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Eddie Hinton – guitar on "I'll Take You There" Raymond Banks – guitar on "I'll Take You There" The Memphis Horns (including Wayne Jackson and Andrew Love – horns (saxophones, trumpets, baritone saxophone, trombone) Ben Cauley – horns; Production and technical staff. Al Bell – arranger, producer; Johnny Allen – arranger
"I'll Be There (If You Ever Want Me)"' is a song co-written and originally released as a single by American country artist Ray Price.After becoming a major country hit in 1954, the song has been covered by numerous artists such as Cowboy Copas, Elvis Presley, Connie Smith, Johnny Bush, George Jones and Tammy Wynette, Ronnie Milsap, Heather Myles, Martina McBride, Sam Palladio, Don White & Eric ...
Included on the group's 1972 album Be Altitude: Respect Yourself, "I'll Take You There" features lead singer Mavis Staples inviting her listeners to seek Heaven.The song is almost completely a call-and-response chorus, with the introduction and bassline being lifted—uncredited—from "The Liquidator", a 1969 reggae hit written by Harry Johnson and performed by the Harry J Allstars.
"Respect Yourself" (1971) "I'll Take You There" (1972) "Respect Yourself" is a song by American R&B/gospel group the Staple Singers.
"Respect" is a song written and performed by American soul singer-songwriter Otis Redding, and later rearranged by Aretha Franklin. It was released in 1965 as a single from Redding's third album Otis Blue/Otis Redding Sings Soul and became a crossover hit for Redding.
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The song peaked at #1 on the Billboard Hot Black Singles chart, and remained number one for two weeks in May 1986. "I Have Learned to Respect the Power of Love" was Mills's sixteenth entry on the chart and her first number-one single. While the song was one of her most successful in the R&B/soul markets, the single did not make the Billboard ...
You tell two particularly poignant anecdotes about John and Paul from around this time. One is that their meeting in L.A. in 1974 may have been a factor in John going back to Yoko.