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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Tawl_RossTawl Ross - Wikipedia

    Lucius "Tawl" Ross (October 5, 1948 – January 3, 2024) was an American musician. He was the rhythm guitarist for Funkadelic from 1968 to 1971, and played on their first three albums. [1] He left the band in 1971 soon after a debilitating experience with LSD, [2] [3] which is reported to have resulted in brain damage. [4]

  2. 11. März 2024 · Ross spielte bis 1971 in der Gruppe und ist auf deren ersten drei Alben zu hören, die zu Meilensteinen psychedelischer Musik und des Funk Rock wurden. Tawl Ross soll allerdings von seinem exzessiven LSD-Konsum schwere psychische Schäden davongetragen haben, weshalb er die Gruppe verlassen musste. Der Gitarrist zog sich über zwei ...

  3. 5. Okt. 2018 · Tal Ross Lucius (Tal) “TawlRoss (October 5, 1948 / January 3, 2024) Was the rhythm guitarist for Funkadelic from 1968 to 1971 and played on their first three albums. He left the band in...

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  4. 3. Jan. 2024 · Damn! First Amp, and now Tawl… 2 Likes. BiologicalSpeculator January 4, 2024, 12:34am 4. Loved his playing on the early albums and with Ruth Copeland. His solo album is really great and worth checking out. Always hoped he would surprise ...

  5. 8. März 2016 · Built around Eddie Hazel’s fuzz-drenched leads and Tawl Ross’ steady rhythmic chunk—and inspired by artists like the MC5, Vanilla Fudge, and Jimi Hendrix—Funkadelic redefined R&B. They were loud, audacious, outrageous, and infinitely groovy.

    • Tzvi Gluckin
  6. Credit also must go to bassist William ‘Billy Bass’ Nelson and rhythm guitarist Tawl Ross, who together lay down a granite-solid foundation for the more out-there explorations of Hazel’s playing and Clinton’s otherworldly songwriting. The tight playing of Nelson and Ross, alongside drummer Tiki Fulwood, prevent the band from becoming ...

  7. 19. Juli 2020 · Tawl Ross sings lead on the track, imbuing raw emotion to straight-forward lyrics, concluding that money will “buy you life, but not true life / The kind of life where the soul is harsh.” Along with astounding guitar work by both Ross and Hazel, a virtuoso madcap piano solo by Worrell makes up the song’s centerpiece.