Tepid Funk vs. Tacky Funk
faux_rillz
14,343 Posts
Is there a difference?I was up all night worrying about this.And don't let me have to hit you with a "Your Favorite Tepid Funk Terds II" thread--I see some of you little dudes falling back into your old habits, talking up Lonnie Smith LPs on Groove Merchant and such.
Comments
Indeed.
Now that I have relieved myself of that terd I am free to badmouth it in public.
None-tracker
Yeah, I like that track, too, but you seem a little confused about the purpose of this thread--it's not about records that you like.
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I was thinking the distinction was more along the lines of : Tacky Funk is played by aging jazz dudes, while Tepid Funk is played by actual [Rickey Vincent]funkateers[/Rickey Vincent].
Not sure if it's still running, but it used to be the real deal.
certain types of music connoisseurs simply must have breakbeat_boombap_quarternoteshuffle_snarepop drums in whatever they listen to.
they'd rather listen to a lesser record with the style of drumming they prefer, instead of a better soul or jazz record with a different rhythm.
If your thinking your getting Chick A Boom pt 2 then yes.
Your pretty much right on, I would also add that Tedpid funk is also played by great funk bands that had to give into the disco era by label preassures.
disco was the same as funk.
it was simply the latest 'thing' & bands that wanted to be popular had to adjust.
I don't buy the whole thing about labels twisting arms to get their groups to play disco, the bands wanted to do it( regardless of what they said later in interviews when the 'fad' blew over)
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You might be entering into a world of pain with this.
tacky jazz funk dudes may have pointlessly covered 70's pop tunes like 'close to you', 'we've only just begun', 'more today than yesterday', 'raindrops keep fallin on my head', 'ain't no sunshine' etc etc.
but in 1965 the same guys would have been doing tunes from broadway shows.
not much different I think.
working bands usually play whatever is popular.
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your totally right though. haha!
worldviews are crumbling...
it was the DJ( not disco) that killed off the funk band.
simple economics: hiring a DJ is far cheaper than paying 5-10 guys to play.
circa the mid 70's clubs & bars started realizing this & also that audiences would accept hearing recorded music instead of live musicians.
similar factors made the big swing band obsolete in the 40's & led to smaller R&B/jump bands & the bebop quartet/quintet style.
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Are we allowed to badmouth airbrushed nipples?