rdfs:comment
| - "I Got You (I Feel Good)" is a 1965 single by James Brown. The song is one of the signature songs Brown recorded, and it can be argued it is his most widely-known. The form of the song is twelve bar blues and features a commanding tenor sax solo by Maceo Parker. The song is sung by Hurley to calm Aaron down in "The Greater Good", but to no avail.
- A música de 1965 de James Brown, I Got You (I Feel Good), está em seu CD , "Turn It Loose". A música é uma das mais conhecidas de Brown. Ná música, existe um solo de saxofone de Maceo Parker. Em Lost, a música foi cantada por Hurley para tentar acalmar Aaron no episódio "The Greater Good".
- I Got You (I Feel Good) is a single from Funk singer James Brown. The song is Brown's highest charting song peaking at number three on the Billboard Top 100, and topping the Rhythm and Blues charts for six non-consecutive weeks. Kingston Livingston III sings the song in a 1993 episode after telling the story of how he got his new hat, and chose to wear it forwards, instead of backwards like Loretta and their friends.
- I Got You (I Feel Good) is a song in Mafia III.
- James Browns single "I Got You (I Feel Good)" uit 1965 staat op zijn Turn It Loose-album. Het lied is een van de meest typische Brown-nummers en waarschijnlijk een van de bekendste. Het nummer is volgens het bluesschema en bevat een tenor-sax-solo van Maceo Parker. Het lied werd gezongen door Hurley om Aaron te kalmeren, met weinig succes.
- "I Got You (I Feel Good)" is a song performed by James Brown, recorded on the album I Got You (I Feel Good) in 1965. The song appeared in the Miami Vice episode "Missing Hours".
- I Got You (I Feel Good) est une chanson interprétée par James Brown.
- "I Got You (I Feel Good)" is a song by James Brown. Recorded and released as a single in 1965, it was his highest charting song and is arguably his most widely known recording.
- "I Got You (I Feel Good)" is a song by James Brown which is a reworking of "I Found You," a song recorded and released by Yvonne Fair and produced by Brown in 1962. Smash Records released this in the summer of '64. After forming his own record company (Fair Deal Records), Brown leased some of his songs to Smash Records, which prompted a lawsuit King Records, Brown's former label. In October 1964, a judge ruled that Smash Records would be allowed to issue only instrumental recordings by Brown, and all masters of vocals by JB would become property of King Records. Distribution of this song was halted upon the ruling. Brown continued playing on the road (335 nights a year) and performed on The T.A.M.I. Show and Shindig. In the meantime, King Records simply repackaged his hits.
|