
The now hard to find and out of print album, Bootsy's Rubber Band "live in Louisvile 1978" will now be released on vinyl. This is the first in a series of limited vinyl releases. The Funk To The Max release is scheduled for November.

With a delay of almost a year....Funk to the Max will finally release the "Newburgh session 1976" . The digital remastered album will be available in October / November.

Funk To The Max will release another item from the GMBC vaults, Bootsy's Rubber Band live in Niagra N.Y 1978. According to Kush Griffith one of the best shows during this tour. A memorable night. "What's the name of this town" / "Rubber Duckie", "Interlude Peace ok / Pinochio theory", "Hollywood squares" , "Very yes" , "Can't stay away" , "Stretchin' out" , "As in I love you" , "I'd rather be with you" , "Bootzilla". The release is scheduled for October / November release.
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The legendary Funkoutfit Grand Slam returns to the scene after a 20-months hiatus with a brandnew album, a brandnew line-up and a brandnew transformation of their very own universe of black grooves. In its 19th year of existence, the multicultural group again has remixed its blend of musical vibes from different sources, multiple influences and various likings into a very enjoyable musical cocktail, designed to cause massive booty-shakin' all across Europe's liveclub and festival audiences.
From Grand Slam's deep roots in the P-Funk vibe (Parliament/Funkadelic, Bootsy Collins, George Clinton), the musical journey leads you to todays HipHop acts with a live concept (The Roots, Outkast, De la Soul). From their own starting days in the Old School Funk of the 80s (Cameo, Midnight Star, Lakeside), the sound has developed into the neo-soul consciousness of the new Millennium (Erykah Badu, D'Angelo). Grand Slam's sound in 2004 is not restricted by any musical guidelines, one minute you will dance to original 70s funk, a second later you find yourself being part of an almost pop-appealing rock/rave-tune, reminding you of dj-remixes of old U2 singles. And, while merging all these different musical spheres, the band has once again managed to keep their very own distinctive and recognizable sound. If you're not completely deaf, dumb and blind, you will realise that the definite central thread of Grand Slam's 2004 program is: "WE'VE COME TO MAKE YOU DANCE!"
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