Posted on 11/13/2025 3:23:37 PM PST by nickcarraway
In late 1965, the irresistible single became the Godfather’s second big crossover hit in a row.
By late 1965, James Brown was nearly ten years into his R&B chart career in the US. But as far as the majority of the pop audience was concerned, he had only been on the radar for a few months. On November 13 that year, he hit the Billboard Hot 100 with the song that would become his second big crossover single in a row, “I Got You (I Feel Good).”
Brown was now reaping the rewards from his stunning performance on the T.A.M.I. Show TV special of late 1964. That was the historic show on which he rubbed shoulders with such British invaders as the Rolling Stones and Gerry & the Pacemakers, and US acts including the Beach Boys and Jan & Dean, and upstaged them all.
In the summer of 1965, “Papa’s Got A Brand New Bag” not only became his second R&B No.1 (and first for seven years, since “Try Me”) but made him a pop radio name as well, reaching No.8 on the Hot 100. Better still was to come with “I Got You.”
The artist had first recorded the song a year earlier, in a version that got caught up in a legal wrangle. Its origins went back even further, to a version titled “I Found You” by Yvonne Fair, then a member of JB’s band, later a solo artist best remembered for her UK hit of 1976, “It Should Have Been Me.” The Godfather of Soul’s hit version of the tune, recorded in May 1965, featured, among others, Maceo Parker on sax and his brother Melvin on drums.
“I Got You (I Feel Good)” arrived on the Billboard pop singles chart in 1965 at a confident No.68, the third-highest of 16 new entries and below only the Four Tops’ “Something About You” and “Over and Over” by the Dave Clark 5. The next week, it made an incredible 54-place climb to No.14, and went on to spend three weeks at No.3, from just before Christmas into the new year. On the December 4 chart, the track started a six-week run atop the R&B survey. It went on to feature repeatedly as a cultural marker of the era, everywhere from Good Morning Vietnam to The Simpsons.
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Timeless!
"I Feel Bad!"
One of the greatest performances of all time. He schooled Mick on the moves.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=grbQv_U4sXI
James Brown on the T.A.M.I. Show
Same tape I’ve had for years.
Who’s the hardest working man in music?
The day after Newt Gingrich and the First 100 Days Congress was elected, I remember driving with my wife to lunch as Rush Limbaugh played “I Feel Good” on his show. He was in a great mood.
Miss him.
A great performance!!!
Got to see him in Memphis on the riverfront during the Memphis in May Bluesfest.
The crowd went wild during Livin’ In America.
Does it make me old if I saw the show on the big screen at the Fox Theater in Detroit with three of my college buddies?
Probably early 1965 due to its release in December 29, 1964.
Don’t answer.
Indeed...
The World’s Greatest Entertainer, Mr. Dynamite, The Amazing Mr. Please Please Please, The Hardest Working Man in Show Business, Soul Brother Number One, The Godfather of Soul, The Minister of The New, New Super Heavy Funk, The Living Legend of Soul Himself, Mr. JAMES BROWN!!!
I take various versions of great songs and put them in "My Favorites" YouTube folder like "Hallelujah" by Leonard Cohen - they don't have to be the original artist and a lot of times they're can be much better. Guaranteed good music.
The little lady sticks to the original performer, original version and complains if its not the original Elvis, Beatles, etc. version. Sigh.
This live version of "I Got You", I saved for the performance and the backup performers although if they were singing I'd have to watch it again to check. Entertaining version. Shaking your booty comes to mind for some reason.
;-)
Probably the original recorded version with lyrics at least according to my memory from long ago:
Charlie
T.A.M.I was not a television show. It was shown in theaters. I have an original poster framed and in my basement.
I’m obviously in the minority, but I find James Brown’s performance in TAMI the height of Drama-Queen behavior.
(1980)I first heard about the T.A.M.I. Show when Gordon Sumner mentioned it in a 1980 song:
Turn on my V.C.R.
Same one I've had for years
James Brown on the T.A.M.I. Show
Same tape I've had for years
I found a NYT article that said the VHS didn't come out until 1982. (Possibly inspired by Michael Jackson's interest in it.) So, Sumner must have been using his imagination in 1980.
Here is the song:
The Police - When The World Is Running Down... (1980)
As someone who wasn't alive at the time. I would like to see the T.A.M.I. show.
Sting also mentions having an Otis Redding tape in the song. (1980 is in your window of music, so aybe you know it.)
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