U.S. Music With Funkadelic

Kendra Foster ‎- Raw Honey Vol. 1 The Kendra Foster Live Series
Kendra Foster ‎- Raw Honey Vol. 1: The Kendra Foster Live Series
February 26, 2009
Standing On The Verge - The Best Of Funkadelic
Standing On The Verge – The Best Of Funkadelic
November 10, 2009
Kendra Foster ‎- Raw Honey Vol. 1 The Kendra Foster Live Series
Kendra Foster ‎- Raw Honey Vol. 1: The Kendra Foster Live Series
February 26, 2009
Standing On The Verge - The Best Of Funkadelic
Standing On The Verge – The Best Of Funkadelic
November 10, 2009

01. This Broken Heart
02. Baby I Owe You Something Good
03. Be What You Is
04. I Miss My Baby
05. Rat Kiss the Cat on the Naval
06. Baby I Owe You Something Good” (Mono single mix)
07. I Miss My Baby” (Mono single mix)

The mono tracks appear only on the CD version of the album.

U.S. Music with Funkadelic (United Soul) is a self-titled album consisting of tracks recorded in the early 1970s by the band United Soul with input from members of Funkadelic. The album was released by Westbound Records in 2009. Two tracks, “I Miss My Baby” and “Baby I Owe You Something Good” were originally released as a one-off single by Westbound under the group name U.S. Music with Funkadelic, which was probably meant to denote U.S. with Music by Funkadelic or simply U.S. with Funkadelic.

The CD presents George Clinton’s first attempt to launch a P-Funk spin off act using up and coming musicians based in Plainfield, New Jersey. “U.S.” refers to the band United Soul that had been discovered and produced by Clinton in 1971, and which contained future Parliament-Funkadelic members Garry Shider and Cordell Mosson. A version of the song “This Broken Heart” appears on the 1973 Funkadelic album Cosmic Slop, and “Baby I Owe You Something Good” was later re-recorded on the 1975 album Let’s Take It to the Stage. Shider and Mosson were present for both of these later Funkadelic recordings. “I Miss My Baby” and “Baby I Owe You Something Good” also appear on the 1993 compilation Music for Your Mother: Funkadelic 45s with a special notation for the group name U.S. Music with Funkadelic.
(Source : wikipedia)