Selling things we don't need anymore for my son's college fund....thanks for looking!
See Similar Items from this seller's store: Click Here
Item Description
Detailed item info
Track listing
1. Doing It to Death 2. Super Bad - (mono) 3. Soul Power - (mono) 4. Think 5. It's a Man's World - (previously unreleased, mono) 6. Try Me (I Need You) - (mono) 7. Bewildered - (mono) 8. Out of Sight 9. I Got You 10. Prisoner of Love 11. I Got the Feelin' - (mono) 12. Maybe the Last Time 13. Licking Stick Licking Stick 14. Mother Popcorn 15. Papa's Got a Brand New Bag - (mono) 16. Sex Machine 17. Payback 18. Please, Please, Please - (mono)
Details
Playing time:
3304000 ms
Contributing artists:
Bootsy Collins, Michael Brecker, Steve Gadd, Maceo Parker, Pee Wee Ellis, Fred Wesley, St. Clair Pinckney
Distributor:
Universal Distribution
Recording type:
Studio
Recording mode:
Stereo
SPAR Code:
AAD
Album notes
Personnel includes: James Brown (vocals); "Catfish" Collins, Kenny Burrell, Jimmy Nolen, Nafloyd Scott (guitar); Maceo Parker (alto & baritone saxophones, flute); St. Clair Pickney (tenor saxophone); Mike Brecker, Alfred "Pee Wee" Ellis (saxophone); Randy Brecker (trumpet); Fred Wesley (trombone); Bobby Byrd (piano, keyboards, background vocals); Fred Thomas, William "Bootsy" Collins (bass); John "Jabo" Starks, Steve Gadd, Clyde Stubblefield (drums); Keels, Nashpendle Knox (background vocals). Producers include: Cliff White, Barry Feldman, T.C. Rogers, James Brown, Andy Gibson. Polydor Records put a tentative toe into the emerging CD stream in 1985 and enjoyed surprising commercial success with this 56-minute, 18-song James Brown sampler. Rather than taking the standard greatest-hits approach, compiler Cliff White mixed familiar hits with rarities and even unreleased material, a shortened version of the later boxed-set formula. So, along with number one R&B hits like "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag," "Super Bad," and "Mother Popcorn," one heard a previously unreleased version of "It's a Man's World," two years older than the better-known one, and "I Got You," an early version of "I Got You (I Feel Good)," culled from the withdrawn Out of Sight LP. The effect, especially for a first-time listener, was to whet the appetite for more, though The CD of JB was more a highlights disc than a thorough anthology. ~ William Ruhlmann