James Brown & The Famous Flames – Papa's Got A Brand New Bag album cover

James Brown & The Famous Flames – Papa's Got A Brand New Bag

Album 1965

The music gear and equipment used by the artists, producers, engineers, and more involved in the making of the 1965 album Papa's Got A Brand New Bag.

Music from Papa's Got A Brand New Bag

Gear Used On Papa's Got A Brand New Bag

Explore the instruments, equipment, software, and production tools used in the making of James Brown & The Famous Flames – Papa's Got A Brand New Bag (1965). Click more on each item to see exactly how it was used.

Microphones used by James Brown on Papa's Got A Brand New Bag

Condenser Microphones

Neumann U47

Avg price: $16,111.00

Used for "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag", as mentioned by recording engineer Ron Lenhoff in this June 2014 Sound on Sound interview.

"While I recorded Melvin Parker's drums with a tube [Neumann] U47 overhead and a kick mic, I also tracked James's vocals with a 47. The only time he ever did anything other than hand-hold the microphone was when he did overdubs. When he hand-held the microphone it was like he was on stage. It wasn't a studio performance; it was a stage performance. He had a great mic technique right from the very first time I met him, so we really didn't get the problem of his voice phasing in and out. We didn't always get everything the first take, but the first complete take that he was satisfied with. If he was happy with it, we'd have it on tape. I knew I had to work that way.

"We did add echo, but that was usually done on the session, and at that time it was 100 percent live echo. We'd use anything to give him an edge, and later on we did use echo plates. Both James and I preferred to always aim for as clean a sound as possible, with plenty of separation on the instruments.