"Love with a Feeling" | ||||
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Single by Tampa Red | ||||
B-side | "When I Had a Good Woman" | |||
Released | 1938 | |||
Format | 10" 78 rpm record | |||
Recorded | Chicago June 16, 1938 |
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Genre | Blues | |||
Length | 02:55 | |||
Label | Bluebird (Cat. No. 7822) | |||
Writer(s) | Tampa Red aka Hudson Whittaker | |||
Tampa Red singles chronology | ||||
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"You've Got to Love Her with a Feeling", or "Love with a Feeling" as it was originally called, is a blues song first recorded by Tampa Red in 1938. Numerous blues artists have interpreted and recorded the song, including Freddie King who had a #92 Pop Hit in 1961 with "You've Got to Love Her with a Feeling".[1]
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Tampa Red recorded "Love with a Feeling" as a mid-tempo twelve-bar blues. Accompanying Red, who sang and played slide guitar, were Black Bob Hudson on piano and an unknown bass player.[2] Although Tampa Red wrote several bawdy blues, "Love with a Feeling" is tame, with only one verse suggesting the more colorful versions to come:
Not long after recording "Love with a Feeling", other blues artists began recording their versions of the song: Merline Johnson (also known as "The Yas Yas Girl") (1938), Piedmont blues-singer Sonny Jones (1939), Tommy McClennan (1940), and Brownie McGhee (1946). In May 1950, Tampa Red recorded an updated version called "Love Her with a Feelin'". The song was performed as a Chicago-style blues with Tampa Red on electric slide guitar with piano, bass, and drum backing (RCA 50-0084). He also recorded it as a solo piece with vocal and electric guitar in 1961 for his Don't Tampa with the Blues album.
On August 26, 1960 Freddie King recorded his version titled "You've Got to Love Her with a Feeling" for King Records. The song was released as the B-side of the "Have You Ever Loved a Woman" single on King Records subsidiary, Federal Records. Of the two songs, "You've Got to Love Her with a Feeling" was the only one to appear in the record charts, reaching #92 in the Billboard Hot 100 in 1961.
Backing King (vocal and guitar) are Sonny Thompson (piano), Bill Willis (bass), and Phillip Paul (drums). Freddie King's version uses breaks where he sings the first four bars of each twelve-bar verse without the usual instrumental accompaniment. Most versions recorded after King follow this arrangement.
Numerous versions have been recorded with a variety of titles,[3] including those by Johnny Jones with Billy Boy Arnold (from Live in Chicago recorded 1963, released 1979); Paul Butterfield (1970 Live, with additional tracks released 2007); Junior Wells (Live at Theresa's 1975 released 2006); Muddy Waters, James Cotton, and Johnny Winter (Breakin' It Up, Breakin' It Down recorded 1977, released 2007); Anson Funderburgh (1985 She Knocks Me Out); Clarence Carter (1985 Messin' with My Mind, a live version was released in 1994 on Live with the Dr.); Johnny Copeland (1990 Live in Australia); Buddy Guy (1994 Slippin' In); Taj Mahal with Eric Clapton (1996 Phantom Blues); Eddie "Guitar" Burns (2002 Lonesome Feeling).