Please, Please, Please
"Please, Please, Please" | |
---|---|
Song | |
B-side | "Why Do You Do Me" |
"Please, Please, Please" is an R&B song written by James Brown and Johnny Terry and recorded by Brown and The Famous Flames. Released as a single on the Cincinnati, Ohio-based label Federal Records, it was Brown's first professional recording and his first hit, eventually selling over a million copies.[1] It became Brown's signature song and a staple of his live act, usually performed as part of his cape routine.
Heavily rooted in a southern gospel music sensibility, "Please, Please, Please" features the 23-year-old Brown as a heartbroken man begging his woman not to leave him. The Famous Flames back up Brown's impassioned lament with smooth vocal harmonies.
"Please, Please, Please" reached #6 on the R&B singles chart, but did not sell well to pop audiences, and peaked at #105 on the pop singles chart. An album named for the song was released in late 1958 after Brown scored a second R&B hit with "Try Me".
A 1964 reissue of "Please, Please, Please" on King Records featuring overdubbed audience noise meant to mimic a live recording (and capitalize on the success of Brown's hit Live at the Apollo album) reached #95 on the Billboard Hot 100.
In 2004, "Please, Please, Please" was ranked number 142 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest songs of all time.
Personnel
- James Brown - lead vocal
with The (Famous) Flames:
- Bobby Byrd - vocals
- Johnny Terry - vocals
- Sylvester Keels - vocals
- Nash Knox - vocals
- Nafloyd Scott - guitar
plus:
- Wilbert "Lee Diamond" Smith - tenor saxophone
- Ray Felder - tenor saxophone
- Lucas "Fats" Gonder - piano
- Clarence Mack - bass
- Edison Gore - drums
Filmed performances
- Brown and The Famous Flames perform "Please, Please, Please" at the end of their set in The T.A.M.I. Show.
- In the movie Blues Brothers 2000 Brown performs the song after the closing credits, trying (and ultimately failing) to persuade a woman to come back to him.
Cover versions
"Please, Please, Please" has been covered by many performers, including Tina Turner and the British rock group The Who on their 1965 album The Who Sings My Generation.
References in other media
In the Jimmy Neutron special The League of Villains, when Tee begs Jimmy to save his bandit friends he gets down on his knees and pleads into a microphone, "Please! Please!" Please!" Sheen walks over and lays a blanket on Tee's back as he leans forward in despair.
Citations
- ^ "James Brown". history-of-rock. Retrieved 2006-11-08.
References
- Leeds, Alan M., and Harry Weinger (1991). Star Time: Song by Song. In Star Time (pp. 46-53) [CD liner notes]. London: Polydor Records.
- White, Cliff (1991). Discography. In Star Time (pp. 54-59) [CD liner notes]. London: Polydor Records.