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Soul Brother Number One, the Godfather of Soul, the Hardest Working Man in Show Business, Mr Dynamite--those are pretty arrogant titles, but not many people would try to put across the notion that James Brown doesn't deserve them. No other soul musician in his prime put on a more exhilarating stage show: as the 1970 set of Sex Machine attests, Brown was a marvel of athletic, almost inhuman stamina and split-second timing. Recorded at the Bell Auditorium in Augusta, Georgia, this is one of two essential live James Brown albums--the other is Live At The Apollo, originally released in 1963. The 15-track Sex Machine not only captures the fervour of a Godfather of Soul's concert in all its glory--the calculated spontaneity combined with the raw power of his 20-plus strong band--but it also shows everyone how a live album should be done. From the fantastic stop-start version of "Get Up, I Feel Like A Sex Machine" through the nascent strains of early rap on "Brother Rap 1 and 11" and beyond, this gives you a real taste of Brown at his best. Much of the credit for the impeccable sound on Sex Machine should be attributed to his guest musicians which now reads like the funk-soul Hall of Fame: the P-Funk Collins brothers, Catfish and Bootsy on guitar and bass respectively, Bobby Byrd on organ, Pee Wee Ellis and Maceo Parker on saxophones and Clyde Stubblefield on drums, among many others, are a credit to Brown's brilliant leadership, gospel-impassioned vocals and wonderful songs.
James Brown - Very best of
1. Please Please Please
2. Think
3. Night Train
4. Out of Sight
5. Papa's Got a Brand New Bag, Part 1
6. I Got You (I Feel Good)
7. It's a Man's Man's Man's World
8. Cold Sweat
9. Say It Loud, I'm Black and I'm Proud, Part 1
10.Get Up (I Feel Like Being A) Sex Machine
11.Hey America
12.Make It Funky, Part 1
13.I'm a Greedy Man, Part 1
14.Get On the Good Foot
15.Get Up Offa That Thing
16.It's Too Funky in Here
17.Living in America
18.I'm Real
19.Hot Pants, Part 1
20.Soul Power (live)
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