Category: Original Versions

Happy Birthday Otis Redding

By , September 9, 2014 11:10 am

Example

Otis Redding

Example

Listen/Download Otis Redding – Good To Me

Greetings all

Seventy-three years ago today, the greatest soul singer that ever was, Otis Redding, was born in Dawson, Georgia.

I have previously recounted in this space the story of how Otis was my gateway into the world of soul almost 40 years ago, and have reiterated many times that I hold no singer (soul or otherwise) in higher esteem.

Though his career only lasted for six years, it spanned most of the classic soul era, and influenced countless performers.

Redding was possessed of a mighty voice, a dynamic stage presence and was also a gifted songwriter.

I came to today’s selection the long way ‘round, as it were.

The first version I picked up was by Irma Thomas* (recorded in Muscle Shoals in 1968), and it was a while before I realized that it had been co-written (with Julius Green of the Mad Lads) and originally recorded by Otis in 1966.

The arrangement on Redding’s original is fairly spare, fitting since the structure of the songs is deceptively simple. The verse builds slowly, shifting ever so much when he states:

I’m going to keep loving you woman
For 20 more years
After that I’m going for 40
‘Cause I’ve got my will to try

The song has an almost gospel feel to it, a song of praise, not to God, but rather to a woman.

It moves at an almost glacial pace, but that’s the kind of environment where Otis redding thrived.

Unlike so many that came after him, he was able to fill what would seem like an insurmountably empty space, not with theatrics, but with concise, perfectly delivered emotion.

That’s why he was the man.

Happy Birthday Otis.

Keep the faith

Larry

Example  

 

* There’s also a very nice instrumental version by Odell Brown 

_________________________________________________________________________________________

 

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

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

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

James Ray -I’ve Got My Mind Set On You

By , September 2, 2014 11:39 am

Example

James Ray

Example

Listen/Download James Ray – I’ve Got My Mind Set On You

Greetings all

The middle of the week is upon us, so I felt it only fitting that I dip into the crates and whip a little history (and a groovy song) on all of you.

It ought to be obvious by now that my record collector spidey sense is often set a-tingling by original versions of popular songs.

This is often the case because the originals are often much better, especially when the source material is R&B/soul/funk based.

If you had your ears pointed at a radio (or MTV) in 1987, you most certainly heard George Harrison working it out on a song called ‘I’ve Got My Mind Set On You’.

It was one of his biggest solo hits, and as it turns out, a cover of an obscure 1962 R&B tune by a singer named James Ray.

Now, I heard Ray’s OG years before I laid my hands on a copy (thanks to one of those ‘Who Played It First’ type comps), but only set out to get myself an original after my memory was jogged by none other than the mighty Mr Finewine, when he graciously invited me to share the decks during his long-running Wednesday night thing at Botanic in NYC.

Since the 45 was more expensive/elusive, I ended up getting a copy of James Ray’s self-titled 1962 LP.

In addition to today’s selection, the disc also includes his minor hits ‘If You Gotta Make a Fool Out Of Somebody’ (later covered by Freddie and the Dreamers) and ‘Itty Bitty Pieces’.

Produced and arranged by Hutch Davie, and largely composed by Rudy Clark (who also wrote ‘It’s In His Kiss (the Shoop Shoop Song)’ and ‘Good Lovin’), the LP runs the gamut from R&B to fairly mainstream pop.

The arrangements, including on ‘I’ve Got My Mind Set On You’ tend to be oddly ornate (dig, if you will, the chorus and the banjo…), though not at all out of character for 1962.

Ray had a high, slightly raspy tenor that has touches of Ray Charles in it.

Sadly, he passed away only a few years after recording this, victim of a drug overdose, still in his early 20s.

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

Keep the faith

Larry

Example  

 

 

_________________________________________________________________________________________

 

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

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

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Junior Murvin – Police and Thieves + The Equals – Police On My Back

By , August 14, 2014 9:12 am

Example

Ferguson, MO

Example

Listen/Download Junior Murvin – Police On My Back

Listen/Download The Equals – Police On My Back

 

_____________________________________

All the peacemakers turned war officers…

______________________________________

Well I’m running police on my back
I’ve been hiding police on my back
There was a shooting police on my back
And the victim well he wont come back

_______________________________________

 

Keep the faith

Larry

Example  

 

 

_________________________________________________________________________________________

 

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

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

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Ike and Tina Turner – Somebody Needs You

By , July 22, 2014 12:50 pm

Example

Ike and Tina Turner

Example

Listen/Download Ike and Tina Turner – Somebody Needs You

Greetings all

I hope the middle of the week finds you all well.

The song I bring you today is one of those anomalies that piques my curiosity and sends me off on a search.

A while back I was listening to the two volumes of the Ike and Tina Turner Revue recorded live, released in 1965 on Loma and Warner Brothers.

If you get a chance to pick up either volume, they are both outstanding, presenting the group in fine form delivering a wide variety of material, including great covers of songs by the Impressions, Etta James, the Soul Sisters, the Five Dutones and more.

The one track (on Volume 2) that stuck out like a sore thumb was ‘Somebody (Somewhere) Needs You’.

Clearly a studio track with audience overdubs (where every other track was live), the song was also a stylistic departure.

Whereas Ike and Tina and the Ikettes always had a harder, R&B inflected edge to their recordings, ‘Somebody (Somewhere) Needs You’ was stylish, Detroit-style Northern Soul.

I hit the reference books and discovered that the song had been released as a single in 1965, and that it was fairly scarce, and a little bit expensive.

It took me a little while, but I finally tracked down a copy.

Even a single listen should be enough to convince you that ‘Somebody Needs You’ (as the track is listed on the Loma 45) is unlike anything else in the Ike and Tina discography.

As it turns out, the song has an interesting history.

Written by Frank Wilson (the man that brought you ‘Do I Love You (Indeed I Do)’), ‘Somebody (Somewhere) Needs You’ was also recorded by Darrell Banks (Revilot 1966).

The backing track from the Ike and Tina version was recycled several times.

First as Larry Laster’s ‘Go For Yourself’ (with new lyrics by, and credited to Leon Sylvers) on Loma in 1966, a year later by Herb and Doris on the HIP label, as ‘Lighten Up’ by Larry Atkins on the Highland label, and by Ty Karim as ‘Lighten Up Baby’ on Car-A-Mel!

Interestingly enough, the Darrell Banks recording uses a completely different track/arrangement.

It’s an amazing record, and a real departure for Ike and Tina. It leaves me wishing that they’d done more like it.

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

Keep the faith

Larry

Example  

 

 

_________________________________________________________________________________________

 

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

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

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Sam and Dave – I Can’t Stand Up For Falling Down

By , July 20, 2014 11:45 am

Example

Sam and Dave

Example

Listen/Download Sam and Dave – I Can’t Stand Up For Falling Down

Greetings all

The summer is in full swing.

The thickness of the air does however force one to slow down a bit, and in times like these I develop a taste for deep soul.

Earlier this year I had the great honor to meet and DJ for the mighty David Porter.

Alongside Isaac Hayes, Porter was part of one of the great songwriting teams of the classic soul era.

As it happens, not long after that night, I got my hands on Robert Gordon’s ‘Respect Yourself: Stax Records and the Soul Explosion’ (highly recommended).

The combination of these two things had me digging deep in my own crates and doing some intense listening to all things Stax and Stax-related.

Aside from the pure pleasure of digging all that amazing music, I came out of it with a new, deeper appreciation for Sam Moore.

I have always had a pet peeve of sorts in regard to amazing soul singers – Levi Stubbs especially – who ought to be placed in the pantheon of the greats, alongside Otis Redding and Wilson Pickett, yet seem trapped withing the group identity.

No matter how great he was, Levi Stubbs will forever be ‘Levi Stubbs of the Four Tops’, and Sam Moore, will always be ‘Sam’ of Sam and Dave.

This is not to cast aspersions on Dave Prater, a great singer in his own right, but rather to focus on the fact that Sam Moore was possessed of a voice that had few equals, at Stax or anywhere else.

The fact that what we consider to be soul music would not exist without deep and strong gospel roots is something that a lot of people need to be reminded of.

Though gospel music is in the midst of a collector’s renaissance, the average listener rarely makes the connections between the amen corner and the soulful sounds they hear on their favorite oldies station.

Both Sam Moore and Dave Prater got their start singing in church, and their vocal stylings, as individuals and in their interplay as a duo, brought that training to the fore.

The record I bring you today is a tune that I first came to know via the (much faster) 1980 cover by Elvis Costello and the Attractions.

The first time I heard the original 1967 version by Sam and Dave, the radical difference in presentation gave me pause.

Co-written by the mighty Homer Banks and Allen Jones, the song is the deep, gospel confessional channeled through romantic regret. Instead of confessing their sins before the congregation, Sam and Dave deliver a sermon about broken hearts.

‘I Can’t Stand Up For Falling Down’ is a great window into the duo’s technique, both individually and in tandem.

Moore takes the opening verse, with its amazing line ‘I’ve tasted the bitterness of my own tears’ and his clear, high tenor soars into the rafters.

Prater follows in the second verse, his grittier voice (punctuated by Moore’s cries) coming from another place entirely.

The singers join together on the chorus, and then in the bridge, where the record finds its only odd note, with Moore taking the line ‘But that won’t stop me from loving you’ and changing it to ‘But that can’t stop Sam and Dave from loving you.’*

‘I Can’t Stand Up For Falling Down’ is hardly the only great performance in the Sam and Dave discography, but it is one of the finest, as well as one of the greatest ballads in the entirety of the Stax catalog.

If you haven’t given them a good listen lately, take your Sam and Dave 45s out, dust them off and dig in.

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

Keep the faith

Larry

Example  

*Listen, it’s none of my business what Sam and Dave did in their free time…

 

 

_________________________________________________________________________________________

 

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

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

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Barbara Lynn – I’m a Good Woman

By , July 1, 2014 12:53 pm

Example

Miss Barbara Lynn

Example

Listen/Download Barbara Lynn – I’m a Good Woman

Greetings all

Hows about traversing the middle of the week with something deep?

The record you see before you is one of those 45s that I chased for a long, long (loooong) time before I finally tackled it and tossed it into my record box.

‘I’m a Good Woman’ by Barbara Lynn is a popular side with DJs and collectors, and as a result it can be a little pricey and there’s a fair amount of competition when copies show up for sale.

This can be attributed 100 percent to the undeniable bad-ass-ness of the song/performance.

Barbara Lynn is one of the most underrated performers of the 60s and 70s, having had her biggest hit (‘You’ll Lose a Good Thing’) right out of the gate in 1962.

She wrote and recorded ‘I’m a Good Woman’ for the Tribe label in 1966,and despite its brilliance, it went exactly nowhere.

This might have something to do with the fact that ‘I’m a Good Woman’is something of a slow burner/builder.

It opens with a spellbinding (largely) a capella segment, and then starts stomping right away.

The rhythm section and the horns hit hard, and get harder as the song moves on.

I like to compare ‘I’m a Good Woman’ to a record like Tommy Tucker’s ‘Long Tall Shorty’, which starts off like a blues shuffle and turns into a buffalo stampede before you know it.

‘I’m a Good Woman’ is a solid dancer, which is why the DJs sweat it so hard.

All of that, and the fact that the song is a stone solid feminist statement.

Does it get any more plain spoken than ‘I’m a good woman, so don’t treat me like dirt!’ ?

No, it does not.

‘I’m a Good Woman’ has been covered over the years by artists like Cold Blood (very nice reading by Lydia Pense) and El Chicano, and there’s a very tasty modern cover by a UK group called Hannah Williams and the Tastemakers.

It is a killer.

Dig it and I’ll see you on Friday.

Keep the faith

Larry

Example  

 

_________________________________________________________________________________________

 

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

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

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Bobby Womack 1944-2014

By , June 29, 2014 11:56 am

Example

Bobby Womack

Listen/Download The Valentinos – It’s All Over Now

Listen/Download Percy Sledge – Baby Help Me

Listen/Download Bobby Womack – Take Me

Listen/Download Bobby Womack – A Simple Man

Listen/Download Sammy Gordon and the Hip Huggers – Breezin’

Listen/Download Bobby Womack and Peace – Across 110th Street

 

_____________________________________________________________________

Greetings all

Last week ended on a down note, with news of the passing of the mighty Bobby Womack.

Womack, who was 70, had fought multiple health-related battles over the past few years.

As has been stated in this space a few times in the past, I came to the music of Bobby Womack fairly late in the game.

Womack’s was one of those names that I ‘knew’ (that much was unavoidable) but his music was always just outside of my view.

Typical of my musical wandering, it was via his singing with his brothers in the Valentinos that I first heard his voice.

As an inveterate seeker of all things ‘original’, it was the Valentinos’ ‘It’s All Over Now’, covered by the Rolling Stones, that I had to put my hands on, and I was very happy to do so.

Over the years, thanks to reading about his exploits in a number of books, I became better acquainted with his life, and by picking up his records when I could, his music.

Discussing his passing with a friend on Facebook, I described Bobby Womack as a kind of ‘Zelig’ of soul (referencing the omnipresent Woody Allen character), popping up all over the musical landscape, working with artists like Sly Stone, Aretha Franklin and Janis Joplin over the years.

He got his start singing gospel with The Womack Brothers, that group evolving (much to their father’s consternation) into the R&B Valentinos.

Womack worked closely with Sam Cooke, and after that giant’s untimely death, eventually married his widow, a move that was reportedly so unpopular in the music business that it all but torpedoed his career at the time.

Through the 1960s Womack worked steadily as a guitarist (for Ray Charles, among others) and songwriter, composing a number of Wilson Pickett’s big hits (‘I’m In Love’ and ‘I’m a Midnight Mover’ among others), yet didn’t make it onto the charts under his own name until 1968 and ‘What Is This’, which started long string of R&B hits that lasted all the way until 1986.

The more I listen to his music, the more I realize that Bobby Womack should have been a much, bigger star. I think, had his string of hits started a few years earlier, he would be spoken of in the same breath as Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Solomon Burke and the like.

He was a prodigiously talented artist, as able a composer and musician as he was a singer, able to mix and match those talents as needed.

That he was already held in that high esteem by soul fans is without question. The outpouring of sadness and respect I have seen over the past few days attests to that.

I have posted a number of Bobby Womack (and related) tracks in this space over the last half-dozen years. As I was digging through the archives, I pulled a number of those out, as well as something I’d been wanting to feature for a while.

___________________________________________________________________________

Example

The first track is – of course – the Valentinos ‘It’s All Over Now’. Released in 1964 on Sam Cooke’s SAR label, but soon pushed out of the spotlight by the Rolling Stones cover, ‘It’s All Over Now’ is a fantastic piece of early West Coast soul, and maybe the grooviest record ever to feature both the glockenspiel and the tuba. It wasn’t the Valentinos biggest hit – ‘Lookin’ For a Love’ made it into the R&B Top 10 in 1962 – but it is nonetheless amazing.

Example

Percy Sledge

Next up is a track from Womack’s songwriting days, just prior to his own chart ascendancy. ‘Baby Help Me’ was a minor hit for Percy Sledge in early 1967. It is a departure for Sledge, seeing him working the uptempo, soul shouting side of the street.

Example

‘Take Me’ from 1968, was the flipside of his Top 20 R&B hit cover of ‘Fly Me To the Moon’. I am here to tell you – though you’d be able to pick up as much listening to the song – that this is not only one of Bobby Womack’s best (though, strangely enough, composed not by him, but by Big Dee Erwin/Ervin) but one of the finest soul records laid down in the 1960s.

Recorded in Memphis with the American Studios band (of whom Womack had been a part), ‘Take Me’ (this is the 45 mix, noticeably different from, and superior to the LP track) is a mid-tempo epic, with a powerful ascending horn chart, and an epic vocal by Bobby. There are times when this record can bring me to tears, it’s so good.

1971 found Womack in the studio with another Funky16Corners favorite, Gabor Szabo on the ‘High Contrast’ LP (Womack writing four of the album’s seven tracks). He presented Szabo with a new composition entitled ‘Breezin’, and the two of them grazed the R&B Top 40 with their version of the song.

Example

A year later, NY-based Sammy Gordon and the Hiphuggers covered ‘Breezin’ for the Archives label. Gordon, who had come to New York (as did his cousin Benny, of Benny Gordon and the Soul Brothers) from the Carolinas, recorded a couple of excellent, funky 45s. Their amazing version of ‘Breezin’ went nowhere near the charts, but its loopable drum and bass opening (try to keep from nodding your head) and mellow groove is fantastic, and for me far superior to the better known, 1976 hit by George Benson.

Example

The very funky ‘Simple Man’ (co-written with Joe Hicks) is one of my favorite tracks from Womack’s 1972 LP ‘Understanding, which also included ‘Woman’s Gotta Have It’ his first R&B #1 hit. The cut features a wild vocal by Bobby, some rolling electric piano and plenty of fuzz guitar.

I wanted to include Womack’s 1973 cover of Bob Dylan’s ‘All Along the Watchtower’. Recorded with the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section for the ‘Facts of Life’ album, it’s a hard rocking take on the tune, which sounds more like Neil Young than Jimi Hendrix, and is a great window into the complexity and variety of Womack’s sound.

Example

The last track I’m posting today is Bobby Womack’s famous entry into the Blaxploitation world, 1973’s title track from the film ‘Across 100th Street’. A funky cut, with just enough strings (co-written with jazz trombonist JJ Johnson, who created much of the instrumental music on the soundtrack), it is pushed along by percussive keyboards and heavy bass. The song had a second life when Quentin Tarantino used it in his film ‘Jackie Brown’.

He continued to record through the 80s and 90s (having some of his biggest hits with the LPs ‘The Poet’ and ‘The Poet II” in 1981 and 1984 respectively), eventually guesting on the Gorillaz ‘Stylo’ in 2009 (the year he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)

Bobby Womack was a master.

He will be missed.

Keep the faith

Larry

Example  

 

_________________________________________________________________________________________

 

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

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

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Theresa Lindsey – Daddy-O b/w I’ll Bet You

By , June 26, 2014 4:22 pm

Example

Theresa Lindsey

Example

Example

Listen/Download Theresa Lindsey – Daddy-O

Listen/Download Theresa Lindsey – I’ll Bet You

Greetings all

The weekend is looming, so I’ll remind you that the Funky16Corners Radio Show takes to the airwaves of the interwebs this and every Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio. You can also partake in the soulfulness by subscribing to the show as a podcast in iTunes, or by grabbing an MP3 at the blog.

I’ve been wanting to drop today’s selection for a long time, but I wanted to wait until I was in the exactly right frame of mind.

A while back I was listening to Gail Smith’s most excellent ‘Work Your Soul’ podcast, when I encountered a song that shot right to all the soul-related pleasure centers of my brain. A quick glance at the playlist indicated that what I was digging was a tune called ‘Daddy-O’ by Theresa Lindsey.

Her name was already familiar as a Detroit-based singer who had recorded the original version of ‘I’ll Bet You’, which she co-wrote with George Clinton and Sidney Barnes (and was later recorded by Funkadelic, Billy Butler, Jean Carter and the Jackson Five).

What I discovered in short order (as soon as I set out in search of my own copy) was that ‘Daddy-O’ was the flipside of ‘I’ll Bet You’! Now I really had to get a copy!

Once I did (at what I would consider to be not too extreme an expense), I digimatized the 45 and played it over, and over and over again.

You see, ‘Daddy-O’ is one of the most sublime examples of the art form known as Detroit Soul that was ever created.

What you get here is a solid dancer’s beat, combined with a beautiful melody, a tight Detroit band and above all, the sexy, soulful delivery of Miss Theresa Lindsey.

This record is as close to perfect as it gets, my friends.

Opening with piano (the piano is really the heart of the band on this one), and then picking up with drums, vibes, bass and hand-claps, ‘Daddy-O’ is a showcase for Lindsey’s voice and the subtle backing vocals. There is no point where the essence of this record diverges from sublime wonderfulness, which makes it all the more surprising that it wasn’t a hit.

‘I’ll Bet You’ is taken at a brisk pace (much like the Billy Butler take from the following year) and features some tasty Dennis Coffey guitar licks.

Despite her obvious talents, Theresa Lindsey’s only chart success was a regional hit with her 1964 ‘Gotta Find a Way’ for the Correc-tone label.

Lindsey recorded a total of five singles, three for Correc-Tone, the one you see before you for Golden World, and then a UK-only release (recorded in New York) for the President label as ‘Terry Lindsey’.

Both sides of this 45 and some of her Correc-Tone recordings have been comped over the years, with both ‘Daddy-O’ and ‘I’ll Bet You’ currently available in iTunes (on a couple of shifty-looking comps).

That said, you can pull down the ones and zeros here, and bathe your ears in the goodness.

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

Keep the faith

Larry

Example  

 

_________________________________________________________________________________________

 

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

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

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

The Cookies – Chains b/w RIP Gerry Goffin

By , June 25, 2014 10:32 am

Example

Carole King, Gerry Goffin and the Cookies

Example

Listen/Download The Cookies – Chains

Greetings all

It is with this post that we resume regularly scheduled programming here at Funky16Corners.

I will take a moment here to give my deepest thanks to all of those that took part in the 2014 Allnighter and Pledge Drive, from the selectors that brought the heat, to the donors whose contributions will keep the lights on around here for another year.

This November will mark the tenth anniversary of the Funky16Corners Blog, and these pledge drives (this was the eighth year) always remind me of the generosity and dedication of the readership. That so many of you are willing to help keep this labor of love up and running warms my heart.

So thanks again, and stick around for more goodness.

__________________________________________________________________________________

I had something else lined up for today, but the word came down late last week that the great Gerry Goffin had passed away at the age of 75.

Whether or not you knew his name, you certainly knew the music he helped to create over a career that lasted half a century.

Starting in partnership with his then wife Carole King, Goffin wrote some of the most memorable pop and R&B songs of the 60s, 70s and 80s.

The list is incredibly long (flip on over to the Wikipedia article listing the charting hits from 1961 to 1989) and includes an amazing number of certifiable classics.

The sounds include straight pop, girl groups, R&B, soul and rock, many of them huge hits.

I was genuinely surprised to discover that following the dissolution of the Goffin-King marital and creative partnerships that Gerry Goffin continued to generate hits (with partners like Barry Goldberg and Michael Masser), including a number of very big R&B hits for artists like Gladys Knight and the Pips (I’ve Got To Use My Imagination), Diana Ross (The Theme From Mahogany), Roberta Flack and Peabo Bryson (Tonight I Celebrate My Love) and Whitney Houston (Saving All My Love For You, originally recorded by Marilyn McCoo and Billy Davis, Jr.).

Though I count a numberof Goffin-King songs among my very favorites (especially the Monkees ‘Pleasant Valley Sunday’) one of the first songs of theirs that drilled its was into my head was a tune called ‘Chains’.

The version I first heard (on the very first record I ever bought) was the cover by the Beatles.

The VeeJay LP ‘Introducing the Beatles’ was a gateway for me into R&B and soul, introducing me to the Shirelles (Boys, Baby It’s You), Arthur Alexander (Anna), The Isley Brothers (Twist and Shout) and (as on the record you see before you today), the Cookies and ‘Chains’.

Over the next few years, I would hear (and dig) the original versions of almost all of those songs, with the exception of the Cookies.

The group had a small string of hits in 1962 and 1963, of which ‘Chains’ was the first, but ‘Don’t Say Nothing Bad (About My Baby)’ was the biggest, making it into the Pop and R&B Top 10. It was the latter song that got airplay on oldies radio.

It wasn’t until many years later that I finally heard their version of ‘Chains’ (and only a few months ago that I finally got a copy of the 45).

The line up of Cookies that recorded ‘Chains’ was the second incarnation of the group, with members of the first version (which included Margie Hendrix) going on to join the Raeletts.

The Cookies Mk2, which provided backing vocals on a number of other artist’s (Little Eva, Mel Torme) records, included Earl-Jean McRea (the lead on ‘Chains’), who went on to record the original version of ‘I’m Into Something Good’, another Goffin-King song that went on to be a huge hit for Herman’s Hermits.

‘Chains’, which made the R&B Top 10 (and the Pop Top 20) in December of 1962 is a great bit of early girl group soul, driven by the group’s harmonies (and handclaps), a ringing rhythm guitar, a bass that sounds like it’s coming from the subway, and interjections from the horn section.

Interestingly enough, the record was also produced by Gerry Goffin!

All in all, a great record, and a great way to remember a truly great songwriter.

See you on Friday.

Keep the faith

Larry

Example  

 NOTE: The winner of the ‘Soul City Los Angeles’ CD comp was Jeff Ash!

 

_________________________________________________________________________________________

 

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

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

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Funky16Corners 2014 Allnighter/Pledge Drive: Funky16Corners – Walking In Space

By , June 5, 2014 11:51 am

Example

Example

Funky16Corners Presents: Walking In Space

Quincy Jones – Walking In Space (A&M)
Wes Montgomery – Up and At It (A&M)
Deodato – September 13 (CTI)
Lonnie Smith – Stand (Edit) (Kudu)
Grover Washington Jr – Masterpiece (Kudu)
Gabor Szabo – Rambler (CTI)
Johnny Hammond Smith – Big Sur Suite (Kudu)
Milt Jackson – People Make the World Go Round (CTI)
Bob James – Nautilus (CTI)

Listen/Download Funky16Corners Presents: Walking In Space

 

NOTE: This – the first of two mixes I put together for this year’s Allnighter is a tribute to the sounds that Creed Taylor produced (usually engineered by Rudy Van Gelder) for A&M, CTI and Kudu in the late 60s and 70s. 

I’m a huge fan of the entire CTI aesthetic, from the amazing sounds (listen to the drums, brass and strings)  to the classic album covers. It’s no mystery why so much of the CTI catalog has been sampled over the years, and many of those sample sources are in this mix.

This one was a real labor of love, and I’ve given it a grip of listens since I recorded it.

I hope you dig it, too.

See you on Monday with a new mix from Kris Holmes!

– Larry

Example




Greetings all

Welcome to the 2014 edition of the Funky16Corners Allnighter/Pledge Drive.

This is the ninth annual Pledge Drive, and the fifth Allnighter.

If you haven’t experienced the Allnighter/Pledge Drive, it can be explained as thus: once a year, the Funky16Corners Blog, your home for the best in funk, soul, jazz and rare groove vinyl for almost 10 years comes to you with hand outstretched, asking for donations to offset the operating expenses of the web site.

The Funky16Corners ‘operation’ (as it is) included the Funky16Corners and Iron Leg blogs, the mix archives for both (containing well over 200 mixes), and the Funky16Corners Radio Show/Podcast (another 200+ files available for download, or through subscription in iTunes).

The money raised during the pledge drive goes to pay for the server space and fees associated with hosting the whole megillah.

As has been attested to many times in the past, Funky16Corners has humble beginnings, starting out on the old (free) Blogger service, moving to WordPress, and then to self-hosted WordPress. The move to paid hosting was necessitated by increased bandwidth usage, as well as the need for a place to store all the mixes (and eventually the radio show episodes).

The Allnighter/Pledge Drive is a once-yearly occurrence, in which yours truly, and some of the finest selectors out there whip up new mixes for your delectation.

In past years, I have posted all of the mixes in a single post, and left it up for a week.

This year, the quality and quantity of the mixes spurred me on to try something a little different, i.e. posting a new mix each weekday for a period of just over two weeks. This way, each selector gets their moment in the spotlight, and the mixes get spaced out so that the listeners don’t suffer from mix-fatigue.

Each day, you’ll get a fantastic mix (there really are some amazing ones this year) from one of my favorite DJs, most of whom have participated in the Allnighter before, as well as a great new contributor.

So, if you dig what we do here at Funky16Corners, click on the Paypal link and toss some cash into the barrel.




Contributors will receive a 2014 Allnighter badge (see below), as well as some stickers from the archive (as long as they last).

Example

This year I will also be drawing the names of contributors at random for groovy swag, including CDs and 45s from Cultures of Soul and LugnutBrand Records, and CDs from Light in the Attic and Secret Stash.

So, dig the sounds for the next couple of weeks, and make sure you stop back on a daily basis to pick up new mixes and contribute for a chance to win some cool stuff.

Thanks, and as always,

Keep the faith

Larry

Example  

 




_________________________________________________________________________________________

 

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

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

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Two By the Paul Butterfield Blues Band

By , May 6, 2014 12:04 pm

Example

The Paul Butterfield Blues Band in 1965
(L-R) Bloomfield, Butterfield, Lay, Bishop, Arnold (not pictured, Mark Naftalin)

Example

Listen/Download The Paul Butterfield Blues Band – Born In Chicago

Listen/Download The Paul Butterfield Blues Band – Get Out of My Life Woman

Greetings all

The middle of the week is here, so I thought I’d whip something a little unusual (for here, anyway) into your ears.
Those of you past a certain age will likely be familiar with the name Paul Butterfield.

Butterfield – harp player and vocalist – was one of the movers and shakers of the blues scene in the 1960s.

The band he led – unsurprisingly going by the name The Paul Butterfield Blues Band – was hot as hell, as well as serving as an incubator for talent, incubating  guitarists Mike Bloomfield and Elvin Bishop.

Formed in 1964 in Chicago with Mike Bloomfield (both he and Butterfield were Chitown natives) and University of Chicago student Bishop, local heavies Sam Lay (on drums) and Jerome Arnold (brother of Billy Boy Arnold on bass) and later adding Mark Naftalin on keyboards, the Butterfield Blues Band had a sound that was rooted firmly in electric Chicago blues.

What made it stand out – aside from an embarrassment of riches in the talent department – was a willingness to experiment with rock and jazz styles and interesting cover material.

The first tune featured today – ‘Born In Chicago’, written by Nick Gravenites who would later join Bloomfield and Buddy Miles in the Electric Flag– was the lead-off track from the groups self-titled 1965 debut. It is a wailing slice of rocking blues, featuring blazing harp solos by Butterfield and wailing leads by Bloomfield.

The second track is a cover of Lee Dorsey’s ‘Get Out of My Life Woman’, from the group’s second LP, ‘East-West’ from 1966. Unlike most covers of the tune, the Butterfield Blues Band dispenses with the opening drum break. They take the tune a slightly more brisk pace than the original, adding in some tasty piano work by Naftalin.

‘East-West’ also includes a very groovy version of the Monkees ‘Mary Mary’.

Though the original lineup was all but gone by 1967’s ‘The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw’, the BBB continued to meld blues and R&B and kept rolling on into the 1970s.

They played at Woodstock (with none other than David Sanborn on sax) but were not included in the original film (there are clips of the band playing the festival).

That all said, you can find all of the BBB’s best stuff in digital reissue, and copies of their stuff turns up frequently in used bins (those first three LPs are all worth grabbing).

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

Keep the faith

Larry

Example  

 

_________________________________________________________________________________________

 

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

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

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Jimmy Holiday – The New Breed b/w Love Me One More Time (Plus more!)

By , March 16, 2014 12:56 pm

Example

Jimmy Holiday

Example

Example

Example

Listen/Download Jimmy Holiday – The New Breed

Listen/Download Jimmy Holiday – Love Me One More Time

Listen/Download Ron Moody and the Centaurs – The New Breed

Greetings all

I hope the new week finds you all welland in rapt anticipation of the oncoming Spring (despite all meteorological evidence to the contrary).

Today’s selections come to you well in advance of my original plans, thanks to a special request from a reader.

Naturally the story of how I got this record is quite convoluted (aren’t they all?).

A while back, a friend on Facebook posted a clip of a song called ‘The New Breed’ by a band called Ron Moody and the Centaurs.

It was a very groovy song indeed, and a little bit of research revealed that they were a white R&B band from Richmond, Virginia who recorded one 45, ‘The New Breed’ b/w ‘If I Didn’t Have a Dime’.

I wanted a copy of the 45, so I added it to my watch list and grabbed it when it popped up.

This is where things move into the ‘easier said than done’ category.

The package arrived, and I opened it to find…the wrong record.

I contact the seller who says that he must have sent the Ron Moody 45 to some guy in Germany (who was supposed to get the record that I got) and as soon as he gets it back from him, he’ll send it to me.

I figured I was never going to see the 45, but after going back and forth with the seller for a few months, it finally showed up!

I’m glad it did because the Centaurs version swings in a Beach Music stylee (the group had a following on that scene) and is very cool.

So I dig a little deeper and discover that ‘The New Breed’ was in fact a cover, having been originally recorded by a singer named Jimmy Holiday.

While the Centaurs version was cool, it paled (no pun intended) in comparison to Holiday’s original.

So I figured (as I always do…) that I ought to find myself a copy of the OG.

I checked Ebay (usually a good, basic gauge of whether or not a record is readily available), found a copy (graded VG) for five bucks and pulled the trigger.

When the record arrived, I discovered that the seller had under-graded the 45 (always cool) and also that the flip-side, ‘Love Me One More Time’ was a killer as well.

As it turns out, Jimmy Holiday was an interesting cat, indeed.

He recorded frequently through the 60s and early 70s, waxing more than two dozen 45s (and at least one LP) for labels like Everest, Diplomacy and Minit, all the while working as a songwriter, co-writing ‘Put A Little Love In your Heart’ for Jackie DeShannon, and working as a staff writer for Ray Charles’s Tangerine label.

He had a Top 10 R&B hit with “How Can I Forget’ in 1963 and placed one record a year into the R&B Top 40 in 1966, 1967 and 1968, as well as scoring a minor regional hit in a duet with Clydie King on ‘Ready, Willing and Able’ in 1967.

‘The New Breed’ b/w ‘Love Me One More Time’ was the first of his two 45s for the Diplomacy label in 1965*.

‘The New Breed’ is a hard charging floor-filler, with propulsive rhythm guitar and piano and a powerful horn section.

‘Love Me One More Time’ has a slightly heavier R&B edge, with a wailing vocal by Holiday.

The arrangements are by Jimmy Long who did a lot of work for Motown (Temptations, Four Tops, Gladys Knight and the Pips).

Sadly, Jimmy Holiday passed away in 1989, at the age of only 52.

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

Keep the faith

Larry

Example  

*’The New Breed’ was also issued on Kent in 1967 but replacing ‘Love Me One More Time’ with a tune called ‘I Can’t Stand It’

_________________________________________________________________________________________

 

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

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

 

Example Example  

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Panorama Theme by Themocracy