James Brown - Papa's Got A Brand New Bag ( part 1) // #33 Billboard Top 100 Songs of 1965

James Brown - Papa's Got A Brand New Bag ( part 1) // #33 Billboard Top 100 Songs of 1965

🎼 James Brown - Papa's Got A Brand New Bag 🎁 Hello music lovers! Each month we're giving away swag "themed" to your favorite band / artist / musician -- all you have to do is enter. Winner picks the theme! 🎁 FREE Entry, here 👉 https://daft.to/giveaway -- 🎶 Lyrics: [Verse 1] Come here, sister Papa's in the swing He ain't too hip About that new breed thing [Chorus] He ain't no drag Papa's got a brand new bag [Verse 2] Come here, mama And dig this crazy scene He's not too fancy But his line is pretty clean [Chorus] He ain't no drag Papa's got a brand new bag [Bridge] He's doing The Jerk He's doing The Fly Don't play him cheap 'Cause you know he ain't shy He's doing The Monkey, The Mashed Potatoes Jump back Jack, see you later, alligator [Verse 2] Come here, sister Papa's in the swing He ain't too hip now But I can dig the new breed thing [Chorus] He ain't no drag He's got a brand new bag [Bridge] Well, Papa, you're doing The Jerk Papa, he's doing The Jerk You're doing The Twist, just like this He's doing The Fly every day and every night The thing, like The Boomerang [Outro] Hey! Come on, hey hey! Come on, hey hey! Said you're uptight, you're out of sight Come on, see what you know Come on, see what you know -- 🎶 Song Info: "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag" is a song written and recorded by James Brown.[2] Released as a two-part single in 1965, it was Brown's first song to reach the Billboard Hot 100 Top Ten, peaking at number eight, and was a number-one R&B hit, topping the charts for eight weeks.[3][4] It won Brown his first Grammy Award, for Best Rhythm & Blues Recording.[5] Label: King Records (3) – 938 Format: Vinyl, LP, Album, Mono Country: US Released: 1965 Genre: Funk / Soul Style: Soul, Funk B-side: "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag Part II" Released: June 1965 Recorded: February 1965 Studio: Arthur Smith Studios, Charlotte, North Carolina Genre: Soul, funk[1] Length: 1:55 (Part I), length mentioned on single; actual playing time was 2:03, 2:12 (Part II) Label: King (5999) Songwriter(s): James Brown Producer(s): James Brown Written-By – James Brown (tracks: A1 to A4, A6 to B3, B5, B6), Joe Tex (tracks: B3) Real Name: James Joseph Brown, Jr. American singer, songwriter, and musician. Born: 3 May 1933 near Barnwell, South Carolina, USA. Died: 25 December 2006 in Atlanta, Georgia, USA (aged 73). James Brown was raised in poverty in Augusta, Georgia. Previously worked as a shoe shiner, car washer & a cotton picker. 1950s: Joined the Gospel Starlighters in 1953, a vocal quartet led by Bobby Byrd, after completing a four-year stint in prison for robbery. As Brown became the focal point of the act, the group changed its name to 'The Famous Flames' and its focus from gospel to R&B. In 1955 The Famous Flames record "Please Please Please" at the studio of WIBB in Macon, Georgia. In 1958 James Brown's first #1 hit, "Try Me", is released. It was the best-selling R&B single of 1958, and the first of 17 chart-topping R&B singles by Brown over the next two decades. ---------- #JamesBrownPapasGotABrandNewBagpart1 #JamesBrownPapasGotABrandNewBagpart1lyrics #PapasGotABrandNewBagpart1lyrics #PopRock #HardRock #tops1965 #top1965music #folksongs #1965songs #best1965songs #musicsong #top100songs #popmusic65 #topbilboardsongson1965 #100top100songsofthe1965 #Rockmusic65 #65hits #65music #daftFM #daftfm #ProgRock #Ballad