Category: Soul

Monday – The Knockouts – Mo Jo (Got My Mo Jo Working) Pts 1&2

By , December 29, 2013 12:07 pm

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The Knockouts, Bob D’Andrea at right (hugging gorilla…)

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Listen/Download The Knockouts – Mo Jo (Got My Mo Jo Working) Pt1

Listen/Download The Knockouts – Mo Jo (Got My Mo Jo Working) Pt2

Greetings all

Every once in a while I find myself entranced by a record that despite coming from an artist/scene outside of the ‘traditional’ soul/funk orbit.

There are countless examples of performers taking a temporary detour down soul street. Granted, most of these folks were on some sort of parallel course, whether it be R&B, jazz, or even (in this particular case) doowop, but the records in question are often extraordinary.

As far as I can tell Bob D’Andrea and the Knockouts started out like many other Italian harmony groups in the New York area, working a ballad-heavy twist on late 50s/early 60s doowop.

There are traces of Dion and the Belmonts, but their ballad performances are not my cup of tea.

However, there are a few items in their discography (roughly 1959-1965) that suggest that the group had a taste for wilder stuff.

Their 1961 b-side ‘You Can Take My Girl’ is a much more raucous affair, with touches of actual R&B making their way into the mix, but even then, it barely prepares you for today’s selection.

Released in 1964, ‘Mo Jo (Got My Mo Jo Working)’ sounds like Joey Dee and the Starliters got their hands on some slightly poisonous hooch and went right out of their minds.

The arrangement runs at roughly 100 miles an hour, pushed along by bass, drums, handclaps and a churning combo organ, with a wild vocal by D’Andrea.

What little information I’ve been able to find on the group suggests that they were first and foremost a live band, working it out in the clubs along the Jersey Shore.

‘Mo Jo (Got My Mo Jo Working)’ sounds like 100 sweaty nights of whipping drunken revelers into a frenzy compressed into roughly five minutes (both sides, natch) of madness.

Someone in this band had a taste for the (musical) hard stuff and it comes through on this record.

I’ve done the math a hundred times, and no matter how I run the numbers, there’s no sane reason that this record should be as good as it is, but it is.

The Knockouts made an LP called ‘Go Ape With the Knockouts’ that included both sides of this 45 as well as a serviceable version of ‘I Got a Woman’.

Lead singer Bob D’Andrea still performs today in Atlantic City as part of the music/comedy duo of Andre and Cirell.

I hope you dig the sounds, and I’ll see you all on Wednesday.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Best of Funky16Corners – Funky16Corners Radio v.62 – Hot Pants!

By , December 26, 2013 2:46 pm

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Funky16Corners Radio v.62 – Hot Pants!! Under the Covers with James Brown

Playlist

Otis Redding – Papa’s Got a Brand New Bag (Atco)
Dee Felice Trio – There Was a Time (King)
Shark Wilson & the Basement Heaters – Make It Reggae (Ashanti)
Cannibal & the Headhunters – Outta Sight (Rampart)
Albert King – Cold Sweat (Stax)
Dick Hyman – Give It Up of Turn It Loose (Command/ABC)
Mar-Keys – Dear James Medley (Atlantic)
Truman Thomas – Cold Sweat (Veep)
Soulful Strings – There Was a Time (Cadet)
Byron Lee – Hot Reggay (Dynamic)
Jerry O – There Was a Time (White Whale)
Jimmy Lynch – There Was a Time (LaVal)
Enoch Light & the Brass Menagerie – Hot Pants (Project 3)

NOTE: Since it’s right around the anniversary of the passing of the mighty James Brown, and I felt like taking the rest of the week off to spend some quality time with the fam, I decided to repost this mix from back in 2008.

What you get here are the songs of James Brown as interpreted by others.

I hope you dig it, and I’ll see you on Monday.

Larry

Originally Posted 12/14/2008

>>Greetings all.

I hope all is well on your end.

Ever since I started doing the Funky16Corners Radio Show over at Viva internet radio, I’ve been much more careful about gathering and sorting my digi-ma-tized material. As I was flipping through the folders, I just happened to notice that I had a number of covers of James Brown songs in the to-be-blogged area, and I started to copy them into a folder, with the intention of someday making them into a mix.

Then the mailman showed up with yet another, and after a touch of brainstorming, during which I plunged briefly into the crates to pull out a few more sides, I sat down with the turntable and the laptop, and set to work (though I would hardly describe sitting at the dining room table with headphones on as “work”).

When I was done, I had the mix you see before you, and I had an excuse to take most of the week off to concentrate on, and attend to what the crate diggerati describe as “real world moves”.

A couple of these songs have appeared in this space before, a few as individual tracks and others as part of themed mixes.

My hope is that the new context will forgive the recycling.

Things get rolling with a great version of ‘Papa’s Got a Brand New Bag’ by my all time fave soul singer, the master Otis Redding. I think you’ll agree that he did a fine job.

Next up is the only JB ‘protégé’ in the group, pianist Dee Felice and his trio with a slamming take (the first of four in this mix) on ‘There Was a Time’. I have a few other versions of this tune not included in this mix, and I remember at one time contemplating an all ‘There Was a Time Mix’, but eventually thought better of it (especially since I don’t have the Soul Searchers version yet).

Next up is the wholly awesome Jamaican re-working of the Godfather’s ‘Make It Funky’, recast by Shark Wilson and the Basement Heaters as ‘Make It Reggae’.

Most folks are certainly familiar with Cannibal & the Headhunters epic reading of Chris Kenner’s ‘Land of 1000 Dances’ (in which they introduced the ‘NA, NA NA NA NA’S), but I suspect only the Brown Eyed Soul aficionados among you have heard their take on ‘Outta Sight’.

If you’re not hep to the sounds of Albert King, get down to the Record Barn and grab some of the heat he laid down for the Stax label. Like Little Milton and Freddy King, Albert created a soulful strain of the blues, and was often backed by the Stax house band when doing so. His smoking version of ‘Cold Sweat’ was released as the B-side of a 1970 Stax 45.

Dick Hyman is a name well known to jazzbos, and Easy fans as well. He spent a lot of the 60s experimenting with Moog synthesizers for Enoch Light’s various labels. His version of ‘Give It Up (Or Turn It Loose)’ is something of an acquired taste (which I’ve acquired), and should be listened to repeatedly. Whoever’s working the drums is setting a very tasty groove amongst the various bleeps and bloops of the moog.

The Mar-Key’s are best known for their hit ‘Last Night’, one of the earliest hits for the Stax label. Their James Brown medley comes from their 1966 LP on Atlantic.

The Hammond stylings of Mr Truman Thomas are a big fave hereabouts, and first and foremost among them is his wailing version of ‘Cold Sweat’.

Speaking of Funky16Corners faves, they don’t get any fave-er than Richard Evans’ Soulful Strings. Their take on ‘There Was a Time’ is from their live LP.

I recently picked up a very groovy LP by the late Byron Lee and his Dragonaires. ‘Reggay Hot & Cool’ includes both his reworking of ‘Hot Pants’ (entitled) ‘Hot Reggay’, with some very cool flute, and a smooth version of the theme from ‘Shaft’.

The version of ‘There Was a Time’ by Jerry-O namechecks another Chitown cover of that particular song, by (as Jerry refers to him) Gene Chandler ‘The Woman Handler’. It’s definitely one of Jerry-O’s funkier sides for White Whale.

Next up is yet another version of that very tune, by guitarist/comedian Jimmy Lynch. The 45 (on LaVal, the same label that brought you Chick Willis’ ‘Mother Fuyer’) has some questionable fidelity, sounding as if it was recorded surreptitiously, but the power of the tune shines through.

We close things out with a return to the laboratory of Mr Enoch Light, with a surprising tasty version of ‘Hot Pants’ by the Brass Menagerie. This is the record that the mailman dropped off, and brother it was worth the wait. Though Light’s albums were clearly intended for Hi-Fi nuts, the bands he worked with were the cream of the studio crop, and often enough they craned out some funky stuff (breaks for days and what not).

I hope you dig the mix, and I may or may not be back on Friday.<<

Keep the Faith


Larry

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived!

The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock.

They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US).

Click here to go to the ordering page.
Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

Example

Example

 

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

James Brown – Santa Claus Go Straight to the Ghetto

By , December 24, 2013 11:45 am

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Ho Ho Hyeaahhh!

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Listen/Download – James Brown – Santa Claus Go Straight to the Ghetto

 

NOTE: This year – as in years past – the run up to Christmas will be filled with re-postings of some of my (and your) fave soulful and funky holiday tunes.

This gives you all a chance to catch up on some soulful Christmas jams, and gives me time to rest my blogging muscles and enjoy the holiday.

This track is especially apropos since we lost the Godfather of Soul on Christmas day back in 2006.

I’ll be back on Friday with some more James Brown-related treats!

Enjoy!

Originally Posted 12/18/11

Greetings all.

The time has come, as it does once a year for yours truly to let loose with the Ho Ho Hos and the jingle bells and what not on account of the fact that Christmas is approaching rapidly.

As has been mentioned here before, this is a multi-religious household, with myself representing the (extremely) lapsed-Catholic and my wife repping the Jewish and the Little Corners an interfaith bouillabaisse, their eyes and hearts filled to bursting with the childhood wonder of the season.

Which is really what it’s all about, at least from my vantage point, where what I want is no more or less than their happiness, and my wife’s good health.

You know that I’ve mentioned here (every single Christmas since this blog has been extant) that I have never been a prodigious collector of holiday music. Whether this has to do with my acceptance (almost at the DNA level) of the cheesy/classic seasonal sounds of my childhood, to the point where I can sit back and take some comfort in the sound of the voices of Andy Williams or Jim Nabors (and surprisingly enough, I can), or that seeing limited appeal/value in holiday music, I’d rather spend my money on reg’lar old soul and funk is in the end meaningless, since there always seems to be something cool dropping in from the margins to satisfy the Funky Kringle in us all.

I bring you today’s selection in particular because it is a favorite of bot myself and my wife, and naturally because it is a very groovy, upbeat and cheerful Christmas offering from Mr Please Please Please (HO HO HO?) himself, James Brown.

When I listen to ‘Santa Claus Go Straight to the Ghetto’, I realize that what we get with this record is both funky and danceable, but also poignant, especially in these days where there’s a tent city of homeless families not 10 miles from my warm, toasty house, and Mr Brown was thinking of how this, the most precious of holidays for children especially, could be rough for the poorest among us, and we should remember that while we listen to this song.

We should also remember that James Brown, who gave us such a great Christmas song, left us on that very day five years ago.

So dig the tune (there’ll be many old faves dropping as the week progresses) and remember that not everyone has the wherewithal to have a groovy holiday.

So try to remember that even if you are (like me) not a religious person, that the Christmas season can just be about brotherhood in the general ‘Family of Man’ sense, which is cool too, especially when times are tough (which they are for so many).

See you on tomorrow.

 

Peace

Larry

 

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived!

The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock.

They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US).

Click here to go to the ordering page.
Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

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Example

 

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Christmas With the Soulful Strings (and Dorothy Ashby)

By , December 22, 2013 12:26 pm

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The LP (above), Miss Dorothy Ashby (below)

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Listen/Download – The Soulful Strings – Jingle Bells

Listen / Download – The Soulful Strings featuring Dorothy Ashby – Merry Christmas Baby

 

NOTE: This year – as in years past – the run up to Christmas will be filled with re-postings of some of my (and your) fave soulful and funky holiday tunes.

This gives you all a chance to catch up on some soulful Christmas jams, and gives me time to rest my blogging muscles and enjoy the holiday.

 

Ho Ho Ho!

Originally posted 12/2007

Greetings all.

As I’ve stated repeatedly in the past, I’ve never been much of a holiday music collector. However, once in a while a personal obsession of mine also happens to have a Christmas record. In the case of Richard Evans and the Soulful Strings, their 1968 LP ‘The Magic of Christmas’ is a real gem.

The first tune I selected was the obvious choice (at least for me) because I can’t think of another version of ‘Jingle Bells’ that opens up with an honest to goodness drum break. I’m not sure who’s laying it down here (though I’m guessing that it is in fact Morris Jennings Jr.).

The second selection is a lush, sublime reading of Charles Brown’s classic ‘Merry Christmas Baby’ which features the brilliant Dorothy Ashby on harp. If you aren’t familiar with Ashby – I included her ‘Soul Vibrations’ on my collab with DJ Prestige ‘Beat Combination Pt2’ (check out the Flea Market Funk Mixes page)– she was one of the few harpists who could actually play jazz on the instrument, and the three albums she recorded for Cadet between 1968 and 1970 (in collaboration with Evans) are brilliant.

If your nerves are frayed (like mine) and the consumerist madness of the holiday season has you down, give this version of ‘Merry Christmas Baby’ a listen and all will (at least for a few minutes) be well, as it is positively sublime.

I’ll be taking the next week off to enjoy the holiday with my family and do a little visiting. I will most definitely be back with something for New Years Eve, so hang tight, enjoy your Christmas and I’ll see you all soon.<<

 

Peace

Larry

Example

Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived!

The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock.

They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US).

Click here to go to the ordering page.
Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

Example

Example

 

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Charles Brown – Merry Christmas Baby (1970)

By , December 19, 2013 12:09 pm

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Charles Brown

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Listen/Download Charles Brown – Merry Christmas Baby (1970)

NOTE:  Don’t forget to tune into this year’s Funky16Corners Radio Show Christmas special. It airs on Friday night 12/2o at 9PM on Viva Radio. If you are out making merry at that hour, you can catch up by subscribing to the show as a podcast in iTunes.

Enjoy!

Greetings all

As mentioned in our previous post, of Ike and Tina Turner KILLING ‘Merry Christmas Baby’, the original version was recorded by Charles Brown with Johnny Moore’s Three Blazers in 1947.

The tune became a holiday standard, and was covered by many people (including Ike and Tina, Chuck Berry, Otis Redding, Booker T and the MGs, Kenny Burrell and Bruce Springsteen).

Brown himself returned to the well frequently over the years, recording the song anew many times.

The version I bring you today is something I dug up this past summer on a record safari to the Finger Lakes region of New York.

When I saw it, I was unaware of Brown’s many rerecordings, and assumed it to simply be a later pressing of the tune.

When I finally got home and gave it a spin, it was immediately clear – via the wah-wah guitar – that what I was hearing was a recording of a much later vintage.

A little bit of research revealed that Brown had redone the tune for Jewel records (along with a new version of ‘Please Come Home For Christmas’) in 1970.

Though I haven’t been able to track down any session info (I really wish I knew who the guitarist was) I think it’s a safe assumption that it is Brown himself tickling the ivories.

His voice – in the words of Slim Gaillard, “mellow like a cello” – one of the finest/smoothest that ever was, was still in fine shape (and would remain so for many years) and the vibe is relaxed.

What amazes me about this song in particular is how flexible it is.

You can line up the versions that have appeared in this space – or on the Funky16Corners Radio Show – by Ike and Tina, Otis Redding and the Soulful Strings – next to Brown’s, and marvel at how different the song (a fairly simple blues) manages to sound in each interpretation.

I love to hear Charles Brown’s voice (right up there with Lou Rawls for pure listening pleasure) and he clearly dug this song.
I hope you do too.

See you next week with some more holiday soul!

Keep the faith

Larry

Example   ___________________________________________________________________________________________

 

Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Bobby Hollaway – Funky Little Drummer Boy

By , December 17, 2013 1:09 pm

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Listen/Download – Bobby Holloway – Funky Little Drummer Boy

NOTE: This year – as in years past – the run up to Christmas will be filled with re-postings of some of my (and your) fave soulful and funky holiday tunes.

This gives you all a chance to catch up on some soulful Christmas jams, and gives me time to rest my blogging muscles and enjoy the holiday.

 

This year’s Christmas show airs on Friday night 12/2o at 9PM on Viva Radio.

Enjoy!

Originally posted 12/16/12

Greetings all

I should get things started by noting that the next week or so will be filled with soulful and funky Christmas music.

I will be posting new stuff (like you see today) interspersed some old faves.

Here’s hoping that you dig it all, and that those that celebrate have themselves a groovy Christmas.

It was way back in February of this year that I featured the absolutely incendiary flipside of this biscuit – ‘Cornbread, Hog Maw and Chitterlins’ – in this very space.

Funny thing is, the record was first recommended to me (by the mighty Midnight Cowbwoy) for the side you see before you today.

I was in search of some groovy, soulful Christmas ish, and he suggested that Bobby Hollaway’s ‘Funky Little Drummer Boy’ could be had for not much scratch. So, off I went in search of said 45, found it, coughed up my ten smackers and eagerly awaited it’s arrival here at the crib.

Well, when it fell through the mail slot, I played the Christmas side, dug it and thought “Well, that was ten bucks well spent!”

Then I flipped it over.

The next thing I remember is waking up in a body cast (not really).

However, the ‘Cornbread…’ side is as deadly a bit of organ driven instro-soul as has ever rolled down the pike.

The Christmas side is a cover of a song thathas never really done much for me in its original form.

However, it seems to be the kind of song that lends itself to particularly interesting soul and funk interpretations, like the George Conedy and Lenox Ave versions you have seen/heard in this space previously.

Mr Hollaway does yet another stupendous take on ‘The Little Drummer Boy’, picking up the tempo considerably and laying a whole lot of soul on what started out as a decidedly un-soulful tune.

I have yet to discover anything about Bobby Hollaway – what little I was able to glean can be picked up in the earlier post – and I wish I knew more.

If anyone has anything to add to the story, please drop me a line.

Until then, I hope you dig the tune, and Merry Christmas.

Keep the faith

Larry

 

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived!

The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock.

They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US).

Click here to go to the ordering page.
Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

Example

Example

 

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Ike and Tina Turner – Merry Christmas Baby

By , December 15, 2013 12:57 pm

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Ike and Tina

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Listen/Download Ike and Tina Turner – Merry Christmas Baby

Greetings all

The first of our new, soulful Christmas tunes this year is my favorite recording of what is perhaps the greatest R&B-rooted holiday tune ever written.

‘Merry Christmas Baby’, composed by Johnny Moore and Lou Baxter, and first recorded in 1947 by Johnny Moore’s Three Blazers with Charles Brown on vocals, has become a standard, re-recorded many times, in many styles in the decades since it was created.

If you haven’t heard Moore’s group, make sure you do a little digging. Much of their recorded work – with and without Brown – is available in reissue, and is worth your time. They were one of the truly great small groups working in the transitional years between jazz and R&B (in the style of the King Cole Trio, which featured Johnny Moore’s brother, Oscar on guitar).

The version of the song I bring you today is not only my fave ‘Merry Christmas Baby’, but may very well be my favorite holiday soul record.

Ike and Tina Turner released their version of the song in 1964 on the b-side of a cover of Jesse Hill’s New Orleans R&B classic ‘Ooh Poop A Doo’ (using the Turner’s spelling…).

The tune opens with a fanfare, and the Ikette’s wailing ‘Jingle all the way!’, before Tina, Ike and a drummer who sounds like he was playing with sledgehammers drop in like a ton of bricks.

The recording has a remarkable “live’ sound, with the horns and Ikettes dueling for first place all the way through and Miss Tina delivering 110%.

I recently saw a video of the Ike and Tina Turner Revue from the Big TNT Show, and it is a testament to the fact that they were as hot an act as was around in the mid-60s. Every single time the drummer hits that snare drum the whole band explodes, and they carry that vibe onto this 45.

Neither side of this record charted, but don’t let that fool you. This right here…this is the shit.

Ho Ho Ho

Keep the faith

Larry

Example   ___________________________________________________________________________________________

 

Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

Example Example  

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

The Fabulous Counts – Lunar Funk

By , December 12, 2013 12:34 pm

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The Fabulous Counts

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Listen/Download The Fabulous Counts – Lunar Funk

 

Greetings all

It’s almost Friday, which is why I will remind you once again that the Funky16Corners Radio Show is on its way, taking to the airwaves of the interwebs this and every Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio. You can also keep up with the show by subscribing to it as a podcast in iTunes, or by grabbing an MP3 at the blog.

The Funky16Corners Radio Show Christmas Special will be dropping next Friday, 12/20 at the usual time, so make sure to pencil that into your datebooks! Also, the next two weeks will be devoted to Christmas music, with some old faves making their yearly appearances, as well as some new finds from this year which I think you’ll dig. _____________________________________________________________________________________

I thought we’d finish off the week with something funky.

I have long been a fan of the Fabulous Counts. Their 1969 hit ‘Jan Jan’ (just skirting the R&B Top 40) was one of the first funk 45s I heard (or owned) and I did my level best to amass all of their stuff as quickly as possible.

They recorded three excellent of 45s for Ollie McLaughlin’s Moira label (his Detroit labels Carla, Karen and Moira all named after his daughters) and an LP for the Cotillion label (produced by McLaughlin), all in 1969.

Led by organist Mose Davis, the Fabulous Counts laid down a jazzy style of funk that broke from the James Brown mold, with their sound much closer in spirit to a group like Kool and the Gang.

Today’s selection, ‘Lunar Funk’ was the flipside of their biggest hit, 1970’s ‘Get Down People’ (R&B #32, Pop #88).

Featuring fuzz bass, wah wah guitar by Leroy Emmanuel and some groovy clavinet by Davis, the tune is a fast moving number with a great horn section.

The group would eventually leave Moira for the Westbound label, recording one more 45 as the Fabulous Counts, before shortening their name to the Counts.

I hope you dig the track, and I’ll see you all on Monday.

 

Keep the faith

Larry

 

Example   ___________________________________________________________________________________________

Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

Example Example

 

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Otis Redding at Monterey Pop

By , December 10, 2013 9:58 am

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Otis Redding at the Monterey Pop Festival

 

Listen/Download – Otis Redding – Monterey Pop Set

 

Set List”: Shake – Respect – I’ve Been Loving You Too Long – (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction – Try a Little Tenderness

______________________________________________________________________________________

Greetings all.

This is a repost of a piece I wrote back in 2008 about the sounds that first brought me to soul music, back when I was a kid.

I putting it up again because 46 years ago today, the mighty Otis Redding (the greatest soul singer that ever was) was taken from  us in a plane crash.

He was only 26 years old and one can only imagine what he could have accomplished had he lived.

Do yourself a favor – whether you’ve heard this or not – and sit down with your headphones on, give this performance your full attention, and realized what a master he was.

A gift to us all.

Dig it, and I’ll see you all on Friday.

Keep the Faith

Larry

______________________________________________________________________________________

Originally posted 3/27/2008

>>I hope the end of the week – as it nears – finds you well.

The “selection” I bring you today is something a little different than I ordinarily offer in this space, in that it is composed of an entire LP side, which is itself an entire live set* by one of the greatest soul artists of all time, the mighty Otis Redding.

I’ve mentioned several times in this space that my ‘Road to Damascus’ moment as a fan of soul music was the day I flipped over the Jimi Hendrix Experience ‘Live at Monterey’ LP and played the album side I have posted today.

That day – sometime around 1976 or ’77 – was a landmark in my musical growth because although I was aware of soul and funk music in as much as its existence was reflected in the playlists of Top 40 radio of the early 70s, I had never been an active consumer thereof, i.e. I let the soul come to me, but never went looking for it.

It’s likely that I wasn’t paying close attention to the album, at least not at first, as I didn’t have much of an idea who Otis Redding was, outside of ‘Dock of the Bay’. It was that day, as the sounds of one of the greatest live sets ever recorded by any artist poured from my Montgomery Ward console stereo (next to my bed, the biggest piece of furniture in my small room), that a fundamental part of how my mind processed music – in as much as it processed the effects of sound along with my heart and soul – was changed forever.

I can’t remember the first time I actually saw ‘Monterey Pop’ on TV, though it was probably either on the Late Show or on the local PBS station, but when I did it quickly became my favorite musical documentary, in large part because of the inclusion of an excerpt from this very set.

It wasn’t until last year, when my lovely wife bought me the Criterion Collection issue of ‘Monterey Pop’ – which included an entire disc of previously unissued performances, as well as the two mini-documentaries ‘Jimi Plays Monterey!’ and ‘Shake! Otis at Monterey’ that I finally saw the film of Redding’s entire set from June 17th, 1967.

It was the final set, of the second night of the Monterey Pop Festival, and as the story goes, the festival had gone past the agreed upon curfew by the time Otis reached the stage.

Backed by Booker T & the MGs (who had just played a short set of their own), as well as the Mar-Keys (actually the Memphis Horns with the addition of Floyd Newman), and following an introduction by Tommy Smothers, Otis stormed the stage and ripped into Sam Cooke’s ‘Shake’. Despite a solid, day-long line up of rock, pop and jazz acts, at that late hour the crowd could not have possibly been prepared for the power that Redding brought onto the stage.

By the time Otis finished the tune he was gasping for breath, as he introduced his own ‘Respect’ – with a bit of understatement – as ‘…a song that a girl took away from me.’ He takes the tune at a brisk pace with pounding support from the band.

As he finishes ‘Respect’ he takes a moment to rap to what he refers to as ‘The Love Crowd’, before he launches into one of the single greatest soul performances ever recorded.

Two years before Monterey, Redding and Jerry Butler sat down in a Buffalo, NY hotel room and composed what would become (later that year) one of Redding’s biggest hits, ‘I’ve Been Loving You Too Long’. Redding’s reading of the tune is an absolute masterpiece of dynamics, building and release of tension and pure soul. It’s not hard to deduce from his demeanor that by this point in the set that Otis knew that he had the crowd in the palm of his hand.

He delivers his greatest song as a high-wire act balancing tasteful restraint with roof-raising soul pleading.

Whenever I listen to this (a performance that never fails to bring a tear to my eye) I wonder if Otis and Butler knew when they were writing this song how perfect a showstopper it would become. The verses open with those classic, slow-dance, R&B guitar triplets, moving to an explosion each time the second part of the verse begins.

There’s a version of ‘I’ve Been Loving You Too Long’ on the ‘Otis Redding Live In Europe’ LP where, if you listen very closely, you can hear Redding – as an aside, almost completely off mike – say ‘Oh my God!’ just before he launches into the line ‘There were times… It’s almost as if he had to muster every bit of power in his voice to deliver the line, rocketing the level of emotion in the performance to a point that few performers could ever dream of approaching and the truly amazing thing is that he’s able to do it over, and over again until the final section of the song where he’s rolling out the

‘GOOD GOD ALMIGHTY’s

and the ‘I CAN’T STOP NOW’s

and ‘I’M DOWN ON MY KNEES’


and ‘I LOVE YOU WITH ALL MY HEART’

and the band is vamping under him with the horns growing in intensity, and before you know it – because you almost expect, or at least wish that he would go on all night – the song is over and the band tears into ‘Satisfaction’, and the audience, still dizzy from the previous number rides along with them until Otis takes the tempo down, and you can hear the audience clapping along, and then the band picks up speed again almost crashing at the end of the song.

It’s at this point that Otis Redding proves once and for all (as if there were any doubts left) how much of a master performer he was. Taking a song written and first performed in 1932, Redding builds ‘Try a Little Tenderness’ into a soulful tour de force. The tempo of the tune building almost imperceptibly at first, with the band laying down the sparest of backings, but before you know it the whole shebang is bearing down like a freight train and Otis is wailing about

‘GOTTA GOTTA GOTTA NOW NOW NOW TENDERNESS A LITTLE TENDERNESS YEAH YEAH TENDERNESS YOU GOTTA GOTTA TENDERNESS!!!’


and Steve Cropper is weaving in and out of the mix and you can sense Otis whipping the audience around like a sweaty handkerchief while he loses himself in the ecstasy of the performance.

This is true greatness, on a level that very, very few performers, in any kind of music were ever able to achieve, and as the few remaining documents will attest to, it was greatness that Otis Redding was able to deliver on a regular basis.

The Monterey Pop Festival was filled with monumental, career making performances, but no one, not Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, the Who, NO ONE, came within 100 miles of delivering the way Otis Redding delivered that night.

He wouldn’t have many opportunities to do it again, because a few days short of six months later, Otis Redding was dead.<<

 

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*Believe it or not, this entire – legendary – set lasts less that 20 minutes!
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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Benny Gordon and the Soul Brothers – What Is Soul?

By , December 8, 2013 12:50 pm

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Benny Gordon

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Listen/Download Benny Gordon and the Soul Brothers – What Is Soul?

Greetings all

I’ll assume that we’re all ready to launch ourselves into the new week, so I though I’d get things rolling with something upbeat and groovy.

If today’s selection sounds at all familiar, it might be because it is a cover of a Ben E. King tune, which was featured in this space early last year.

The original is cool not only because of Ben E’s great vocal, but is also sought after because of that sweet Bernard Purdie drum break at the beginning.

The version I bring you today is by an old Funky16Corners favorite, Benny Gordon and the Soul Brothers.

As featured in this space (as well as in a couple of mixes over the years) Benny Gordon (and his cousin Sammy, of Hiphuggers fame) were perfect examples of the kind of hardworking, journeyman soul performers I love to feature here at the Corners.

They hailed from the Carolinas, but did most of their recording and performing up New York City way.

Their take on ‘What Is Soul’ was released in 1967 (a year after the OG), and while it features a small break (nothing compared the OG) what drew me in was Benny’s vocal.

The arrangement and production is a little more restrained than on the original, but Gordon’s lays down a passionate, soulful performance.

Gordon and the Soul Brothers laid down just about two dozen 45s (and two rare LPs) between 1964 and 1973 but never had any chart success.

I hope you dig the tune, and I’ll see you all on Wednesday.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

Example Example  

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

A Fat Stack O’45s….

By , December 5, 2013 11:47 am

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Funky16Corners Set List – Botanica 12/04/13

Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes – Get Out (and Let Me Cry) (Landa)
Theresa Lindsey – Daddy-O (Golden World)
Ted Taylor – (Love Is Like A) Ramblin’ Rose (Okeh)
Delores Hall – Good Lovin’ Man (Keymen)
Shirelles – Last Minute Miracle (Scepter)
Homer Banks – 60 Minutes of Your Love (Minit)
Four Larks – Groovin’ At the Go Go (Tower)
Jimmy Hanna and the Dynamics – Leaving Here (Seafair/Bolo)
Lee Garrett – I Can’t Break the Habit (Harthon)
Otis Clay – I Got To Find A Way (One-Derful)
Wynder K Frog – Dancing Frog (UA)
Eyes of Blue – Heart Trouble (Deram)
The Soul City – Everybody Dance Now (Goodtime)
Mary Wells – Can’t You See (You’re Losing Me) (Atco)
Jimmy Holiday – The New Breed (Diplomacy)
G. Davis and R. Tyler – Hold On Help Is On the Way (Parlo)
Joann and Troy – Who Do You Love (Atlantic)
The Olympics – Mine Exclusively (Mirwood)
Bobby Hollaway – Cornbread Hog Maws and Chitterlins (Smash)
Warren Lee – Star Revue (Deesu)
Rubaiyats – Omar Khayyam (Sansu)
Betty Lavette – I Feel Good All Over (Calla)
The Performers – I Can’t Stop You (Mirwood)
Irma Thomas – What Are You Trying To Do (Imperial)
Roger and the Gypsies – Pass the Hatchet Pt1 (Seven B)
Gene Waiters – Shake and Shingaling Pt1 (Fairmount)
The Eldorados – The New Breed (Port)
Albert Collins – Cookin’ Catfish (20th Century Fox)
Bob and Earl – Harlem Shuffle (Marc)
Geno Washington and the Ram Jam Band – (I Gotta) Hold On To My Love (Picadilly)
The Chitlins – Sugar Woman (Pala)
Jeanne and the Darlings – Soul Girl (Volt)
Wayne Cochran – Going Back to Miami (Mercury)
Danny White – Cracked Up Over You (Decca)

Trading one for one with Mr Finewine

Billy Davis – Stanky Get Funky (Cobblestone)
Little Bob and the Lollipops – I Got Loaded (La Louisianne)
Harvey – Any Way You Wanta (Tri Phi)
BJ and the Profits – It’s Gonna Rain Outside (Uptown)
Scatman Crothers- Golly Zonk! (It’s Scat Man!) (HBR)
Ross D Wylie – Do the Uptight (A&M)
Dinah Washington – Soulville (Roulette)
Rex Garvin and the Mighty Cravers – I Gotta Go Now (Out On the Floor) (Like)
Richie Barrett – Some Other Guy (Atlantic)

Listen/Download Funky16Corners Presents: A Fat Stack O’45s Mixed MP3 147MB/256KB

Greetings all

The end of the week is coming on fast, so I’ll remind you that the Funky16Corners Radio Show will be returning to the airwaves of the interwebs Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio. If you cannot join me at airtime, you can always keep up with the show by subscribing to it as a podcast in iTunes.

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Mr Finewine cues up another killer!

This past Wednesday I had the privilege of joining Matt ‘Mr Finewine’ Weingarden at his regular weekly shindig at Botanica in New York City.

Thanks to a variety of difficulties – most of which have been covered in this space – I haven’t been able to get out and spin soul 45s for more than two years, and I was eager to get back on the decks.

It turned out to be a very groovy affair indeed, with some heavy record people – including Connie T. Empress of the Empire City Soul Club (and Asbury Park 45 Sessions) and my man Keenan Popwell falling by to soak up the sounds.

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Connie T. Empress and Keenan Popwell rap about wax.

I also got to meet some new folks (Monk One was in the house), and sample a couple of glasses of sparkling ginger beer (I had to drive back to NJ…).

The only bummer was, once we got ready to toss some platters on the decks, my trusty digital recorder decided not to cooperate, and would not fire up, preventing me from recording my set live.

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Somebody’s got a frowny face… (I’m probably thinking about the drive home).

Not one to let a little technology rain on my parade, I sat down this morning (after not quite enough sleep) and typed up my set list, then moved over to my turntables and mixer to recreate my set.

I was on the decks for about an hour and twenty minutes, and then Matt and I closed out the night by trading off, 45 for 45. Though I did not recreate that part of the evening, I listed the 45s I played above.

Mr Finewine was an exceptionally gracious host, and I really had a gas. Hopefully I’ll be getting back into the city to spin some more in the coming year. I will of course keep you apprised of any upcoming dates.

I hope you dig the sounds, and I’ll see you all on Monday.

Now I’m gonna take me a nap…

Keep the faith

Larry

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Gloria Taylor – You Got To Pay the Price

By , December 3, 2013 12:58 pm

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Listen/Download Gloria Taylor – You Got To Pay the Price

Greetings all

Today’s selection is another one of those “didn’t know I had it until I started rooting around in my own crates” records.

I have no idea when I picked up this 45, whether it was part of a bulk purchase in a lot, or another one of those 25 cent come ups that I pulled out of a box because the artists name was familiar.

What I am pretty sure of, is that when I bought it, I never gave it a proper spin, because if I had, I would have recognized a long time ago that it was both very groovy, as well as a cover version of song I already knew.

Fortunately, when I finally did give Gloria Taylor’s ‘You GotTo Pay the Price’ a thorough listen, I realized that it was a cover of the Al Kent song of the same name.

Al Kent’s original version of the song, released in 1967 (I wrote up its flipside ‘Where Do We I From Here’ back in January) was done as an instrumental, and has over the years gathered a following on the Northern Soul scene.

Gloria Taylor (sometimes billed as Gloria Ann Taylor), was an Ohio-based singer who recorded just over a dozen 45s (and a rare LP) between 1968 and 1976 for a variety of Detroit and Nashville labels.

Taylor was apparently from Toledo, Ohio, and was discovered by (and later married to) producer Walter Whisenhunt, who ended up producing most of her recorded output.

Her version of ‘You Got To Pay the Price’, originally released on the King Soul label, and then on Silver Fox in 1969 takes the song at the same general tempo as the original. Taylor’s vocal ranges from a soulful contralto to flashes of super-high soprano, the part of her range that she seemed to favor on most of her other records.

‘You Got To Pay the Price’ was Taylor’s first (and biggest) hit, making it into the R&B Top 10 (Pop Top 50) in October of 1969.

She had two more chart hits, ‘Grounded’ in 1970 (R&B #43) and ‘Deep Inside You’ in 1974 (R&B #96).

Taylor has had some songs released on various funk and soul comps. Her Silver Fox 45s are fairly inexpensive and easy to come by, with the smaller label singles getting progressively more expensive, and the LP bringing in hundreds of dollars.

That said, I hope you dig the record, and I’ll see you all on Friday.

Keep the faith

Larry

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Also, the brand new Funky16Corners ‘Keep Calm and Stay Funky’ stickers have arrived! The stickers are 4″ x 3″ and printed on high quality, glossy stock. They are $2.00 each, with free shipping in the US ($2.00 per order shipping outside of the US). Click here to go to the ordering page.

Also, make sure that you check out the links below to the Be The Match Foundation and POAC (click on the logos for more info).

 

Example Example  

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

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