Episode 221

Seth Neblett on Parliament-Funkadelic Women & 'Mothership Connected'

Think back to when you first realized a record you loved was built on somebody's sacrifice. Not the sacrifice of struggle-and-triumph that gets the Grammy speech. The quiet kind, where a woman gave everything to a machine and walked away with barely her name on it.

That is the story Seth Neblett has been carrying his whole life. His mother, Mallia Franklin, was Parlet's front woman, the only member formally contracted by Casablanca Records, and the woman George Clinton's team privately described as the reason Parlet existed at all. She brought Bootsy Collins into the family. She recruited Walter "Junie" Morrison. She was, as multiple people in Seth's book confirm, the connective tissue behind nearly every P-Funk hit from 1975's "Give Up the Funk" through "Atomic Dog" in 1983. And she died in 2010 at 57 without the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame or the Grammys ever mentioning her name.

Seth Neblett spent twenty years making sure that didn't stand. The result is Mothership Connected: The Women of Parliament-Funkadelic (University of Texas Press, 2025), a wide-ranging oral history that puts Mallia, Debbie Wright, Shirley Hayden, Dawn Silva, and Lynn Mabry center stage, finally.

In this episode, Seth sits down with DJ Sir Daniel and Jay Ray to walk through what it was like growing up as an only child with Parliament rehearsing in the basement of his grandparents' house in Highland Park, Michigan. His godfather was Bootsy Collins. His babysitters were members of the Ohio Players. His grandmother was vice president of the city council and a close friend of Rosa Parks. He is, as Sir Daniel puts it, the best possible version of a nepo kid. But the book Seth wrote isn't a nostalgia trip. It's a reckoning. It documents how women, particularly Black women, were systematically frozen out of the money they made, the credit they earned, and the history they helped write.

This episode covers the business mechanics that kept Parlet broke while their vocals were everywhere, the "space whorehouse" concept quietly embedded in Parlet's debut album art, how Mallia's advocacy for fair pay eventually got her and the group sidelined, and the chain of connections that runs from Mallia Franklin straight to "California Love." Seth doesn't theorize. He was there.

You can get 30% off a copy of 'Mothership Connected: The Women of Parliament-Funkadelic' at University of Texas Press. Use the code: UTXPCA until May 31, 2026! Click here: https://qpnt.net/msconnectedut

Links to Content Related To This Episode For Research and Context

Chapter Markers

00:00 Intro Theme

00:16 Welcoming Seth Neblett, Author of Mothership Connected

01:45 Jay Ray Reads Seth Neblett's Full Bio

04:00 What Was It Like For Seth Neblett Growing Up?

07:16 Watching Mom Transform Into a P-Funk Superhero Backstage

12:40 An Odd Seed Kid With Parlet Rehearsing in the Basement

16:30 How the Industry Exploited Black Women in the 70s & 80s

21:07 Mallia's Contract and the Hidden Business Behind Parlet

27:42 Space Ships and Space Pimps: The Hidden Meaning in Parlet's Album Art

32:45 How Streaming and Social Media Changed Power for Women Artists

35:43 Famous But Broke: Songwriters Got Rich, Not the Artists

37:00 Protecting Black Music History: The Book as a Permanent Record

38:22 Bootsy Collins Told Seth: You Write It

40:00 Finishing the Book After Mallia Passed Away in 2010

42:17 Mallia Franklin Brought Every P-Funk Hit Maker Through the Door

44:31 Mallia Connects Dr. Dre and Roger Troutman at Death Row

48:24 The Stories That Didn't Make the Book: 100 Deleted Pages

50:25 P-Funk Demons and Doubters Couldn't Stop the Book

54:02 What Mallia and His Grandparents Would Say About the Book

55:24 Where to Buy the Book and Follow Seth's Work

57:31 Queue Points Sign-Off and Listener Resources

58:51 Outro Theme

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About the Podcast

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Queue Points

About your hosts

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DJ Sir Daniel

DJ Sir Daniel is a DJ/Selector and part of Atlanta's, all-vinyl crew, Wax Fundamentals. Co-host of the Queue Points podcast, he is an advocate for DJ culture and is passionate about creating atmospheres of inclusivity and jubilation from a Black perspective.

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Jay Ray

Johnnie Ray Kornegay III (Jay Ray) is a podcast consultant and co-host and producer of Queue Points, the Ambie Award-nominated podcast that drops the needle on Black music history. In addition to his duties at Queue Points, he is the Deputy Director of Strategy and Impact for CNP (Counter Narrative Project). A photographer, creative consultant and social commentator, Jay Ray's work is centered around a commitment to telling full and honest stories about communities often ignored.