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Ohio Players
Ohio Players
American funk and R&B band
1
Jimmy Castor
Jimmy Castor
American musician
2
Zapp
Zapp
American funk band from Dayton, Ohio
3
B. T. Express
B. T. Express
American band
4
Mickey & the Soul Generation
Mickey & the Soul Generation
5
The Trammps
The Trammps
American soul band
6
Money Mark
Money Mark
American musician
7
The Gap Band
The Gap Band
American R&B and funk band
8
Sea Level
Sea Level
Southern rock/funk/fusion jam band
9
Funkadelic
Funkadelic
American band
10
Fuzzy Haskins
Fuzzy Haskins
American singer and guitarist
11
100 Proof
100 Proof
American musical group
12
Westbound Train
Westbound Train
13
Bernard Purdie
Bernard Purdie
American drummer
14
Hi Tension
Hi Tension
15
The Fatback Band
The Fatback Band
American funk band
16
Gleaming Spires
Gleaming Spires
American new wave musical duo
17
Wet Willie
Wet Willie
American rock band
18
Larry Young
Larry Young
American jazz musician
19
Rare Earth
Rare Earth
American rock band
20
Parliament-Funkadelic
Parliament-Funkadelic
American band
21
Tate Houston
Tate Houston
American saxophonist
22
Change
Change
Italian-American post-disco group
23
Death
Death
protopunk band
24
L.T.D.
L.T.D.
1970s funk music group
25
Joe Henderson
Joe Henderson
American jazz tenor saxophonist
26
Quill
Quill
musical group
27
Pepper Adams
Pepper Adams
American saxophonist
28
Crime & the City Solution
Crime & the City Solution
Australian rock band
29
The Time
The Time
American funk and dance-pop ensemble
30
The Outsiders
The Outsiders
US band
Intro
Genres
Music

The Fabulous Counts were an American soul/funk group from Detroit, Michigan. They won local acclaim as an instrumental group and as a backing ensemble for visiting solo acts after their formation in 1968. Working with producer Richard "Popcorn" Wylie, they released the instrumental single "Jan, Jan" on Detroit's Moira Records that year, which narrowly missed hitting the US R&B charts that winter. Their second single, "Dirty Red", passed without trace, but the third single, "Get Down People", hit #32 R&B and #88 on the US pop charts. A full-length, Jan, Jan (produced by Ollie McLaughlin), was released in 1969 on Cotillion Records, but the group left the label in 1970.

Signing with Westbound Records that year, the group changed their name simply to The Counts. Shortchanged by Westbound Records in favor of The Ohio Players and Funkadelic, many of the band's original members of the group left, and the band moved to Atlanta, Georgia, signing with Michael Thevis' Aware Records, where they released their final LP's "Love Sign" and "Funk Pump" before the group called it quits in 1976. All three of the funk albums they released under their new name charted.

The band's biggest hit came in 1972 under a pseudonym: "Mr. Penguin - Pt. 1" by Lunar Funk, recorded and released on Bell Records while they were still signed to Westbound. It reached #29 R&B and #63 on the Hot 100.

Just before reuniting in 2009, Mose Davis played jazz piano around Atlanta with the Mose Davis Trio, Leroy Emmanuel played in a Canadian funk band called the LMT Connection and Demo Cates operated out of Canada, where he received two Juno Award nominations for R&B/Soul Recording of the Year and appeared as an actor in TV and movies.

In 2009, they reunited back in the line up from 1976: Mose Davis (hammond organ, vocals), Leroy Emmanuel (guitar, vocals), Demo Cates (saxes,vocals), Jimmy "Junebug" Jackson (drums,vocals) and Jimmy Brown (saxes,voc).

The band's Cotillion LP has been reissued, and the first Westbound LP is also in print as a CD.