Take Out Some Insurance by Jimmy Reed. Carnegie Hall, 1961 (Suite Beat 3001)
If U leave me baby say U won't be back That would be the end of me 'cause I'd have a heart attack U better get some insurance on me baby take out some insurance on me baby 'Cause if U ever ever say goodbye I'm gonna haul ri ...ght off and die Darlin' how I love U long as I got breath If we part I know sweetheart it would worry me to death U better get some insurance on me baby take out some insurance on me baby 'Cause if U ever ever say goodbye I'm gonna haul right off and die Don't get no sick and accident 'cause I'm healthy as can be Now if ya got any sense you'd take the hint and get a Penn Life on me U don't know me baby like I know myself I couldn't live if U should give ur love to someone else Better get some insurance on me baby take out some insurance on me baby 'Cause if you ever ever say goodbye I'm gonna haul right off and die.
"Night Train" is a twelve bar blues instrumental standard first recorded by Jimmy Forrest in 1951. The piece's opening riff was first recorded in 1940 by a small group led by Duke Ellington sideman Johnny Hodges under the title "That's the Blues, Old Man". James Brown released a version of "Night Train" in 1962 that reached #5 on the R#B charts and #35 on the pop charts. His performance replaced the original lyrics of the song with a shouted list of American cities (mainly in the South) and many repetitions of the song's name. A live version of the tune was the closing number on his breakthrough 1963 album Live at the Apollo. Jazz pianist Oscar Peterson recorded it with his trio on a 1962 Featured on the soundtrack album to Quadrophenia (1979)
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