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Pure Dynamite! Live at the Royal

Pure Dynamite! Live at the Royal
Pure Dynamite! Live at the Royal.jpeg
Live album by James Brown and The Famous Flames
Released 1964
Recorded November 1963
Venue Royal Theatre, Baltimore, Maryland
Genre R&B, soul
Label King
K883
Producer James Brown, Gene Redd, Syd Nathan
James Brown live albums chronology
Live at the Apollo
(1963)Live at the Apollo1963
Pure Dynamite! Live at the Royal
(1964)
The James Brown Show
(1967)The James Brown Show1967
Singles from Pure Dynamite! Live at the Royal
  1. "Oh Baby Don't You Weep"
    Released: 1964
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars

Pure Dynamite! Live At The Royal is a 1964 live album by James Brown and The Famous Flames. Originally issued on King Records, it was the live follow-up to Brown's 1963 Live at the Apollo LP, and like that album, reached the Top 10 of the Billboard album charts, peaking at #10. It was recorded live at the Royal Theatre in Baltimore, Maryland, a popular venue for R&B artists of the day. The album takes its title from Brown's most famous nickname at the time, "Mr. Dynamite".

Although most of Pure Dynamite! is live, it contains one non-live studio track, the extended-length song "Oh Baby, Don't You Weep", which was the group's then-current hit release. Dubbed-in crowd noise was added to simulate a live recording.

Pure Dynamite! features live versions of the singles Brown & The Flames had released since the Apollo LP. It opens with "Shout and Shimmy" (Billboard Pop #61, R&B #16) which features a comedy skit between James and Famous Flames member Bobby Bennett, and continues with the standard "These Foolish Things", (which was a charting single for the group the previous year; Billboard Pop #55, R&B #25), "Like a Baby", another charting standard (#24 R&B, also from '63), and "Signed, Sealed, And Delivered" (not the Stevie Wonder song; #77 Pop), also from '63. Side 1 closes with "I'll Never Never Let You Go", another song from the group's 1960 Think! LP. Side Two features Brown's signature hit, the million-selling "Please, Please, Please", the aforementioned "Oh Baby Don't You Weep" (#23 Pop), and closes with the group's 1959 regional hit single "Good Good Lovin'", all delivered to an enthusiastic audience response.


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