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"...Cold Sweat..."
The 42-Tracks of "The Singles Volume 4..." by all things JAMES BROWN covers releases from February 1966 through to October 1967 – fourth in a truly stunning 11-Volume Series of 2CD-Compilations that has had most fans reaching for the Mr. Dynamite superlatives, and genuinely finding there aren't enough.
Alongside every King, Smash and Bethlehem Records A&B-side, we get the altered mix for "This Old Heart" that appeared on King 6044 ("This Old Heart" is also on Volume 3 in the series as King 5995 for February 1965), both sides of the unissued King 6087 single for "It's A Gas Part 1 and 2" and King 6111 for "It Won't Be Me" b/w "Mona Lisa", both versions of King 6122 because "Get It Together" was issued with two different edits and those lesser-seen Christmas singles too. And of course there are the career/world-altering monster number one hits in the shape of "It's Man's Man's Man's World" and "Cold Sweat".
Volume Four also has the same spectacular Audio and beautifully presented 28-page fact-filled booklet on Soul Brother No. 1 that all these 45-single anthologies have. The booklet is a feast of fan-pleasing details and memorabilia provided by a team of experts on all things JB Productions - ALAN LEEDS, his manager and pal, being principal among them (it's printed on a sort of sepia-feel paper). It should also be noted too that the eleven volumes in "The Singles" Series for 'James Brown', along with the 'Motown' and 'Chess' Book Set Reissues - has gone a long way to emblazoning 'HIP-O SELECT' as a reissue label dear to SOUL and R&B collector's hearts (they've handled some Rock and Pop titles too). Here are the details...
USA released 19 October 2007 - "The Singles Volume 4: 1966-1967" by JAMES BROWN on Hip-O Select/Polydor B0009472-02 (Barcode 602517407725) offers 42-tracks Remastered onto 2CDs (a Limited Edition). All catalogue numbers provided below are US 45-singles (unless otherwise noted) sided with their peak US R&B and Pop Chart placing (no entry means it didn't chart). Each disc breaks down as follows...
Disc 1, 21-Tracks, 55:03 minutes:
1. Ain't That A Groove Part 1
2. Ain't That A Groove Part 1
Tracks 1 and 2 are King 6025, released February 1966, as by James Brown And The Famous Flames. Both parts amount to 3:33-minutes playing time, so 60-seconds of Part 2 is a repeat of what is in Part 1. US chart peak No. 6 R&B and No. 42 Pop
3. New Breed (The Boo-Ga-Loo) (Part I)
4. New Breed (The Boo-Ga-Loo) (Part II)
Tracks 3 and 4 are Smash 2028, released March 1966, as James Brown. Both are Instrumentals with Part II featuring loops of Part I
5. It's Man's Man's Man's World
6. Is It Yes Or Is It No
Tracks 5 and 6 are King 6035, released April 1966, as by James Brown and The Famous Flames. US chart peak No. 1 R&B, No. 8 Pop
7. James Brown's Boo-Ga-Loo
8. Lost In A Mood Of Changes
Tracks 7 and 8 are Smash 2042, released June 1966, as by James Brown
9. Money Won't Change You Part 1
10. Money Won't Change You Part 2
Tracks 9 and 10 are King 6048, released July 1966, as by James Brown and The Famous Flames. US chart peak No. 11 R&B and No. 53 Pop
11. This Old Heart
Track 11 is the B-side of King 6044, released August 1966, as by James Brown and The Famous Flames. The A-side is "How Long Darling" which was originally on King 5876 in March 1964 - itself a B-side to "Again" (both of those 1964 recordings are available as Tracks 3 and 4 on Disc 1 of Volume 3 in this series). King 6044 from August 1966 was King Records endlessly plundering his back catalogue once again, but its inclusion here is because the 6044 version is a remix and therefore exclusive.
12. Don't Be A Drop-Out
13. Tell Me That You Love Me
Tracks 12 and 13 are King 6056, released September 1966, as by James Brown and The Famous Flames. US chart peak No. 4 R&B, No. 50 Pop
14. Let's Go Get Stoned
15. Our Day Will Come
Tracks 14 and 15 are King Smash 2064, released November 1966, as by James Brown At The Organ. The A-side was an Ashford & Simpson song recently made a hit by Ray Charles on ABC-Paramount 10808 in May 1966
16. The Christmas Song (Version 1)
17. The Christmas Song (Version 2)
Tracks 16 and 17 are King 6064, released November 1966 as by James Brown and The Famous Flames. The A-side (a Mel Torme cover) is described as a 'mellow' version sung in the smooth style of Charles Brown, whilst the version 2 cut is in a different key where JB reverts to his own voice.
18. Sweet Little Baby Boy (Part 1)
19. Sweet Little Baby Boy (Part 1)
Tracks 19 and 20 are King 6065, released November 1966, as by James Brown and The Famous Flames
20. Let's Make Christmas Mean Something This Year (Part 1)
21. Let's Make Christmas Mean Something This Year (Part 2)
Tracks 20 and 21 are King 6072, released late November 1966, as by James Brown and The Famous Flames. None of his three Christmas singles for 1966 charted, although this one received most airplay
Disc 2, 21-Tracks, 63:53 minutes:
1. Bring It Up
2. Nobody Knows
Tracks 1 and 2 are King 6071, released December 1966, as by James Brown and The Famous Flames.
3. Kansas City
4. Stone Fox
Tracks 3 and 4 are King 6086, released February 1967, as by James Brown and The Famous Flames. Both sides are instrumentals and this is the last record to credit The Famous Flames. B-side is an instrumental and features guitarist Troy Seals
5. It's A Gas Part 1
6. It's A Gas Part 2
Tracks 5 and 6 are King 6087, UNRELEASED, was to be by The James Brown Dancers
7. Think
Track 7 is King 6091, released February 1967, as by Vicki Anderson and James Brown. B-side is "Nobody Cares" by Vicki Anderson (solo) and is not on this compilation
8. Let Yourself Go
9. Good Rockin' Tonight
Tracks 8 and 9 are King 6100, released April 1967, as by James Brown and The Famous Flames. The B-side is a Roy Brown cover – US chart peak No. 5 R&B, No. 46 Pop.
10. I Loves You Porgy
11. Yours And Mine
Tracks 10 and 11 are Bethlehem 3089, released May 1967, as by Alfred "Pee Wee" Ellis
12. Jimmy Mack
13. What Do You Like
Tracks 12 and 13 are Smash 2093, released June 1967, as by James Brown At The Organ
14. It Won't Be Me
15. Mona Lisa
Tracks 14 and 15 are King 6111, scheduled for May 1967 but UNRELEASED, as by James Brown and The Famous Flames
16. Cold Sweat – Part 1
17. Cold Sweat – Part 2
Tracks 16 and 17 are King 6110, released June 1967, as by James Brown. US chart peak No. 1 R&B and No. 7 Pop
18. Get It Together (Part 1)
19. Get It Together (Part 2)
20. Get It Together (Part 1) (Version 2)
21. Get It Together (Part 2) (Version 2)
Tracks 18 and 19/Tracks 20 and 21 are King 6122, released October 1967, as by James Brown and The Famous Flames. Version 2 is a remixed cut at Brown's insistence that adds on a further 25-seconds of playing time.
Like all 11 Volumes in this Hip-O Select 2CD series, the 28-page booklet by noted JB expert and former tour manager ALAN LEEDS and is a joy to look at — a hugely informative read that's packed to the gills with track histories, concert posters (Madison Square Gardens in New York, Latin Casino in New Jersey, City Stadium in Richmond etc), trade adverts, official tour programs, in on the joke smiling cops leading JB offstage at a huge outdoor event during his 'Please, Please, Please' microphone-pleading routine, and of course, a thoroughly detailed recording Sessionography.
Produced with affection and firsthand knowledge by HARRY WEINGER and ALAN LEEDS (Leeds was Tour Manager from 1970 to 1974) - the inlay beneath the see-through CD tray has the James Brown's Advice advert for truant young African-American kids to Be The Best – Stay At School.
Photos include inter-departmental correspondence notes for King Records, a fan club badge for loyal Don't Be A Drop-Out supporters, JB pointing at The Flamingo Club neon in the Nevada Desert distance where Flip Wilson is the support act, alighting a jet for his first barnstorming European Tour and in-the-studio shots with Engineer Ron Lenhoff. There is a gorgeous tinted colour photo on the rear of the booklet that has JB with the four smiling white boys of The Dapps at the Living Room Club in Cincinnati, Ohio mid funky routine that literally oozes pleasure (would love that as a poster on my wall).
Cool and smart attention to detail shows that both compilers know what fans want - for instance the song by song Sessionography in the last few pages provides master numbers, band personnel, 45 and LPs with catalogue numbers noted, Disc and Track location etc. The NOTES stretch for one page. So you learn that "Let Yourself Go" appeared in place of "Kansas City" on some early copies – and that "Kansas City" is extended a further 24-seconds on the King LP version.
As in previous issues, SETH FOSTER has transferred the first-generation master tapes for the single mixes and he's done a truly superlative job — warm, clear and fabulously alive. The word "Limited Edition" is embossed in gold lettering on the rear inlay – numbers are not stated but presumably it's a worldwide limited edition of 5000 copies like its predecessor. Now to the music...
It speaks volumes of his extraordinary work ethic that Brown popped out FOUR singles in November 1966 – three trying to capture the Christmas market – and when that failed – another that wasn’t a Santa-themed message song just in case its groove might catch the holiday season zeitgeist. But you also get to hear the extraordinary - "It's Man's Man's Man's World", "Let Yourself Go", "Cold Sweat" and the huge leap forwards into that Funk grove that "Get It Together" represented.
I must admit that I could live without the "Porgy And Bess" and "Jimmy Mack" cover versions, but I love the New Breed Boo-Ga-Loo stuff and two of those rare B-sides slipped me by - "Stone Fox" and "Lost In A Mood Of Changes" - very cool stuff. The Audio too – a fabulous feel to each transfer – lifting up the listen so much.
I've diligently collected this entire series of 11 x 2CD Singles sets for JAMES BROWN - first released Stateside in September 2006 by Universal's highly collectable mail-order wing - Hip-O Select. Stunning is a word often overused - but on these wickedly good Remasters, it hardly does these twofer peaches justice. And his band would only go on to re-route Soul and Funk come Volumes 5, 6, 7 and 8 that take us from the late 60ts up to the early-to-mid Seventies (all reviewed).
For those wanting to know why Funk happened or simply hear evidence of his relentless musical genius during those amazingly productive years - its an absolute must own. Don't be a drop out JB used to say; well I say, be a drop-in on the whole caboodle...