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It features the band members chanting the song's title and a prominent organ part played by Brown himself. Bobby Byrd also contributes vocals and a spoken intro. Brown released the next 6 minutes of the recording as another two-part single, titled " My Part/Make It Funky ", which charted #68 R&B. Parts 3 and 4 appeared on the album Get on the ...
This is a discography chronicling the musical career of James Brown. Brown joined Bobby Byrd's vocal group The Flames in 1953, first as a drummer, and then as leading front man. Later becoming The Famous Flames , they signed with Federal Records in 1956 and recorded their first hit single, " Please, Please, Please ", which sold over a million ...
The tape was given to Fred Seibert and Alan Goodman of Fred/Alan Inc. to make into an inexpensive music video. The team worked with their in-house producer/director Tom Pomposello and creative director Marcy Brafman and Peter Caesar to create the video. The video entered rotation on MTV in mid-October 1984. [2]
"Super Bad, Pt. 1, 2 & 3" James Brown: 9:16: 2. "Let It Be Me" Gilbert Bécaud, Pierre Delanoë: 3:22: 3. "Sometime" James Brown, Bud Hobgood: 3:39: 4. "A Man Has to Go Back to the Crossroads" James Brown: 3:18: 5. "Giving Out of Juice" Teddy Brown: 9:26: 6. "By the Time I Get to Phoenix" Jimmy Webb: 3:05
Star Time is a four-CD box set by American musician James Brown.Released in May 1991 by Polydor Records, its contents span most of the length of his career up to the time of its release, starting in 1956 with his first hit record, "Please, Please, Please", and ending with "Unity", his 1984 collaboration with Afrika Bambaataa.
The Way We Walk – Live in Concert is a 1992 live video from the We Can't Dance tour by Genesis. The footage was videotaped on 6th, 7 and 8 November 1992 at Earls Court in London, and first released on VHS on the 29th March 1993 as Genesis Live – The Way We Walk – In Concert. It was also available on PAL format LaserDisc.
Nonstop! is a studio album by American musician James Brown. [1] [2] The album was released in April 1981 and was compiled of outtakes from his previous album, T.K. Records' Soul Syndrome; the album thereby fulfilled his contract. [3]
The Payback is the 37th studio album by American musician James Brown.The album was released in December 1973, by Polydor Records.It was originally scheduled to become the soundtrack for the blaxploitation film Hell Up in Harlem, but was rejected by the film's producers, who dismissed it as "the same old James Brown stuff."