Category: Soul

Rufus Thomas – The Preacher and the Bear (Live)

By , March 18, 2012 12:43 pm

Example
Mister Rufus Thomas
Example

Listen/Download – Rufus Thomas – The Preacher and the Bear (Live)

Greetings all.

The tune I bring you this fine day is one of those lucky finds that manages to work on multiple levels.

First and foremost, it is undeniably funky, and I love few things more than stumbling upon a funk record that I haven’t heard before.

Second, it brings with it a very interesting story, in which our man Rufus Thomas gets to step inside a song – three quarters of a century old (when he recorded it) – and turn it inside out.

It was a short while back that I managed to find myself at the intersection of free time and a few extra dollars on the corner of look, record for sale.

There was another one of those record/garage sales at the Asbury Lanes, which have over time fluctuated between an embarrassment of riches (as far as vinyl is concerned) and occasionally yielding what folks have since time immemorial referred to simply as jack shit.

I didn’t have much green lining my pockets this time out, which didn’t matter since the first box I flipped through yielded a half dozen very nice 45s, all in the one or two dollar range, and the next table I hit coughed up a couple of cool LPs, one of which gave up the track you see before you.

With that, the bank was broken and I decamped for a fish sang-weech and the ride home.

Now, when I picked up the ‘Rufus Thomas Live Doing the Push and Pull at PJs’ album, and finished staggering through the very lengthy and awkward title, I decided to grab it because it contained live versions of a couple of his favorites, which I surmised might be very cool.

What I did not suspect, is that there would be a track that would good and truly blow my mind.

Rufus Thomas was a righteous dude, for a variety of reasons (all good, all having to do with music) and anyone that would waste your time arguing otherwise deserves little more than a kick in the shins.

He made some of the finest, funkiest records that Stax ever put out, many when he was well into middle age.

When I first dropped the needle on the live version of ‘The Preacher and the Bear’, I was grabbed by the spoken intro:

‘Here’s a song I understand is very popular out this way, out here on the coast.
Now, it is done differently in the club.’

But Rufus pronounces the last word ‘cluurrbb’ with an emphasis that implied that the live venue was something quite different from the studio*.

He wasn’t kidding.

What I didn’t know when I first heard the record and not until I sat down to research this piece, was that Rufus had recorded a studio version of ‘The Preacher and the Bear’ in 1970 (#42 R&B).

It has been reissued a few times (you can get it here), and it has to be said while the 45 version is lively, it is a radically different construct than what Rufus and his band laid down at PJs, and in comparison very weak broth indeed.

The title of the song was vaguely familiar, and when I listened to the lyrics they were similarly so (for good reason).

As it turns out, ‘The Preacher and the Bear’ had been around for ages. It was first published in 1903 and recorded a few years later by Arthur Collins (reportedly the first million selling recording).

It was, in it’s original form, what was known as a ‘coon song’, i.e. one that portrayed a racist image of blacks (in a wide variety of settings) often sung in what was supposed to pass for negro vernacular and often exaggerated accent.

The basic story – of a hypocritical preacher gone hunting on the Sabbath and getting treed by a bear for his sin – changed little over the years (aside from the removal of the overt racist context and the term ‘coon’).

‘The Preacher and the Bear’ was re-recorded/reinterpreted many times over the years, in a variety of musical settings, actually becoming a hit in versions by Phil Harris (1947) and Jerry Reed(1971).

Since Thomas was performing with the Rabbit Foot Minstrels in the mid 1930s , it’s possible that he had been hearing (if not actually performing) the song for decades.

The song was almost always delivered as a humorous tale with the preacher petitioning the lord to deliver him from the bear as he had delivered Daniel, Jonah and others in the bible from their travails.

While Rufus Thomas made humor and important component of his discography, what he does with ‘The Preacher and the Bear’ is something else entirely.

As he said in the intro, the song was indeed ‘done differently in the club’.

Where the studio version of the song is briskly paced, with an almost Chicago blues style to it, the live version is much funkier, with a guitar line that sounds like a not so distant cousin to Ike and Tina Turner’s ‘Bold Soul Sister’.

Thomas and his band attack the song from an entirely new angle, using the hard edge of the music to add a touch of actual danger to the tale.

The lyrics of the song follow a familiar path until Thomas reaches the chorus where he makes some subtle but (very) important changes.

Earlier versions of the song generally reference Daniel, Jonah, and the “Hebrew children in the furnace” (aka Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego) all tales from the Old Testament where people were saved from certain death by the intercession of god.

Thomas replaces Noah with Samson and ends the chorus with a reference to David and Goliath, both stories where the heroes were endowed directly with supernatural strength that allowed them to triumph in their time of troubles.

When Thomas charges into the chorus there is fire in his voice.

You remember Daniel from the lion’s den
Samson strong as a hundred men
The Hebrew children in the furnace of fire
David when he killed Goliath
The good book do declare!

It is as if he is no longer in the cluurrbb, but in chu’ch, which gets even clearer when the band falls back and Rufus starts to preach, adding a whole new chapter to the tale, in which (in the midst of hand-to-claw combat) the preacher reminds god that he protected him from bombs, guns and shrapnel when he was over in Vietnam.

Rufus engages in a little back and forth with the audience that has momentarily been converted (transubstantiated?) into a de facto amen corner with the organist in the band playing as if he were adjacent not to the bar, but rather the choir loft.

When Rufus starts to invoke Vietnam he adds a layer of sadness to the song that was never really there before, and the listener is compelled to wonder if in fact the struggle with the bear hadn’t become (at least in this case) a metaphor for the black experience in the 1960s.

All of those old bible stories told people that if they were faithful and followed the commandments that the good lord would be there for them in their time of need.

When I listen to Rufus drop down into the ‘Vietnam’ section of the song it sounds like he’s relating the story of someone who feels that they’ve finally been forsaken.

Is it possible that the ‘World’s Oldest Teenager’ had reached back into the early years of the century to take an old “coon song” reconstruct it on an angry frame and shoot it back out into the ether?

I think it is.

I hope you dig it too.

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

 

*It should be noted that over the last century the music behind ‘The Preacher and the Bear’ has often changed drastically in different settings. I have heard a similar tune behind some of the country versions of the song from the 30s on, but the Rufus Thomas recordings of the song diverge from those (and each other)

 

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

RIP Leon Spencer 1945-2012

By , March 15, 2012 2:48 pm

Example
Leon Spencer 1945-2012

Listen/Download Leon Spencer – Message From the Meters

Listen/Download Leon Spencer – The Slide

Listen/Download Melvin Sparks (feat Leon Spencer) – Thank You Pt1

Listen/Download Melvin Sparks (feat Leon Spencer) – Thank You Pt2

Greetings all.

It is – as always – time to remind you that the Funky16Corners Radio Show returns to the airwaves of the interwebs this Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio. If you can’t join us at airtime, make sure to fall by the blog and pick yourself up an MP3 of the show (or dip into the extensive Radio Show archives with almost 100 past episodes).

I had something else planned for today, but last night word started to filer through the haze of the interwebs that one of my favorite past masters of the Hammond organ, the mighty Leon Spencer, had passed away.

I have yet to locate any real details, but when I do I will pass them on.

Spencer may not have been a household name (except for my house, maybe) but he was a very important figure of the crucial, funky, soul jazz years of the late 60s and early 70s.

He only recorded a few albums as a leader (between 1971 and 1974) but was a very prominent sideman on Prestige and Blue Note dates, backing cats like Lou Donaldson, Melvin Sparks, Rusty Bryant, Gene Ammons and others.

I’m posting four cuts for your listening pleasure today.

The first two (recorded 12/7/70) , Spencer’s cover of “Message From the Meters” and his original “The Slide” appeared on his Prestige LP, ‘Sneak Preview’. The all-star group, featuring Melvin Sparks, Idris Muhammad and Grover Washington Jr really bring the funk on the Meters tune, and get to settle into a more relaxed groove on ‘The Slide’.

The third features an example of Spencer’s work as a sideman (recorded 9/14/70*), backing Sparks (again with Muhammad) on his ‘Sparks’ LP, covering Sly and the Family Stone’s ‘Thank You (Fallettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)’. I’m posting both halves of the 45 since you get to hear Spencer stretch out a little bot more on part two.

Leon Spencer had a fluid, economical style that always demonstrated an ability to weave in and out of the groove. His playing was clearly deep inside the soul jazz “thing” while also being consistently inventive, something that cannot be said of all organists active in the period.

He will be missed.

See you on Monday with some more soul.

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

*Trumpeter Virgil Jones appears on both dates as well

 

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

The Dells – Windy City Soul

By , March 13, 2012 10:31 am

Example
The Mighty Mighty Dells!
Example

Listen/Download – The Dells – Windy City Soul

Greetings all.

I come to you mid-week with something funky from the mighty Dells.

As much as my Chi-town crates are populated with several Dells 45s (mostly spanning the 60s) I’m surprised (and a little embarrassed) by their lack of appearances in this space.

The Dells were formed in the early 50s and their line up remained almost completely unchanged for almost 50 years.

They made the charts more than 40 times between 1956 and 1984 and managed to hit twice with two different versions of their first hit ‘Oh What a Night’ in 1956 and 1969!

The Dells also managed to cross over into the Pop charts several times as well with cuts like the storming ‘There Is’.

The tune I bring you today hails from their 1972 LP ‘Sweet As Funk Can Be’ (dig that title!), coming from the latter part of their association with the Cadet label (they would move to Mercury in 1975).

‘Windy City Soul’ is a funky mover with contributions from all members of the group but marked by some hard edged soul shouting from the mighty Marvin Junior.

The album is a concept album of sorts with a stream of funkiness feel to it, including some quasi-spoken interludes between the tracks.

What is unusual and extra-groovy about this particular set is that is was almost all written by none other than Terry Callier and his writing partner Larry Wade,and the album was produced by the brilliant Charles Stepney.

If this sounds like a combination of talents guaranteed to please, you will not be disappointed. A couple of tracks from the album (though not today’s selection) made it into the R&B Top 40, but the album was not a big hit.

I hope you dig the track, and I’ll be back with more on Friday.

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

 

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

RIP Jimmy Ellis of the Trammps 1937-2012

By , March 11, 2012 11:40 am

Example
The Trammps – Jimmy Ellis at left
Example

Listen/Download The Trammps – Hold Back the Night
Listen/Download The Trammps – Scruboard (Inst)
Listen/Download The Trammps – Medley – Penguin at the Big Apple/Zing Went the Strings of My Heart
Listen/Download The Trammps -Penguin at the Big Apple (Inst)

Greetings all.

I heard late this week that Trammps lead singer Jimmy Ellis had passed away at the age of 74 after a long struggle with Alzheimer’s.

Though known to the general public mainly for their 1977 hit ‘Disco Inferno’ (which had the good fortune to be included on the Saturday Night Fever OST) hardcore soulies and Philly aficianados know that the Trammps legacy was much bigger than that.

It bears mentioning – especially here – that the Trammps had their roots in the Volcanos (of ‘Storm Warning’ fame) and through their multi-decade career included not only the exceptionally soulful voice of Jimmy Ellis, but the backing – instrumentally, songwriting and production – of some of the finest talent in Philadelphia.

The four tunes I bring you today hail from the Trammps 1975 LP ‘The Legendary Zing Album’.

A slightly deceptive bit of packaging – the ‘album’ was actually a compilation of earlier (circa 1972) tracks, remixes, instrumental dubs and new tracks – ‘The Legendary Zing Album’ is nonetheless remarkable.

First and foremost it highlights the Trammps as one of the more soulful acts associated with the disco era, i.e. heavy on actual songs/singing as opposed to injection molded/assembly line dance floor fodder. Though you don’t get a hell of a lot of vocals here, what you do get are outstanding.

Jimmy Ellis had one of those rare, perfect soul voices that combined a remarkable level of control that allowed him to swing effortlessly between moderation and soaring gospel-inflected shouts.

‘Hold Back the Night’ which was the Trammps’ first R&B Top 10 hit (also making into the Pop Top 40 and the Top 5 in the UK). Written by Norman Harris, Ronnie Baker, Earl Young and Allen Felder, ‘Hold Back the Night’ combines smooth, yet danceable soul with pop hooks. It has a certain pre-disco feel to it, and managed to get a fair amount of play on Northern Soul dance floors when it hit in the UK.

‘Scruboard’ (or ‘Scrub-Board’ as it was titled on its 1972 45 release) is actually the instrumental track that would later be used for ‘Hold Back the Night’. It first appeared as the B-side of the group’s version of ‘Sixty Minute Man’.

Though the Trammps had their first hit with their version of the old standard ‘Zing Went the Strings of My Heart’ in 1972, the medley of that song and its instrumental dub ‘Penguin at the Big Apple’ was a “new” assemblage created for the ‘Legendary Zing Album’ by none other than mix-meister Tom Moulton. It has a much more disco-friendly mix – approaching the five-minute mark – and you get to hear more of that fantastic rhythm guitar.

The Trammps run of hits came to a close in 1978, though they continued to perform (with and without Ellis) for many years.

I hope you dig the tracks, and that you raise a glass (or more appropriately, cut a rug) in memory of Jimmy Ellis.

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

 

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

F16C Soul Club Presents: The Wiz – mixed by Tarik Thornton

By , March 8, 2012 5:14 pm

Example

 

Playlist

Jenny Misty – Nature Boy- Breakout
Earnest Jackson – Funky Blackman (Stone)
Bill Withers – Kissing My Love (Sussex)
Talmadge Armstrong – You’ve Got So Much Feeling (In Your Love) (Love Records)
Sir Wales Wallace- Whatever you Want (Innovations 2)
Big John Hamilton – Just Seeing You Again (Minaret)
Alex Williams & The Mustangs – Thrill Aint Gone ( Jewel)
Ernest Johnson – Old Man Blues (Steph and Lee)
Rickey Calloway – Paid My Dues Part. 1 (Super Records)
Fabulous Counts – Rhythm Changes (Westbound)
Jimmie (The Shiek) Green – Let Yourself Go (Stringer)
Stage Three- Don’t Ever Go Home (Zelia)
Wisdom – Nefertiti (Adelia)

 

Listen/Download -The Wiz – Mixed by Tarik Thornton – 48MB Mixed Mp3/160K

Greetings all.

The end of the week is here and I have a very special treat for you all.

But first – as is always the custom – I simply must remind you that the Funky16Corners Radio Show will be blowing up the intertubes this Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio. Or, should you be unable to attend at the time of broadcast, you can always drop by this very spot to grab yourselves an MP3 of this (or any of the previous ninety-some) week’s show.

_______________________________________________________________________________

Example

Also, I don’t usually do a whole ot of plugs here, but I got word that the BBC is doing an hour-long radio documentary on one of my all-time faves, the mighty Wilson Pickett, featuring interviews with folks like Bobby Womack, Steve Cropper, Bobby Eli, Willie Schofield, Eddie Floyd, Sir Mack Rice, Rick Hall, and Spooner Oldham and the whole thing is narrated by none other than Roger Daltrey.

It will be broadcast on BBC2 (for you good folks in the UK) on Monday March 12th at 10pm and will also be available on their listen again feature on their website for the following 7 days.

_________________________________________________________________________________

Now, back to the treats.

If you are a regular attendee of the festivities here at the Funky16Corners you will already be familiar with the mixing/digging prowess of my man Tarik Thornton.

Tarik has contributed to both of the previous Funky16Corners Soul Club Allnighters, as well as dropping one of his live sets from the Hip Drop.

Tarik is a very solid cat and it should go without saying (but I’ll say it anyway) that I hold his musical taste in high esteem.

The mix he brings us today is his latest excursion, this in a down-to-mid-tempo style, entitled ‘The Wiz’.

I’m always down to listen to any of Tarik’s mixes, but this one is extra groovy.

Despite my obvious love for hard charging bangers (funk and/or soul) I have a highly developed taste for the somewhat more laid back side of funk (see ‘Easy Mover’ just added to the Guest Mix Archive), in the “it doesn’t have to crack you over the head to bring the funk” school of thought.

That is the vibe of ‘The Wiz’ with some stuff straight out of the old school, some of slightly later – how the kids say “modern soul’ bag – and some very tasty breaks as well.

He doesn’t belabor the point either, bringing the whole thing in at around a tight 40 minutes.

Give this one a spin with the lights down low.

I know you’ll dig it.

See you on Monday.

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

 

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

 

Darrell Banks – Open The Door To Your Heart

By , March 4, 2012 3:12 pm

Example

Darrell Banks

Example

Listen/Download – Darrell Banks – Open the Door To Your Heart

Greetings all.

Welcome to another spectacular week in the world of vinyl.

The tune I bring you today is one of those case studies in a record that I came around to, despite plenty of evidence, very, very late in the game.

It must be said in my defense, however, that this was wholly the fault of this record’s no less than spectacular b-side, one of my all time favorite soul tunes, Darrell Banks’ version of ‘Our Love Is In the Pocket’.

A song that I heard first (and fell in love with) via Amen Corner, and then picked up on Banks’ version on an old Northern Soul comp, ‘Our Love Is In the Pocket’ is one of those records that never, ever gets old to me.

Oddly enough, I had read (and been told directly) many times that the version I needed to hear was that by JJ Barnes, and that I ought to have flipped the Banks 45 over to hear the song I bring you today, ‘Open the Door To Your Heart’.

Once I listened deeply and attentively ‘Open the Door To Your Heart’ – how do they say – grew on me, so much so that I felt compelled to pull it out of the crates and digimatize it.

Though it doesn’t have the power hooks of ‘Our Love…’ it is without a doubt a wonderful record, so much so that it was a #2 R&B hit in 1967 and made it into the Pop Top 40 as well (it was in fact Banks’ biggest hit before his premature death in 1970).

I suppose the problem – if it can be said that there was one – was my yet to be developed taste for a more subdued, mid-tempo variety of Northern (and othern) soul. Whether it was a matter of my ears maturing, or seeing what folks liked to dance to (that being not everything at 140+ BPM), this is now a record that dig quite a lot.

Since I know a lot of you already do too, I can only say that I hope someone out there that was similarly afflicted hears it and is so converted.

See you on Wednesday.

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

 

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

 

Ben E King – What Is Soul?

By , March 1, 2012 2:29 pm

Example

Mr Ben E King

Example

Listen/Download – Ben E King – What Is Soul

Greetings all.

I hope all is well in your corner of the world.

I should remind you all that the Funky16Corners Radio Show once again takes to the airwaves of the interwebs this Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio.

This week we have a very groovy – and in the words of Slim GaillardMellow like a cello” – all soul ballads show for you. If you can’t make it at the time of broadcast, you can always stop by the blog and pick up the MP3 version of the show over the weekend, or listen to it in the Flash player in the sidebar.

The tune I bring you today fell into my ears fairly late in the game.

I have to be honest and say that I have slept on the sounds of Ben E King in a big way.

Aside from ‘Spanish Harlem’, the Soul Clan, various and sundry Drifters cuts, and of course ‘Stand By Me’ (one of those tunes I never need to hear again), I hadn’t heard much of anything else from his catalog.

Then someone, somewhere (I forget who) posted a clip of ‘What is Soul?’ and I was all “What the hey?”

Where had this gem been all my life?

I started to look for a copy forthwith and was initially unsuccessful.

It seemed that most of the available copies were over in the UK (where it was included on a popular late 60s comp) or over here for prices a little higher than I was willing to spend.

Fortunately, as one of the old dogs that has been able to learn a new trick along the way, I was patient, did a saved search and a nice copy popped up before long at an even nicer price.

The appeal, upon first listen is obvious.

The tune, recorded with Eric Gale’s band in October of 1966, and beginning with a very tasty drum break by Bernard Purdie, ‘What Is Soul?’ is an odd but compelling hybrid soul shout/ballad.

Ben E’s vocal is pure heat and the production/arrrangement by Bob Gallo (who also did Patti LaBelle and the Bluebelles stunning version of ‘Take Me For a Little While’) is hot in every sense of the word. It sounds like one of those sessions where the meters were pushed into the red all the way through the song.

‘What Is Soul’ slipped just inside the R&B Top 40 in January of 1967, remained on the charts for two weeks and then disappeared. King wouldn’t have another big hit until 1975’s ‘Supernatural Thing’.

Interestingly enough, not long after I grabbed this 45, I found a cover of the tune by one of my favorite acts, Benny Gordon and the Soul Brothers (which I’m saving for another time).

Ben E. King would sneak the song through the back door of the Top 40 again in 1977, when his cover of the song with the Average White Band appeared on the b-side of the song ‘A Star In the Ghetto’.

I hope you dig the tune, and I’ll be back on Monday.

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

 

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

 

The People’s Choice – Do It Any Way You Wanna

By , February 26, 2012 4:02 pm

Example

The People’s Choice

Example

Listen/Download -The People’s Choice – Do It Any Way You Wanna

Greetings all.

Welcome to another week at the Funky16Corners!

First, a very brief technical note, it occurred to me that if you use the RSS feed you’ll have to reset the link you use, as the feed has changed.

The tune I bring you today is one of those records that should have been glaringly obvious (or at least it seemed so when I finally heard it) but I managed (in classic Larry Grogan fashion) to find my way there by the most circuitous route possible.

I first knew the People’s Choice via their early 70s 45s for the Phil-LA of Soul label (‘I Likes To Do It’ was R&B Top 10 in 1971), which were very early digging scores of mine during the first days of my Philly obsession.

Then, a few years later my man Tony C dropped a mix with a track that blew my mind, which opened up with a stunning version of this song (later featured in this very space after I managed to get my grubby little fingers on a copy of my own) by Louie Ramirez on Cotique (which can be heard in this past Friday’s Funky16Corners Radio Show).

It was only after that, that during a bit of dusty, outdoor, flea market digging that I happened upon a copy of the record you see before you today, which is of course the original (hit) version of the song by the People’s Choice.

As soon as I gave it a spin it was obvious that I had indeed heard it before, which spurred me to dig out my Billboard R&B chart book, which confirmed that ‘Do It Any Way You Wanna’ was a number one R&B hit and Top Ten pop hit in the summer of 1975, right smack in the middle of my AM radio listening years.

This is of course indicative of one variety of the diggers disease, wherein the obvious seems to get washed away in a torrent of obscurity, which happens to us all but still shames me when I manage to step in it (I really ought to know better).

That all said, the People’s Choice version of ‘Do It Any Way You Wanna’ is a prime piece of funky disco (disco-y funk?) with enough heat for the dance floor and enough edge for the ears, which goes a long way in explaining why it was such a big hit.

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

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

 

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

 

The Martinis – Hung Over

By , February 22, 2012 11:56 am

Example

Packy Axton (2nd from left) with some Memphis heavies…

Example

Listen/Download -Martinis – Hung Over

Greetings all.

First, some important news.

The day before yesterday I found out that I was going to have to change the domain where the Funky16Corners Blog and web zine reside. Unfortunately I had very little notice and the change was made rather hastily.

As a result, a lot of people that come looking for the blog using the old funky16corners.lunarpages.net links are going to find NOTHING. If you use the www.funky16corners.com, or just funky16corners.com (no WWW) you’ll still get here.

The problem is, blogging being what it is, a lot of the incoming links are located in places where they aren’t likely to get changed any time soon, and it’s going to take Google a while to rediscover the content here.

In the interim, I would appreciate it, that if you’re associated with a blog or website that links here, please adjust the links accordingly. If not, please just pass the word along, via Twitter or Facebook, that we have moved.

As I explained briefly yesterday, the switch over to the new domain should appear largely seamless – completely so in regard to new content – but there will be some effect on older stuff.

The graphics have to be restored to all posts prior to last November.

The links should be working in the Radio Show, Podcast, Guest Mix and Soul Club archives. If you find any broken links, please let me know.

This is an especially hectic and stressful time already, and I may have missed something here or there.

Thanks – as always – for your patience.

__________________________________________________________________________________

That said, today’s selection is one of those records that have been staple in my crates for a long, long time, and I can’t honestly say why I never featured it before.

Why am I posting it now, you may ask?

Because it is, quite suddenly, timely.

A while back I provided some very minor assistance in the research for the folks assembling the Light In the Attic compilation ‘Charles Packy Axton: Late Late Party: 1965-1967’ for which they very graciously (and surprisingly) thanked me in the liner notes.

Long-time readers of the blog will be aware that packy Axton features prominently in one of my favorite sagas, that being the story of the Packers ‘Hole In the Wall’ (more here) and its reappearance as a single by a cat named Joe S Maxey (as well as the vocal cover by the Other Brothers).

Ever since being clued into the various recorded exploits of Charles Packy Axton in Rob Bowman’s excellent book ‘Soulville USA: The Story of Stax Records’ I have picked up Packers record where and whenever I find them.

Axton, the son of Stax co-founder Estelle Axton, was a saxophonist and a hard living party animal who expired prematurely in 1974 at the age of 32.

He was, through the 60s a member of the Mar-Keys, and recorded with a revolving cast of characters (that often included Stax heavies and the Hodges brothers of the Hi records house band) under the names the Packers, the Martinis and the Pac-Keys, as well as providing backing for singles by singers LH White and Stacy Lane.

Thes 45s are collected in the aforementioned Light In the Attic comp, which if greasy, low down R&B and soul is your bag, ought to be on your shopping list.

The tune I bring you today, ‘Hung Over’ is the very essence of smoky, late night grooves, until it is rudely interrupted by the sound of someone making a very loud noise, which I (and many others) assumed was simulated (?) vomiting, but according to the liner notes of the comp, was actually Packy’s version of an angry growl.

The flip side, ‘Late Late Party’ is built on the same frame.

The various and sundry Axton-related 45s run from not too expensive to very much so, so if you’re not dedicated to finding them and shaking out your wallet, picking up the CD might be a better idea.

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

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

 

 

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

 

Funky16Corners Presents Boogaloo Mardi Gras!

By , February 19, 2012 3:15 pm

Example

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

Greetings all.

I hope you all are well.

I had some other things planned for today, then while I was out running errands I drove past a church with a sign up about Ash Wednesday, which meant only one thing to my deeply lapsed, heathen, ex-Catholic self (I’m so far gone I usually don’t catch on until I see people walking around with ashes on their foreheads), that being that Mardi Gras was at hand.

Despite my obvious affinity for and devotion to the music of New Orleans, for some reason I have a fairly consistent mental block when it comes to remembering Mardi Gras.

It seems that every single year it comes into my sightline either on the day of or after and I end up sitting here like a schmo wondering why I couldn’t get it together to commemorate that most significant of New Orleans-based festivities.

Fortunately, this year fate stepped in, I saw that sign and mixed you up a nice, spicy bowl of New Orleans funk and soul gumbo.

I don’t think there’s anything in this mix that hasn’t appeared in this space at least once over the years, but that shouldn’t stop you from digging in.

There are a few Mardi Gras-specific numbers here, including the record that gives the mix it’s title by Bobby Williams, the mighty Professor Longhair and ‘Big Chief’, the Dixie Cups and their Mardi Gras Indian chant Two Way Poc A Way’ and Earl King’s ‘Street Parade’.

There are also a grip of drum-heavy, NOLA party burners as well, powerful enough to get you up out of your seat and on to the floor.

I hope you dig the sounds and I’ll be back on Wednesday with something cool.

Also, don’t forget to check out the latest episode of the Funky16Corners Radio Show via the Flash player in the sidebar.

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

 

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

 

Slim Harpo – Baby Scratch My Back (and some news)

By , February 16, 2012 2:06 pm

Example

Slim Harpo

Example

Listen/Download -Slim Harpo – Baby Scratch My Back

Greetings all.

It has been another busy week here at the Funky16Corners compound, with hospital visits and sundry other responsibilities that simply must be taken care of lest the world wind off of its axis.

First, a bit of important business to get out of the way.

As most of you probably know, these are dark times for music blogs.

The copyright wars are getting hotter all the time, with domains seized, blogs shut down and threats being issued on the reg.

Funky16Corners, one of the longer lived blogs of its kind, has been extraordinarily lucky over the years in that we have not once (knock wood) been on the receiving end of threats, take-down notices or other negative feedback related to the posting of music.

For the longest time, I kept things going as usual, with all of the Funky16Corners Radio Podcast mixes posted in the archive containing the individual files and a fairly relaxed attitude to breaking the links on the single tracks in the regular posts.

A while back I tightened the reins a bit on the regular posts, pulling down the tracks after a 10 day period so that Funky16Corners remained true to its spirit as an educational resource.

Then, a few months ago it became apparent that less, shall we say, “dedicated” bloggers were indemnifying themselves against difficulty by deep linking (posting links on their blogs directly to the URLs on my server) to my tracks, not to mention the same thing being done (in a much more mechanical fashion) by rogue MP3 services that scour the internet for content to offer their visitors.

Despite the fact that I was breaking the links in my posts, they were still available to anyone who had deep-linked or in some other way recorded the full URL of the tracks.

My initial reaction to this was to relocate my on-line archive (which I use frequently to access tracks for mixes and tribute posts to artists that had passed on) and to move tracks to “off-line” locations after the aforementioned 10-day period.

The more I thought about the situation the more I decided that I needed to take whatever steps I could to protect Funky16Corners without compromising the “mission” (for lack of a better word) of the blog.

As a result, I did some restructuring at the server level, as well as removing the ZIP file links from the Podcast Archive.

All of the mixed MP3 files remain, but access to individual tracks has, at least for the time being, been removed.

I know that some of you will be disappointed – the archive is one of the most heavily traveled parts of the site – but this is something I felt needed to be done.

I have always felt that what I do here at Funky16Corners – as well as most of the blogs I link to – is much different than the popular idea of music blogging.

I have never posted full albums here, and the music I do post is always posted along with commentary and historical context.

I’m happy to say that in the many cases where I have been contacted by an artist that was featured here or a member of their family, the feedback has always been positive.

Unfortunately, the reality of blogging in 2012 is that the worst possible scenario could descend at at minute, and I owe it to myself to make this environment as “safe” as possible.

Hopefully the status quo will be maintained.

___________________________________________________________________________________

That said, I should also remind you that the Funky16Corners Radio Show takes to the airwaves of the interwebs Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio. If you cannot make the scene at airtime, you can always come by the blog on Saturday and pick up an MP3 of the show.

Also (yes, there’s more…) the post I recently did about the passing of the great Johnny Otis has been republished on the Greek culture website The Goddess of the Hunt!

___________________________________________________________________________________

What better way to face such chaos than a bit of mellow (bot not too mellow), soulful (just the right amount of soul) Louisiana blues.

Does the name Slim Harpo set your ears vibrating and your feet moving just so?

Though I can’t remember the exact day, I do know the year that the sounds of Mr James Moore (aka Slim Harpo) first breached the redoubts of my ears.

It was sometime back in Nineteen and Eighty Seven that my brother from another mother, the Bluesman handed me a brick of cassettes, all of which contained the sounds from whence he got his sobriquet.

There, alongside the Kings (Albert and BB) was a tape featuring the sounds of the mighty Slim Harpo.

While the name was at the time familiar (no doubt due to British Invasion coverage of his catalog by cats like the Rolling Stones, the Kinks and Them) I had never heard the originals.

I was in for a treat.

While I listened to all of those tapes, the one that took up permanent residence in my automobile was the Slim Harpo collection.

There was something very groovy about Slim’s voice and harmonica that shot right into the pleasure centers of my brain.

Years of reflection have led me to the conclusion that this was probably due to the fact that the music of Slim Harpo, while bluesy, was not entirely “the blues”, swimming in a swamp of R&B, soul and even country sounds, and it was all wrapped up in his unique voice.

He recorded his first record for Excello in 1957, and had his first hits in the early 60s and his first (and only) R&B Number One hit with the record you see before you today ‘Baby Scratch My Back’ in 1966.

The groovy thing is, that while there is something undeniably laconic about Slim Harpo’s music, the more you listen to this record in particular the more you realize how danceable it is.

It’s not a hard-charger, but it possesses a groove as thick as molasses.

Sadly, Slim Harpo died in 1970 at the age of 46, felled by a heart attack.

If you dig this cut, head out and grab yourself a copy of ‘The Best of Slim Harpo’ and get hip to a master.

See you on Monday.

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

 

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

 

Funky16Corners Valentine’s Mix: Dance of Love

By , February 13, 2012 10:32 pm

Example

Frank Wilson – Do I Love You (Indeed I Do)
Charlie Rich – Dance Of Love
Darrell Banks – Our Love Is In the Pocket
Jackie Wilson – I Get the Sweetest Feeling
Eddie Bo and Inez Cheatham – Lover and a Friend
Charlie Earlands Erector Set – Cherie Amour
JJ Barnes – Hold On To It
Spinners – Sweet Thing
Sand Pebbles – Love Power
Platters – Sweet Sweet Loving
Lee Dorsey and Betty Harris – Love Lots of Lovin’
Len Barry – I Struck It Rich
Producers – Love Is Amazing
Lee Williams and the Cymbals – It’s Everything About You That I Love
Broadways – You Just Don’t Know Good You Make Me Feel
Velvelettes – Since You’ve Been Loving Me
Soul Brothers Six – Your Love Is Such a Wonderful Love
Wilson Pickett – Everybody Needs Somebody To Love

Listen/Download -Funky16Corners Valentine’s Mix: Dance of Love – 86MB Mixed Mp3/256K

Greetings all.

What you see before you is an impromptu musical love letter/box of chocolates that I put together to evoke the soulful spirit of love.

I do so in the general, Valentine’s Day sense, but also in the specific sense of the love that I have for my wife.

As regular readers of the blog know she’s been going through some tough stuff the last few months, which she has weathered with exceptionally good spirits and courage.

She had a particularly hard day today, and I was mulling over the idea of a lover’s mix that she might download and play to lift her spirits in the hospital, and that others, in the embrace of their own love might listen to as well.

There’s a wide variety of great tunes here – and no, I do not own an original copy of the Frank Wilson 45, but I can dream, can’t I? – all on the upbeat, positive tip.

It’s just over 45 minutes of great stuff.

I hope you dig the sounds and play them for someone you love.

Oh…one more thing…I just added a Flash player in the sidebar so you can play the most recent episode of the Funky16Corners Radio Show while you’re browsing the site!

I’ll see you all later in the week.

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

 

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

 

Panorama Theme by Themocracy