"Mothership Connection (Star Child)" is a funk song by Parliament. It was the third and last single released from the group's 1975 album Mothership Connection. The song introduces George Clinton's messianic alien alter ego Star Child for the first time (see P-Funk mythology).
![]() | This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2010) |
"Star Child" | |
---|---|
Single by Parliament | |
from the album Mothership Connection | |
A-side | "Star Child" |
B-side | "Supergroovalisticprosifunkstication" |
Released | August 1976 |
Recorded | 1975 |
Genre | P-Funk |
Length | 6:11 (album version)/3:08 (7" edit) |
Label | Casablanca 864 |
Songwriter(s) | George Clinton/Bootsy Collins/Bernie Worrell |
Producer(s) | George Clinton |
The lyrics "Swing down, sweet chariot, stop and let me ride" quote the traditional spiritual "Swing Down, Sweet Chariot",[1] first popularized in the 1940s by The Golden Gate Quartet and later recorded by Elvis Presley among others (and not the better-known spiritual "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot").
The track "Let Me Ride" on the Dr. Dre album The Chronic is heavily based on samples from this song.
In 1998, Scott Grooves produced a remix version of this song under the title Mothership Reconnection, followed by yet another remix by Scott Grooves, Slam and Daft Punk. The music video for the Scott Grooves version hinted at the modernizing of the song by showing characters inspired by Clinton's Star Child mythology re-made in the visual style of the 1982 movie Tron.[2]
The song is featured in the enhanced editions soundtrack of the video game Grand Theft Auto V, appearing on the fictional in-game radio station Space 103.2 FM.
The song was the inspiration for Dave Parker's "Boys Boppin'" shirt [3]
The song was titled simply "Star Child" on its single release, while the radio promo version was titled "Star Child (Mothership Connection)." This version uses the same track from Mothership Connection but fades out at 3:08. It is included as a bonus track on the Mothership Connection CD.
On the album Live: P-Funk Earth Tour the song is split into two tracks, "Mothership Connection (Star Child)" and "Swing Down, Sweet Chariot."
In 1990, bassist Stanley Clarke and keyboardist George Duke released an album entitled "3," which contained a cover of this song.[4]
![]() | This 1970s R&B/soul music song-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
![]() | This 1970s single–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |