Category: Funky16Corners Radio

Funky16Corners Radio v.82 – Groovin’ at the Go Go

By , February 21, 2010 5:12 pm

Example

Funky16Corners Radio v.82 – Groovin’ at the Go Go

Playlist

Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes – Get Out (and Let Me Cry) (Landa)
Pat Lewis – Look At What I Almost Missed (Solid Hit)
Maurice and the Radiants – Baby You’ve Got It (Chess)
Broadways – You Just Don’t Know (MGM)
Four Larks – Groovin’ at the Go Go (Tower)
Bob Brady and the Con Chords – Everybody’s Goin’ To the Love In (Chariot)
Volcanos – (It’s Against) The Laws of Love (Arctic)
Barbara Banks – River of Tears (Veep)
Bonnie and Lee – The Way I Feel About You (Fairmount)
Irma Thomas – What Are You Trying To Do (Imperial)
Olympics – Mine Exclusively (Mirwood)
Mary Wells – Can’t You See (You’re Losing Me)
Vontastics – Never Let Your Love Grow Cold (St Lawrence)
JJ Barnes – Chains of Love (Groovesville)
Marvelettes – I’ll Keep On Holding On (Tamla)
Sam and Bill – I’ll Try (Decca)
Fascinations – Girls Are Out To Get You (Mayfield)
Young-Holt Unlimited – California Montage (Brunswick)
Eddie Holman – Eddie’s My Name (Parkway)
Ethics – Look at Me Now (Vent)
Intruders – (You Better) Check Yourself (Gamble)
Just Brothers – Sliced Tomatoes (Music Merchant)
Lorraine Ellison – Call Me Anytime You Need Some Lovin’ (Mercury)
Marvin Gaye – Baby Don’t You Do It (Tamla)
Len Barry – I Struck It Rich (Decca)

To hear this mix, head over to the Funky16Corners Radio Podcast Archive


Greetings all.

Welcome to something unusual, that being the second consecutive week in a row starting with a new Funky16Corners Radio mix. While I normally wouldn’t stack them so close together, the circumstances are unusual.
Last week – as you already know – I returned to DJ Bluewater’s Master Groove night with a promised all-Northern Soul set. One of the great things for me about spinning at Master Groove is that I have a certain amount of flexibility in what I can spin, the only real constraints being those of the genres funk and soul (and there’s even a bit of wiggle room therein), and the format of the seven-inch, 45RPM single. Outside of those rather expansive guidelines, pretty much anything (assuming that the attendees dig it) goes.
The last time I brought my record box to Forbidden City, the sounds therein were entirely organ driven. It was on that night that I was rapping about the scene with my man Bluewater, when I said that I’d been thinking about working on a Northern (style) set, to which my esteemed host said ‘Why not?’.
Early last week I strode into the Funky16Corners record vault – which is in a seemingly constant state of chaos – and set upon the crates in search of my favorite Northern Soul 45s.
I should take a second here to mention that the definition of ‘Northern Soul’ that I’m using here is strictly a stylistic one, i.e. not every record I played is necessarily an accepted part of the Northern canon (though some are long standing faves on the scene), but rather hew fairly close to the ‘sound’ in question.
I pulled every single 45 box off of the shelves in search of the best and brightest (necessary since at least five of these records were in the very last box) and pulled out enough 45s for at least three hours worth of play. I spent the next few days at the turntable, working out which records I wanted to play, revising the set more than a few times until I was happy with the chosen sides. I’m happy to say that with one exception (the very last record on the playlist) I stayed with all the 45s I had originally selected.
As I’ve stated here many times before, while I’m no expert on the subject of Northern Soul, I am a huge fan of the sound, and the playlist above represents several of my very favorite soul records. And when I say ‘favorite’ I’m not referring to some passing affection. I’m talking about the kinds of 45s that set my hair on end and shivers up and down my spine. Heavy, heavy stuff. There are 45s here that combine propulsive, soulful power with pop hooks and brilliant performances in ways that very few records can approach. Getting to play them for people over a nice sound system is (as it is with any great record) an absolute blast.
My plan was – as I had done on my previous visit – to bring my digital recorder, hook it into the board and record the set as I laid the records on the turntables. Murphy’s Law being what it is, I drove all the way into the city without the necessary cable with which to make the connection. This was a huge drag, but I decided there and then that although I would be unable to present the “live” mix as promised, (since I was so happy with the results) I would record the set at home and bring it to you anyway, thus the new mix.
The mix features a lot of Philly sides, selections from Chicago, Detroit (natch) and even a couple of New Jersey sides, one hailing from my home turf on the Jersey Shore.
Things get started with a classic by Harold Melvin and the Bluenotes. ‘Get Out (and Let Me Cry)’ is probably unfamiliar to folks who’s concept of the group starts with the Teddy Pendergrass era, but by the time ‘Get Out…’ was released in 1965 the group had been together for almost a decade. It has a deceptively mellow opening, but once things get going it evolves into a hard charging dance number.
The original recording of ‘Look at What I Almost Missed’ by Miss Pat Lewis was the first tune to appear on the latest incarnation of the Funky16Corners blog. Though it’s better known via the version by its author George Clinton with his group the Parliaments, the Solid Hit version by Lewis is sweet.
Maurice (McCallister) and the Radiants are one of the greatest Chicago groups of the 60s. They recorded a number of classics, including ‘Voice Your Choice’. The selection included in this set, the epic ‘Baby You’ve Got It’ first made its way into my ears via the cover by the Action.
The Jersey Shore record I mentioned above is ‘You Just Don’t Know’ by the mighty Broadways. Hailing from Asbury Park and Long Branch, and featuring members that would go on to join the Moments, the Broadways recorded two outstanding 45s for MGM. ‘You Just Don’t Know’ is a soaring, hook-filled masterpiece.
Of the many Philadelphia records revered by the Northern Soulies, my favorite (out of the remarkable Harthon stable) is the Four Larks ‘Groovin’ at the Go Go’. Having found almost every other45 by the group, I chased this record for years, ultimately convinced that I would never find – or be able to afford – a copy of my own. Until, that is, a reader of the blog, in one of the greatest recorded acts of vinyl-related altruism, found a mint copy at a New York City stoop sale and sent it to me. To say that I was pole-axed when I opened the package and saw that it contained one of my all-time white whales is an understatement. One of the many records in this mix that might be described as ‘anthemic’, ‘Groovin’ at the Go Go’ – penned by Thom Bell – has it all, and is justifiably considered a classic.
Possessor of the greatest faux-Smokey Robinson voice in soul history, Baltimore’s Bob Brady (and the Con Chords) recorded a number of excellent sides for the Chariot label, but none of them is as flat-out amazing as ‘Everybody’s Goin’ to the Love In’, with its pounding piano line, blaring horns and era-specific lyrics. I dare you to stay in your seat when this one starts playing.
Heading back to Philly – and one of my all-time fave soul groups – we hear the Volcanos and ‘(It’s Against) the Laws of Love’. When I packed my record box for the night it contained no less that four Volcanos 45s, from both their Arctic and Harthon periods. Though ‘Storm Warning’ is still my fave, I decided to go a little deeper and drop ‘(It’s Against) The Laws of Love’ instead. Written by Carl Fisher (who also wrote ‘Storm Warning’), the tune features Vince Montana’s vibes and a typically excellent Gene Faith vocal.
I’ve gone on at length in this space before about my love for Barbara Banks’ ‘River of Tears’ (as well as the Royalettes’ cover of same). It’s simply a brilliant record.
Though Bonnie and Lee’s storming ‘The Way I Feel About You’ was released on Philadelphia’s Fairmount label, I’ve never been able to nail down any info on the duo. It opens with a jangling guitar line, and then the rest of the band falls in like a ton of bricks. It was – as far as I can tell – the last 45 to be released on the label, which would place it somewhere in 1965/66.
Irma Thomas has long been known as the Soul Queen of New Orleans for good reason. Her discography is packed with winners, from soaring ballads like ‘I Wish Someone Would Care’, to uptempo dancefloor killers like her cover of Jackie DeShannon’s ‘Breakaway’, and the song included in this mix, the amazing ‘What Are You Trying To Do’. Unusual in her Imperial discography in that it was written and produced by the master Allen Toussaint ‘What Are You Trying To Do’ sounds a lot more Detroit than New Orleans.
Oddly enough, the first time I heard the Olympics’ ‘Mine Exclusively’ was in an unjustly forgotten, period/teen film called ‘The In Crowd’. A barely disguised retelling of the story of Jerry Blavat’s Philly dance party TV show, the movie features a great soundtrack and some wonderful production numbers. ‘Mine Exclusively’ is one of the finest late-period numbers in the Olympics discography.
I have to admit that I only heard Mary Wells powerful ‘Can’t You See (You’re Losing Me)’ a few months ago, via a tip by Atlanta’s finest, Agent 45. This was another one of those ‘where has this record been all my life’ numbers which knocked my flat on my ass the first time I heard it. I wasted no time in tracking down a copy.
When I mentioned that some of these records sent chills up my spine, I was referring specifically to the Vontastics’ “Never Let Your Love Grow Cold’. One of my fave Chitown 45s, it has a fantastic arrangement which builds excitement from the first guitar riff all the way to the run off groove. If you find any of their 45s in the field, do not sleep!
JJ Barnes made some of the greatest Detroit soul 45s, and is justly revered as a kind of patron saint of the Northern scene. ‘Chains Of Love’ is one of his harder 45s, and features my favorite vocal by Barnes.
I mentioned being turned on to the Radiants ‘Baby You’ve Got It’ by UK mod gods the Action, and such is also the case with the Marvelettes ‘I’ll Keep On Holding On’. Though this mix features a lot of favorites, this is probably – for me – the very top of the heap. It’s not only a great dancer, but the chorus builds into one of the great soul anthems of all time. I remember sweating this record heavily for years until I scored a copy (at a premium) many, many years ago. Oddly enough I found a second, mint copy about a month ago for a pittance. I plan on keeping it in cold storage in case anything untoward happens to my original.
We return to New Jersey with the great ‘I’ll Try’ by Sam and Bill. This is another one of those 45s that I pulled out a huge, multi-thousand record haul some years back, and it sat, unlistened to for a good, long time until it finally blew me away. It’s records like this that remind me that I need to be more thorough when I’m reviewing my finds.
It wouldn’t be very cool if I put a set like this together and didn’t include anything from the pen of the brilliant Curtis Mayfield. The Fascinations 1967 ‘Girls Are Out To Get You’ (one of their six 45s for the Mayfield label, almost half of its entire discography) is a classic.
When I mentioned accepted numbers from the Northern Soul canon, I was referring to 45s like Young-Holt Unlimited’s ‘California Montage’. Actually a piece of film music (from the movie ‘Winning’), ‘California Montage’ is a classy instrumental, with a strong dancers beat and layer upon layer of strings and horns.
Eddie Holman is best known for his late 60s ABC sides like ‘Hey There Lonely Girl’, but I’m here to tell you that unless you’ve heard his Cameo/Parkway 45s, you’re missing a big part of the picture. Holman worked as both a performer and songwriter attached to Philadelphia’s Harthon organization for a few years before he hit it big, and made some really brilliant 45s. ‘Eddie’s My Name’ – featuring Holman’s soaring tenor – is my personal fave, and it makes me happy that after a long search, I dug up my own copy inside the Philadelphia city limits.
Another great Philly side is the Ethics’ ‘Look at Me Now’, which should have been a huge hit (they did have a couple of R&B chart placements, but this wasn’t one of them), instead of the local sensation that it was.
The most successful of the classic Philly soul groups, the Intruders had no less that twenty-four (?!?) R&B chart hits between 1966 and 1975, including 1968’s Number One hit ‘Cowboys to Girls’. The storming ‘(You Better) Check Yourself’, from 1966 is proof that they were capable of more than the sweet soul they were best known for.
Another Northern classic (a fave at the UK – Stoke On Trent – venue the Golden Torch) ‘Sliced Tomatoes’ by Just Brothers is actually a later record, having been released in 1972. I always enjoy dropping this one since most people, if they’re unfamiliar with the OG, recognize it as the song Fatboy Slim sampled for ‘Rockafella Skank’.
If you follow the Funky16Corners blog, you already know that I verily worship at the altar of the mighty Lou Courtney. He penned (and produced) Lorraine Ellison’s stratospheric ‘Call Me Anytime You Need Some Loving’. Featuring a propulsive verse and a positively explosive chorus, ‘Call Me…’ is a great illustration of Ellison’s amazing range.
Marvin Gaye’s oft covered ‘Baby Don’t You Do It’ is yet another great tune that I first heard via a performance by a UK 60s mod band, in this case the mighty Small Faces. Though their version is very cool, Gaye’s original snaps, crackles and pops on a whole ‘nother level. Listen to how those drums explode from the speakers as Marvin winds his smooth way in and out of that powerful Motown sound. Solid, solid stuff.
This edition of the Funky16Corners Radio Podcast comes to a conclusion with a killer song by Len Barry. I knew (and loved) ‘I Struck It Rich’ in the version by Billy Harner, but only found the original (written by Barry with Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff) late last year. While it lacks the power of Harner’s cover, it has a certain stylish, polished vibe that I dig a lot. I’ve always considered Barry to be an underrated singer, and ‘I Struck It Rich’ is proof as to why.
I hope you dig the mix, and hopefully the next time I hit the decks at Master Groove, I’ll have all my technical ducks in a row.
See you later in the week.

Peace

Larry

Example

PS – One of the benefits of running the blog out of my own web space, is the opportunity for better statistical tracking. One of the benefits of that is seeing where all of you fine folks are visiting from, which has been a sobering experience. If you take a look at the list below the Funky16Corners blog is bringing folks in from all over the world. In addition to almost every one of the United States (especially one person in Atlanta who seems to be the biggest fan this blog has ever had), people are falling by from all corners of the world.

I drive my wife nuts every day as I check the visitor stats to see if I can find a flag I haven’t seen before.

I’d just like to say thanks to the folks in…

Peru

Chile

Italy

Sri Lanka

India

Tahiti (French Polynesia)

Reunion Island

Madagascar

Ukraine

Russia

Hungary

Sweden

Denmark

Germany

Jordan

Dubai

Argentina

Bulgaria

Netherlands

Belgium

Yemen

Israel

England

China

Thailand

Hong Kong

Austria

France

Greece

Spain

Japan

Portugal

Brazil

Switzerland

Czech Republic

Slovenia

Croatia

Australia

Finland

South Africa

Mexico

South Korea

Iran

Poland

Latvia

Estonia

Malaysia

Serbia

Puerto Rico

Canada

New Zealand

Malta

England

Ireland

Scotland

Wales

Just added 2/26 ! Venezuela, Cambodia and Bulgaria!!!

Added on 2/28 – Moldova and Pakistan!!!

Added 4/4 Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Senegal, Libya!!!

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PPS – Make sure to fall by Iron Leg for some tracks by the late Doug Feiger’s first band.

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Funky16Corners Radio v.81 – The Piano Electrified

By , February 14, 2010 3:55 pm

Example

Funky16Corners Radio v.81 – The Piano Electrified

Playlist

Eddie Harris – Listen Here (Atlantic)
Herbie Hancock – Fat Albert Rotunda (WB)
Art Jerry Miller – Finger Lickin’ Good (Enterprise)
Pete Jolly – Prairie Road (A&M)
Mose Allison – Meadows (Atlantic)
Lonnie Liston Smith & the Cosmic Echoes – Voodoo Woman (Flying Dutchman)
Hampton Hawes – J.B.’s Mind (Prestige)
Bob James – Nautilus (CTI)
Larry Willis – 153rd St Theme (Groove Merchant)
Neal Creque – D Train (Cobblestone)
Deodato – September 13 (CTI)
Les McCann and Eddie Harris – Shorty Rides Again (Atlantic)
Ramsey Lewis – Living For the City (CBS)
 

 

 


To hear this mix, head over to the Funky16Corners Radio Podcast Archive


Greetings all.

I hope reentry into the seven day cycle finds you all well.
I have just about recovered from all the snow-related exertion, and if we get another storm anytime soon I’m going to hunt down Mother Nature and kick her in the ass.
It is in the spirit of relaxation (though not too relaxed) that I bring you another in the recently mounted series of instrumental focus mixes, this time out a very tasty hour-long (plus) excursion into the world of the electric piano.
The electric piano – specifically the Fender Rhodes, though there are a couple of different brands/models represented here – is, like the vibes in F16Rv.79, one of my all time favorite sounds. Say what you want about the structure/genre of any kind of music, but when you boil it down, there’s something about the way a specific instrument sounds, whether it’s the vibes, electric piano, string bass, oud, flute, what have you, that gets deep inside my head and drills down into my pleasure centers on a primal, vibrational level, to the point where an immersive exercise like the one you see before you is the only prescription.
This has a lot to do with growing up around the piano. My Pop plays, and it was his second job for all of my childhood. If my love of music has a specific source, it’s because I grew up with a pianist/singer in the house. Whether it was on the out of tune upright at my Grandma’s house, the baby grand he entertained on at my wedding, or the electric keyboard he has now, my Dad has always instilled the value of a good (great) song in all of his children (which is why most of them play instruments).
I’ve been wanting to get down to working on this particular mix for a long time, but it was only in the last couple of weeks that I set foot in the record room – which is starting to outgrow its current location – and set to digging out the prime electric piano specimens in my crates.
While there is a funky edge to the majority of the selections herein, there are a couple of mellower things where you really get to hear the dreamy, chiming side of the instrument.
Things get underway with a song that is both a certifiable soul jazz standard, but also an oddity of sorts. Eddie Harris, who appears twice in this mix, but just once on the piano, is best known as a sax man, primarily as the number one proponent of another favorite sound of mine, that being the Varitone electric saxophone. The 1966 album ‘Mean Greens’, from which ‘Listen Here’ originates, is unusual because it includes an entire side on which Harris puts down the sax and works it out on electric piano and organ. Though Harris wasn’t giving any of the past masters of the keyboard anything to worry about, he acquits himself nicely on ‘Listen Here’, building a nice groove against a percussion base.
Herbie Hancock lays down a serious groove on the title track from 1969’s ‘Fat Albert Rotunda’. Featuring Hancock and a band of serious jazz heads (like Joe Henderson and Albert ‘Tootie’ Heath) ‘Fat Albert Rotunda’ (the song and the album) is a landmark of sorts, with the pianist settling into the funk for the first time.
Art Jerry Miller is one of those cats where I wish I could get more than a few, tantalizing clues about his story. He was Memphis-based, wrote for an played with Willie Mitchell, and recorded one very groovy album for the Stax subsidiary Enterprise Records in 1969. ‘Finger Lickin’ Good’ is a classic of the three o’clock in the morning mood, and sounds like a distant cousin of King Curtis’ ‘Soul Serenade’.
Pete Jolly was a serious West Coast jazz pianist and studio musician who recorded steadily from the 50s to the 90s. ‘Prairie Road’ is a cut from his 1970 album ‘Seasons’, which was improvised and recorded in a single four-hour session. The album is sought out for the sample on ‘Plummer Park’, but I’m here to tell you that in addition to ‘Prairie Road’ – which is included here – you really need to get your hands on the entire album (in OG or reissue) because it is one sweet listen.
Mose Allison has long been a favorite of mine, but it wasn’t until last summer, when I was down in DC digging, that DJ Birdman hepped me to the album ‘Western Man’, the only one on which the mighty Mose ever played the electric piano. I finally found myself a copy last month, and it’s both amazing, and a little bit sad that Allison didn’t spend more time working in a similar groove. The mellow tune ‘Meadows’ is included here.
I remember a time when I didn’t know that Lonnie Smith (the Hammond cat) and Lonnie Liston Smith were two different people. It wasn’t until I picked up a couple of his early 70s Flying Dutchman albums that I got hip. Lonnie Liston Smith was a busy sideman (with Miles Davis among others) who broke off in the early 70s to make his own brand of spiritual fusion. ‘Voodoo Woman’ is from his 1974 ‘Expansion’ album, and while it gets off to a funky start, it quickly settles into a late night, quiet storm groove.
Hampton Hawes first made his mark as a hard bop pianist in 1950s Los Angeles. By the early 70s he had moved on to electric piano, and a funkier sound. ‘J.B.’s Mind’ is from his 1972 album ‘Universe’, and manages to whip a little bit of funk into the mix, alongside some serious jazz sounds from Oscar Brashear and Harold Land.
Bob James is known to most people as the man behind the theme to ‘Taxi’, but ask any crate digger, and they’ll let you in on the breakbeats that make his early 70s albums on CTI/Tappan Zee favorites. The most prominent of these comes toward the end of the tune included in this mix, ‘Nautilus’ from 1974’s ‘One’ album (break courtesy of Idris Muhammad).
Larry Willis is a journeyman jazz keyboardist who has played in a wide variety of settings since the 60s (including an early 70s stint in Blood Sweat and Tears!). ‘153rd St Theme’ is a cut from his 1973 Groove Merchant album ‘Inner Crisis’.
Neal Creque has appeared in this space before, in his capacity as sideman for both Grant Green (he wrote Green’s epic ‘Cease the Bombing’) and Mongo Santamaria. He was a versatile keyboardist, working on both piano and organ. His 1972 ‘Contrast’ LP for Cobblestone is a lost classic, with funk, jazz and just a touch of his roots in the Virgin Islands. ‘D Train’ is one of the funkier numbers on the album.
Eumir Deodato, one of Brazil’s most successful musical exports is responsible for the biggest hit CTI records ever had, his reworking of ‘Also Sprach Zarathustra’ aka ‘2001’ which was a Top 10 hit around the world in 1973. The heavily sampled ‘September 13’ is another cut from the ‘Prelude’ album.
Les McCann and Eddie Harris were both jazz veterans when they hit the charts with their live, 1969 recording of Gene McDaniel’s ‘Compared To What’ which appeared on the ‘Swiss Movement’ LP. They reunited in 1971 for the album ‘Second Movement’, which featured the tune included in this mix, the funky, oft sampled ‘Shorty Rides Again’.
No mix focusing on the electric piano would be complete without a contribution from the mighty Ramsey Lewis. Lewis verily wrote the book on soul jazz piano in the 60s, and carrid on making huge contributions to jazz funk in the 70s. His 1974 ‘Sun Goddess’ album was one of his biggest hits, and in addition to his regular trio members (including Cadet house drummer Morris Jennings), the album also featured contributions from several members of Earth Wind and Fire. We close out this edition of the Funky16Corners Radio thang with his extremely cool cover of Stevie Wonder’s ‘Living For the City’.
I hope you dig the mix, and I’ll be back later in the week.
Also, if you’re in or around NYC this Wednesday, I’ll be back spinning with DJ Bluewater and M-Fasis at Master Groove @ Forbidden City, Ave A between 13th and 14th Sts. If I can get my shit (and records) together it’ll be an all Northern Soul set, so fall by if you’re in the area (things get underway at 10PM).

Example

Peace

Larry

Example

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