[1] Please Please Please - 02:45
[2] Think - 02:46
[3] Night Train - 03:32
[4] Out Of Sight - 02:23
[5] Papa's Got A Brand New Bag pt.1 - 02:07
[6] I Got You (I Feel Good) - 02:47
[7] It's A Man's Man's Man's World - 02:48
[8] Cold Sweat - 02:52
[9] Say It Loud, I'm Black And I'm Proud pt.1 - 02:47
[10] Get Up (I Feel Like Being A) Sex Machine - 05:16
[11] Hey America - 03:38
[12] Make It Funky pt.1 - 03:16
[13] I'm A Greedy Man pt.1 - 03:37
[14] Get On The Good Foot - 03:35
[15] Get Up Offa That Thing - 04:10
[16] It's Too Funky In Here - 03:59
[17] Living In America - 04:42
[18] I'm Real - 05:34
[19] Hot Pants pt.1 - 03:08
[20] Soul Power (Live) - 04:29
The CD Slide Pack is a New Form of No-frills CD Packaging featuring an
Outer Slipcase with the Original Cover Artwork, and an Inner 'slider'
Including a CD. Note: There is No CD Booklet in this Package.
Soul Brother Number One, the Godfather of Soul, the Hardest Working Man
in Show Business, Mr. Dynamite -- those are mighty titles, but no one
can question that James Brown has earned them more than any other
performer. Other singers were more popular, others were equally
skilled, but no other African-American musician has been so influential
on the course of popular music in the past several decades. And no
other musician, pop or otherwise, put on a more exciting, exhilarating
stage show -- Brown's performances were marvels of athletic stamina and
split-second timing. Through the gospel-impassioned fury of his vocals
and the complex polyrhythms of his beats, Brown was a crucial midwife
in not just one, but two revolutions in American Black music. He was
one of the figures most responsible for turning R&B into soul; he
was, most would agree, the figure most responsible for turning soul
music into the funk of the late '60s and early '70s. Since the
mid-'70s, he's done little more than tread water artistically; his
financial and drug problems eventually got him a controversial prison
sentence. Yet in a sense his music is now more influential than ever,
as his voice and rhythms are sampled on innumerable rap and hip-hop
recordings, and critics have belatedly hailed his innovations as among
the most important in all of rock or soul.
Brown's rags-to-riches-to-rags story has heroic and tragic dimensions
of mythic resonance. Born into poverty in the South, he ran afoul of
the law by the late '40s on an armed robbery conviction. With the help
of singer Bobby Byrd's family, Brown gained parole, and started a
gospel group with Byrd, changing their focus to R&B as the rock
revolution gained steam. The Flames, as the Georgian group were known
in the mid-'50s, were signed by Federal/King, and had a huge R&B
hit right off the bat with the wrenching, churchy ballad "Please,
Please, Please." By now the Flames had become James Brown and the
Famous Flames, the charisma, energy, and talent of Brown making him the
natural star attraction.
All of Brown's singles over the next two years flopped, as he sought to
establish his own style, recording material that was obviously
derivative of heroes like Roy Brown, Hank Ballard, Little Richard, and
Ray Charles. In retrospect, it can be seen that Brown was in the same
position as dozens of other R&B one-shots -- talented singers in
need of better songs, or not fully on the road to a truly original
sound. What made Brown succeed where hundreds of others failed was his
superhuman determination, working the chitlin circuit to death,
sharpening his band, and keeping an eye on new trends. He was on the
verge of being dropped from King in late 1958 when his perseverance
finally paid off, as "Try Me" became a number one R&B (and small
pop) hit, and several follow-ups established him as a regular visitor
to the R&B charts.
Brown's style of R&B got harder as the '60s began, as he added more
complex, Latin- and jazz-influenced rhythms on hits like "Good Good
Lovin'," "I'll Go Crazy," "Think," and "Night Train," alternating these
with torturous ballads that featured some of the most frayed screaming
to be heard outside of the church. Black audiences already knew that
Brown had the most exciting live act around, but he truly started to
become a phenomenon with the release of Live at the Apollo in 1963.
Capturing a James Brown concert in all its whirling-dervish energy and
calculated spontaneity, it reached number two in the album charts, an
unprecedented feat for a hardcore R&B LP.
Live at the Apollo was recorded and released against the wishes of the
King label. It was these kinds of artistic standoffs that led Brown to
seek better opportunities elsewhere. In 1964, he ignored his King
contract to record "Out of Sight" for Smash, igniting a lengthy legal
battle that prevented him from issuing vocal recordings for about a
year. When he finally resumed recording for King in 1965, he had a new
contract that granted him far more artistic control over his releases.
Brown's new era had truly begun, however, with "Out of Sight," which
topped the R&B charts and made the pop Top 30. For some time, Brown
had been moving toward more elemental lyrics which threw in as many
chants and screams as words, and more intricate beats and horn charts
that took some of their cues from the ensemble work of jazz outfits.
"Out of Sight" wasn't called funk when it came out, but it had most of
the essential ingredients. These were amplified and perfected on 1965's
"Papa's Got a Brand New Bag," a monster that finally broke Brown to the
White audience, reaching the Top Ten. The even more adventurous
follow-up, "I Got You (I Feel Good)," did even better, making number
three.
These hits kicked off Brown's period of greatest commercial success and
public visibility. From 1965 to the end of the decade, he was rarely
off the R&B charts, often on the pop listings, and all over the
concert circuit and national television, even meeting with
Vice-President Hubert Humphrey and other important politicians as a
representative of the Black community. His music became even bolder and
funkier, as melody was dispensed with almost altogether in favor of
chunky rhythms and magnetic interplay between his vocals, horns, drums,
and scratching electric guitar (heard to best advantage on hits like
"Cold Sweat," "I Got the Feelin'," and "There Was a Time"). The lyrics
were now not so much words as chanted, stream-of-consciousness slogans,
often aligning themselves with Black pride as well as good
old-fashioned (or new-fashioned) sex. Much of the credit for the sound
he devised belonged to (and has now been belatedly attributed) his
top-notch supporting musicians, such as saxophonists Maceo Parker, St.
Clair Pinckney, and Pee Wee Ellis; guitarist Jimmy Nolen; backup singer
and longtime loyal associate Bobby Byrd; and drummer Clyde Stubblefield.
Brown was both a brilliant bandleader and a stern taskmaster, leading
his band to walk out on him in late 1969. Amazingly, he turned the
crisis to his advantage by recruiting a young Cincinnati outfit called
the Pacemakers, featuring guitarist Catfish Collins and bassist Bootsy
Collins. Although they only stayed with him for about a year, they were
crucial to Brown's evolution into even harder funk, emphasizing the
rhythm and the bottom even more. The Collins brothers, for their part,
put their apprenticeship to good use, helping define '70s funk as
members of the Parliament/Funkadelic axis.
In the early '70s, many of the most important members of Brown's
late-'60s band returned to the fold, to be billed as the J.B's (they
also made records on their own). Brown continued to score heavily on
the R&B charts throughout the first half of the 1970s, the music
becoming even more and more elemental and beat-driven. At the same
time, he was retreating from the White audience he had cultivated
during the mid-to-late '60s; records like "Make It Funky," "Hot Pants,"
"Get on the Good Foot," and "The Payback" were huge soul sellers, but
only modest pop ones. Critics charged, with some justification, that
the Godfather was starting to repeat and recycle himself too many
times. It must be remembered, though, that these songs were made for
the singles-radio-jukebox market and not meant to be played one after
the other on CD compilations (as they are today).
By the mid-'70s, Brown was beginning to burn out artistically. He
seemed shorn of new ideas, was being outgunned on the charts by disco,
and was running into problems with the IRS and his financial empire.
There were sporadic hits, and he could always count on enthusiastic
live audiences, but by the 1980s, he didn't have a label. With the
explosion of rap, however, which frequently sampled vintage JB records,
Brown was now hipper than ever. He collaborated with Afrika Bambaataa
on the critical smash single "Unity," and re-entered the Top Ten in
1986 with "Living in America." Rock critics, who had always ranked
Brown considerably below Otis Redding and Aretha Franklin in the soul
canon, began to reevaluate his output, particularly his funk years,
sometimes anointing him not just as Soul Brother Number One, but as the
most important Black musician of the rock era.
In 1988, Brown's personal life came crashing down in a well-publicized
incident in which he was accused by his wife of assault and battery.
After a year skirting hazy legal and personal troubles, he led the
police on an interstate car chase after allegedly threatening people
with a handgun. The episode ended in a six-year prison sentence that
many felt excessive; he was paroled after serving two years.
It's probably safe to assume that Brown, now well into his 60s, will
not make any more important recordings, although he continues to
perform and release new material like 1998's I'm Back. Yet his music is
probably more popular in the American mainstream today than it's been
in over 20 years, and not just among young rappers and samplers. For a
long time his cumbersome, byzantine discography was mostly out of
print, with pieces available only on skimpy greatest-hits collections.
A series of exceptionally well-packaged reissues on PolyGram has
changed the situation; the Star Time box set is the best overview, with
other superb compilations devoted to specific phases of his lengthy
career, from '50s R&B to '70s funk.