James Brown — "I can't go to hell, I'm a good dancer."
I can't go to hell, I'm a good dancer.
I can't go to hell, I'm a good dancer.
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"I got to be me. I can't be nobody else."
"I'm a survivor. I've been through a lot."
"I'm a man of the people. I'm a man of the streets."
"I don't sing for the money. I sing for the people. I sing because I love to sing."
"When I'm on stage, I'm trying to do one thing: bring people joy."
American singer and 'Godfather of Soul' whose 1960s-70s recordings invented funk and shaped hip-hop's rhythmic foundations. Closely associated with Sly Stone (fellow funk pioneer (Sly and the Family Stone)) and George Clinton (Parliament-Funkadelic successor). For an intellectual contrast, see Berry Gordy, Motown founder — Motown made Black popular music palatable for white radio with smoothed-out crossover production; Brown's funk insisted on the raw groove without compromise. The two opposite paths Black popular music took out of the 1960s — Motown polish vs JB raw.
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