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  1. The Cinderella Theory is the fifth studio album by American funk musician George Clinton, released August 2, 1989, on Paisley Park Records. It was released three years after his previous studio effort, R&B Skeletons in the Closet, which was his last album for Capitol Records. The Cinderella Theory represented a comeback of sorts for Clinton ...

    • 54:05
    • August 2, 1989
    • George Clinton
  2. Mar 24, 2020 · On his first album for Prince's Paisley Park record label, George Clinton's willingness to experiment with samplers and hip-hop (including guest appearances by such artists as Chuck D and Flavor Flav of Public Enemy) resulted in a slightly inconsistent record, but it has more than enough truly fine songs to make The Cinderella Theory rank among ...

  3. The legendary Public Enemy is back! Stream "GRID" from the new album "What You Gonna Do When The Grid Goes Down" Now: https://PublicEnemy.lnk.to/WYGDWTGGDFol...

    • Oct 14, 2020
    • 156.4K
    • PublicEnemyVEVO
  4. Nov 9, 2019 · The result was The Cinderella Theory an album that simultaneously feeds off numerous themes present in 1980’s P-Funk, while also displaying the slight influence of his new label boss. Released to mixed reviews on August 2nd, 1989, the album still displays moments of Funk- induced magic.

  5. May 4, 2023 · It kicks off with “Airbound,” a light and airy tune that glides along nicely. The collection’s clear-cut standout, “Tweakin’,” is next. Featuring rapping by Public Enemy’s Chuck D and Flavor Flav, this song is the only one that rekindles that classic Clinton sizzle. The sequel to the 1982 standard “Atomic Dog,” “Why Should I ...

  6. Oct 2, 2020 · Accumulated research shows the Cinderella Phenomenon often involves the redirection of anger that an abusive parent feels toward someone else—perhaps an absent spouse or former partner. The targeted child may remind the parent of a trauma he or she experienced, such as rape, or as Egeland noted, their own abuse.

  7. Jun 19, 2015 · The wrongdoing schema is psychologically important because it can provide a unified explanation of several well-documented patterns of thinking in humans: moral dumbfounding, dyadic completion ...

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