Category: Soul 45

Fontella Bass 1940-2012

By , January 3, 2013 11:23 am

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Miss Fontella Bass
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Listen/Download Fontella Bass and Bobby McLure – Don’t Mess Up a Good Thing

Greetings all

Since the end of the week is upon us it behooves me to remind you that the Funky16Corners Radio Show is as well, airing each and every Friday night at 9pM on Viva Radio. If you can’t fall by at airtime, you can always subscribe to the show as a podcast in iTunes, or grab an MP3 here at the blog.

We have to start off 2013 in much the same way as we did 2012, that is eulogizing the fallen greats of funk and soul (Miss Marva Whitney a few days ago and Jimmy McCracklin this coming Monday).

Today we mark the passing of Miss Fontella Bass.

Those that know me have heard my complaints about Ms Bass’s biggest hit, 1965’s ‘Rescue Me’ as a song so ubiquitous that I would feel safe never having to hear it again.

This is of course no fault of hers, but rather the tastemakers/compilers of oldies radio and movie soundtracks who have made that particular record an all but inescapable shorthand for 60s soul, much like James Brown’s ‘I Feel Good’, or the Four Tops ‘(I Can’t Help Myself) Sugar Pie Honey Bunch’, all in their way great records, but beaten so soundly into my brain as to have sucked all the joy out of the music.

Every time ‘Rescue Me’ is cued up it just conjures up images of ‘The Big Chill’ and makes me want to strangle a Baby Boomer with a tie-dyed shirt. And the remarkable thing is that it’s not even on that soundtrack, but rather just another house picked up by and forever swirling around inside of that horrifying tornado of nostalgia.

Though I have owned a copy of ‘Rescue Me’ for years, I have not pulled it out of the crates to play it, and for all intents and purposes, Fontella Bass was well off my radar.

That was, until one lazy day, when I was sprawled on the couch channel surfing and happened upon a soul documentary that while generally unpromising, was light years better than everything else on the tube.

It was during this program (on one of the VH-1s) that a clip came on with a song that I hadn’t heard before and my ears perked right up.

There on the screen were Fontella Bass and Bobby McClure belting out a tune called ‘Don’t Mess Up a Good Thing’.

There’s no question that my lack of interest in all things Fontella Bass was unfair, but in my defense, I had no idea that she’d done anything else, especially anything this cool.

I listen to a tremendous amount of music (especially soul and funk), much of it pulled out of dusty boxes and shoved directly into my ears, and I was, unfortunately, unaware of this record, but that’s the way things go. Despite what some people might say or think, you must be humble enough to admit that you cannot know every good record there is (and I do not, though maybe someday…).

That said, ‘Don’t Mess Up a Good Thing’ hit the R&B Top 5 and the Pop Top 40 in February of 1965.

Fontella Bass, Bobby McClure and the bandleader on the date Oliver Sain (the flipside of the 45 was ‘Jerk Loose’ by Sain and his orchestra) all hailed from St Louis, MO.

Bass had started out as a gospel singer, her mother Martha Bass being a member of the Clara Ward Singers. She got her start in the world of secular music playing piano in Little Milton’s band (alongside Oliver Sain).

She signed with Chess/Checker in 1964, had the duet hit with McClure in early 1965 and went on to have her biggest hit with ‘Rescue Me’ in September of that year, making it to the Number One spot on the R&B charts and the Pop Top 5.

Bass had three more R&B Top 40 hits in 1965 and 1966 but left the label after being denied a co-writing credit on ‘Rescue Me’.

She married avant garde jazz trumpeter Lester Bowie, with whom she moved to Paris in the late 60s where she recorded two albums with the Art Ensemble of Chicago, including the sought after ‘Les Stances a Sophie’.

Following her return to the US, Bass recorded more soul sides for the Paula label through 1972 but eventually retired from music.

She returned to record both gospel and jazz later in life but suffered a series of strokes in the last few years of her life and was in hospice care when she succumbed to a heart attack.

She will be missed.

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.

Marva Whitney 1944 – 2012

By , January 1, 2013 3:08 pm

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Miss Marva Whitney

Listen/Download Marva Whitney – It’s My Thing

Listen/Download Marva Whitney – Things Got To Get Better (Get Together)

Listen/Download Marva Whitney – This Girl’s In Love With You

Greetings all

It was just a few days short of Christmas (the very day that the Godfather of Soul slipped the surly bonds of earth but six years ago) that word filtered down to me that the mighty Marva Whitney had died.

Marva Whitney – one of the great divas of the classic era of the James Brown Revue – was born in Kansas City, KA in 1944, where she grew up performing gospel music.

It wasn’t until the mid-60s that she made the move to the secular side of soul, eventually joing James Brown and recording her first 45 with his organization in 1967.

During her tenure with Brown, running from 1967 to 1970, she recorded more than a dozen 45s and three albums (one unreleased) before moving on to record sides for T-Neck, Forte and Excello.

She left music for a time in the 1980s before returning to perform with various and sundry James Brown alumni, eventually working with Osaka Monauril (big ups to DJ Pari who was instrumental in her return to the studio), recording new music and touring extensively in the 2000s.

Whitney had one of the most powerful voices in the realm of classic funk.

Though she didn’t have much in the way of commercial success in her heyday, Whitney is treasured both by crate diggers, who verily worship her hard-hitting funk sides, but also by the hip hop side of things for heavily sampled tracks like ‘Unwind Yourself’.

The three tunes I’m posting today have all appeared at Funky16Corners over the years and are staples in my crates and playlists.

The first is my personal favorite. ‘It’s My Thing’ – an obvious “answer” to the Isleys – was her biggest hit, making it into the R&B Top 20 in the Spring of 1969.

It’s a killer from its opening notes, and right up there with the best singles of James Brown’s King-era. The instrumental backing is rock solid, yet fairly rudimentary, with Marva’s remarkable voice dragging the whole show behind her in the dust.

The second is another banger, which ought to be familiar to listeners of the Funky16Corners Radio Show, via the whole song, but also from the sample of her voice that graces so many drops. ‘Things Got to Get Better (Get Together)’ is a fast mover with a tasty horn chart that propels the song from the bottom up. There’s a fantastic live performance clip from he show ‘Music Scene’ in 1969, with Marva laying it down in front of the mighty James Brown band that must be seen,not just for the undeniable power of the music, but for Ms Whitney’s platinum afro, which is a thing to behold.

The last track is something extra special that I was introduced to some years back when Dave Withers guested at the Asbury Park 45 Sessions.

Marva Whitney’s ‘This Girl’s In Love With You’ (a distaff remake of the huge Herb Albert hit) from 1969 is one of those records that ought to be much better known. Every time I play it out I see the same reaction that I had the first time I heard it, that being “where has this record been all my life?”.

It is in turns sweet, funky and a remarkable contrast to the harder edged stuff in Marva’s catalog. I’m not sure who did the arrangement, but it’s fantastic and the fact that this record doesn’t seem to have charted anywhere just makes me shake my head.

Though some of Marva Whitney’s old-school vinyl can be hard to come by and costly, you can find her 2006 comeback LP with Osaka Monaurail ‘I Am What I Am’ in iTunes, and most of her classic tracks can be found on the ‘James Brown’s Funky Divas’ collection (along with a lot of other indispensable music).

I hope you dig the sounds, and when you get a chance, get down in memory of the great Marva Whitney.

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.

Funky16Corners 2012 Year In Review Mix

By , December 30, 2012 3:45 pm

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Bobby Hollaway – Cornbread, Hog Maws and Chitterlins (Smash)
Ben E King – What Is Soul (Atco)
Nina Simone – Save Me (RCA)
Pieces of Eight – Come Back Girl (A&M)
Len Barry – I Struck it Rich (Decca)
Papa Don Association – Souled Out (Amy)
Vibrations – Expressway To Your Heart (Neptune)
Russell Evans and the Nighthawks – Send Me Some Cornbread (Atco)
Shirelles – Last Minute Miracle (Scepter)
Garnet Mimms – Prove It To Me (UA)
Exciters – Blowing Up My Mind (RCA)
Etta James – I Got You Babe (Cadet)
Billy Preston – Greazee Pt1 (Derby)
Freddie Scott – You (Got What I Need) (Shout)
Lloyd L Williams – Be Mine Tonight (ABC)
Marvelle and the Blue Mats – The Dance Called the Motion (Dynamic Sound)
The Poets – She Blew a Good Thing (Symbol)
Titus Turner – Soulville (Enjoy)
Betty Harris – Mojo Hannah (Jubilee)
Dean Parrish – I’m On My Way (Laurie)

 

Listen/Download -Funky16Corners 2012 Year In Review Mix – 93MB Mixed Mp3/256K

Greetings all.

What you see before you is the Funky16Corners 2012 Year In Review Mix, in which we take a look at the tracks that I consider to be the finest posted here since January.

You get all manner of soul and funk (mostly of the 45RPM variety), breakbeats and grooves of all kinds.

I gave this a listen the other night and came to the conclusion that this has been an especially good year.

My memories of recent digs, as well as the “to be blogged’ folder indicate that there’s a lot more where that came from.

I hope you dig the mix, and I’ll be back next week with some more groovy gravy.

Don’t forget to hit up the Funky16Corners Radio Show, this and every Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio, or, if you can’t be there at airtime, subscribe to the show as a podcast in iTunes, or grab an MP3 for the archive here at the blog.

Happy New Year,

Keep the faith

Larry

 

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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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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 Christmas: Bobby Hollaway – Funky Little Drummer Boy

By , December 16, 2012 2:20 pm

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Listen/Download Bobby Hollaway – Funky Little Drummer Boy

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).

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Myra Barnes – Super Good (Answer to Super Bad) Pts1&2

By , December 11, 2012 4:25 pm

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Myra Barnes aka Vicki Anderson


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Listen/Download Myra Barnes – Super Good (Answer to Super Bad) Pt1

Listen/Download Myra Barnes – Super Good (Answer to Super Bad) Pt2

Greetings all

How’s about some of the dead on the one, super heavy funk to help you get on up and over the hump?

The record I bring you today is one that I was seeking for a long time, before it ultimately turned up in a box of cheapies at a record show.

It looked a little distressed, but for three bucks I could not pass it by. When I got it home and dropped the needle it was immediately evident that I had made the right choice.

That said, this 45, released in 1970 and credited to Myra Barnes (and then parenthetically to Vicki Anderson, who is Myra Barnes and vice versa…) is a killer.

It is prime, funk 45 era James Brown-and associated action, with interjections by the king himself and some cool, fuzzed out guitar (which you get to hear a lot more of in Part 2) as well.

The thing that always puzzled me, is why the double billing?

Myra Barnes is the birth name of Vicki Anderson, one of the great divas of the James Brown organization.

She recorded for a variety of labels, under both names, but oddly enough not in chronological order, i.e. even though there are ‘Myra Barnes’ 45s released on the King label in 1970 and 1971, there are also Vicki Anderson 45s released before and after those (from 1967 to 1971).

Was James trying to break Myra/Vicki in any way possible, and playing any card available? Certainly the vocals on the Myra/Vicki 45s sound like the same person, so it’s not like she was working separate personas.

There was some fluctuation in the position of ‘main female singer’ in the James Brown revue with Myra/Vicki preceded by Anna King, replaced by Marva Whitney, and then returning to the fold before being replaced by Lyn Collins.

To complicate matters even further, she recorded again for Brown’s I-Dentify label under the name ‘Mommie-O’ in 1975.

In the end, Myra Barnes/Vicki Anderson/Mommie-O laid down some of the finest records of the classic funk era, and JB himself reportedly considered her to be the finest singer he ever worked with.

I hope you get down, dig the sounds, and I’ll see you 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).

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Funky16Corners Soul Club Rewind: Spindletop Early Set 1/10/11

By , December 9, 2012 3:32 pm

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Funky16Corners @ Spindletop – Early Set 1/10/11

Playlist

Cals – Stand Tall (Loadstone)
Jackie Hairston – Hijack (Atco)
JB & The V-Kings – Lazy Soul (Zap Zing!)
Bobby Cook and the Explosions – On the Way (Compose)
Ulysses Crockett – Major Funky (Transverse)
Three Souls – Chittlins Con Carne (Argo)
Prime Mates – Hot Tamales Pt1 (Sansu)
Fuzzy Kane Trio – Monday Monday (Bay Sound)
Roy Budd – Get Carter (Pye)
Mary Lou Williams – The Credo (Mary)
Mel Brown – Ode to Billie Joe (Impulse)
Jr Walker & the All Stars – Cleo’s Mood (Soul)
The Rhine Oaks – Tampin’ (Atco)
Dorothy Ashby – Soul Vibrations (Cadet)
Johnny Lytle – Screaming Loud (Tuba)

Listen/Download 80MB/256kb Mixed MP3

Greetings all.

As you all know, I spend as much (or more) time listening to the mixes I put together for Funky16Corners than anyone.

This has everything to do with the fact that all of the content here on the blog has to pass my own “ear test” before you hear it, so the mixes/posts reflect what I’m digging at any given point.

Though – due to circumstances beyond my control -I haven’t played out in more than a year, 2011 was an especially cool/busy time in that respect.

Between stints at Master Groove and Spindletop, and guest spots at Subway Soul (all NYC), Wooly Bully and Sweet Exorcist (both in Mass) I had plenty of opportunities to spin vinyl for groovy people.

The Spindletop night (at Botanica) was an especially cool night (while it lasted) because I had an exceptional amount of freedom in the styles of music I could spin as well as providing an opportunity to play especially long sets.

Back in January of last year, I had a chance to play almost three full hours of soul jazz 45s, and I decided to get things started with a slow-to-midtempo set.

The results – which you see before you (again) – ended up being one of my favorite sets* of the last few years, and I’ve cued it up on the iPod several times since then.

I decided that I’d re-post it for those that might have missed it the first time out.

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

Keep the faith

Larry

 

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*As mentioned when this was originally posted, the line-out on the house mixer was not functioning, so I spun and rerecorded this set live on my decks at home the following day.
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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.

Rex Garvin and the Mighty Cravers – Soul Food

By , November 29, 2012 3:20 pm

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Rex Garvin (ctr) and the Mighty Cravers


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Listen/Download Rex Garvin and the Mighty Cravers – Soul Food

Greetings all

We’ve all made it to the end of another week, so raise your glass and dig (the music, that is).

You simply must join me this (and every) Friday night at 9PM for the Funky16Corners Radio Show on Viva Radio. If you can’t hit us up at airtime, you can always pick up the show by subscribing as a podcast in iTunes, or by picking up an MP3 download in the Radio Show Archive here at the blog.

The tune I bring you to close out the week is an early one from the catalog of one of my all-time favorite soul groups, Rex Garvin and the Mighty Cravers.

Mr Garvin and his fellow cats were in fact responsible for one of my soulful Top 5, that being ‘I Gotta Go Now (Up On The Floor)’, one of the mightiest of all soul 45s, and a record guaranteed to get me shaking like a tomato aspic.

Today’s selection hails from nineteen and sixty three, when Rex was waxing heaters for the Keynote label.

While it is not the relentless head-banger that ‘I Gotta Go Now’ is, it is still quite groovy, mainly because it is a fine addition to the long list of “soul food” records.

That is in fact entitled ‘Soul Food’ only shortens the distance between two point, that being the space between the internet and your hungry ears.

While Rex engages in a somewhat reckless rhyme scheme – matching up ‘potato salad’ and ‘drive me mad’ –  the buffet he lays out is a tasty one indeed.

You can file this one on the big bridge between R&B and pure soul (leaning in the later direction), and I assure you that were you to drop this for a room full of well lubricated dancers your efforts would be rewarded with flights of terpsichorean madness.

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

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.

Papa Don Association – Souled Out

By , November 18, 2012 2:08 pm

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Papa Don Schroeder


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Listen/Download Papa Don Association – Souled Out

Greetings all

Welcome to another fine week here at the Funky16Corners.

The tune I bring you today is one of those records that I knew of, but hadn’t heard until very recently, when it turned up in a friend’s sale list.

If any part of the name Papa Don Association rings a bell, it might be because the man behind the record is in fact famed southern soul producer/songwriter Papa Don Schroeder.

Known to soul fans for his work with artists like James and Bobby Purify and Mighty Sam (and his familiar PDP logo on their 45s) Schroeder was a significant presence on the southern scene during the 1960s.

Released in 1968, the sole 45 by The Papa Don Association featured the song you see before you today – ‘Souled Out’ (credited to Schroeder) – and a reworking of Procol Harum’s ‘Whiter Shade of Pale’ on the flipside.

‘Souled Out’ is a certifiably mighty piece of funky southern soul.

The opening bass (some goddamn funky bass!) and drum combo out to be in some kind of hall of fame, and the rest of the song has a muscular, Booker T and the MG’s edge to it.

If you get the chance, slap on the headphones and turn up the volume and really listen to the drum sound. The back and forth between the snare roll and the bass drum (which almost echoes) is really something else.

I have had no luck in discovering who the ‘Papa Don Association’ actually was, but my suspicion leans in the direction of the American Studios crew in Memphis, with whom Schroeder worked extensively during the period. There’s a similarity here to Rosie Grier’s ‘Slow Drag’ that pushes me in that direction as well.

This is one you want to slap on in the heat of a particularly sweaty dance if only to kick things up just a little bit more. The pulse of ‘Souled Out’ conjures up the image of any number of fine frames being shaken and stirred vigorously.

This is a heater indeed, and I hope you dig it as much as I do.

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

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Billy Preston – Billy’s Bag

By , November 11, 2012 12:01 pm

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Billy Preston


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Listen/Download Billy Preston – Billy’s Bag

Greetings all

I hope that all is well in your corner of the world and that you’re all ready to hit the ground running this week.

The mighty Billy Preston has appeared in this space a few times before, including earlier this year with his Hammond instrumental ‘Greazee Pts 1&2’.

The track Ibring you today has dropped here as part of mix, but I only managed to score a copy of the 45 a few weeks back.

When I posted a list of my finds from the Allentown all-45 show, a friend requested that I post ‘Billy’s Bag’, so here it is.

Released in 1965 on the VeeJay label, ‘Billy’s Bag’ didn’t hit the charts in the US or the UK (where it was released on Sue) but it was a seminal record on the Mod Soul scene in the UK.

‘Mod Soul’ may be – from the outside – an amorphous concept, but I wouldn’t by lying if I said it was the driving force behind my listening for a long time.

As an collective genre,it encompassed soul jazz, R&B, uptempo blues, soul (of all varieties), and especially Hammond groovers (which fall inside all of the previously mentioned subgenres).

The sound was a huge part of the Mod lifestyle, as well as going on to inform much of the finest music to come out of the UK in the mid-60s.

Thanks to my own exposure to the Mod aesthetic – of which I was mostly an observer – Mod soul had a huge influence on the way I dig music, and I enjoy nothing better that spinning records for a crowd that shares that appreciation.

Preston spent the mid-60s as part of Ray Charles’s roadshow, and the flipsides of both of his VeeJay 45s were instrumental versions of Charles tunes (Don’t Let the Sun Catch You Crying and Drown In My Own Tears).

Without a doubt my all-time favorite cut by Preston, ‘Billy’s Bag’ is fast enough for the dance floor and has more than enough Hammond organ heat for the organ groove fan in me. The conga/cowbell percussion breaks are especially cool.

I really dig how Preston works the piano in the background as well.

‘Billy’s Bag’ made its mark on the Northern scene as well.

I hope you dig it, 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).

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Funky16Corners Presents: Out On the Floor – Funky16Corners 8th Anniversary Mix!

By , November 8, 2012 2:22 pm

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Ted Taylor – Love Is Like a Ramblin’ Rose (Okeh)
Stereos – I Feel Soul a Comin’ (Cadet)
Benny Gordon and the Soul Brothers – I Can’t Turn You Loose (RCA)
Choker Campbell and his 16 Piece Band – Wild One (Motown)
Joe Jeffrey Group – My Pledge of Love (Wand)
The Contours – First I Look at the Purse (Gordy)
Derek Martin – Sly Girl (Tuba)
Exciters – Blowing Up My Mind (RCA)
Ferris Wheel – Number One Guy (Philips)
Carl Carlton – Hold On To What You Got (Big Beat)
Ella Fitzgerald – Get Ready (Reprise)
High Keys – Living a Lie (Verve)
Dobie Gray – Out On the Floor (Charger)
Ronnie Dyson – Fever (Columbia)
Shirelles – No Doubt About It (Scepter)
The Tams – Trouble Maker (ABC)
Garnet Mimms – Prove It To Me (UA)
Marvelle and the Blue Mats – Mellow Man (Dynamic Sound)
Billy Butler – Boston Monkey (Okeh)

 

Listen/Download -Funky16Corners Presents Out On the Floor – 86MB Mixed Mp3/256K

Greetings all.

I hope all is well on your end.

It’s the end of the week again, so that means it’s Funky16Corners Radio Show time, this (and every) Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio. You can also come by this very spot on the weekend and pick yourself up an MP3 version of the show, or more than 100 previous episodes in the archive.
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I come to you this day a happy/relieved man.

The election is finally over, and by and large the results were ones that I would consider not only positive but encouraging.

I realize that not everyone agrees with that assessment, but I have also come to see that having stated my peace, there’s not much I can do about that.

I’m certainly not going to worry about it either.

There are those on the fringes that start with the violent rhetoric, but my suspicion is that they have neither the courage nor the wherewithal to follow through on their angry, anonymous threats.

The vast majority of the population will either get back to work in furtherance of their agenda, or will likely ignore the political scene until whipped once again into a fever pitch for the mid-terms.

I’m going to savor this all a little bit, and then go back to staying informed, a little less on edge that I have been for the past few months.

The other good news is, that this week marks the eighth anniversary of the founding of the Funky16Corners blog.

It was back in early November of 2004 that I made the leap from the Funky16Corners web zine (est. 2000) and decided to continue whipping the sounds and words on you all in a slightly more economical form.

There have been redirections (Blogger to WordPress to self-hosted WordPress) and a few minor policy changes (the unfortunate removal of the zip files) but there have also been improvements as well (like the Funky16Corners Radio Show and its archive).

Either way, the flow of music and history continues in force, and my passion for both remains as strong as ever.

My thanks goes out to all of you that have participated in the conversation along the way (readers and fellow bloggers), some of whom have become friends.

With any luck, we’ll all be celebrating these anniversaries for years to come.

The slogan of the Funky16Corners blog – borrowed from the Northern Soul movement in the UK – is ‘Keep the Faith’. These are words to live by, not only as a dedicated soul fan, but as someone with an eye on improving the world, in any way possible.

I “keep the faith” here by preaching and spreading the gospel of good music, not only to help keep it alive, but to remind as many people as possible of the importance of its transformative nature.

2012 has been an especially trying time in our house on a very deep, very frightening level.

The other day my son asked me what was most important to me in the world and I answered that family was number one, but music was next.

All great music is “soul” music in the broad sense because that’s where it hits you. It gets deep inside your brain and has the power to move your emotions (in many directions) and often enough, move your physical body, whether simply nodding your head, tapping your feet or lifting you out of your seat to dance.

If there is a guiding force behind Funky16Corners – the blog, or when I’m lucky enough to get out and spin records – that is it.

And that it shall stay.

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What you see before you is a new mix (previewed on Mixcloud a while back) composed of 45 solid minutes of dancers, most in the Northern Soul style.

There are lots of groovy 45s, a couple of unjustly ignored b-sides and an album track here and there.

A couple of these tracks have seen the light of day in this space individually, and a couple more may do so in the future.

Either way, they all ought to make you get up out of your seat and outon the floor (thanks Dobie!).

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

 

Keep the faith

Larry

 

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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

 

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.

Get Up, Get Into It, Get Involved: VOTE

By , November 4, 2012 3:30 pm

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Funky16Corners Radio v.89 – Things Got To Get Better (Get Together)

Playlist

Sir Joe Quaterman & Free Soul – So Much Trouble On My Mind (GSF)
Raymond Winnfield – Things Could Be Better (Fordom)
Spoken interlude: Malcolm X
Gene Chandler – In My Body’s House (Checker)
Nat Turner Rebellion – Plastic People (Delvaliant)
Spoken interlude: Noam Chomsky
Donny Hathaway – The Slums (Atco)
Spoken interlude: Dorothy Day
Sebastian – Living In Depression (Brown Dog)
Senor Soul – Don’t Lay Your Funky Trip On Me (Whiz)
Spoken interlude: Rev Martin Luther King Jr
Della Reese – Compared to What (Avco)
Impressions – Mighty Mighty (Spade and Whitey) (Curtom)
James Brown – Funky President (People It’s Bad) (Polydor)
Spoken interlude: Terence McKenna
James Brown – Get Up Get Into It Get Involved (King)
Spoken interlude: Saul Alinsky
Soul Searchers – We The People (Sussex)
Isley Brothers – Fight the Power (T-Neck)
Spoken interlude: Jesse Jackson
Stevie Wonder – We Can Work It Out (Tamla)
Unifics – People Got to Be Free (Kapp)
Spoken interlude: Michelle Obama
S.O.U.L. – Love Peace and Power (Musicor)
Mohawks – Baby Hold On (Cotillion)
Impressions – We’re a Winner (ABC)
Closing: Rev Martin Luther King Jr

Listen/Download – Funky16Corners Radio v.89 – Things Got To Get Better (GetTogether)

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Greetings all.
This mix first appeared here at Funky16Corners in late October of 2010.
When I first put it together, the occasion was the mid-term elections.
This was the first wave of Tea Party-related bullshit  here in the USA, and I am sad to say that in the two years since then, things have only gotten worse.
Despite the fact that President Obama pulled us back from the brink of a depression, the forces that opposed him and the progressive agenda in 2010 have only become entrenched.
The regressive agenda (and really, is there a better name?) is extremely well funded (thanks to the Citizens United decision) and the message of fear pushed by its representatives, both in government and the pundit class has (unfortunately) proven very popular.
As I mentioned when this was first published, the reaction to our tough economic times has not been one of joining hands to overcome, but sadly much closer to “I’ve got mine, now fuck off”.
It doesn’t help that this has come hand in hand with xenophobia, racism, and top-down class warfare.
The latter problem has no better personification that the Romney/Ryan ticket.
Here we have a plutocrat and his Rand-ian sidekick, telling Americans that tough times demand that we double down on the failed policies of trickle-down economics and telling those at the bottom of the ladder that they need to sacrifice so that the wealthiest among us can keep their beloved tax cuts.
The poisonous Gospel of John Galt has spread rapidly, convincing people that it’s somehow better to isolate themselves by building walls (real and imagined) instead of breaking them down.
The Republican coalition is a dangerous mixture of the most extreme voices in America.
We are bombarded by a cacophony of economic, religious and anti-scientific lunacy based in the purest definition of ignorance.
Turn on your TV or pick up a newspaper and be faced with voices and ideas that sound as if they are being piped in from a dark past, spouted by a Frankenstein’s monster stitched together from Cotton Mather, Ebenezer Scrooge, Ayn Rand and George Lincoln Rockwell.
To paraphrase Dean Wormer, “Lying, hateful and suspicious is no way to go through life, son.’
This shit has to stop.
Now.
Do you honestly think a few more dollars in your pocket are worth the suffering of others? Are you willing to curtail the civil rights of your fellow Americans because some religious fanatic tells you to?
I’m going to leave the original 2010 text (below) as is, because not that much has changed.
The names might be different, but the idiocy is the same.
Where Joe Miller, Sharon Angle and Christine O’Donnell are gone, Joe Walsh, Allen West, Richard Mourdock, Todd Akin, Paul Broun and many others have filled the gap.
Same insane shit, different election.
The bottom line is the same: you can go into the voting booth and pull the lever for progress, or for insanity.
That this election comes in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy should frame the decision we have to make very distinctly.
Those of us within the affected areas have to ask ourselves, would we want to depend on the party of privatization while we wait for recovery?
How long would we wait to get our utilities restored when ruled by the party of deregulation?
Think about those things.
Seriously, and as always…
Keep the Faith
Larry
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Originally Posted 10/2010

>>As first hinted at, then promised, and finally warned about (for those of you who are diametrically opposed politically), Funky16Corners Radio v.89 – Things Got To Get Better (Get Together), aka the ‘election mix’ has finally arrived, been posted at the top of the blog, where it will remain until the election is over.

I know I normally run Halloween themed posts this time of year, but we have real things to be scared about.
There is a Halloween set in this week’s Funky16Corners Radio Show on Viva Radio (Friday night at 9PM) so you can get your fix there.

As far as I can recall, I haven’t approached the readers of the Funky16Corners blog with anything sociopolitical since the ‘Two From the Stonewall Jukebox’ post back in July of 2009, and before that the posts about the Presidential election of 2008.

Though I think most of you have some idea of my political orientation, it’s not a frequent subject here, because ultimately Funky16Corners is about music.

However (big however coming here)…

We are currently in the midst of a very dark time, not just in the US, but worldwide.

The rise of the ultra-right and the ensuing anti-immigrant, anti-gay and ultimately anti-intellectual wave that is poised to wash away decades of important social gains in this country is the single most important issue at hand.

Having grown up in the 1970s, I find the idea that this great country would ever descend again into a maelstrom of religious lunacy, open hatred of immigrants and homosexuals, demonization of organized labor (especially teachers) and hateful, empty Rand-ian ‘libertarianism’ is beyond insane.

The economy is in terrible shape, and is unlikely to get better any time soon, and those that have been able to return to work often find that the salaries are lower and the benefits non-existent.

How have some of our countrymen reacted to these challenges?

Not well.

An increasingly angry minority, funded by the mega-rich have become a political force, eager to build fences (literal and figurative) to keep those they consider ‘undesirable’ from participating fully in our democracy.

The rise of these deeply ignorant ‘patriots’ (they love to wrap themselves in the flag, unable to embrace its true meaning), marching alongside religious ideologues and plutocrats has woven together a rancid fabric, its warp and weft rife with xenophobia, racism, class warfare, homophobia and various and sundry fringe hatreds.

You may step back and see these negative forces as smaller, separate issues, but the truth is that they are all part of the same, ugly reaction.

When the going got tough, the right got nasty.

Those institutions tasked with keeping us informed have collapsed under the collective weight of corruption by and collusion with those that have the most to gain by a population ignorant of the truth.

I still have a basic faith in the goodness of the human race, but it is being sorely tested.

I want my children to grow up in a world where they are indifferent to the color of a person’s skin, the language they speak or their sexual preference, but we are surrounded by those that would deny them that future.

This includes people of supposed deep religious faith who forget that their own freedom to worship and express the tenets of their faith includes the freedom of others to find their own path. These are the people who continually fight to deny gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender Americans their civil rights.

These are the people who want to rewrite the textbooks in our schools to cleanse them of science and fill them with creationism and revisionist (racial and political) history.

This also includes a lot of people, many of them radicalized after the attacks of 9/11, who have turned against American citizens of Muslim faith, and stoked fears (alongside similarly radicalized anti-Muslim forces in Europe and Scandinavia) of all Muslims, as well as immigrants in general.

These are the people who allowed 30 years of Republican propaganda to turn them against organized labor, while simultaneously building an obscene faith in big business that allowed massive deregulation and tax cuts, as well a cheering our way into two insane wars.

This is the same big business that – thanks to a bizarre Supreme Court decision – is now allowed to flood the political system with piles of cash (anonymously) to attack those that would put a stop to our slow (but seemingly inevitable) march to plutarchy.

Please don’t mistake this as an endorsement of President Obama specifically, or the Democrats in general.
Despite promises to the contrary, the President has continued to fight the right of gays to serve in the military, and has stated that he opposes the idea of gay marriage.

Many of those that serve with the (D) next to their name have also thrown their lot in with the ‘whatever big business wants’ crowd as well.

There may be something “trickling down” onto the middle class and the poor, but it’s not money.

However (another big one here), the alternative is people like Joe Miller in Alaska, Sharon Angle in Nevada, the execrable Rand Paul in Kentucky, deeply ignorant Christine O’Donnell in Delaware, Ken Buck in Colorado, Marco Rubio in Florida and countless others who have embraced the insane ideas of the radical right.
These people are only the larger public face of this movement.

While they run for national office, their foot soldiers are poised to fill seats in state legislatures, county and local office, and worst of all, school boards.

There are those that would have you believe that the system is utterly broken, and that an appropriate response is not to vote at all.

This is insane.

Is there any among you that really think that the way to right a staggering democracy is to withdraw from it?
Not only should every one of you exercise your right to vote, but you should do what you can to convince your family and friends that they should as well, because one thing the forces of the radical right do, religious or otherwise, is vote.

These are the people that are counting on apathy to help them get their hooks into the government where they can start to punch holes in the Constitution they ironically wave like a battle flag.

So what does this have to do with Funky16Corners?

Like the mighty James Brown says:

People, people we got to get over before we go under!

Tell’em Godfather!

The majority of the soul and funk music we celebrate here was created during a time when the forces of the right were attempting to tighten the screws of the status quo, while the forces of peace, racial equality and sexual liberation were battling in the streets (and the ballot box) to upend it and seize their rights.

Soul and funk are the sounds of struggle and liberation. Not every number here has an explicit political/social message, but the music of black America, created in the 60s and 70s in its core rarely says anything else.
Funky16Corners Radio v.89 is an attempt to string some of the more powerful musical statements of the time together, along with spoken intervals by important thinkers.

Things get off to a depressing, yet wholly realistic start, but work their way up through anger, defiance and ultimately (hopefully) triumph.

Not every number here carries an explicit message, but taken together they make an important statement.
The voices heard between the songs include some very well known (civil rights figures like Dr Martin Luther King, Malcolm X and Jesse Jackson), and some lesser known (Dorothy Day*), and in a few cases dreadfully misunderstood and demonized (Saul Alinsky**, Noam Chomsky), but their words all have in common is their relevance to the world we live in today.

I’m not saying that things are going to be fixed if the opponents of democracy are defeated in this election (since many of them clearly won’t be), but rather (to borrow an old saw) the journey of 1,000 miles begins with a single step, and stepping into the voting booth and making yourself heard is that step.

Far too many Americans take a pass on that important responsibility, and if they continue to do so, they’ll have no one to thank but themselves when the world around them gets worse.

So, once again in the words of James Brown:

Get Up, Get Into It, Get Involved.

Educate yourself.

Educate others.

Don’t allow hatred and disinformation to go unchallenged.

Don’t be afraid.

Peace

Larry<<

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*Dorothy Day is an especially important figure in the history of social justice and charity. If her name is unfamiliar, dig a little deeper and read about this great woman.

**Saul Alinsky has been demonized by the right to the point where his name has become a kind of shorthand (with just the tiniest bit of anti-semitism attached to it) for leftist subversion. I doubt most of the people that throw his name around as an epithet have read anything about him. His voice – like most of those in this mix – was an important one in the struggle to transfer power from the haves to the have nots (which goes a long way to explaining why those that shill for the mega-rich hate him so). If all you’ve ever heard about him are bad things, do yourself a favor and read up on his life (outside of right wing web sites).

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Betty Harris – Mojo Hannah

By , November 1, 2012 2:37 pm

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Miss Betty Harris


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Listen/Download Betty Harris – Mojo Hannah

Greetings all

The conclusion of another week is close at hand, so I must remind you of the weekly celebration of soul known as the Funky16Corners Radio Show. Yours truly whips the best in funk, soul, jazz and rare groove (all on vinyl) upon the airwaves of the interwebs each and every Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio. As always, if you canot be there at the time of broadcast, you can always pick up the show by subscribing to it as a podcast in iTunes, or grabbing an MP3 download here at the blog.

We’re still in the midst of post-hurricane chaos, i.e. no power, no wifi (publishing prepared posts from the iphone) and no idea when things might get better.

Right now I have another week or so of posts left until I run out. If the power isn’t back by then we may have to relocate.

The record I bring you today is one of those atomic hotfoot, get off your ass and dive into the weekend things I like to drop on a Friday.

If you drop by here with any regularity, or back in the old Funky16Corners web zine days, you already know that Miss Betty Harris is a huge favorite of mine.

The remarkable sides she recorded in New Orleans with Allen Toussaint (for Sansu and SSS Intl) are rightly regarded as classics and ought to be included in any respectable survey of female soul singing of the classic era.

Oddly enough, though her NOLA-based sides are incredible, none of them (with the exception of 1967s ‘Nearer To You’, which was R&B Top 20) came close to the success of her 1963 cover of Solomon Burke’s ‘Cry To Me’, which made the R&B Top 10 and very nearly the Pop Top 20.

Harris recorded three 45s (an another unreleased track) for the Jubilee label in 1963 and 1964, the last of which was today’s selection, her version of the oft-recorded ‘Mojo Hannah’.

Produced by none other than the mighty Lieber and Stoller, Harris’s version of ‘Mojo Hannah’ is just this side of completely fucking nuts (and I mean that in the best way possible).

She takes the song at a breakneck pace, so fast that there area couple of points where she appears to run short of breath.

The arrangement is very cool, marked by a deep, twangy lead guitar, Ikette-esque backing vocals and horn accents.

It is one of the greatest vocals that Betty Harris ever laid down, and ought to be much better known.

I hope you dig it (and if you haven’t explore Miss Harris’s discography), and I’ll see you on Monday.

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

 

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.

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