DETROIT — ''I was strung out on Bach, and Beethoven was my thing. I dug jazz, I dug rock, anything with a swing'' — or so goes Funkadelic's 1978 groove ''Cholly (Funk Getting Ready to Roll!).''
Now Parliament-Funkadelic is going orchestral.
The Detroit Opera will showcase some of funk maestro George Clinton 's and P-Funk's greatest hits this weekend, performed by violins, cellos, horns and other instruments tuned more for arias or sonatas than for tunes like ''Flash Light,'' ''(Not Just) Knee Deep'' and ''One Nation Under a Groove.''
Ray Chew, arranger and conductor of ''Symphonic PFunk: Celebrating the Music of Parliament Funkadelic,'' believes Saturday's show will be the first time an orchestra has performed the iconic group's music.
Chew, himself a musician, has performed and arranged music for some of the industry's biggest names. He's also a fan of the funk.
''The arrangements that I'm making are going to really be key to how we bring it all together,'' he said of Saturday's performance. ''George's and P-Funk's music is just waiting to explode through that orchestra.''
For Clinton, it was inevitable.
''I've been waiting on it to happen over the years,'' the 84-year-old founder and frontman told The Associated Press. ''We knew we were going to be doing this one day. We expected to gravitate into classical or something.''