- cross-posted to:
- music@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- music@lemmy.world
Facts about song:
You might not know the title of this song, but you’ll recognize it when you hear it. In America, “Feels So Good” is one of the most popular instrumental songs of all time, and certainly the biggest flugelhorn hit.
Chuck Mangione first recorded with his brother Gap in a band called The Jazz Brothers, which formed in 1960. He signed with Mercury Records as a solo artist and released his first album in 1970, charting for the first time with “Hill Where The Lord Hides” in 1971 (#76). He grew a following in jazz circles and scored a surprise mainstream hit with “Feels So Good,” which reached #4 in June 1978 and also hit #1 on the Adult Contemporary chart. These were the last days of disco, and his smooth jazz number provided welcome relief from the typical dance music that had saturated the airwaves. It sold over 2 million copies.
Mangione died in 2025 at 84.
On the Feels So Good album, this track runs 9:42.
Mangione recorded it along with five more instrumentals for the album, none of which seemed to have hit potential. An executive at his label suggested cutting down the title track to make it more radio-friendly, so a 3:28 edit was made and released as a single, which became the hit. The radio edit retained the two key elements in the song: Mangione’s flugelhorn, and the guitar solo by Grant Geissman. Other performers on the track were Charles Meeks on bass, Chris Vadala on saxophone and James Bradley, Jr. on drums.
This earned a Grammy nomination for Record of the Year, losing to Billy Joel’s “Just The Way You Are.” Mangione didn’t come out empty-handed: He took Best Pop Instrumental Performance for his album Children of Sanchez.
“Feels So Good” is far and away Mangione’s most popular song, but it’s not the only one to make an impact: His song “Give It All You Got” was chosen as the theme to the 1980 Winter Olympics and also went to #1 on the Adult Contemporary chart.
This song has been used in episodes of these TV series:
- Friends (“The One with All the Haste” - 1998) - Joey’s singing neighbor (Michal Connor) annoys Rachel with his vocal rendition, “Morning’s Here.”
- The Simpsons (“Ice Cream of Margie: With the Light Blue Hair” - 2006)
- Family Guy (“Stew-roids” - 2009)
- The Big Bang Theory (“The Graduation Transmission” - 2015)
- South Park (“Where My Country Gone?” - 2015)
And these movies:
- Hard to Kill (1990)
- Fargo (1996)
- Intolerable Cruelty (2003)
This song was a topic of discussion in the 2016 blockbuster Doctor Strange. It plays in a scene where the title character is doing brain surgery. When his assistant says that the song was released in 1978, Strange corrects him, letting him know that it was issued in December 1977 (he’s right).
The song was part of a running gag throughout King Of The Hill, an animated TV series set in the fictional town of Arlen, Texas. Mangione, who made several guest appearances on the show during its run from 1997 to 2010, portrayed himself as the reluctant celebrity spokesperson for Mega Lo Mart. When his strict contract with the department store takes over his life, he’s reduced to living in secret at the Arlen location. The joke was that no matter what song Mangione played, it always turned into “Feels So Good.”
Mangione first shows up in the season 1 episode “Luanne’s Saga.” Wearing his red-and-white jacket and trademark hat from the album cover, he appears in a commercial for Mega Lo Mart, saying he shops there because it “feels so good.”[1]
Edit:
- Update url with offical video link, https://youtu.be/FExBwfQHXlE, old link: https://youtu.be/dwkwjOd7MCU; updated time from 09:20 to 09:42
I love the subtle but very chaotic choice at ~2:22 to mix a wah-wah’d guitar wide right and an acoustic guitar wide left mic’d up to accentuate the pick noises and give a really acoustic feel. It works beautifully but it is kind of amusing how on paper that mix sounds kind of jarring.
How did your “TV” list miss KOTH?!
It’s Hank and Peggy’s song, Chuck Mangione voiced himself and was a recurring character in many episodes over multiple seasons. He is was the media spokesperson for Mega Lo Mart, in fact if you search “Mega Lo Mart” on DDG to make sure you get the spelling right, a literal picture of Chuck comes up. He was there when the Mega Lo Mart blew up, he played the flugelhorn at Buckley’s funeral, he was in the therapy group when hank was afraid of propane after the explosion, and in the anger management class after Hank cut off Dale’s finger accidentally seasons later. At one point Dale almost kills him when he’s living in the Arlen Mega Lo Mart to avoid contractual obligations. On top of all Chuck Mangione’s voiced appearances, he also appears in the background in some episodes, and Feels So Good itself is played so often it’s almost an unofficial theme of the show. If ANY show deserves a mention in this post it’s King of the Hill.
Edit: I may have stopped reading when it looked like it was forgotten with the rest of the “TV” lmao…my bad!
All is well!
I had a similar reaction when I was gathering information!
One of his distant relatives (maybe, same last name at least) did some pretty good work too. More of a percussionist, think he went by something like Louie G.