Category: Northern Soul

F16C Rewind Pt2: Baby You’ve Got It

By , August 21, 2012 6:22 pm

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Lou Courtney – Me And You Doing The Boogaloo (Riverside)
Jackie Lee – The Shotgun & The Duck (Mirwood)
Spinners – Sweet Thing (Tamla)
Fontella Bass & Bobby McClure – Don’t Mess Up A Good Thing (Checker)
Formations – At The Top Of The Stairs (MGM)
Young Holt Unltd – California Montage (Brunswick)
Ethics – Look At Me Now (Vent)
Volcanos – Storm Warning (Arctic)
Jackie Wilson – I Get The Sweetest Feeling (Brunswick)
Henry Lumpkin – Soul Is Taking Over (Buddah)
Maurice & The Radiants – Baby You’ve Got It (Chess)
Broadways – You Just Don’t Know How (MGM)
Smokey Robinson & The Miracles – Going To A Go Go (Tamla)
San Remo Golden Strings – I’m Satisifed (Ric Tic)
Lorraine Ellison – Call Me Anytime You Need Some Lovin’ (Mercury)
Fascinations – Girls Are Out To Get You (Mayfield)
Darrell Banks – Our Love Is In The Pocket (Revilot)
Billy Butler & The Chanters – Nevertheless (Okeh)
Cooperettes – Shingaling (Brunswick)
Bernard Williams & The Original Blue Notes – It’s Needless To Say (Harthon)
Bobby Taylor & The Vancouvers – If You Love Her Let Her Go (Gordy)
Marvelows – I Do (ABC)
Olympics – Good Lovin’ (Loma)
Rex Garvin & The Mighty Cravers – I Gotta Go Now (Up On The Floor) (Like)

Listen/Download -Funky16Corners Rewind: Baby You’ve Got It – 83MB Mixed Mp3

Greetings all.

Welcome to the middle of Funky16Corners Rewind week.

This time out we have an old fave of mine, a Northern Soul mix that I did for the good folks at the Hook and Sling blog back in 2008.

‘Baby You’ve Got It’ (title take from one of my personal Top 5) is one of the first Northern-style mixes I did, and I still dig giving it a spin now and then.

You get stops in Philly, Chicago, Detroit, LA and several other points on the map.

The set list is packed with classics from beginning to end.

I hope you dig it, and I’ll be back with some funky disco on Friday.

 

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.

Carl Davis 1934 – 2012

By , August 12, 2012 11:32 am

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Carl Davis

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Clockwise from top left: Major Lance, Walter Jackson, Jackie Wilson, Billy Butler
Below: The Artistics

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Listen/Download Billy Butler – Right Track
Listen/Download Billy Butler – I’ll Bet You
Listen/Download Major Lance – Too Hot To Hold
Listen/Download Walter Jackson – Funny (Not Much)
Listen/Download Jackie Wilson – I Get the Sweetest Feeling
Listen/Download The Artistics – What Happened

Greetings all and welcome to another week here at the intersection of all things soulful.

It was near the end of last week that I heard that the great producer Carl Davis had passed away.

If you’re a fan and/or collector of classic Chicago soul, his is a name that looms large (and appears constantly at the bottom of 45 labels).

Davis was one of the first black A&R men and one of the most important producers involved in soul music during the 60s.

He produced countless classic sessions for the Okeh and Brunswick labels, both crucibles for the development of the Chicago “sound”.

While I would not classify myself as an expert on Chicago soul, I am without any shadow of a doubt a huge fan and devotee thereof.

Many of my favorite soul 45s came out of the Windy City, and Carl Davis was the producer on many of those.

Davis worked with a wide variety of performers, solo artists and groups, and his style was marked by the ability tomake records that were simultaneously lush and economical.

Few had Davis’s ability create records so full of life and dynamic range yet utterly uncluttered.

He could layer rhythm sections, horns, strings and vocals and still manage to have the various elements inhabit their own distinct spaces.

His productions were bright, exciting and sometimes even explosive.

Though Davis produced some of the biggest hit records to come out of Chicago, I’d like to feature a couple of lesser known killers as well.

Davis worked extensively with Major Lance and produced ‘Um Um Um Um Um’, but my fave Davis/Lance collab is ‘Too Hot To Hold’, which made it into the outer reaches of the R&B Top 40 in 1965. Check out the way the smoothness of the female backing vocals almost (but not quite) clash with the over-the-top-ness of the male voices, especially the ‘Hey! Hey! Hey!’s.

Billy Butler has always been the connoiseur’s choice when it comes to Chitown soul singers. While never as successful as his older brother Jerry, he did manage to place four sides into the R&B Top 40 between 1965 and 1971.

‘Right Track’, from 1966 is rightly regarded as a soul anthem. It features a unstoppable arrangement that builds gradually, never overwhelming Butler’s vocals.

A year later, Butler would record one of the best versions of the oft covered George Clinton/Sidney Barnes/Theresa Lindsey classic ‘I’ll Bet You’. Whereas later versions (Funkadelic, Jackson 5) take the song at a slow, almost sinister tempo, Butler’s version moves along at a brisk pace, which made it a favorite on Northern Soul dance floors. The production is wonderful, but the recording of the drums especially is remarkable. Limited largely to the closed hi-hat and the snare (with occasional handclaps and congas) , Davis kept the drums high  in the mix, allowing them to drive the record without smothering the rest of the band.

It remains one of my favorite sides on Brunswick.

Davis also did a lot of work with balladeer Walter Jackson. Though he’s not as well remembered as many of his contemporaries, Jackson chocked up a significant number of R&B hits between 1964 and his untimely death in 1983.

I first heard ‘Funny (Not Much)’ some years ago on a comp, and promptly fell in love with it. I’m not surprised that the record – from 1966 – didn’t chart. The jazzy, supper club arrangement sounds about 10 years past its prime, but is undeniably beautiful. The arrangement is lush with strings, yet Davis lets the piano, guitar and vibes pop up into the mix just enough to lend the record an air of intimacy. Jackson’s voice is remarkable, yet just flawed enough to be interesting.

The best known record featured today is a longtime favorite, Jackie Wilson’s ‘I Get the Sweetest Feeling’. Grazing the R&B Top 10 (as well as the Pop Top 40) in the summer of 1968, ‘I Get the Sweetest Feeling’ is the biggest hit of the Davis productions on this list.

‘I Get the Sweetest Feeling’ is two minutes and forty three seconds of absolute perfection. One of those soul records that is soulful yet almost pure pop, lush yet also danceable, and featuring one of Jackie Wilson’s finest vocals. ‘I Get the Sweetest Feeling’ is also an example of a perfectly produced side.

Davis brings in the vocals, strings, drums, backing vocals and horns, maintaining the perfect amount of space between them all, allowing Wilson’s voice to ride effortlessly atop the whole thing. The record is bright and open, without ever going over the top, restrained without ever making you think your missing something.

Like all of the finest records, the ultimate intersection of art and craft.

The final record I bring you is in many ways the most experimental, progressive 45 on this list.

The Artistics were around on the fringes of the Chicago scene, working as backing vocalists on Okeh sessions for Davis, eventually recording a handful of singles for the label.

They moved on to Brunswick in 1966 and hit the charts a few times over the next five years.

‘What Happened’ was released in 1967, and as I said when I first wrote about the record back in 2009, it is one of the finest examples of baroque, almost psychedelic touches working their way onto the soul palette. Davis (who produced with Eugene Record) brings in fuzz guitar, string quartet, organ and piano to lay down a foundation for the Artistics build their mighty harmonies on.

It never fails to amaze me that a record this good failed to chart.

Carl Davis went on to form the Dakar and Chi Sound labels, eventually working with – and making hits for – almost every major Chicago-based artist.

He was a master and he 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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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.

Clydie King – ‘Bout Love

By , August 7, 2012 1:45 pm

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Clydie King (top) with the Raelettes:
(clockwise from top left) Alex Brown, Clydie King, Gwen Berry, Merry Clayton.


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Listen/Download Clydie King – ‘Bout Love

Greetings all

Welcome to the middle of another glorious week.

The tune I bring you today is a longtime favorite of mine, by a singer that you’ve probably all heard (whether you knew it or not).

As a youngster, back in the days of LPs and album covers, I – and my friends – used to spend a lot of time perusing record jackets, and after memorizing band line-ups, registering (almost subliminally) the names of what might, for lack of better term, be called the “support staff”, i.e. backing singers, horn sections, percussionists and producers (among others).

As I grew older, and had years of stuffing factoids into my fevered brain, and became a collector of soul and funk in earnest, some of those names began to pop up again, and again.

Among those names, one that loomed large was that of Miss Clydie King.

Truth be told, I can seldom say ‘Clydie King’ without also saying ‘Venetta Fields’ and ‘Sherlie Matthews’ the women with whom she was often grouped in background singing duties.

As the Blackberries, they provided harmonies for Joe Cocker. Humble Pie, Leon Russell, Bob Dylan, the Rollings Stones, Steely Dan, Barbra Streisand (she appears with Streisand in ‘A Star Is Born’) and countless others.

Interestingly, many of these singers, including King, got their start as Raelettes, alongside the mighty Merry Clayton.

King recorded her first 45 – as Little Clydie and the Teens – at the age of 13 in 1956.

She went on to record in groups, duets (with both Mel Carter and Jimmy Holiday) and as a solo for more than a dozen labels between the mid-50s and the late 70s.

The tune I bring you today hails from her 1971 LP for the storied Lizard label.

Founded by producer Gabriel Mekler, Lizard released titles by King, Nolan Porter, Paul Humphrey and heavy rock by bands like Frantic and Jamul.

I originally picked up King’s ‘Direct Me’ LP (with one of the greatest low-rent design jobs I’ve ever seen) because it contained a cover of a fave song of mine, Gladys Knight’s ‘You Need Love Like I Do’.

Once I got the record home, it was the track I bring you today that really grabbed me. It was several years before I found a copy of the 45.

‘Bout Love’, which has a certain amount of popularity amongst the Northern Soulies (rightfully so) builds perfectly into an anthemic chorus that packs enough power to get any lazy ass up off of the sidelines and onto the dance floor.

The album features Billy Preston on keys (King and Preston had sung together in church as teenagers and they worked together with Ray Charles) , Paul Humphrey on drums and David T Walker (who can be heard to great effect on ‘Bout Love’) on guitar.

King continued to work as a backing singer and recording with the Blackberries, and Brown Sugar.

She seems to have been out of the business for many years.

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

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In other, most excellent news, the mighty Bo-Keys featuring Percy Wiggins have a new single (Writing On the Wall b/w I’m Still In Need) and if you can drag yourselves over to Soundcloud you can stream both sides!

You can dig it here!

Read more about the Bo-Keys here.

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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.

Funky16Corners Presents: All Strung Out

By , July 29, 2012 3:17 pm

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Funky16Corners Presents: All Strung Out


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

 

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

Greetings all.

Welcome to another week here at Funky16Corners.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

I’ll be back later in the week.

Until then

 

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

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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.

Willie Hutch – Brother’s Gonna Work It Out / Vampin’

By , July 26, 2012 12:13 pm

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Willie Hutch


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Listen/Download Willie Hutch – Brother’s Gonna Work It Out (45 Edit)

Listen/Download Willie Hutch – Vampin’ (from The Mack OST)

Greetings all

The week is coming to a close so I’ll remind you that the Funky16Corners Radio Show will be hitting the airwaves of the interwebs Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio. The following day you can pick up an MP3 of the show via iTunes or over at the Funky16Corners Blog.

The tunes I bring you today are prime examples of the finest sounds being made during the apex of the ‘Blaxploitation’ era.

A few years back I was down digging/spinning at the DC record show and was lucky enough to have an exceptionally good day in the stacks, walking away with several long-time wants on 45 and LP, among them, the soundtrack to the 1973 film (one of the finest of the genre) ‘The Mack’.

The flick starred Max Julien and Richard Pryor, and had the great good fortune of having its soundtrack composed by the mighty Willie Hutch.

Born in LA but raised in Texas, Willie Hutch (born William McKinley Hutchinson) returned to the West Coast in the mid-60s, eventually finding work as an writer/producer/arranger for the 5th Dimension.

He was later called in to write lyrics for the song that would become ‘I’ll Be There’ and after the song became a hit for the Jackson Five, Hutch went to work for Motown.

While at the label he recorded several albums under his own name, as well as the soundtracks for ‘The Mack’ and ‘Foxy Brown’.

The two tunes I bring you today both hail from the soundtrack to ‘The Mack’.

The first is the 45 edit/hit version (R&B Top 20 in 1973) of ‘Brother’s Gonna Work It Out’. A great feature for Hutch as both vocalist and guitarist, it’s also hard not to compare it to Curtis Mayfield’s award winning work on the ‘Superfly’ soundtrack from the previous year.
While Hutch’s production is more dense and hard-hitting than Mayfield’s, ‘Brother’s Gonna Work It Out’ has that Curtis vibe to it.

That said, it is a dynamite track, with classy strings (and harp!), wah wah guitar and a great falsetto vocal by Hutch.

The second cut, ‘Vampin’ (from the soundtrack album) is a change of pace, almost more of a musical interlude than a proper song, but a groovy one indeed. The horns almost have a touch of Norman Whitfield to them, and Hutch lays down some exceptional guitar lines throughout.

As I said, Hutch went on to record several albums for Motown, leaving Motown in 1977 to work with Norman Whitfield, then returning to the label in 1982. He eventually left the label and returned to Texas in the 1990s.

I hope you dig the tracks, and I’ll see you all back here 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.

The Poets – She Blew a Good Thing

By , July 10, 2012 12:31 pm

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Listen/Download The Poets – She Blew a Good Thing

Greetings all.

We’re in the middle of another (literally and figuratively) hot week here at Funky16Corners.

The tune I bring you today is an old fave of mine, and a you’d be hard pressed to find yourselves a sweeter bit of mid-60s soul.

‘She Blew a Good Thing’ by the Poets is one of those classic 45s that is eminently danceable, laden with sweet, soulful harmonies and packed with enough hooks to get you singing along.

One of two groups with the same name working in different parts of New York City (the other Poets recorded for Red Bird and eventually formed the basis for 70s hitmakers the Main Ingredient), the Poets recorded three 45s for Juggy Murray’s Symbol records in the mid-60s.

Led by Ronnie Lewis (who gets co-writing credit with Murray), the Poets also featured Melvin Bradford, Paul Fulton and Johnny James).

‘She Blew a Good Thing’ made it all the way to #2 on the R&B charts (scraping the outer limits of the Pop Top 40) in the spring of 1966.

The song is a longtime fave on the Northern Soul scene in the UK, where the group was billed (due to the existence of the storied Scottish beat band the Poets) as the American Poets.

Donald Height did his own (radically different) version of the tune for Jubilee in 1969.

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

Keep the faith

Larry

 

Example
___________________________________________________________________________________________
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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.

Len Barry – I Struck It Rich

By , June 28, 2012 3:00 pm

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Len Barry
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Listen/Download Len Barry – I Struck It Rich

Greetings all.

The end of another week is here, and so is your weekly dose of soul in the form of the Funky16Corners Radio Show. We take to the airwaves of the interwebs this – and every – Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio. If you can’t be there at the time of broadcast you can always fall by the blog and grab the show (or any of the previous 100+ episodes) in MP3 form.

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Also, in other news, my man Eilon Paz, photographer and founder of the Dust and Grooves site is having a show of his vinyl portraiture (he featured yours truly back in the day) at the Tropicalia In Furs store, with an opening event Friday night July 6th from 7-10PM.

There will be photos from his various D&G features, as well as vinyl (natch) DJ sets by my man DJ Prestige and the mighty Supreme La Rock.

You might even see a picture of me!

If time and life allows I’m going to try to make it out to this one. I hope to see you there!

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The tune I bring you today is an old favorite of mine.

Len Barry is a name that should be familiar to soul fans, especially with a focus on the sounds of Philadelphia.

Barry – nee Leonard Borisoff – got his first taste of chart success as a member of the Dovells.

He first hit big in 1965 with the brilliant ‘1-2-3’ in the summer of 1965, which almost hit #1 Pop and grazed the R&B Top 10.

When I describe that record as ‘brilliant’ I’m not kidding. It was written by Barry with John Madara and David White (both Philly mainstays) and sports a stunning arrangement by Jimmy Wisner.

Barry is one of a number of soulful white singers from the Philly/Baltimore axis, including Billy Harner (more on him in a moment), Daryl Hall (then in the Temptones), and Bob Brady (of the Conchords).

Barry’s Decca sides from 1965 and 1966 are excellent and worth seeking out (including his improbably cool version of ‘Somewhere’ from West Side Story).

The number I bring you today charted regionally in the Northeast in the summer of 1966 (almost exactly a year after ‘1-2-3’).

The first time I heard ‘I Struck It Rich’ it was via the version by the aforementioned Billy Harner.

Harner, a Philly-area native (south Jersey actually) recorded a grip of fantastic records in the 60s for a variety of local and nationally distributed labels. His version of ‘I Struck It Rich’ takes a slightly rougher tack that Barry’s, and a for a while it was my favored version of the two.

However, as the years went on, and I got deeper into the stylish sounds of Northern Soul, Len Barry’s improved greatly in my eyes (and ears, of course).

Co-written by Barry with the mighty Gamble and Huff (and arranged again, by Wisner) ‘I Struck It Rich’ is up there with the best of Philly soul.

As a vocalist, Barry is much closer to the Smokey Robinson mold (not as close as Bob Brady…) than Harner, a rougher singer with a deeper register.

That all said, I’d be happy spinning either version for dancers.

I hope you dig the tune 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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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 2012 Pledge Drive / Allnighter

By , June 17, 2012 4:24 pm

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Greetings all.

Welcome to the third annual Funky16Corners Pledge Drive/Allnighter!

Though we’ve been doing the Pledge Drive thing since2006, the Allnighter concept first rolled out in 2010, with several hours of mixes by some of the finest selectors I know.

This year we have most of the usual suspects, including several Asbury Park 45 Sessions alumni, as well as my man Tony C from the UK and Tarik Thornton.

The sounds run the gamut of classic soul, funk, reggae, rock steady, old school Hammond 45s and all connective points in between.

If you read the blog on the reg you already know that the past year has been an exceptionally challenging one here.
It wouldn’t be reaching to state that keeping Funky16Corners (and Iron Leg) up and running had a lot to do with maintaining my sanity over the last eight months.

There’s something to be said for keeping a small island of creative stability afloat during a crisis, and that’s what the blog has been.

Much of that has – as always – come from the interchange with the readers, listeners, fellow vinyl travelers, and DJs. Your contributions, whether informational, conversational, sometimes monetary or sometimes all of the above, have kept Funky16Corners rolling along.

This November will mark the 8th anniversary of the blog (something akin to 800 internet years!) and creating and running the blog has become a big part of my life. Through it I’ve learned a great deal, met many incredibly cool people and gotten to DJ in many, many cool places.

The Pledge Drive aspect of this yearly event is an important one.

Funky16Corners – all of the text, graphics and sound files – resides on paid server space, a bill that comes due around this time every year. Your donations help pay for that.

Blogging has always been an ephemeral pursuit, partly because not everyone has the interest in keeping one going for very long, but also because it rarely rises above the level of a casual pursuit for most people. They start a blog, post most files temporarily and depart as soon as their interest wanes.

Funky16Corners may very well have gone the way of most blogs (I don’t know the actual percentage of music blogs that last more than a year, but anecdotally I’d guess that it’s below 10%) but after getting it rolling (with a slightly different format) in 2004, and changing platforms twice (finally ending up with the self-hosting WordPress model) I think we have at long last settled into lasting form.

The basic format of how I communicate with the audience through the blog has always remained fairly constant, with a pictures and labels (what the vinyl nerds of the world know as record porn) and some written context to tie it all together.

Along the way, the Funky16Corners Radio Podcast mixes worked their way into the flow, then the actual Funky16Corners Radio Show (Friday nights at 9PM on Viva Radio and then archived here) and then in 2010 the Funky16Corners Soul Club/Allnighters so I could present mixes by other selectors.

What we have now, in the middle of 2012 is –including this year’s Allnighter mixes – close to 150 mixes and another 110 episodes of the radio show on-line for your (and my) listening pleasure.

And my friends, pleasure is what it’s all about; the pleasure that great music, some rare, some not so rare, can bring to those willing to open their ears.

That’s why I do it, and as always, I hope you dig it.

If you do, and you can afford to, please click on the Paypal link and drop a few coins in the basket.

There’ll be stickers for everyone that donates.

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So, I’ll offer you my thanks once again, and hopefully we’ll all be together again this time next year for more of the same.

Keep the Faith
Larry

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CLICK HERE TO DONATE!




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Funky16Corners Presents: Tear It Up
Billy Wade and the 3rd Degrees – Tear It UP Pt1 (ABC)
Alvin Cash and the Scott Bros Orchestra – Keep On Dancing Pt2 (Toddlin’ Town)
Jerry-O – Funky Four Corners (White Whale)
Gunga Din – Snake Pit (Valise)
Lou Donaldson – Say It Loud (Blue Note)
James Young and the Housewreckers – Barking Up the Wrong Tree (Jet Stream)
Rex Garvin and the Mighty Cravers – Raw Funky (Tower)
Syl Johnson – Annie Got Hot Pants Power Pt2 (Twinight)
African Echoes – Big Time (Phil LA of Soul)
Bill Cosby – I Luv Myself Better Than I Luv Myself (Capitol)
Bobby Byrd – Keep On Doin’ What You’re Doin’ (Brownstone)
Lonnie Youngblood – African Twist Pt1 (Loma)
Little Sonny – Sonny’s Bag (Revilot)
Jimmy ‘Mr Motion’ Lynch – There Was a Time Pt1 (La Val)
Juggy – Buttered Popcorn (Sue)
Creative Funk – Funk Power (Creative Funk)
Freddy King – Funky (Cotillion)
Billy Wade and the 3rd Degrees – Tear It Up Pt2 (ABC)

Listen/Download Funky16Corners – Tear It Up!
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DJ Bluewater – Merritones
The Zodiacs Walk On By
The Ethiopians Miss Nora
Merritone Singers House Upon The Hill
The Renegades Mr. Hops
Don Henry As Long As I Live
Joe Higgs You Hurt My Soul
The Untouchables I Do Love You
The Renegades Big And Fine
Henry Buckley If I Am Right
The Untouchables Mackie Mackie
The Dynamites If You Did Love Me
Roland Alphonso Sounds Of Silence
Lyn Taitt and The Jets Why Am I Treated So Bad
Roland Alphonso Stranger For Durango
Henry Buckley Thank You Girl
The Tartans It’s Not Right
Eddie Perkins I’m Coming Home
Hopeton Lewis Everybody Rocking
Tomorrow’s Children Bang Bang Rock Steady
The Tartans Rolling Rolling

Listen/Download DJ Bluewater – The Merritone Hour
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DJ Prestige – Hotter Fire

Big Youth – Hotter Fire/Negusa Negast Records
Tapper Zukie – Woman Ah No Me Trouble/ Mobiliser
Success All Stars – Doctor Satan Echo Chamber/ Striker Lee
Augustus Pablo – Fat Girl/ Echo Records
Winston Groovy – Dancing Shoes/ Pioneer International
Barrington Levy – Time Hard/ Puff Records
Gregory Isaacs – Night Nurse/ African Museum (Disco 45)
Marcia Griffiths – Feel Like Jumping/ High Note
Joy White – Tribulation/ Joe Gibbs International
Dennis Brown – Jah Can Do It/ Joe Gibbs International
Jackie Mittoo – Revolting Rockers/ Third World Records
Rockers All Stars – Fire Dub/ Rockers International

Listen/Download DJ Prestige – Hotter Fire
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Tony C – 45 Heaven
Queen City Soul Band-True Patron Of The Arts-Pow
Freddie Scott-I’ll Be Gone-Shout
Betty Everett-Too Hot To Hold-Veejay
Fred Hughes-I Keep Tryin’-Ex
Little Flint-Pain-Beast
Larry Williams-Boss Lovin’-Smash
Garnett Mimms-Prove It To Me-U.A
Gene Chandler-Mr Bigshot-Constellation
Otis Williams-Aint Gonna Walk Your Dog No More-Okeh
Wilson Pickett-Baby Call On Me-Double L
Moss Tolbert-Money In My Pocket-Veejay
Jimmy Ricks-Daddy Rollin’ Stone-Atco
Georgie Fame-Green Onions-Columbia
Solomon Burke-Peepin’-Atlantic
JJ Barnes-Wont You Let Me Know-Rich
Pearl Woods-Right Now-Charge
Jackie Wilson/Linda Hopkins-Say I do-Brunswick
Big Boy Myles-She’s So Fine-V.Tone
B.B.King-Heartbreaker-Bluesway
Peppermint Harris-Wait Until It Happens To You-Jewel
James Duncan-Too Hot To Hold-King
Anna King-Mamas Got A Bag Of Her Own-End
Little Oscar-Two Foot Drag-Toddlin Town
Seven Souls-Groove In-Venture
Patriza&Jimmy-Trust Your Child-ALA
Smokey Brooks-Spin Jig It-Now
Rodger Collins-Foxy Girls In Oakland-Galaxy
Al Reed-94/44/100 Pure Love-Axe
Roland Alphonso-Hip Hug Her-JJ
Eddie Holland-Gotta Have Your Love-Motown
Little Willie John-You’re Welcome To Try-V.R.C
Grady Tate-All Around The World-Skye

Listen/Download Tony C – 45 Heaven

A word from Tony: This is my third year of supplying a mix for the pledge drive and as always it is an honour and a pleasure to be asked by Larry to particiipate.Especially with the great line up of DJ’s sharing their quality tunes.”45 Heaven” is a collection of 45s ,with the exception of one LP track that I have aquired over the last year or so.I have tried to include a bit of everything that I enjoy listening to. Hope you do too.

Cheers TonyC.
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Tarik Thornton – Getting the Corners
1.Sweet Delights- Baby Be Mine – ATCO
2.Jay Rhythm- Soul Emotion- Leo
3.T.S.U. Tornados- The Goose- Atlantic
4.Syl Johnson- I Feel The Urge – Twinight
5.Dell Ingrid – Try It You’ll Like It- Ultra-Class
6.Johnnie Mae Matthews – Momma Didn’t Lie- Big Hit
7.Maurice Mckinnies and the Fabulous Champions – Sock – A – Poo Poo Pt.2 – Black & Proud
8.Count Rockin Sidney – Do You Stuff – Gold Band
9. Ernest Thomas – Soul Time- International
10.Boogie Kings- Do Em All- Pic 1
11.Bobby Rush- Let All Hang Out- Salem
12.Dennis Lee- Do The Funky Penguin- Jenmark
13.O.D. Williams – Funky Belly- Bar Bare
14.Isaac Clark- Do The Dog Funk- Miro
15.Willie Tee- Funky Funky Twist- Gatur
16.George Holmes- Panama- Carol
17.Hamilton Movement – Having A Set- Look- Out
18.Louis Villery- Black Water Gold- Soul Power
19.Jesse Green – Flip- Red Bus Tempo
20.Donald Byrd- Change- Blue Note
21 Young & Holt Unlimited – Black & White- Cotillion

Listen/Download Tarik Thornton – Getting the Corners
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DJ Prime Mundo – Prime Cuts
gene harris/the three sounds – hey girl (blue note)
melvin sparks – if you want my love (westbound)
johnnie taylor – love in the streets (stax)
jackie edwards – oh manio (direction)
rhetta hughes – sooky (tetragrammaton)
john gibbs & the unlimited sound of steel orchestra – shaft (makossa)
gabor szabo – gypsy ’66 (impulse)
jon lucien – would you believe in me (rca)
osibisa – kotoku (warner bros)
the festivals – checkin’ out (blue rock/mercury)
shall we dance – somebody’s baby (hoctor)
freddy king – funky (cotillion)
giorgio – lord releaseme (dunhill)
delegation – oh honey (state)

Listen/Download DJ Prime Mundo – Prime Cuts
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M-Fasis: ROUND TRIP TICKET: excursions into funk, soul, rock and back’…
1)Paul Revere- Beastie Boys ‘MCA R.I.P. (Def Jam)
2)Down in Black Bottom- Cannonball Adderley Quintet (Capitol)
3)Scuze Uz Y’all- Brenda & The Tabulations (Top and Bottom)
4)Mean Black Snake- J.W. Alexander (Thursh)
5)L.C. Funk- Lee Williams (Rapda)
6)Midnight Flower- The Four Tops (Dunhill)
7)Sweetback- Viola Wills (Supreme)
8)Ready or Not- Delfonics (Bell)
9)Mississippi Foxhole- Midnight Movers (Buddah)
10)You’re the Fool- Three Degrees (Roulette)
11)It’s Amazing- Johnny Taylor (Stax)
12)The Stretch- Detroit Sex Machines (Soul Track)
13)Synthetic Substitution- Melvin Bliss (Sunburst)
14)Too Hot To Hold- Tina Turner (Pompeii)
15)I’m Unconscious- Sugarcane Harris (Epic)
16)Down to the Nightclub- Tower of Power (Warner)
17)Wish you’d Never Been Born- Jodo (Decca)
18)Hard Times- Zoo (Riviera)
19)You Made Me a Believer- Ruby Andrews (Zodiac)
20)What Time It Is- General Crook (Down to Earth)
21)Light My Fire- Rhetta Hughes (Tetragrammaton)
22)El Paso County Jail- The Happenings (Jubilee)
23)And Then There Was…- Cozy Powell (RAK)
24)Utica Club Natural Carbonation Band- Natural Carbonation (RCA)
25)Vitamin C- Can (UA)
26)Keep Him- Barbara Mason (Artic)
27)You Can’t Blame Me- Johnson, Hawkins, Tatum… (Capsoul)
28)Fire and Rain- Ice (Cindri)
29)Un Sueno- Los Terricolas (Discolando)
30)Piu Nessuno Al Campo- Gli Uh! (Kansas)
31)All This- Barbara Jean English (Alithia)

Listen/Download M-Fasis – Round Trip Ticket
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Funky16Corners Presents: Greasy Spoon
The Poets – Devil’s Den Pt1 (Try Me)
Freddie Roach – Next Time You See Me (Blue Note)
David Rockingham Trio – Bee Dee (Josie)
Bill Doggett – Afternoon Jump (King)
Freddy Robinson and Tall Paul Hankins – The Buzzard (Queen)
Gene Ludwig – Mr Fink Pt2 (La Vere)
Delegates – Pigmy Pt1 (Pacific Jazz)
Johnny Hammond Smith – The Stinger (Prestige)
Hank Marr – The Greasy Spoon (Federal)
Russell Evans and the Nite Hawks – The Bold (Atco)
Timmy Thomas – Liquid Mood (Goldwax)
Charlie Nesbit Organ Trio – Triple-O-Soul (Salvador)
Groove Holmes – Groove’s Groove (Prestige)
Baby Face Willette – Roll’em Pete (Argo)
Beverly Pitts – Just Some Soul (Soul Shot)
Butch Cornell Trio – Here ‘Tis Now (Ru-Jac)
James Brown – Shades of Brown (King)
Jimmy McGriff – MG Blues (Sue)
Larry Young Jr Quartette – Groove Street Pt1 (Prestige)
Merl Saunders – I Pity the Fool (Galaxy)
Shirley Scott – Sister Sadie Pt1 (Prestige)
Tall Paul Hankins – My Boo-Ga-Loo (Pop Up)

Listen/Download Funky16Corners – The Greasy Spoon – Hammond organ 45s from the old school
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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.

Shirley Ellis – Soul Time

By , April 29, 2012 1:21 pm

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Miss Shirley Ellis
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Listen/Download Shirley Ellis – Soul Time

Greetings all.

It’s that time again, by which I mean time to welcome you to another week here at the Funky16Corners, but also, as Miss Shirley Ellis says in today’s selection, it’s “soul time”.

Now, every single day here at Funky16Corners qualifies in some way as soul time, but with the song I bring you today it is explicitly so.

Shirley Ellis was one of the great female soul voices of the classic era and would be memorable if all she ever did was sing the oft-covered ‘The Nitty Gritty’ (1963), or for that matter ‘The Name Game’ (‘Lincoln Lincoln Bo-Bincoln’ etc) (1964) which is probably the song that most people outside of soul fandom know.

Ellis (born Elliston, the name under which she wrote ‘Soul Time’) had a powerful, soulful voice as well as a talent for writing her own material.

Though she is best known for what might be considered ‘novelty’, she managed to imbue those records with actual soul, so much so that even “those” records (especially ‘The Clapping Song’) still get spun with regularity on dance floors.

‘Soul Time’, from 1967 was her last charting hit, making it into the R&B Top 40 (stalling at #67 Pop)*.

The cut is at least to my ears the apex of her catalog, with a distinct flavor that makes it appeal to the Northern Soul crowd (dig the hooks, the vibes and the horns). ‘Soul Time’ has a rousing, propulsive beat and a brief, but anthemic chorus. It’s not hard to imagine the song pulling the dancers out onto the floor.

Ellis pretty much vanishes from the music scene after 1968, at least as a performer, seemingly content top sit back and watch her hits covered by folks like Gladys Knight, Madeline Bell (a killer cover of this very song), Ricardo Ray, Gary Glitter and much later,  Southern Culture on the Skids.

I hope you dig (and dance to) the tune, and I’ll see you later in the week.

Keep the faith

Larry

 

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*Other than a reappearance of ‘The Clapping Song’ in the UK Top 100 in 1979

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.

Garnet Mimms – Prove It To Me

By , April 12, 2012 3:34 pm

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Garnet Mimms
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Listen/Download Garnett Mimms – Prove It To Me

Greetings all.

I hope the day finds you all well.

The end of another week is here, and so is your weekly dose of soul power on the Funky16Corners Radio Show. We take to the airwaves of the interwebs this – and every – Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio. If you can’t be there at the time of broadcast you can always fall by the blog and grab the show (or any of the previous 100 episodes) in MP3 form.

Today’s selection is another one of those records I might never have known about had I not had the good fortune to spin beside one of the greats of the game, the mighty Phast Phreddie the Boogaloo Omnibus.

It was last Spring when I was fortunate enough to spin at one of the last Subway Soul nights in New York City that I got to spin the good stuff, sharing the decks with Phreddie, Girlsoul, and my old friend Jumpy, spending a fair amount of time (as is often the case in these situations) lengthening my want list.

There were many cool sounds that were new to my ears, but the one that really grabbed me is the 45 you see before you today.

As soon as the Boog dropped the needle on ‘Prove It To Me’ my ears perked up and I sidled up to the decks to see what the record was.

I have to be honest when I say that for the longest time I pretty much thought the Garnet Mimms story started and finished with the epic ‘Cry Baby’.

Back in ’63, when the mighty Jerry Ragavoy and Bert Berns put pen to paper, and then went into the studio with Mimms, they created one of the great soul ballad records of the classic era.

Today’s selection, ‘Prove It To Me’ – recorded and released in 1966 – was written (again) by Ragavoy (co-written by Edward Marshall who also helped pen Ragovoy’s first chart hit, the Majors ‘A Wonderful Dream’), who also produced and arranged.

It is a stunning, moody slice of Northern soul with a repeating horn line that digs deep into your ears. The record also features a great vocal by Mimms and some just this side of incongruous gut-bucket lead guitar.

Oddly enough – though this may be a testament to what listeners were expecting from Mimms – ‘Prove It To Me’ didn’t make a dent on the charts, but its flip side, the (excellent) slow ballad ‘I’ll Take Good Care Of You’ was a Top 20 R&B hit in the Spring of 1966.

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

See you on Monday

 

Peace

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.

Darrell Banks – Open The Door To Your Heart

By , March 4, 2012 3:12 pm

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Darrell Banks

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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

 

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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.

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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.

 

Dean Parrish – I’m On My Way

By , January 5, 2012 4:48 pm

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Dean Parrish

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The US OG issue (above) and the 1970s UK reissue (below)
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Listen/Download – Dean Parrish – I’m On My Way

Greetings all.

The end of the week is here and I am all but exhausted.

Lots to do hereabouts and despite the fact (or because of it) that everything is going as planned all I want to do right now is find a spot on the couch and nod off for an hour or two.

That said, a certain level of excitement is working its way through my stupor.

I have happened upon a couple of exceptional records in the last few weeks – which will naturally appear in this space soon – I got news of a very groovy DJ gig coming up this spring, and, best of all (at least for this moment) I get to end this week of Northern Soul with a truly stunning record.

I do not recall exactly when or where I first heard ‘I’m On My Way’ by Dean Parrish (I suspect it was on a mix tape many years ago) but it blew my mind and dug its claws deep into my brain (and my want list).

I searched for thus record high and low for a long time, getting outbid time and time again (it is a very popular record), eventually picking up a 1970s UK reissue so I could have it in my record box, and then, in a near mystical stroke of kismet, a nice, minty OG fell into my lap.

I don’t know if you’re familiar with my Timmy Thomas ‘Have Some Boogaloo’ saga –  wherein I chased the record forever, won a copy, seemingly lost it and then via a series of trades and the vagaries of the international postal maelstrom, ended up with not one but two copies of said record –  but ending up with doubles was a very groovy thing indeed.

On the very day I got that extra copy of Timmy, a DJ buddy contacted me to ask if I might be up for a trade, I asked what he had to swap and who should be sitting at the top of his list, but Mr Dean Parrish.

It was as if the hand of fate had slipped this monster of a 45 directly into my record box.

Released in 1967, the last of a string of a half dozen 45s Parrish (born Phil Anastasia) had recorded since 1964, ‘I’m On My Way’ is one of those 45s (particularly Northern Soul faves) that sounds every bit a huge, hit record, but was actually – like so many others – an abject commercial failure.

Though Parrish had had a regional success with his 1966 record ‘Tell Her’, ‘I’m On My Way’ – written by Eliot Greenberg and Doug Morris (who had written ‘Sweet Talking Guy’ for the Chiffons, and another Northern killer ‘The Next In Line’ for Hoagy Lands) went nowhere*.

This is (as I alluded to earlier) not a unique story, but once you’ve heard the record in question it is especially puzzling.

‘I’m On My Way’ grabs your attention instantly with its opening fuzz guitar line, leading into a brief opening verse before launching into a chorus that is so mind-bendingly anthemic you’re likely to bruise yourself rushing to turn up the volume.

Though Northern Soul favorites are often noted for their steady, four on the floor dance beat, ‘I’m On My Way’ bucks that trend with verses that could almost be described as rhythmically awkward, but when you take the chorus – so much musical rocket fuel – into account, it is very easy to understand why the record was the last of the legendary “3 before 8”** at Wigan Casino (the records played before closing time at every allnighter).

The chorus of ‘I’m On My Way’, with its mix of soulful vocals (by Parrish and the backing vocalists) and the soaring melody, from the moment where Parrish shouts ‘Baby!’ to the reprise of the fuzz guitar that closes the chorus, what you are hearing is 30 seconds of purely blissful music.

It’s easy to picture a room full of nearly exhausted dancers whipping themselves into one last frenzy, grabbing the last few minutes of the night and wringing all that they can out of them, a tableaux played out on countless dance floors all over the world since people started spinning records for people to dance to.

It is an anthem in every sense of the word and a fitting way to close out the week.

Make sure you grab yourself an earful of the Funky16Corners Radio Show, this Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio, or pick it up as an MP3 over the weekend here at the blog.

Have a great weekend, and I’ll see you all on Monday.

 

Peace

Larry

 

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*It has to be noted that after it gained Northern popularity ‘I’m On My Way’ was reissued on Jonathan King’s UK records in 1975 and proceeded to enter the UK Top 40.

**The ‘3 before 8’ were “Time Will Pass You By” by Tobi Legend, “Long After Tonight Is Over” by Jimmy Radcliffe, and “I’m On My Way” by Dean Parrish.

 

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.

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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.

 

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