Category: Soul

Ronnie Milsap – Ain’t No Soul Left In These Ole Shoes

By , April 21, 2019 8:02 am

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Ronnie Milsap

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Listen/Download – Ronnie Milsap – Ain’t No Soul Left In These Ole Shoes MP3

Greetings all.

Today’s selection is one of my favorite versions of one of my favorite songs (great how is works out that way, n’est ce pas?).

Ronnie Milsap was one of the biggest country stars of the 1970s and 1980s, but believe it or not he got his start as a soul singer.

Milsap, who was born almost completely blind, learned how to play the piano, and though he was supposed to go to law school, he left his academic pursuits behind for a career in music.

He was lucky enough to sign with Scepter records, and managed to score his first hit with the Ashford and Simpson tune ‘Never Had It So Good’ (backed with another of their songs ‘Let’s Go Get Stoned’) in 1965.

His follow up was the first recording of Artie Resnick and Joey Levine’s ‘Ain’t No Soul (Left In These Old Shoes), which would go on to be something of a 1960s soul standard with recordings by Major Lance, the Corvairs, Kenny Bernard, and Tami Lynn among others.

Milsap’s version is among the rawest of them all, starting out with a fuzzy combo organ, prominent drums and a wailing vocal by Milsap. The arrangement by Tommy Kaye is fantastic, with a great horn chart and a hard-charging tempo that made the record a huge fave on Northern Soul dance floors in later years.

Milsap kept a bit of R&B flavor in his later successes, yet nothing as full on soulful as this.

I hope you dig the tune, and I’ll see you all next week.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Tami Lynn – Love Affair Suite

By , March 31, 2019 9:32 am

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Tami Lynn

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Listen/Download – Tami Lynn – Love Affair Suite MP3

Greetings all.

I hope the new week finds you all well.

The music I bring you today is unusual in that it comprises not a single song but a side-long medley.

Tami Lynn is a particularly interesting singer.

She came up in New Orleans, singing on a number of local sessions, many for the AFO label, making one single with Bert Berns in 1965 (that went on to become a bog Northern Soul fave, and oddly enough appears on this 1971 album) and then the album you see before you today, and that – as they say – (aside from backgriound singing for others, especially Dr John) is that (though there appears to be another album from 1992 under the name Tamiya Lynn).

I have no idea why she stopped recording under her own name, but the album she left behind, is, while imperfect, possessed of perfection.

When you dig into the recording of ‘Love Is Here And Now Your Gone’ you begin to realize that it was kind of a piecemeal effort, with recording sessions in multiple locations, with multiple producers, and, as I mentioned earlier, the inclusion of that 1965 45.

I have no idea what the history was behind this, whether there wasn’t funding, or some kind of tug of war about what the label was going to do with Tami and her recordings, but at the end of the day, the record will stand as a (lost) classic for side one.

The ‘Love Affair Suite’ (that’s my name for it, since it doesn’t have a collective name on the record) is a sidelong, narrative (the songs are interspersed with monologues) about the birth and death of a love affair.

The medley is composed of songs originally done by Loretta Lynn (Wings Upon Your Horn), the Supremes (Love Is Here And Now You’re Gone), Betty Harris (Can’t Last Much Longer) and one song that originates here (though it was recorded the same year by the Patterson Singers), Dave Crawford and Willie Martin’s ‘That’s Understanding’.

Taken individually, the performances are uniformly wonderful, especially the slowed down, mournful take on ‘Love Is Here…’, but taken as a whole, they constitute a piece of work that ought to be much better known than it is.

Perhaps the overall obscurity of the record contributes to this, or the fact that the entire medley is almost 21 minutes and would never get airplay (though ‘That’s Understanding’ would get a UK 45 release on Mojo), but I assure you that once you pull down the ones and zeroes and let this bit of magic work its way into your ears, you will feel compelled to push it one someone else enthiusiatically.

The production by New Orleans giant Wardell Quezerque is outstanding, and he really lays back and lets the subtle majesty of Lynn’s performance come through.

So dig it, and I’ll see you all next week.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Florence Ballard – Forever Faithful

By , March 24, 2019 6:50 am

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Florence Ballard

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Listen/Download – Florence Ballard – Forever Faithful MP3

Greetings all.

Every once in a while, if you’re lucky, you’ll encounter a record that sets you right back on your heels.

‘Forever Faithful’ by Florence Ballard is one of those.

A few years back, Gene Meredith was kind enough to invite me to come up and spin at the Steel Stax Soul Club.

As is the case every single time I’m lucky enough to spin with someone with good taste and a heavy collection, my ears were wide open and my want list ready to update.

When Gene dropped the needle on ‘Forever Faithful’ I got chills up and down my spine.

Here we have a record that is both a great dancer, but also possessed of a dramatic edge and filled from end to end with memorable hooks.

‘Forever Faithful’, written by Robert Bateman and James Wicker, and produced by Bateman (who has appeared in this space before as a frequent collaborator of Lou Courtney’s), was Florence Ballard’s final 45, about a year after leaving the Supremes and 8 years before she would pass away.

The arrangement, opening with strings and angelic backing chorus, quickly adds pulsing bass and drums, and after a short verse, the absolutely beautiful chorus comes in, a perfectly constructed, economic work of art, perfectly engineered for Northern Soul dance floors.

Unfortunately ‘Forever Faithful’ didn’t catch on at the time of release. It’s flipside, ‘Love Ain’t Love’ got airplay on a handful of Northeast pop stations, but doesn’t appeared to have made any inroads on the R&B side of things.

I hope you dig it as much as I do, and I’ll see you all next week.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Dottie Cambridge – He’s About a Mover

By , March 17, 2019 9:29 am

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Dorothy Moore aka Dottie Cambridge

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Listen/Download – Dottie Cambridge – He’s About a Mover MP3

Greetings all.

Today’s certified banger has been steaming up my crates for a long time.

I first heard Dottie Cambridge’s distaff take on the Sir Douglas Quintet’s ‘(S)He’s About a Mover’ back in the day on the fantastic ‘Pow City!’ comp.

I was already inclined to dig it as a huge SDQ fan, but when I heard Dottie Cambridge and band lay into it, speeding it up and adding that crazy organ, I had to find myself a copy of the 45 (which I did in short order).

Interestingly enough, Dottie Cambridge was in fact Dorothy Moore, who went on to have a huge hit with ‘Misty Blue’ in the 70s. As far as I can tell this was her first solo 45, after recording as part of the Poppies forEpic.

‘He’s About a Mover’ was released in 1967 and produced by Huey Meaux, who produced the original by the Sir Douglas Quintet two years before.

It’s a hot, hot 45 and a dance floor mover, and might set you back a little bit more these days (than it cost me way back when).

I hope you dig it, and I’ll see you all next week.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Master Plan – Bennie and the Jets

By , March 10, 2019 10:36 am

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Master Plan

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Listen/Download – Master Plan – Bennie and the Jets MP3

Greetings all.

I thought, since it’s 2019 Marathon time over at WFMU, where my freeform radio thing ‘Testify!’ resides, a show that should be of interest to fans of both Funky16Corners and Iron Leg, that I might tie things together a bit.

Every years the DJs on WFMU programs put together a premium (usually in the form of a CD compilation) to entice listeners to donate to the station which is 100% listener-supported.

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This year, my premium is ‘Souled Gold: Soul Artists Interpret 70s AM Gold’.
The comp is pretty self-explanatory, with some very groovy, soulful and funky covers of big AM radio hits.

The track I bring you today appears on the comp in question, and since it’s one of my faves therein, and hasn’t appeared in this space before, I thought I’d bring it to you today.

The Master Plan were a San Francisco Bay-area group that released a string of singles on a variety of labels between 1973 and 1988, including a handful on De-Lite.

Their version of Bennie and the Jets was released in 1975, and is – among the tracks on Souled Gold – particularly interesting.

Though it definitely sounds ‘of its time’ it also adds a jazz spin to Elton John’s tune, with an arrangement by David Van De Pitte, who had also worked with the Temptations, Edwin Starr and General Johnson among others.

As far as I can tell, despite its obvious charms, the Master Plan version of ‘Benny and the Jets’ was met with broadcast apathy, with the marked exception of one radio station in Oakland, California.’

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If you dig the tune, and/or Funky16Corners, or WFMU (simply the greatest station in the nation) click on this link (or the logo above) and donate.

If you donate $75 or more you can grab yourselves a copy of ‘Souled Gold’ or any of the great 2019 DJ premiums.

So dig the sounds, dig into your wallets and groove.
See you next week

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Funky16Corners Mardi Gras!

By , March 3, 2019 10:18 am

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Warren Lee – Star Revue (Deesu)
Mac Rebennack and the Soul Orchestra – The Point (AFO)
Candy Phillips – Timber Pt1 (Atlantic)
Tommy Ridgley – In the Same Old Way (Ronn)
Eddie Lang – Something Within Me (Seven B)
Aubrey Twins – Love Without End Amen (Epic)
Bates Sisters – So Broken Hearted (Nola)
Benny Spellman – I Feel Good (Atlantic)
Chitlins – Sugar Woman (Pala)
Curley Moore – Soul Train (Hot Line)
Danny White – Cracked Up Over You (Decca)
Eldridge Holmes – Emperor Jones (ALON)
Irma Thomas – What Are You Trying To Do (Imperial)
Lee Dorsey – Do Re Mi (Fury)
Robert Parker – Secret Service (Nola)
Zodiacs – Surely (Deesu)
Betty Harris – Trouble With My Lover (Sansu)
Eddie Bo – Fence of Love (Seven B)
Jesse Hill – My Children My Children (Chess)
John Williams and the Tick Tocks – Do Me Like You Do Me (Sansu)
Lee Calvin – You Got Me (Sansu)
Mary Jane Hooper – That’s How Strong My Love Is (World Pacific)
Aaron Neville – A Hard Nut To Crack (Parlo)
Skip Easterling – Keep the Fire Burning (ALON)
Alvin Robinson – Seaching (Tiger)
Dr John – Big Chief (Atco)

Listen/Download – Funky16Corners Keep the Fire Burning MP3
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Roger and the Gypsies – Pass the Hatchet Pt1 (Seven B)
Professor Longhair – Big Chief Pt2 (Watch)
Bobby Marchan – Shake Your Tambourine (Cameo/Parkway)
Diamond Joe – Gossip Gossip (Sansu)
Eddie Bo – Hook and Sling Pt1 (Scram)
Lee Dorsey – Four Corners Pt1 (Amy)
Dixie Cups – Two Way Poc A Way (ABC)
Earl King – Street Parade (Kansu)
Meters – Cardova (Josie)
David Batiste and the Gladiators – Funky Soul Pt2 (Instant)
Bobby Williams – Boogaloo Mardi Gras Pt2 (Capitol)
Curly Moore – Sophisticated Cissy (Instant)
Ernie K Doe – Here Come the Girls (Janus)
Larry Darnell – Son of a Son of a Slave (Instant)
Explosions – Hip Drop Pt1 (Gold Cup)
Rubaiyats – Omar Khayyam (Sansu)
Warren Lee – Funky Belly (Wand)
Willie Tee – Sweet Thing (Gatur)
Danny White – Natural Soul Brother (SSS Intl)
Lee Dorsey – Who’s Gonna Help Brother Get Further (Polydor)
Oliver Morgan – Roll Call (Seven B)
Eddie Bo – Can You Handle It (Bo Sound)

Listen/Download -Funky16Corners Presents Boogaloo Mardi Gras! – 85MB Mixed Mp3/192K
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Greetings all!

Yeah you right!

It’s Mardi Gras time again, and you know that the sounds of New Orleans have always been a cornerstone of Funky16Corners.

Today we bring back the two Mardi Gras mixes – one funky and one soulful – that I created for the blog over the years.

There is enough NOLA heat here to keep your party fired up for a while, so pull down the ones and zeros and get down!

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Frank D’Rone – Think I Will

By , February 24, 2019 10:44 am

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Frank D’Rone

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Listen/Download – Frank D’Rone – Think I Will MP3

Greetings all.

I was wandering around in my to-be-blogged folder, and was shocked that I had never written up today’s selection.

I forget exactly where I first happened upon Frank D’Rone’s 1968 ‘Brand New Morning’, but all bets are on Soulstrut as the source.

D’Rone was a Chicago-area jazz singer, who had recorded a number of albums for Mercury in the 60s, before hooking up with Cadet Records and the mighty Richard Evans.

The album is a pretty straight ahead, swinging jazz affair, but the track I bring you today, ‘Think I Will’ not only skirts the edges of funk, but is as fine an arrangement as Richard Evans ever did.

I forget where I saw the session information, but it was very likely that this tune was recorded at the same session as Clea Bradford’s ‘My Love’s a Monster’, to which it has many stylistic similarities.

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A Pretty Solid Week For Cadet (from Billboard Magazine 1968)

D’Rone is a solid, energetic singer, and the arrangement is pure Evans, with big booming brass, powerful drums and, bright, almost explosive production.

The really groovy thing is, while Evans produced the sessions and arranged about half the tracks, the other half was arranged by Johnny Pate, making this something of a Chicago super-session.

‘Think I Will’ is not well known here in the States, but was a fixture on the UK jazz dance scene for years. As a result the 45 can be kind of pricey, but the LP can be had for much less.

I hope you dig it, and I’ll see you all next week.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Best of F16C – The Mad Lads – No Time Is Better Than Right Now

By , February 17, 2019 12:00 pm

ExampleThe Mad Lads

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Listen/Download – The Mad Lads -No Time Is Better Than Right Now MP3

Greetings all.

The tale of “sometimes a record just sneaks up and knocks you on your ass” is one as old as time (and one that has been told in this space many a time).

That said, it bears retelling with every new incident because, a. a new record is involved, and b. that feeling of discovery/gratitude is such a gas.

The record in question this fine day was brought to my attention by my man Tarik Thornton (a giant among collectors/selectors and a righteous dude in all other ways) who included it in his guest mix ‘To Russia With Love’, right here, last September.

The song was ‘No Time Is Better Than Right Now’ by the Mad Lads.

I can remember vividly my feelings the first time I heard this song, starting with the usual “Where has this been all my life?”, followed by “Where can I get my own copy?” and then “Holy shit, what a cool tune!”.

‘No Time Is Better Than Right Now’ – written by Stax bassist Allen Jones and produced by no less a light than drumming master Al Jackson, Jr. (who had quite a sideline producing artists like Albert King, The Bar-Kays and Johnny Taylor for Stax), is a remarkable mix of heavy beat (which presages the feel of New Jack Swing), brilliantly applied harmony vocals (the way the Mad Lads soar into falsetto during the chorus is a thing of beauty), horns and funky piano.

That this wondrous song languished on the B-side of a minor R&B hit (Whatever Hurts You) and was never included on one of the group’s albums is criminal.

I mean, what were the folks at Stax thinking? Surely 1967 was a banner year for the label, and sometimes even great records get lost in the shuffle, but honestly, ‘No Time Is Better Than Right Now’ is so different, so tuneful, so artfully arranged and produced, so joyful a representation of where Memphis soul was (and was going), its obscurity boggles the mind.

The Mad Lads were formed at Booker T Washington High School in Memphis by John Gary Williams, Julius E. Green, William Brown and Robert Phillips and recorded for Stax/Volt between 1964 and 1973.

This record features a different lineup of the group – Sam Nelson, Quincy Billups, Julius Green and Robert Phillips – that recorded when John Gary Williams was in the Army.

I have no idea who did the arrangement, though I would be shocked to discover that it was anyone but Jackson on the drums (that swinging, sock soul sound was like no other).

The group released more than a dozen 45s and three LPs during their first incarnation.

None of the group’s records are terribly expensive (though their debut 45, and their LPs, especially the second one can be pricey), with this one usually gettable for around 20-25 bucks.

It’s a killer 45, and I hope you dig it as much as I do.

Keep the faith

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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The Spellbinders – Chain Reaction

By , February 3, 2019 1:04 pm

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The Spellbinders

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Listen/Download – The Spellbinders – Chain Reaction MP3

Greetings all.

The Spellbinders – New Jersey’s own – have been featured in this space before with their epic 1967 floorfiller ‘Help Me (Get Myself Back Together Again)’.

The group made a string of outstanding singles for Columbia and Date between 1965 and 1967, all with the involvement of soul genius Van McCoy.

‘Chain Reaction’ from 1966 is a stellar midtempo number with echoes of the Miracles. As the song builds the group harmonies come in to fatten up the sound, which is – like many McCoy records – filled with hooks.

Interestingly, ‘Chain Reaction’ got released twice in the UK with a pair of b-sides, first on UK CBS with ‘For You’ on the flip and then again on Reaction with ‘Help Me’ on the flip, both in 1966.

Sadly, for a group with such a great sound and the assistance of Van McCoy, they onky had limited success, with ‘For You’ grazing the R&B Top 20 in 1965 and ‘Chain Reaction’, ‘We’re Acting Like Lovers’ and ‘Help Me’ scoring regional pop radio success.

The group broke up in 1967, with female lead Eloise Pennington moving on to join the Ad Libs.

I hope you dig the sounds, and I’ll see you all next week.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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The Sims Twins – A Losing Battle

By , January 27, 2019 12:14 pm

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The Sims Twins

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Listen/Download – The Sims Twins – A Losing Battle MP3

Greetings all.

Today’s selection is one of my favorite 45s to come out of what I call the Los Angeles/New Orleans connection.

I use the term to cover the diaspora of New Orleans musicians, including Harold Battiste, Mac Rebennack, Jesse Hill and Earl Palmer among others that ended up working in a wide variety of settings in the studios of LA in the 1960s.

The Sims Twins were originally from New Orleans, before being discovered by Sam Cooke and moving out to the West Coast where the recorded a grip of singles for Cooke’s SAR records between 1961 and 1963 (including the original version of ‘Soothe Me’ later covered by Sam and Dave) and going on to record for Omen, Parkway, Specialty and Crossover, eventually running out of steam by the mid 70s.

Today’s selection was recorded for Omen Records in 1966. Written by Mac Rebennack and John Dauenhauer and arranged by Harold Battiste, ‘A Losing Battle’ is a great slice of upbeat soul with a fantastic arrangement.

Oddly enough, a while back, I was listening to Little Royal’s 1972 album, and one of the songs sounded vaguely familiar. It turns out he had covered ‘A Losing Battle’ but slowed the tempo way down, turning into a mournful ballad, rendering it almost unrecognizable.

That said, I hope you dig the tune, and I’ll see you all next week.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Joe Johnson Trio – Son of Ice Bag

By , January 20, 2019 2:16 pm

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Joe Johnson and his Hammond

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Listen/Download – Joe Johnson Trio – Son of Ice Bag MP3

Greetings all.

I hope the new week finds you well.

The track I bring you today is from what most would consider a private press album (as far a I can tell the ‘label’ never issued anything else).

The performer is organist Joe Johnson, and the track, ‘Son of Ice Bag’ appears on the album ‘Jazz In Jersey’.

I can’t find any information to indicate that Johnson ever recorded anything else, under how own name, or as a sideman.

‘Jazz In Jersey’ appears to have been released in 1973, and while Johnson and most of the sidemen listed are obscure, the guitarist, Thornell Schwartz spent a lot of time recording with big name organists like Jimmy Smith, Johnny Hammond Smith and Larry Young.

The track, ‘Son of Ice Bag’ was written and first released by Hugh Masekela in 1967. It was covered a few years later by Lonnie Smith.

Johnson aquits himself nicely, and the arrangement, which hews pretty closely to the Lonnie Smith take, is cool.

I wish I knew more about Johnson. The record – despite the title – was recorded in Philadelphia, and the liner notes mention that he received an award in Philadelphia. They also say he worked with Lou Donaldson and Houston Person, but I can’t find any information to suggest that he recorded with either of them. My suspicion is that he was another working musician, probably grinding it out in night clubs and bars but never making the connection in the studios.

I hope you dig the sounds, and if you have any info on Joe Johnson, please drop me a line.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Best of F16C – All Strung Out

By , January 13, 2019 11:19 am

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Funky16Corners Presents: All Strung Out


San Remo Golden Strings – Hungry For Love (Ric Tic) 1965
San Remo Golden Strings – I’m Satisfied (Ric Tic) 1966
Luther Ingram Orchestra – Exus Trek (Hib) 1966
Kaddo Strings – Crying Over You (Impact) 1966
Robert Walker and the Soul Strings – Stick To Me (RCA) 1967
Lebaron Strings – Now She’s Gone (Solid Hit) 1967
Soulful Strings – Burning Spear (Cadet) 1967
Soulful Strings – Soul Message (Cadet) 1968
Soul Strings and a Funky Horn – Yester Love (Solid State) 1968
Soul Strings and a Funky Horn – Think (Solid State) 1968
Soft Summer Soul Strings – I’m Doing My Thing (Columbia) 1969
Soulful Strings – Chocolate Candy (Cadet) 1969
Soulful Strings – Zambezi (Cadet) 1969
101 Strings – A Taste of Soul (Alshire) 1970 (also billed as Les Baxter and 101 Strings)
Gordon Staples & the Motown Strings – Strung Out (Tamla/Motown) 1971
Gordon Staples & the Motown Strings – Get Down (Tamla/Motown) 1971
Soft Summer Soul Strings – Theme For Soul Strings (Columbia 1969)

Listen/Download -Funky16Corners Presents: All Strung Out – 98MB Mixed Mp3/256K

NOTE: This has been an exceptionally busy week, so I thought I’d dig into the archives and repost a favorite mix. I hope you dig it (or re-dig it) and I’ll catch you all next week. – Larry

Greetings all.

Welcome to another week here at Funky16Corners.

What you see before you is the result of one of my musical obsessions, taken to the nth degree.

Longtime readers of Funky16Corners will already be hip to the fact that I am a huge fan of the Soulful Strings.

I consider Richard Evans to be a genius, and the work he did for the Cadet label, with the Soulful Strings and otherwise made for some of the finest music of the 1960s.

It was a while back, while prepping a blog post about a JJ Barnes 45, that I discovered, quite by accident that two of his sides had been redone (using the same raw tracks) as string instrumentals on a Solid Hit 45, billed as the Lebaron Strings (after label honcho Lebaron Taylor).

This got me thinking about other “strings” instrumentals, and so the search began.

I dug back into my own crates, and started to look elsewhere and was surprised by much of what I found.

The “soulful string” instrumentals can be divided into pre-and-post Soulful Strings.

The first wave, starting with the San Remo Golden Strings made its way onto vinyl in 1965.

The first of these tracks, ‘Hungry For Love’ got its start as an uncredited instrumental on the flipside of Barbara Mercer’s 1965 Golden World 45 ‘The Things We Do Together’.

Reportedly, when the instrumental started to get some airplay, Ed Wingate, using the name of an Italian town that he and his wife had been to on vacation, paired the tune with ‘All Turned On’ (featuring pianist Bob Wilson) and the San Remo Golden Strings were born.

The “group” was in fact various and sundry moonlighting Funk Brothers, backed by string players from the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, led by violinist/concertmaster Gordon Staples.

‘Hungry For Love’ was a minor hit, as was its follow-up ‘I’m Satisfied’. Another San Remo cut, ‘Festival Time’ buoyed by the Northern Soul scene, became a UK Top 40 hit in 1971.

The UK soul scene is an important link, especially in regard to the early string-laden instrumentals.

‘Exus Trek’ by the Luther Ingram Orchestra was released in 1966. It was an instrumental dub of that single’s A-side ‘If It’s All the Same To You’. Both sides of the 45 became popular spins in the UK.

The same can be said of 1966s ‘Crying Over You’. An instrumental version of Duke Browner’s vocal of the same name got its own 45 release, three catalog numbers before Browner’s version (both writing and production are credited to Browner. As with the Ingram 45, both sides became popular spins on Northern dance floors.

I haven’t been able to track down much in the way of info on Robert Walker and the Soul Strings. The involvement of producer/arranger Ernie Wilkins suggests to me that it was a Detroit record. The side presented here, ‘Stick To Me’ is classic Northern Soul and is one of the rarer 45s in this mix. The flipside ‘The Blizzard’ is a great, uptempo dance craze vocal.

‘Now She’s Gone’ by the aforementioned Lebaron Strings was released in 1967, pre-dating the vocal version of the tune by JJ Barnes by a year.

As I mentioned earlier, these tracks can largely be divided into pre-and-post Soulful Strings eras.

Though Detroit producers and musicians were ladling strings over all kinds of records (the classy sound of strings an important component of what would become known/collected as Northern Soul) Richard Evans work with the Soulful Strings was the first purpose-built example of the sound.

It was in Evans hands that the string aspect of the music became more than an embellishment. He integrated the sound of the string section with the more innovative aspects of the Cadet Records sound. That he had access to the finest musicians in Chicago had a lot to do with the artistic success of the records.

Their first album ‘Paint It Black’ was released in 1966, but it wasn’t until ‘Burning Spear’ charted, making it into the R&B Top 40 in early 1968 as well as having regional success on Chicago radio that the group had some success.

Not only was ‘Burning Spear’ covered many times, but the group must have been selling LPs, since Cadet released no less than seven albums, including a live set and a Christmas record.

Evans was no less than a visionary, taking what could have been a simple, easy listening concept and doing something entirely unexpected with it.

The first two Soulful Strings tracks included in this mix are the classic ‘Burning Spear’ from the 1967 LP “Groovin’ With the Soulful Strings’ and ‘Soul Message’ from 1968’s ‘Another Exposure’. Both are fantastic examples of the broad palette that Evans was working with.

The remainder of the tracks in the mix seem to have been following the lead of Evans and the Soulful Strings to varying degrees.

‘Soul Strings and a Funky Horn’, released in 1968 seems a direct attempt to capitalize on the sound of the Soulful Strings. Produced by Sonny Lester for his Solid State label, the record bears no other credits whatsoever (aside from songwriting).

The LP was a mixture of covers of obvious hits and more obscure numbers.

The two tracks included here, a cover of the Smokey Robinson and the Miracles ‘Yester Love’ and Aretha Franklin’s ‘Think’ may not be nearly as adventurous as the Soulful Strings, but the band and the arrangements are tight.

The Soft Summer Soul Strings are another mystery. Though the catalog number of the 45 seems to indicate a 1969 vintage, the music on the 45 points to a somewhat earlier time.

The first tune included here, ‘I’m Doing My Thing’ is a fairly obvious lift of the Supremes’ ‘Where Did Our Love Go’ and the flip (with which we close the mix) ‘Theme For Soul Strings’ applies the same MO to King Curtis’ ‘Soul Serenade’ (both 1964 records). I haven’t been able to make any connections using the info on the labels, so if anyone knows where this one is from, please drop me a line.

The next two cuts hail from what in my opinion is the finest of all the Soulful Strings albums, 1969’s ‘String Fever’. The first of the group’s albums to be composed almost entirely of original material and featuring some of the grooviest sounds of their catalog, ‘String Fever’ is also one of the hardest Soulful Strings albums to come by.

‘Chocolate Candy’ and ‘Zambezi’ are both funky, forward thinking and leave the listener wondering why the Soulful Strings weren’t much more successful.

The next cut is an aberration of sorts, since it comes not from the world of soul, but out of Exotica. ‘A Taste of Soul’ was released a few different times, credited to Les Baxter, Les Baxter and 101 Strings and just 101 Strings.

One of the more prolific exploit-Exotica outfits, 101 Strings created albums aimed squarely at squares, especially those with ‘hi fi’ systems.

The California-based Alshire label was home to all manner of cash-in records aimed at the rock, pop, country and easy listening markets. There were dozens of albums issued under the 101 Strings name, including classical, ethnic, exotica and pop efforts.

This material, once recorded was often issued and reissued with different covers, in different collections, getting the maximum mileage out of the product.

‘A Taste of Soul’ is itself an anomaly in the Alshire catalog. Though the cut opens with waves of strings that sound like they were lifted from a contemporary movie soundtrack, once the drums come in (and they come in heavy) you begin to realize that you’re hearing something unusual.

Where Cadet may have been casting an eye at the easy/hi-fi crowd with the Soulful Strings albums, leaving them in the hands of Richard Evans and the Cadet house band took them in another direction entirely.

101 Strings, emanating from the 99 cent bins in supermarkets, gas stations and occasionally record stores had no overt musical agenda beyond basic competence, but like any broken clock that reads the correct time twice a day, they struck gold with ‘A Taste of Soul’ (which even had a 45 release under Baxter’s name).

Gordon Staples and his compadres from the Detroit Symphony Orchestra were fixtures on all manner of Detroit soul records, for Motown as well as various and sundry smaller labels. It was in 1970 that Staples and the Funk Brothers (once again, anonymously) were paired yet again as ‘Gordon Staples and the String Thing’ (aka the Motown Strings).

Of all the tracks in this mix, Gordon Staples and the String Thing meet the Soulful Strings on their own turf and come away looking (and sounding) quite good.

The 1970 LP ‘Strung Out’ features a couple of well-chosen covers, as well as a grip of excellent originals penned by Motown arranger Paul Riser. Riser, who won a Grammy with Norman Whitfield for the instrumental b-side of ‘Papa Was a Rolling Stone’ wrote some stellar material for the String Thing/Motown Strings.

The first cut here ‘Strung Out’ – which also saw release as a 45 – is sought out by crate diggers and is a great showcase for the Funk Brothers (dig that James Jamerson bass line).

‘Get Down’, which is a little less laid back features some excellent guitar work.

Many of the tracks from the ‘Strung Out’ album were recycled a few years later on the soundtrack to the Fred Williamson Blaxploitation flick ‘Mean Johnny Barrows’.

The last track in this mix – the only one presented out of chronological order – is the Soft Summer Soul Strings ‘Theme For Soul Strings’. As I mentioned before, it sounds as if it was written as a ‘tribute’ to King Curtis’ 1964 ‘Soul Serenade’. It’s slow, mellow, and is a great way to close out the mix.

I hope you dig this look into an often forgotten chapter of the ‘soul story’.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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