1-on-1 with DP – 93.7 The Ticket KNTK - Wrap-Up - February 19th, 6:45pm
Episode Date: February 20, 2024Wrap-UpAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy...
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You're listening to One-on-One with DP, sponsored by Mary Ellen's Food for the Soul,
on 937 The Ticket and The Ticket FM.com.
Okay, Harrison, I'm going to test you.
Ready?
Go for it.
Who made the song?
All right, that's a good one.
I got the song name.
Legendary.
I got one nation, but I, that's cheating.
Legendary.
This, this, so there's a, there's a.
What year?
Some people, oh, this is 19.
70, 76?
I'm not feeling bad about it anymore.
No, no.
So there was a band that was a compilation of bands.
And on any given night, a different version of the band would appear.
The core band was Parliament.
The secondary band was Funkadelic.
So you will get bands, you get songs that were Parliament,
songs that were Parliament Funkadelic,
songs that were Funkadelic, songs that were bootedelic,
songs that were Bootsie.
Bootsie's rubber band, which was Bootsie Collins.
These were all of the musicians who played behind James Brown.
And then they went and became their own band.
And they created, like the real, the era of a funkadelic funk is the band Funkadelic,
George Clinton.
So George Clinton was the leader.
And he created characters, superheroes and villains.
and he would uh everybody on stage and in and it was in costume okay it was that kind of new to
see that type of theater and entertainment it was it was amazing was it was it was amazing because
i i can't recall before that it's funk in itself yeah it was like they were i mean they were
different so sir knows devoid of funk uh he created uh kind of a religion uh this this sort of
Funk was religious in that, as he would say, funk not only moves, it removes.
Some of the great lyrics ever written.
Some of the fun lyrics were through Parliament Funkadelic courtesy of George Clinton.
One Nation Atomic Dog, those are, which led to Zapp and some other things.
So there's your musical history.
I'll tell my parents to listen to this segment.
They're big on the funk.
Yeah, George Clinton.
George Clinton's still on tour.
George Clinton, yeah, he's still on tour.
And he did, I want to say I've probably seen him 30 times in my life in various sorts.
George Clinton has got to be 80 years old.
Yeah, 82.
82 years old.
different types of hair,
all different versions of him.
A song in 2015?
Yeah.
Wesley's theory.
Yeah.
So he's still going.
He's incredible.
Well, and I think he played Omaha,
but I'm not sure that he played Lincoln lately.
Yeah, I'd have to figure out where he all played.
But the fact that he's even, I mean, to produce a song, not just go,
even like that's put out of a song in 2015.
If you've been out of the game, it looked like the last one would have been in the 80s.
Yeah.
He's probably got songs recorded and that he's never released.
And he's just releasing stuff from back in the 80s.
Like Flashlight,
you literally could do an entire bed of shows.
So this.
So the project for me on for one-on-one.
Well, this is an offshoot because Roger Troutman,
Zap was an offtake of George Clinton.
And yeah.
And he used a lot of their sound bites.
So, yeah, funk is funk.
I don't know.
Do you like it.
It's almost got the WWE.
Uh-huh.
It's beautiful.
Harrison,
thank you,
counselor.
What's next?
What are you going to do next?
We got full ticket weeknight's head.
Up next,
we got the Delt Punt Hour
with the morning of personnel.
And then Megan Walker is back for speed and power.
And following that,
what's brewing,
chance of Brewington?
We'll have a little break in there.
I'll hop on the mic and we'll wrap it up with the daily Nebraska.
So plenty ahead here on ticket week nights.
Don't go anywhere.
