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"I Can't Stand Myself (When You Touch Me)", also known as "I Can't Stand It", is a song written and recorded by James Brown in 1967. It is the most successful of the handful of recordings he made with The Dapps , a band of white musicians led by Beau Dollar .
I Can't Stand Myself When You Touch Me is the eighteenth studio album by American musician James Brown. The album was released in March 1968, by King Records. [3] [1]
I Can't Stand Myself When You Touch Me (1968) Singles from Cold Sweat "Cold Sweat" Released: July 1967; Professional ratings; Review scores; Source Rating; AllMusic [1]
I Can't Stand It may refer to: "I Can't Stand It" (Eric Clapton song), 1981 "I Can't Stand It" (Blossoms song), 2018 "I Can't Stand It!", a song by Twenty 4 Seven "I Can't Stand It", a song by the Spencer Davis Group from Their First LP
"There Was a Time" was recorded in June 1967 during a live performance at the Apollo Theater in a medley with "Let Yourself Go" and "I Feel All Right", and was first released November 1967 in edited form as the B-side of the single "I Can't Stand Myself (When You Touch Me)". The song charted #3 R&B — higher than the A-side — and #36 Pop. [1 ...
"Get It Together" is a song performed by James Brown. Released in October 1967 as a two-part single, it charted #11 R&B and #40 Pop. [1] Both parts also appeared on the album I Can't Stand Myself When You Touch Me.
Released as a single in May 1979, [1] it charted #15 R&B. [2] It also appeared on the album The Original Disco Man. Critic Robert Christgau praised the song as the "disco disc of the year". [3] Live performances of the song appear on the albums Hot On the One, Live in New York, and Live at Chastain Park.
Larry Flick from Billboard described the song as a "light and catchy hip-houser". [1] A reviewer from Music & Media wrote, "I Can't Stand It will never be regarded as innovative: the Martin Luther King [actually is a sample from Khalid Muhammad] "Robbed Of Our Nation..!' speech, the Kraftwerk-like synth, the ooh's and yeah' s have all been heard before, but seldom in such a strong pop context.