We donât even have to invent new notes. All the notes are there,â he said.
Setting funk operas to dance music
Outside of the music, part of P-Funk's appeal occurred during packed live concerts as singers and musicians â some taking on far-out alter egos, like Star Child and Dr. Funkenstein â crowded the stage.
Clinton acknowledged that P-Funk's âMothership Connection,â âFunkentelechy Vs. The Placebo Syndromeâ and other albums were part of a âfunk operaâ where the mission was simply getting Sir Nose D'Voidoffunk to dance. Sir Nose was the antagonist and embodiment of everything âunfunky.â He vowed never to dance, but eventually succumbed to the power of the funk.
The highlight of those sold-out shows was the âMothershipâ â a glittering prop space capsule â descending with lights flashing and smoke billowing onto the stage as Clinton's P-Funk mob whipped the crowd up with âswing down sweet chariot stop and let me ride.â
The original âMothershipâ first was used during a 1976 concert in New Orleans. A new version is under construction.
âWe were trying to be the Beatles with the big extravagant arrangements,â said Clinton, a big fan of the Fab Fourâs âSgt. Pepperâs Lonely Hearts Club Bandâ concept album.
Looking ahead, Clinton said he's working on a couple of new albums. The group has been on the road for the past three years and last performed in Detroit about a year ago.
âTo go back there now feels really good,â he said of the Motor City. âI feel a future coming in the place where we have a helluva past. That's where all the music was born.â
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ