Calvin Simon
Calvin Eugene Simon (May 22, 1942 – January 6, 2022) was an American singer and musician best known as a founding member of the influential funk collective Parliament-Funkadelic, where he contributed distinctive vocals and helped pioneer a fusion of funk, R&B, soul, and psychedelic rock.[1][2] Born in Beckley, West Virginia, Simon began his musical journey in the late 1950s as a member of George Clinton's doo-wop group The Parliaments, working alongside future bandmates while employed as a barber.[2][3] Drafted into the U.S. Army in 1966, he served in Vietnam before rejoining the evolving ensemble, which transitioned into Parliament and Funkadelic by the late 1960s.[2] During his tenure with Parliament-Funkadelic from 1968 to 1977, Simon provided lead and background vocals on landmark albums including Maggot Brain (1971), America Eats Its Young (1972), Mothership Connection (1975), and Funkentelechy vs. the Placebo Syndrome (1977), contributing to the group's innovative sound and theatrical performances that defined the P-Funk aesthetic.[1][2] He departed the collective in 1977 alongside fellow original members Fuzzy Haskins and Grady Thomas amid financial and management disputes.[1][3] In the years following, Simon continued performing and recording with offshoot projects, including the 1981 Funkadelic album Connections & Disconnections and releases under the Original P moniker, such as What Dat Shakin' (1998) and Original P Introducing the Westbound Souljaz (2001).[2] Later in his career, he shifted toward gospel music, founding his own label, Simon Says Records, and releasing the album Share the News in 2004, which peaked at number 21 on the Billboard Top Gospel Albums chart.[3][2][4] Simon's contributions to music were recognized with induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997 as part of Parliament-Funkadelic, and in 2019, the collective received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award from the Recording Academy, honoring his foundational role, and posthumously with Fuzzy Haskins into the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame in 2023.[1][5][6] He died on January 6, 2022, at the age of 79 in San Antonio, Florida.[4][2]Early life
Upbringing in West Virginia
Calvin Simon was born on May 22, 1942, in Beckley, West Virginia, into a churchgoing family of modest means.[7] His early years were shaped by the close-knit community of Beckley, where his grandmother played a pivotal role in instilling religious values and the story of Jesus Christ from a young age.[7] His mother, Alice, eventually relocated to New Jersey in search of better employment opportunities, reflecting the economic challenges faced by many working-class families in the region at the time.[8] Simon's childhood was deeply immersed in music through his involvement in the local church. At the age of six, he began singing in the choir at Welcome Baptist Church, where gospel music became a central part of his formative experiences.[7] These choir sessions often included weekly radio broadcasts, which not only honed his vocal skills but also ignited his passion for performing and singing.[1] Through family gatherings and local church events, he gained early exposure to gospel traditions, fostering a strong appreciation for harmonious vocal styles that would influence his lifelong musical journey.[7] Around the age of 13 in the mid-1950s, Simon's family joined his mother in Plainfield, New Jersey, in pursuit of improved prospects.[9] This move marked the end of his West Virginia upbringing and opened new avenues beyond the gospel roots he had nurtured there. These early church choir experiences proved foundational to his distinctive vocal style later developed with Parliament-Funkadelic.[1]Military service and early career entry
Simon was drafted into the United States Army in 1966 and served from 1967 to 1968 during the Vietnam War era, assigned to C Battery, 3rd Battalion, 13th Field Artillery Regiment, 9th Infantry Division.[4][10] His role involved artillery support in a non-combat capacity, though the experience profoundly affected him, leading to lifelong struggles with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which he later described as a key personal challenge he overcame through resilience.[1] This military service interrupted his early musical pursuits, halting his involvement with the doo-wop group The Parliaments at a pivotal moment.[11] Building on doo-wop roots developed during his upbringing in West Virginia, Simon had joined The Parliaments in the late 1950s as a vocalist under the leadership of George Clinton.[3] Prior to his full deployment, he contributed vocals to the group's breakthrough single "(I Wanna) Testify," recorded in 1967 and released on Revilot Records, which became a Top 20 R&B hit.[12] Following his honorable discharge in 1968, Simon immediately returned to New Jersey and rejoined The Parliaments during their late-1960s revival phase, resuming his role as a core vocalist amid the group's transition toward funk influences.[4] This period marked his re-entry into professional music, setting the stage for deeper involvement in the evolving Parliament-Funkadelic collective.[2]Career
Time with Parliament-Funkadelic
Calvin Simon joined the Parliaments in the late 1950s as one of its original vocalists, forming part of the doo-wop group led by George Clinton in Plainfield, New Jersey. After a brief hiatus for U.S. Army service during the Vietnam War, he rejoined the ensemble in 1968, helping steer its transformation into the expansive Parliament-Funkadelic collective by the early 1970s, which fused psychedelic rock, soul, and funk into a groundbreaking sound.[3][13] Throughout the group's peak years, Simon served as a core vocalist, delivering background harmonies and occasional leads that defined P-Funk's layered, cosmic aesthetic. He contributed vocals to Funkadelic's influential Maggot Brain (1971), a psychedelic masterpiece blending raw emotion with experimental grooves, and America Eats Its Young (1972), which addressed social issues through satirical funk narratives. His work extended to Parliament's breakthrough Mothership Connection (1975), where he sang on key tracks like "P-Funk (Wants to Get Funked Up)," helping establish the album's interstellar mythology and commercial success.[1][14] Simon's portrayals in live performances embodied P-Funk's theatrical flair, participating in the collective's elaborate stage shows and concept albums, which humorously critiqued societal norms through funk personas. Collaborating closely with Clinton and bandmates like Fuzzy Haskins and Grady Thomas, he bridged the group's doo-wop origins with its psychedelic evolution until his departure in 1977 amid internal tensions.[1][3]Formation of Original P and disputes
In the mid-1970s, internal tensions within Parliament-Funkadelic escalated due to financial and management disputes, particularly over royalties and creative control led by George Clinton.[3][1] These conflicts arose amid the collective's expanding roster and commercial success, leaving original members feeling marginalized in decision-making and compensation. By 1977, Calvin Simon, along with fellow original Parliaments members Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins and Grady Thomas, departed the group over these unresolved issues.[14][2] Following their exit, Simon, Haskins, and Thomas briefly reunited for a project under the Funkadelic name, releasing the album Connections and Disconnections in 1981, which highlighted their vocal harmonies but sparked further legal contention with Clinton regarding the use of the moniker.[3][1] This effort underscored ongoing disputes over intellectual property and band identity in the P-Funk extended family. In 1998, Simon, Haskins, Thomas, and original Parliaments bassist Ray Davis formed Original P as a reunion act dedicated to the early doo-wop and funk sound of their pre-Funkadelic days, explicitly without Clinton's involvement.[15][16] The group released their debut album, What Dat Shakin', that year on Westbound Records, featuring reinterpreted classics and new material emphasizing tight vocal arrangements.[17] Original P maintained activity through 2007, primarily touring to preserve the original Parliaments' legacy and performing at funk festivals, before Simon's departure from the lineup.[18]Transition to gospel and solo work
Following his involvement with Original P, which he co-founded in 1998 alongside fellow original Parliaments members Ray Davis, Fuzzy Haskins, and Grady Thomas, Simon departed the group in 2007 due to his growing focus on spiritual pursuits.[19][4] Simon launched his solo gospel career through his independent Simon Sayz Recordings label, debuting with the album Share the News in June 2004. The release, recorded amid his cancer treatment, reached No. 21 on the Billboard Gospel Albums chart and marked a return to the faith-based music of his youth.[4][1] His lyrics on the album and subsequent works emphasized themes of faith, redemption, and eternal life, often drawing from autobiographical experiences and his upbringing as a lead singer in the choir at Welcome Baptist Church in Beckley, West Virginia, where his family later co-founded Sky Baptist Church. Simon adapted vocal techniques from his Original Parliaments days, incorporating layered harmonies into gospel arrangements for an uplifting sound. In his follow-up releases, such as It's Not Too Late (2016) and I Believe (2018), Simon blended funk elements with gospel, using P-Funk-inspired musical theory to create "feel good" tracks centered on spiritual redemption.[20] He announced his retirement from music in 2019. He continued independent touring and performances in smaller venues, prioritizing intimate settings to deliver messages of hope and faith drawn from his personal journey through adversity.[21][19][1]Later life and death
Personal challenges and recovery
Simon maintained a long-term marriage to Jennifer Simon, with whom he shared over 43 years together until her passing from cancer in 2014.[22] The couple resided in Windsor, Ontario, for much of that time. Public details on his children are limited, though family provided ongoing support for his musical pursuits throughout his life, including a daughter named Joy McInnis.[23] Following his departure from Parliament-Funkadelic in 1977 amid financial and management disputes, Simon faced a period of personal turmoil in the ensuing years.[14] These issues were compounded by struggles with drug addiction stemming from the excesses of fame during his P-Funk years, compounded by lifelong PTSD from his military service.[24] The combination led to a significant withdrawal from the music industry, during which he stepped back to address his personal demons. Simon achieved recovery in the 2000s through renewed faith in Christianity and a pivot to gospel music, marking a period of sobriety and spiritual renewal.[24] He embraced music as a form of ministry, releasing gospel albums and engaging in community involvement, including church activities that echoed his upbringing.[7] In his later years, he resided in the Tampa Bay area of Florida for proximity to family, continuing his gospel work until his final days.[23][9]Illness and passing
Calvin Simon passed away on January 6, 2022, at the age of 79 in San Antonio, Florida.[9] The cause of death was not publicly disclosed, though Simon had previously battled thyroid cancer in 2004.[1] His passing was first announced by longtime bandmate Bootsy Collins on social media, prompting an outpouring of remembrances from the music community.[1] Bandmates including George Clinton and Bootsy Collins shared heartfelt tributes online, honoring Simon's contributions to Parliament-Funkadelic and his enduring spirit.[4] Clinton's official page noted that arrangements were pending at the time of the announcement, reflecting the close-knit nature of the P-Funk family.[25] Ultimately, a private family service was held, with Simon's ashes returned to his loved ones, underscoring the intimate farewell for the funk pioneer.[26] Simon's death occurred during a period of continued P-Funk reunions and performances, leaving a void in the collective's lineup and halting some collaborative plans as members mourned.[4]Legacy
Awards and recognitions
Calvin Simon was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on May 6, 1997, as one of sixteen members of Parliament-Funkadelic, honoring the collective's innovative fusion of funk, rock, and psychedelic elements that reshaped popular music.[27] In 2019, Simon shared the Recording Academy's Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award with George Clinton and other Parliament-Funkadelic members, acknowledging their profound and lasting impact on funk and related genres over five decades.[28] In 2023, Simon was posthumously inducted into the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame alongside fellow founding member Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins.[29] Simon was included in the Recording Academy's In Memoriam list associated with the 64th Annual Grammy Awards in 2022, celebrating his foundational role in the P-Funk legacy.[30]Cultural impact and tributes
Calvin Simon played a pivotal role in pioneering the theatrical and conceptual elements of funk music as a founding member of Parliament-Funkadelic, contributing vocals that blended elaborate stage personas with psychedelic influences to create immersive live experiences and album narratives.[1] His work with the collective, including background vocals on key tracks, has been extensively sampled in hip-hop, providing foundational rhythmic and vocal textures that shaped the genre's development in the 1980s and 1990s.[31] This influence extended to modern artists such as OutKast, whose fusion of funk grooves and Southern hip-hop echoed P-Funk's innovative layering of soul, jazz, and R&B elements pioneered by Simon and his bandmates.[32] Through his involvement with Original P, formed in the 1990s alongside fellow original Parliaments members, Simon helped preserve the P-Funk legacy by returning to the group's doo-wop roots from the late 1950s and early 1960s, when they performed street-corner harmonies at Black schools and events before evolving into funk.[33] In interviews, Simon emphasized how Original P's recordings and tours revived long-forgotten original songs from 20 to 30 years prior, educating younger fans on the harmonic foundations of doo-wop that underpinned P-Funk's expansive sound and mythology.[33] This effort maintained the continuity of P-Funk's cultural narrative, bridging generational gaps and ensuring the original vocal interplay remained accessible to new audiences.[34] Following Simon's death on January 6, 2022, tributes poured in from the music community, with George Clinton lauding his foundational talent and enduring spirit in official statements, while former bandmate Bootsy Collins shared heartfelt remembrances on social media, calling him a "friend, bandmate, and original P-Funkster."[1] Media outlets like Rolling Stone and Billboard published in-depth obituaries highlighting his irreplaceable contributions to funk's golden era, and fan-led initiatives included online vigils and playlist tributes that celebrated his discography across platforms.[4] These responses underscored the widespread reverence for Simon's role in a movement that redefined Black musical expression. Scholars have recognized Simon's vocal style for its versatility in bridging gospel's emotive depth, doo-wop's tight harmonies, and funk's rhythmic drive, as seen in analyses of Parliament-Funkadelic's evolution from vocal groups to a multimedia collective.[35] His first-tenor contributions exemplified this fusion, drawing on gospel inflections for soulful ad-libs while maintaining doo-wop precision in ensemble singing, a technique that informed P-Funk's communal vocal aesthetic.[36] This scholarly appreciation positions Simon as a key architect in the genre's stylistic transitions.Discography
Albums with Parliament-Funkadelic
Calvin Simon was a core vocalist for Parliament-Funkadelic, providing lead and background vocals across multiple foundational albums that defined the collective's psychedelic funk sound. His contributions helped shape the group's harmonic layers and energetic delivery during the early 1970s, blending doo-wop influences from their Parliaments origins with emerging P-Funk grooves. Simon's vocal work appears on the following Parliament-Funkadelic releases:- Osmium (Parliament, 1970): Lead vocals on tracks including "I Call My Baby Pussycat" and "Little Old Country Boy," alongside group vocals.[37]
- Funkadelic (Funkadelic, 1970): Vocals throughout, including lead on "Qualify and Satisfy."
- Maggot Brain (Funkadelic, 1971): Background and group vocals.
- America Eats Its Young (Funkadelic, 1972): Uncredited vocals on several tracks.
- Cosmic Slop (Funkadelic, 1973): Group vocals throughout the album.[38]
- Standing on the Verge of Getting It On (Funkadelic, 1974): Vocals and congas.
- Mothership Connection (Parliament, 1975): Background vocals, notably on the hit "Give Up the Funk (Tear the Roof off the Sucker)."[39]
- The Clones of Dr. Funkenstein (Parliament, 1976): Group vocals across the album.
With Original P
Simon reunited with Fuzzy Haskins and Grady Thomas as Original P for the following releases:- What Dat Shakin' (Original P, 1998)
- Original P Introducing the Westbound Souljaz (Original P, 2001)[2]
Solo and gospel releases
Calvin Simon transitioned to solo gospel music in the early 2000s, establishing his own label, Simon Sayz Recordings, to release works that blended his funk roots with Christian themes, often described as "sanctified funk." His debut solo album, Share the News, arrived in 2004 and marked his return to recording after a period of personal challenges, peaking at No. 21 on the Billboard Gospel Albums chart.[4] The album featured nine tracks, many of which Simon wrote or co-wrote, emphasizing faith, redemption, and testimony through upbeat rhythms and soulful vocals.| Track No. | Title |
|---|---|
| 1 | Share the News |
| 2 | No Jesus, No Glory |
| 3 | Been Down This Road Before |
| 4 | In My Fathers House |
| 5 | Holy |
| 6 | He's Coming Back |
| 7 | Go For It |
| 8 | Squash It |
| 9 | Every Time I See Your Face |
| Track No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Needing Someone (It's Not Too Late) | 3:48 |
| 2 | The Holy One (Jesus) | 4:21 |
| 3 | Jesus Is a Friend of Mine | 4:12 |
| 4 | Sorrow Street | 5:08 |
| 5 | A Soldier's Story | 3:59 |
| 6 | Power of Love | 4:12 |
| 7 | Stand | 4:11 |
| 8 | The Cross | 3:52 |
| Track No. | Title |
|---|---|
| 1 | Passing Time |
| 2 | Share the News |
| 3 | I Believe |
| 4 | Holy |
| 5 | Dis Be tha Place |
| 6 | He's Coming Back |
| 7 | Been Down This Road Before |
| 8 | Squash It |
| 9 | No Jesus, No Glory |
| 10 | Passing Time (Acoustic) |