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Throughout the sixties, Mickey Murray made a name for himself as a hard working entertainer viewed by many as a cross between James Brown and Otis Redding. He held a regular gig with Dyke and The Blazers on Broadway in NYC, toured with Wilson Pickett and The Staple Singers, and also performed sporadically with the queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin. All of his hard work finally paid off (though not financially) when he recorded his first single, InchShout BamalamaInch in late 1967. It sold a million copies! In 1969 Murray was signed to King Records. The tag was preparing for the inevitable loss of James Brown. Since they obviously couldn't afford to sign another act of Brown's caliber, they decided to develop their own. Mickey was groomed by the tag to become their next superstar act. He recorded People Are Together and they prepared to it in 1970 on their Federal Records imprint. They chose the title track as the lead single. The response from most of the black DJs they relied on for support was that they wouldn't play the song. Most of them feared that the song was far too racially provocative for a developing artist. In fact, many black DJs said they were concerned they'd lose their job if they played the track. It didn't take long at all for King to abandon the . According to Murray, the record may have never actually been formally released in stores. Album Tracks 1. Fat Gal 2. Try a Little Harder 3. Ace of Spades 4. Going Back to Alabama 5. I Wanna See My Baby 6. Money (That's What I Want) 7. People Are Together 8. The Buzzard 9. Explosive Population 10. Fever 11. I Found Out 12. I Don't Know Why