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An edited version of the song, appearing as Side A on the single release, reached number one on the [[Billboard]] Black Singles chart. The song was written by [[George Clinton (funk musician)|George Clinton]] and [[Walter Morrison|Walter "Junie" Morrison]] but the songwriting credit is listed as "George Clinton, Jr." on the album pressing as a gift to Clinton's son. The songwriting credit on the single, however, is listed as George Clinton.
An edited version of the song, appearing as Side A on the single release, reached number one on the [[Billboard]] Black Singles chart. The song was written by [[George Clinton (funk musician)|George Clinton]] and [[Walter Morrison|Walter "Junie" Morrison]] but the songwriting credit is listed as "George Clinton, Jr." on the album pressing as a gift to Clinton's son. The songwriting credit on the single, however, is listed as George Clinton.


The song is about a girl who's "freak of the week" and dances "never missing a beat." It is widely seen as a [[funk]] classic,peaking at number seventy-seven on the [[Hot 100]] and topping the US R&B charts <ref>{{cite book |title= Top R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942-2004|last=Whitburn |first=Joel |authorlink=Joel Whitburn |year=2004 |publisher=Record Research |page=450}}</ref>. in 1979 in heavily edited form. The lyrics deal with a man meeting a woman, presumably at a party; she dances for him. He is unimpressed by the Jerk, the Monkey, the Moose and the Chicken, but is blown away by the Freak.
The song is about a girl who's "freak of the week" and dances "never missing a beat." It is widely seen as a [[funk]] classic, peaking at number seventy-seven on the [[Hot 100]] and topping the US R&B charts <ref>{{cite book |title= Top R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942-2004|last=Whitburn |first=Joel |authorlink=Joel Whitburn |year=2004 |publisher=Record Research |page=450}}</ref>. in 1979 in heavily edited form. The lyrics deal with a man meeting a woman, presumably at a party; she dances for him. He is unimpressed by the Jerk, the Monkey, the Moose and the Chicken, but is blown away by the Freak.


==Personnel==
==Personnel==

Revision as of 04:17, 11 December 2009

"(Not Just) Knee Deep"
Song
A-side"(Not Just) Knee Deep - Pt. 1"
B-side"(Not Just) Knee Deep - Pt. 2"

"(Not Just) Knee Deep" is a funk song running 15 minutes, 21 seconds on side 1 of Funkadelic's 1979 album Uncle Jam Wants You.

Album information

An edited version of the song, appearing as Side A on the single release, reached number one on the Billboard Black Singles chart. The song was written by George Clinton and Walter "Junie" Morrison but the songwriting credit is listed as "George Clinton, Jr." on the album pressing as a gift to Clinton's son. The songwriting credit on the single, however, is listed as George Clinton.

The song is about a girl who's "freak of the week" and dances "never missing a beat." It is widely seen as a funk classic, peaking at number seventy-seven on the Hot 100 and topping the US R&B charts [1]. in 1979 in heavily edited form. The lyrics deal with a man meeting a woman, presumably at a party; she dances for him. He is unimpressed by the Jerk, the Monkey, the Moose and the Chicken, but is blown away by the Freak.

Personnel

Sampled in other Music

The song is considered a classic by many and has been heavily sampled by many artists. Hip hop group De La Soul sampled the intro to the song in their hit "Me, Myself, and I", which reached #34 on the Billboard Pop Charts and #1 on the R&B Charts.

Also LL Cool J ("Nitro"), Above The Law ("Never Missin A Beat"), Tone Loc ("Funky Cold Medina"), MC Hammer & Deion Sanders ("Straight to My Feet") and Snoop Dogg ("Who Am I (What's My Name)?"), G-Funk Intro & his unreleased track "Do U Remember". Geto Boys sampled the intro for "Homie Don't Play That". Dr. Dre also sampled the baseline beat for his song "Dre Day". The Black Eyed Peas also used the beat behind it to remix their hit single "Shut Up". X-Clan sampled the song in Funkin' Lesson. It was also interpolated in the song "Get Away" by Bobby Brown.

EPMD sampled it in their song "Crossover", and Digital Underground, used it in two of their songs, "Kiss You Back" and "Bran Nu Swetta".

Appearances in other media

References

  1. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2004). Top R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942-2004. Record Research. p. 450.
Preceded by Billboard's Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs number one single
October 13 - October 27, 1979
Succeeded by