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Oh Baby Don't You Weep

"Oh Baby Don't You Weep (Part 1)"
Single by James Brown and The Famous Flames
from the album Pure Dynamite! Live at the Royal
B-side "Oh Baby Don't You Weep (Part 2)"
Released 1964 (1964)
Format 7"
Genre Rhythm and blues, soul
Length
  • 2:58 (Part 1)
  • 2:59 (Part 2)
Label King
5842
Songwriter(s) James Brown
James Brown charting singles chronology
"Signed, Sealed, and Delivered"
(1963)
"Oh Baby Don't You Weep (Part 1)"
(1964)
"Please, Please, Please"
(1964)
"Signed, Sealed, and Delivered"
(1963)
"Oh Baby Don't You Weep (Part 1)"
(1964)
"Please, Please, Please"
(1964)

"Oh Baby Don't You Weep" is a song recorded in 1964 by James Brown and The Famous Flames. Based upon the spiritual "Mary Don't You Weep", it was recorded as an extended-length track and released as the first two-part single of Brown's recording career. It peaked at #23 on the Billboard Hot 100 and at #4 on the Cash Box R&B Chart. (At the time of the single's release, Billboard's R&B singles chart had been temporarily suspended). It was the last original song featuring the Famous Flames to chart, not counting the 1964 re-release of "Please, Please, Please" and the 1966 B-side release of the Live at the Apollo performance of "I'll Go Crazy".

"Oh Baby, Don't You Weep" was originally issued with dubbed-in audience noise to simulate a live recording and added to the otherwise authentic live album Pure Dynamite: Live At The Royal. The song's last-minute addition to the album helped make it a hit, propelling it to #10 on the Billboard album chart.

Brown plays the role of the song's narrator, a man comforting a woman devastated by lost love:

You scream and you holler,
your back is soaking wet,
You know that you still love him
and still you can't forget

The Famous Flames support Brown's lead vocal with gospel-inspired chants of "Oh baby, don't you weep". During the course of the song, the theme suddenly changes, as Brown sings of famous entertainers he has met in his travels ("I've got a lot of friends in my business"), and then begins to quote titles of songs recorded by them, such as Jackie Wilson ("You Better Stop Dogging Me Around"), Solomon Burke and Wilson Pickett ("If You Need Me....Call Me" and "It's Too Late"), Sam Cooke ("You Send Me") Ray Charles ("Born To Lose") and Famous Flames member Bobby Byrd's solo release ("I Found Out Now").


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