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Bobby Byrd

17 Shouts   -   386,420 Scrobbles

Biography

As a long-running right-hand man, Bobby Byrd performed an invaluable function in the James Brown show, warming up the crowds as a solo singer, then retreating to the sidelines as a member of The Famous Flames, Brown's backup vocal group. Indeed, without William Byrd, James Brown may have never made it out of Georgia: in the early '50s, William Byrd and his family sponsored Brown's parole from prison, and William Byrd gave Brown a spot in his vocal group, The Flames (which, of course, Brown eventually took over and relegated to the background). Like many of Brown's close associates and support musicians, William Byrd got a chance to record his own work under Brown's direction, releasing numerous Brown-produced singles between the early '60s and early '70s. Some of these were even modest r&b hits -- "We're in Love" (1965) and "I Need Help (I Can't Do It Alone)" (1970) were the biggest, making the r&b Top 20. Brown's backing musicians (and sometimes Brown himself) often figured heavily in the arrangements, and unsurprisingly the tracks often sounded like James Brown records featuring a different vocalist. The unfortunate problem was that William Byrd was an average, even nondescript soul singer, sounding much more like a poor person's Sam & Dave than a facsimile of Soul Brother Number One. The records were often fine, the early-'70s hard funk singles in particular (which usually featured The J.B.'s cook), but you can't help wondering if they might sound a lot better with J.B. himself on the front line. Still, fans of the James Brown groove will find a lot to like in William Byrd's best recordings, in much the same way as they'll enjoy the James Brown's Funky People series of recordings that J.B. oversaw (but did not sing lead on). Certainly Eric B. & Rakim thought so, reworking one of William Byrd's best singles (1971's "I Know You Got Soul") so faithfully that legal action ensued. After splitting from Brown in 1973, William Byrd recorded sporadically and performed often (particularly in Europe), releasing On the Move in 1994. He died of cancer in September 2007, but not before performing at the memorial service for Brown, held just a few months earlier. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi

Top Tracks

Total plays on Last.fm over the last 6 months
  1. I Know You Got Soul - (3:30)  -  7,171 plays
  2. Hot Pants (I'm Coming, Coming, I'm Coming) - (2:23)  -  3,379 plays
  3. Try It Again - (5:15)  -  2,570 plays
  4. I Need Help (I Can't Do It Alone) - (3:11)  -  963 plays
  5. Hot Pants - (2:25)  -  1,198 plays
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