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Try Me (James Brown song)

"Try Me (I Need You)"
TryMeSingle.jpg
Single by James Brown and The Famous Flames
from the album Please Please Please
B-side "Tell Me What I Did Wrong"
Released October 1958 (1958-10)
Format 7" (mono)
Recorded September 18, 1958, Beltone Studios, New York, NY
Genre Rhythm and blues
Length 2:28
Label Federal
12337
Writer(s) James Brown
Producer(s) Andy Gibson
James Brown charting singles chronology
"Please, Please, Please"
(1956)
"Try Me"
(1958)
"I Want You So Bad"
(1959)
"Try Me"
Single by James Brown
from the album Plays James Brown Today and Yesterday
B-side "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag"
Released 1965 (1965)
Format 7"
Genre Rhythm and blues
Length 3:06
Label Smash
20008
Writer(s) James Brown
Producer(s) James Brown
James Brown charting singles chronology
"Papa's Got a Brand New Bag Part I"
(1965)
"Try Me"
(1965)
"I Got You (I Feel Good)"
(1965)

"Try Me", titled "Try Me (I Need You)" in its original release, is a song recorded by James Brown and The Famous Flames in 1958. It was a #1 R&B hit and charted #48 Pop - the group's first appearance on the Billboard Hot 100. It was Brown and the Flames' second charting single, ending a two-year dry spell after the success of "Please, Please, Please".

By 1958 James Brown's career was faltering. After disputes over royalties, songwriting credit, and the indignity of having been relegated to backup singers on the billing of "Please, Please, Please", most of the original Famous Flames (including founder Bobby Byrd) had walked out on him; only Johnny Terry remained. Brown continued to perform with a backing band and a new Flames lineup consisting of members of Little Richard's former vocal group, the Dominions. ("Big Bill" Hollings, Louis Madison, and J.W. Archer). They recorded more songs for Federal Records, but nine of their singles in a row failed to chart.

On the way back to Macon, Georgia after a disappointing West Coast tour, Brown approached his guitar player Bobby Roach with a tune he said he had been given by a patron at the Million Dollar Palms, a Florida nightclub. After Roach crafted a guitar part for "Try Me", Brown and the Flames worked out the vocal harmonies together and cut a demo to send to label head Syd Nathan. Nathan was impressed with it and arranged for a recording session in New York with producer Andy Gibson and a group of seasoned session musicians. Despite the contributions of other people, Brown took the sole writing credit for the song.


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