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Get Off Your Ass and Jam

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"Get Off Your Ass and Jam" is a song by Funkadelic, track number 6 to their 1975 album Let's Take It to the Stage. It was written by George Clinton, although the lyrics are made up entirely of repetitions of the phrase, "Shit! Goddamn! Get off your ass and jam!", interspersed with lengthy guitar solos. Critic Ned Raggett reviewed the song as one that "kicks in with one bad-ass drum roll and then scorches the damn place down".

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Guitar solo

The guitar solo on "Get Off Your Ass and Jam" is uncredited, a practice that was typical of Funkadelic records of the 1970s. In several interviews and in his 2014 autobiography, Brothas Be, Yo Like George, Ain't That Funkin' Kinda Hard on You?, Clinton has said that the guitarist is unknown:

We finished one take, took a smoke break or something, and noticed that a white kid had wandered into the studio, a smack addict. We didn't know him at all, but he said he played a little guitar, and he wanted to know if he could play with us and pick up a little cash in the process. We set him up, started the track, and he just started to play like he was possessed. He did all the rock 'n' roll that hadn't been heard for a few years, and he did it for the entirety of the track. Even when the song ended, he didn't stop. All of us were up there goggle-eyed, saying, "Damn." We had agreed on 25 bucks, but I gave him 50 because I loved it.

According to Clinton, he tried to find the guitarist without success. "I tried to find the guy and put him on another song, but he was gone. He never resurfaced. We never heard from him. He's not credited on the record because we have no idea who he was."

In a July 2009 interview with Vintage Guitar, guitarist Paul Warren—who grew up in the Detroit area and had been a session guitarist for Motown Records—is quoted as saying that he played the solo on "Get Off Your Ass and Jam". Warren makes the same assertion on his website, The Paul Warren Project.

Sampling

The song has been sampled extensively by hip hop artists. It was one of the two songs at the heart of Bridgeport Music, Inc. v. Dimension Films, in which the copyright in the song was held to be infringed when N.W.A sampled a two-second guitar chord from the beginning of the Funkadelic tune, lowered the pitch and looped it five times in their song, 100 Miles and Runnin'. Other artists who have sampled the song include:

  • Public Enemy, in Bring the Noise, from the 1987 album, It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back.
  • Tone Lōc, in Funky Cold Medina (written by Young MC) from 1989 Lōc's debut album, Lōc-ed After Dark.
  • A Tribe Called Quest, in Rhythm (Devoted to the Art of Moving Butts), from their 1990 debut album, People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm, and in The Pressure, from their 1996 album Beats, Rhymes and Life.
  • Ultramagnetic MC's, in Make It Happen from their 1992 album Funk Your Head Up.
  • Tupac Shakur, in Holla If Ya Hear Me, from the 1993 album Strictly 4 My N.I.G.G.A.Z..
  • Ice-T, in 99 Problems, from his 1993 album Home Invasion.
  • Eazy-E, in Eazy Duz It, from his 1988 album Eazy Duz It
  • Primal Scream, in "Kowalski", from the 1997 album Vanishing Point
  • References

    Get Off Your Ass and Jam Wikipedia


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