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Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. This section needs additional citations for verification. This song ends with the repeated phrases: "Jump up and shout now" and the word "Shout" before the song's fade.
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The second part of the song is noted for the repeated call and response lines: "A little bit softer/louder now", where both the lead singer and the backups first sing softly, and then loudly. A slow recitative portion, sung by the lead singer, beginning with "Now wait a minute", separates the faster portions of the song, with the other band members shouting and clapping with "Yeah, yeah". The first bridge changes the rhythm from 2/4 to 6/8 before reverting to the 2/4 rhythm. In the Isley Brothers versions, they quote the "Say You Will" chorus from the song "Lonely Teardrops" by Jackie Wilson. Ronald Isley later said that church groups wrote to radio stations asking them to stop playing the record, because of its use of a traditional black gospel sound. Released in August 1959, with the song split over both sides of the record, the single reached number 47 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming the group's first chart hit, and later the brothers' first gold single on the basis of its longevity. The recording took place on July 29, 1959, with Hugo and Luigi choosing the studio musicians and the Isley Brothers inviting organist Herman Stephens. The producers agreed and suggested that the band invite friends to the recording studio to generate a party atmosphere. On returning to New York City at the end of their engagement, they suggested to record producers Hugo & Luigi that they record the "Shout!" climax of the performance as a separate song. The group developed the song further in later performances and rehearsals, using a drawn out "We-eee-ll" copied from Ray Charles' " I Got a Woman". At one performance at the Uptown Theater in Philadelphia, lead singer Ronald Isley could see the audience standing and yelling their approval, so he extended the song by improvising a call-and-response around the words "You know you make me wanna." "Shout!". In performances around 1958, the Isley Brothers would typically end their shows with a cover version of Jackie Wilson's hit " Lonely Teardrops".