Songs Performed
Originals
The Red Hot Chili Peppers
Freaky Styley
The Uplift Mofo Party Plan
Mother's Milk
|
Blood Sugar Sex Magik
Other (non-album songs)
|
- "After Hours" (Velvet Underground)
- "Anarchy In The U.K." (Sex Pistols)
- "Atomic Dog" (Parliament Funk)
- "Bullet Proof" (George Clinton)
- "Cosmic Slop" (Parliament Funkadelic)
- "Crosstown Traffic" (Jimi Hendrix)
- "Dazed And Confused" (Led Zeppelin)
- "Fopp" (Ohio Players)
- "Gimmie Gimmie Gimmie" (Black Flag)
- "Good God" (James Brown)
- "Good To Your Earhole" (Parliament Funkadelic)
- "Happy #12 & #35" (Thelonious Monster)
- "Heard It On The X" (ZZ Top)
- "If You Got Funk, You Got Style" (Parliament Funkadelic)
- "My Automobile" (Parliament Funkadelic)
- "The Needle And The Damage Done" (Neil Young)
- "New Age" (Velvet Underground)
- "No Head No Backstage Pass" (Parliament Funkadelic)
- "Orange Claw Hammer" (Captain Beefheart)
- "Poptones" (Public Image Ltd)
- "Pot Sharing Tots" (George Clinton)
- "Rapper's Delight" (Sugar Hill Gang)
- "Red Hot Mama" (Parliament Funkadelic)
- "Sammy Hagar Weekend" (Thelonious Monster)
- "Standing On The Verge Of Getting It On" (Parliament Funkadelic)
- "Sunday Morning" (Velvet Underground)
- "Sweet Jane" (Velvet Underground)
- "Ten To Butter Blood Voodoo" (John Frusciante)
- "What Is Soul?" (Parliament Funkadelic)
Read more about this topic: Blood Sugar Sex Magik Tour
Famous quotes containing the words songs and/or performed:
“Dylan is to me the perfect symbol of the anti-artist in our society. He is against everythingthe last resort of someone who doesnt really want to change the world.... Dylans songs accept the world as it is.”
—Ewan MacColl (19151989)
“All in all, the creative act is not performed by the artist alone; the spectator brings the work in contact with the external world by deciphering and interpreting its inner qualifications and thus adds his contribution to the creative act. This becomes even more obvious when posterity gives its final verdict and sometimes rehabilitates forgotten artists.”
—Marcel Duchamp (18871968)