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Get Up I Feel Like Being a Sex Machine

"Get Up (I Feel Like Being Like a) Sex Machine (Part 1)"
GetUp(IFeelLikeBeingA)SexMachine.jpg
King label with variant title wording
Single by James Brown
B-side "Get Up I Feel Like Being Like a Sex Machine (Part 2)"
Released July 1970 (1970-07)
Format 7"
Recorded April 25, 1970, Starday-King Studios, Nashville, TN
Genre Funk
Length 2:49 (Part 1)
2:33 (Part 2)
Label
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s) James Brown
James Brown charting singles chronology
"Brother Rapp (Part 1) & (Part 2)"
(1970)
"Get Up (I Feel Like Being Like a) Sex Machine (Part 1)"
(1970)
"Super Bad (Part 1 & Part 2)"
(1970)
"Brother Rapp (Part 1) & (Part 2)"
(1970)
"Get Up I Feel Like Being Like a Sex Machine (Part 1)"
(1970)
"Super Bad (Part 1 & Part 2)"
(1970)
"Sex Machine Part I"
Single by James Brown
from the album Sex Machine Today
B-side "Sex Machine Part II"
Released 1975 (1975)
Format 7"
Length
  • 5:45 (Part I)
  • 5:09 (Part II)
Label Polydor 14270
Songwriter(s)
James Brown charting singles chronology
"Reality"
(1975)
"Sex Machine Part I"
(1975)
"Hustle!!! (Dead on It)"
(1975)
"Reality"
(1975)
"Sex Machine Part I"
(1975)
"Hustle!!! (Dead on It)"
(1975)

"Get Up (I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine" is a song recorded by James Brown with Bobby Byrd on backing vocals. Released as a two-part single in 1970, it was a no. 2 R&B hit and reached no. 15 on the Billboard Hot 100.

In 2004, "Sex Machine" was ranked number 326 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest songs of all time.

"Sex Machine" was one of the first songs Brown recorded with his new band, The J.B.'s. In comparison with Brown's 1960s solo funk hits such as "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag", the band's inexperienced horn section plays a relatively minor part. Instead, the song centers on the insistent riff played by brothers Bootsy and Catfish Collins on bass and guitar and Jabo Starks on drums, along with the call and response interplay between Brown and Byrd's vocals, which consist mostly of exhortations to "get up / stay on the scene / like a sex machine". During the song's final vocal passages Brown and Byrd started to sing the main hook of Elmore James' blues classic "Shake Your Moneymaker."

The original single version of "Sex Machine" — recorded, like many of Brown's hits, in just two takes — begins with a spoken dialogue between Brown and his band which was recreated with minor variations in live performances:

Fellas, I'm ready to get up and do my thing! (Yeah! That's right! Do it!) I want to get into it, man, you know? (Go ahead! Yeah!) Like a, like a sex machine, man, (Yeah!) movin', groovin', doin' it, y'know? (Yeah!) Can I count it off? (Okay! Alright!) One, two, three, four!


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Wikipedia

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