The Brigands

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
(Would I Still Be) Her Big Man 00:00 Tools
The Hempen Jig 03:11 Tools
Rummer the Rum Runner 04:05 Tools
Hate Yer State 02:24 Tools
Her Big Man 02:24 Tools
( Would I Still Be ) Her Big Man 02:24 Tools
Her Big Man, (Would I Still Be) 02:22 Tools
Would I still be her big man? 02:22 Tools
(Would I Still Be) Her Big Man? 02:22 Tools
I'm A Patient Man 01:52 Tools
Supersonic 03:37 Tools
Would I Still Be) Her Big Man 02:22 Tools
Edmond 02:21 Tools
She's Mine 02:05 Tools
Looking for Lewis and Clark 02:05 Tools
Remote Control 02:05 Tools
The World's Last Honest Man 02:05 Tools
Angel 01:52 Tools
Mad Blues 01:52 Tools
The Brigands - (Would I Still Be) Her Big Man 01:52 Tools
Pills 00:00 Tools
Brand New Cadillac 01:52 Tools
Night Patrol 00:00 Tools
Backstab 00:00 Tools
(Would I Still Be) Her Big Man - The Brigands 00:00 Tools
(Would I Still Be) Her Big Man (60s US Punk) 00:00 Tools
Acid Test 00:00 Tools
The Chase 00:00 Tools
She's so Hot 00:00 Tools
The Devil In Me 00:00 Tools
Joey's Friend 00:00 Tools
Teenage Flu 00:00 Tools
Spymaster 00:00 Tools
parasites 00:00 Tools
[Would I Still Be] Her Big Man 00:00 Tools
Her Big Man (Epic 10011) Forest Hill, NY. 1966 00:00 Tools
Columbiano 00:00 Tools
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The Brigands were an American garage rock band, best known for the 1966 song, "(Would I Still Be) Her Big Man", which appeared as the A-side of a single released on Epic Records. Little is known about them other than that the song was recorded in New York City. Their origins are unknown, but some have attributed their residence to Forest Hills, Long Island, New York. Others have speculated that they were an ensemble of session musicians who recorded the song as a one-time act under the moniker "the Brigands." One reason mentioned by exponents of this hypothesis is that there would be more known about them, if they had indeed been an been an actual performing unit. They point out that there are no printed artifacts available, such as flyers and listings of live performances, records of battles of the bands, and newspaper clippings. They also point out that, since the song was released on Epic Records and produced by Artie and Kris Resnick, who wrote the Young Rascals' "Good Lovin'" and other popular hits of the time, it is unlikely that such an unknown band would have received the attention of such well-known and established fixtures, unless the song had been recorded by a "ghost band" of session musicians under their tutelage. A 2002 transcript on CNN's website about a reunion of Forest Hills (Queens, NY) High School students features an Anderson Cooper interview with two alumni (Elliott Wertheim and John Hartmann) who were in The Brigands. Wertheim and Hartmann give some background of The Brigands and how their sole Epic Records single came to be. The Brigands's song, "(Would I Still Be) Her Big Man," has appeared on various compilations such as the Back from the Grave, Volume 2 LP, released in 1983 and the Nuggets 4-CD box set released in 1998. "(Would I Still Be) Her Big Man" is a song by the Brigands, an American garage rock band. It appeared as the A-side of a single recorded in New York City and released on Epic Records, and was written and produced by Artie and Kris Resnick, who wrote the Rascals' "Good Lovin'" and other popular hits of the time. The song's lyrics depict the worries of a factory worker who spends his hard-earned money dressing up to impress his lover, a woman with expensive tastes, but wonders if she will still love him when she finds out that he is working class. The song has appeared on various compilations such as the Back from the Grave, Volume 2 LP, released in 1983 and the Nuggets 4-CD box set released in 1998. Their by far most famous song, , is on the fourth disc of the 1998 box-set Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1965-1968. Liner notes from the Nuggets booklet (written by Mike Stax): "Other than a probable East Coast, maybe New York, origin nothing is known of The Brigands. But the song's writers and producers were Artie and Kris Resnick (also responsible for The Third Rail's Run, Run, Run). Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.