"Then everything accelerated. Bobby got kidnapped!" Ned recalls, referring to Seale's various legal troubles, including a contempt of court conviction and a subsequent arrest for allegedly ordering the murder of a Panther-turned-suspected informant (the charges were later dropped). As the Panthers rallied around Seale, party leadership told Ned, "We want you to create a song."

In 1970, the Lumpen recorded two songs—"No More" and "Free Bobby Now"—which were pressed up as a 45 rpm record. They developed a stage show that incorporated original material, skits and versions of other artists' songs with revolutionary lyrics. "Ol' Man River" became "Ol' Pig Nixon."

One of the Lumpen's career highlights came when journalist (and former KQED anchor) Belva Davis arranged a performance at San Quentin with Curtis Mayfield and Muhammad Ali. The Lumpen performed their version of Mayfield's "People Get Ready," then segued to "Free Bobby Now" and "Ol' Pig Nixon." By the fourth song, "Revolution is the Only Solution," prison officials began to take note of the lyrics: "A 45 will stop all jive / A 357 will send a pig to heaven / A 38 will…"

Ned recalls, "All of a sudden, the mics went dead. The guards had pulled the plug. They cut our mic and said, 'You're not gonna sing anymore, or we're gonna end this concert and we're gonna send the prisoners back.' So Curtis came out, and Muhammad Ali was back there just busting up. 'They didn't let y'all sing, huh? Well, I guess I'm gonna have to get out there and tell the truth anyway.' I never will forget that."

Another highlight was an East Coast tour with Douglas, which included a contentious stop in New Haven, where Seale was being held. Matter-of-factly, Ned recounts confrontations with angry crowds: "They threatened us in New Haven, [but] we said, 'Oh, well. We might not get another opportunity to consistently say this.'"

The Lumpen made a live recording from that tour, but the master tapes somehow disappeared and the album was never released.

In 2013, Rickey Vincent, host of KPFA's History of Funk show, wrote a book on the Lumpen called Party Music. Vincent says he's never heard the full album—which he calls a "unicorn"—but did transcribe the lyrics from eight songs he gleaned from a cassette copy while researching his book.

The Lumpen, he says, "represented the music, but they also represented the Black Panther Party at that time. … They represented a moment of truth where the music, the politics, the possibilities were all sort of reaching a peak at the same time."

Vincent says the band existed in a musical context shaped by James Brown's "Say It Loud (I'm Black and I'm Proud)." "That was the record that laid out this explicit discourse across the racial divide," he explains. "The explicit use of race—all that sort of evolved from late '69 into '70. This new era of music was driven by a tantalizing mix of racial community and racial confrontation. The way the times were changing, the way people's expectations were changing, somebody had to push that a little further."

The Lumpen, Vincent argues, were unique. "They weren't a group designed to perform for profit," he says. "They were designed to perform for a specific political agenda that mirrored or reflected the Black Panther Party's vision of social change."

Both Vincent and Ned note that the radio stations of the time were afraid to give the Lumpen airplay despite their talent. Ned adds that Panther leadership had other priorities besides promoting a funk band. Although they played a few local shows in 1972, the group disbanded after its members were reassigned to other roles in the Panther organization.

With a tinge of regret, Ned remarks, "What [Panther leadership] didn't understand at the time that we brought rehumanizing, opening up the doors for everyone to say, 'I'm a revolutionary too.'"

Undoubtedly, the Lumpen's legacy carried on through the sociopolitical commentary that permeated R&B and funk throughout the '70s—as well as the direct political speech of hip-hop groups such as the Coup, Public Enemy and dead prez. There have been inquiries, Ned says, from local artist Kev Choice and X Clan's Brother J about collaborating on a reunion show—suggesting there may be another chapter in the Lumpen's story.

Saturu Ned speaks at The Legacy: Black Arts, Black Panthers, and Hip-Hop, a panel discussion moderated by Eric Arnold on Feb. 27 at Oakstop. Details here.