The Payback James Brown

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CD

  • Release Date: 09/22/1992
  • Original Release: 1973
  • Sales Rank: 42,005
  • Label: POLYDOR / UMGD
  • UPC: 731451713729
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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The Payback

1LISTENThe Payback 7:39
2LISTENDoing the Best I Can 7:39
3LISTENTake Some...Leave Some 8:20
4LISTENShoot Your Shot 8:19
5LISTENForever Suffering 5:39
6LISTENTime Is Running Out Fast 12:58
7LISTENStone To The Bone 10:14
8LISTENMind Power 12:04

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Originally released in 1973 as a sprawling two-LP set, The Payback was one of James Brown's most ambitious albums of the 1970's, and also one of his best, with Brown and his band (which in 1974 still included Fred Wesley, Maceo Parker, St. Clair Pinckney, Jimmy Nolen and Jabo Starks) relentlessly exploring the outer possibilities of the James Brown groove. Stretching eight cuts out over the space of nearly 73 minutes, The Payback is long on extended rhythmic jamming, and by this time Brown and his band had become such a potent and nearly telepathic combination that the musicians were able pull out lengthy solos while still maintaining some of the most hypnotic funk to be found anywhere, and on the album's best songs -- the jazzy "Time Is Running Out Fast," the relentless "Shoot Your Shot," the tight-wound "Mind Power," and the bitter revenge fantasy of the title cut -- the tough, sinuous rhythms and the precise interplay between the players is nothing short of a wonder to behold. And even the album's lower-key cuts (such as the lovelorn "Doing The Best That I Can" and "Forever Suffering") sink their hooks into the listener and pull you in; quite simply, this is remarkable stuff, and even Brown's attempts at lyrical relevance (which were frankly getting a bit shaky at this point in his career) are firmly rooted enough to sound convincing. The Payback turned out to be one of James Brown's last inarguably great albums before he hit a long fallow streak in the mid-to-late 70's, but no one listening to this set would ever imagine that this was the work of an artist (or a band) about to run out of gas. Mark Deming, All Music Guide

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