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5 Funk Guitarists You Should Know
Oscar Jordan
Meet the players who’ve done more than any other to set heads a-bobbing, hips a-swaying, and dance floors afire around the globe.
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Funk is much more than a style of
music that evolved from R&B in the
1960s—it’s a way of life. Or, as the late
great James Brown said in “(Get up I Feel
Like Being A) Sex Machine, Pt. 1,” “You
got ta have the feelin’.” It’s the sound of
a tight ensemble powered by a relentless
groove. It’s sweat, soul, and everybody
playing in the pocket. It’s subservience to
the first beat of every bar. Groove is the
monarch of the genre.
But funk is also about hip, interlocking
guitar parts that make the song pop.
In funk, the song always comes first,
and the best funk guitar parts are mini
compositions within the song. Creating
these mini compositions requires mastering
a variety of techniques, each of
which is inevitably and indelibly seasoned
by each player’s ethnic, regional,
and musical backgrounds. That’s why
veteran 6-string funksters like Leo
Nocentelli (The Meters), David Williams
(Michael Jackson, Madonna), Johnny
“Guitar” Watson, Paul Jackson Jr. (The
Temptations), Phelps “Catfish” Collins
(Parliament, Funkadelic), George Johnson
(The Brothers Johnson), and Gary Shider
(Parliament, Funkadelic) all have uniquely
funky styles that don’t just rely on stereotypical
waka-waka wah hackery.
But the roots of funk reach back even
further than the aforementioned masters
to five greats—Jimmy Nolen, Freddie
Stone, Tony Maiden, Nile Rodgers, and
Al McKay. Each guitarist played the
funkiest stuff on the planet with individuality,
soul, and joie de vivre. They found
their distinctive voices within the guitar
techniques available to us all, and made
great songs groove harder by adding feel,
knowledge, and imagination.
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