iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store.If iTunes doesn't open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop.Progress Indicator
iTunes

iTunes is the world's easiest way to organize and add to your digital media collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from Free Your Mind... by Funkadelic, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes for Mac + PC

Free Your Mind...

Funkadelic

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download music.

Album Review

It's one of the best titles in modern musical history, for song and for album, and as a call to arms mentally and physically the promise of funk was never so perfectly stated. If it were just a title then there'd be little more to say, but happily, Free Your Mind lives up to it throughout as another example of Funkadelic getting busy and taking everyone with it. The title track itself kicks things off with rumbling industrial noises and space alien sound effects, before a call-and-response chant between deep and chirpy voices brings the concept to full life. As the response voices say, "The kingdom of heaven is within!" The low and dirty groove rumbles along for ten minutes of dark fun, with Bernie Worrell turning in a great keyboard solo toward the end — listening to it, one gets the feeling that if Can were this naturally funky, they'd end up sounding like this. From there the band makes its way through a total of six songs, ranging from the good to astoundingly great. "Funky Dollar Bill" is the other standout track from the proceedings, with a great, throw-it-down chorus and rhythm and a sharp, cutting lyric that's as good to think about as it is to sing out loud. The closing "Eulogy and Light," meanwhile, predates Prince with its backward masking and somewhat altered version of the Lord's Prayer and Psalm 23. At other points, even if the song is a little more straightforward, there's something worthwhile about it, like the random stereo panning and Eddie Hazel's insane guitar soloing on "I Wanna Know If It's Good for You," with more zoned and stoned keyboard work from Worrell to top things off. The amount of drugs going down for these sessions in particular must have been notable, but the end results make it worthy. [The 2005 reissue features excellent remastered sound, a thick booklet, and bonus tracks pulled from original Westbound singles, along with a far-out radio spot.]

Customer Reviews

Epic Acid Rock

Don't worry brothers, this ain't no disco funk; man, this is pure freakout. The story goes the Funkadelic Superstars got together in a studio to see if they could come up with an entire album in one day while dropping acid, and it's Eddie Hazel's powerful guitar that really shows its light on this one. Chock full of sound effects, strange phasing, and weird noises a la Zappa that could never be reproduced with the best digital gear, I guarentee this album will put a smile on your face and make you want to party! "Free Your Mind..." and "Friday Night" are my favorite tracks, and I also absolutely love the freakout sound collage of "Eulogy and Light." Get this album, son, get it!

A Must for George Clinton Fans, But Hard to Understand Otherwise

This 2005 release is a bit longer than the original 1970 version, replete with three different cuts of "I Wanna Know If It's Good To You...," making it definitely worth the purchace price if you love George Clinton. "Fish, Chips, and Sweat..." was also not on the original album, and in this version, you get the all-important digital booklet, too. The three most valuable and memorable tracks on this album from a conoisseur's point of view are the title track, with its soaring and minimalist, harmonic guitar groove and Hazel's incendiary soloing; "Friday Night, August 14th," with its highly infectious melody; and "Funky Dollar Bill," which is a great piece of social criticism. Other than that, "Some More" is a surprisingly pedestrian blues riff (albeit with distorted vocals), but the original "Free Your Mind..." radio advertisement is also provided, and is timelessly far cooler than any radio advertisements of today. This album seems to embody the dirtiest of dirty funk, and the low-tech effects are almost grungy, blatantly reflecting the birth of heavy metal, the new musical genre being created when this album was written. George Clinton was a true visionary, even if some or all of those visions were inspired by LSD (and this album certainly reeks of it), as it seems to be most coherent when played at 4 or 5 a.m.

Free Your Mind....

I really do love socially conscious music. OUT there, and ridiculously perfect.

Biography

Formed: 1968

Genre: R&B/Soul

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s

Though it often took a back chair to its sister group Parliament, Funkadelic furthered the notions of black rock begun by Jimi Hendrix and Sly Stone, blending elements of '60s psychedelia and blues plus the deep groove of soul and funk. The band pursued album statements of social/political commentary while Parliament stayed in the funk singles format, but Funkadelic nevertheless paralleled the more commercial artist's...
Full Bio

Become a fan of the iTunes and App Store pages on Facebook for exclusive offers, the inside scoop on new apps and more.