
There was no fat lady singing on Saturday night, Jan. 31, at the Detroit Opera House.
But things were certainly phat.
Part concert and part tribute, “Symphonic PFunk: Celebrating the Music of Parliament-Funkadelic” was a joyous throwdown that treated George Clinton’s famed funk catalog in a new way yet was undeniably a P-Funk throwdown joint.
With an hour and 45-minutes of music divided into two parts, the show needle-dropped into many of the highest points of that enduring body of work as well as a selection of deep digs, with the sold-out crowd of 2,700 dancing, arm-waving and whooping and in a manner decidedly different than, oh, “Madama Butterfly” or “La Traviata.”
The orchestral arrangements, meanwhile, — crafted by “Dancing With the Stars’” music director Ray Chew, who conducted the Detroit Opera Orchestra — largely inobtrusive and certainly eclipsed by the amplified power of the current Parliament Funkadelic lineup.
But when the orchestra did surface through the mix — during songs such as “(Not Just) Knee Deep,” “(I Wanna) Testify,” “Agua Boogie” and “Flash Light” — it added an audible richness and sonic depth to music created mostly at Detroit’s United Sound Systems studio during the 70s.

It didn’t take long for the part to get started as the Mothership and Clinton’s animated visage landed on the video screen and the ensemble kicked into a tight “P.Funk (Make My Funk the P-Funk).
In the flesh, the 84-year-old Clinton was animated and energetic in a dapper suit and fedora as he hyped the crowd along the front of the stage, mugging with Chew and the backing vocalists, including Sheila Brody Amuka in a tall Brides of Funkenstein wig and glittering bikini. Clinton was present for more than half of the 14-song show, occasionally sitting in an office swivel chair on stage and watching the rest from a private box on the Opera House’s mezzanine level.
The concert stayed hot with and without him, of course.
Clinton fronted a muscular rendition of the Parliaments’ 1967 hit “(I Wanna) Testify),” while Rahsaan Patterson joined the collective for “Aqua Boogie” and Labelle veteran Nona Hendryx came on board during “Mothership Connection (Star Child).” Living Colour’s Vernon Reid’s guitar acumen was featured during “Cosmic Slop,” while P-Funk mainstay Michael Hampton shredded on his guitar for “Alice in My Fantasies” and “Maggot Brain.”

A trio of P-Funk alumni — vocalists Sheila Horn and Paul Hill and drummer Gabe Gonzalez — reunited for a “Red Hot Mama” that lived up to its name, while the perennial “Give Up the Funk (Tear the Roof Off the Sucker)” did just that. And the roof stayed off as the whole company romped through an extended medley of “One Nation Under a Groove” and “Flash Light.” The encore, “Atomic Dog,” only kicked things up a notch as a dance team from the Omega Psi Phi fraternity worked its way down the aisle and onto the stage for an assemblage that looked epic — and operatic.
Clinton — who’s planning to launch a new Mothership show during the summer, 50 years after he introduced it — noted during the intermission that he and New York-based Chew Entertainment, which produced “Symphonic PFunk,” hope to keep the concept going; representatives of other venues, including the Hollywood Bowl, were there on Saturday to check it out. But there was only one proper place to start it, of course, and the Opera House certainly had the funk in abundance on Saturday night.





