Posts tagged: Funk

Best of Funky16Corners: F16C After Dark Pts 1&2

By , August 24, 2014 7:48 pm

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Pt1
Intro

Temptations – Papa Was a Rolling Stone (inst)

Brothers of Hope – Nickol Nickol

Earnest Jackson – Funky Black Man

Joe Zawinul – Soul of aVillage

Pat Lewis-I’ll Wait

Lowell Fulsom-Pico

Merl Saunders-Ode to Billie Joe

Syl Johnson- Is It Because I’m Black

Winston Wright – Heads or Tails

Brian Auger and the Trinity – Bumpin’ On Sunset

William DeVaughn – Be Thankful For What You’ve Got

The Cals – Stand Tall

Brother Jack McDuff – Moon Rappin’

Art Jerry Miller – Moonshot

Roy Meriwether Trio – What’s the Buzz

El Chicano – Viva Tirado

Bobby Christian – Mooganga

Freddy Robinson – Black Fox

Pt2
Intro

Dorothy Ashby – Soul Vibrations

Ernie Fields – Watch Your Step

Cal Tjader – Alonzo

Gaturs – Booger Man

Moe Koffman – Forest Flower

Neal Creque – Kenya

Ramsey Lewis – Slipping Into Darkness

Rhetta Hughes – Light My Fire

Roy Budd – Carter

Raymond Winnfield – Things Could Be Better

Jackie Edwards and Soulmakers – Che Che

Mary Lou Williams – The Credo

Marlena Shaw – Woman of the Ghetto

Fuzzy Kane Trio – Monday Monday

Rotary Connection – Respect

Peddlers – Impressions Pt3

Timothy McNealy – Sagittarius Black

 

Listen/Download Funky16Corners After Dark Pt1

Listen/Download Funky16Corners After Dark Pt2

Greetings all

Summer is on the wane, and the fam and I are trying to shoehorn in some R&R before school starts again.

As a result, i’ve gone back into the archives and pulled out a couple of my favorite mixes that I’ve done for other blogs or radio shows in the past, tohold you over until I return to my keyboard and start tapping away once again.

I’m going to get the week started with a two-part set I did for the Delirious Insomniac show back in 2010. The mixes were actually done for the end segment of the show, known as Delirious Sunrise.

I was tasked to put something together for the dark, still hours before dawn, so I dipped into the crates and grabbed a couple of handfuls of ‘head music’.

I use that old term in the old-school ‘feed your head’ sense, which is what I generally do with records like this, just before I close my eyes and allow Hypnos to take me by the hand and lead me to the world of dreams.

There’s just under two full hours of sounds here, running the gamut from soul, to late night funk, to jazz, all good for your ears and (of course) your head.

So dig it, and I’ll see you again on Wednesday with some more grooves.

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

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Soul Partners – Walk On Judge

By , August 19, 2014 10:52 am

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Label owner and producer Bill Moss

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Listen/Download Soul Partners – Walk On Judge

Greetings all

The tune I bring you today is a great bit of late 60s Ohio funk.

The Soul Partners were a Columbus, Ohio band that recorded for Bill Moss’s Holiday imprint.

Moss, a successful Columbus soul DJ ran the Holiday, Loren and Capsoul labels, featuring artists like the Soul Partners, The Four Mints and Johnson, Hawkins, Tatum and Durr.

Moss also recorded the most excellent ‘Sock It To Em Soul Brother’ which also appeared as an instrumental on Capsoul by Elijah and the Ebonies.

The Soul Partners recorded ‘Walk On Judge’ for Holiday in 1968 and it was picked up for national distribution by the Bell label.

The tune is a great, rolling, funky guitar instrumental with a great horn section, sounding like a not too distant cousin of Cliff Nobles’ ‘Horse’.

The flipside, ‘Lose the One You Love’ (which appears on the Numero Group comp ‘Capitol City Soul’) is a very cool vocal number.

The Soul Partners also recorded another cool instro 45, ‘Spead’ b/w ‘Boo Boo’ for Bell in 1969.

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

Keep the faith

Larry

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

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

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Artie Christopher – Stoned Soul

By , August 7, 2014 11:07 am

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Listen/Download Artie Christopher – Stoned Soul

Greetings all

The week is coming to its conclusion (logical, or not) and that means that it’s Funky16Corners Radio Show time again. This and every Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio, I bring you the finest in funk, soul, jazz and rare groove, all on original vinyl. If you can’t fall by at airtime, you can always keep up at your leisure by subscribing to the show as a podcast in iTunes, or by grabbing yourself an MP3 here at the blog.

The tune I bring you today is a little bit of Memphis funk.

I can’t tell you much about Artie Christopher, aside from the fact that he seems to have laid down a pair of 45s for the Atlantic label in 1968 (at least one of them originally released on the 5-High imprint).

He was one of many similarly inclined soulful Caucasians operating in the south at around the same time (see South, Joe and White, Tony Joe for starters), and was the brother of guitarist/songwriter Johnnie Christopher, who co-wrote Elvis Presley’s smash ‘Always On My Mind’ (covered by many, many others).

That’s pretty much where the obtainable facts run out.

The tune you see before you today, the instrumental ‘Stoned Soul’ was released in 1968 as the flipside of Christopher’s version of ‘Hello LA, Bye Bye Birmingham’, the song that led me to seek out this 45 in the first place.

Interestingly enough, it’s ‘Stoned Soul’ for which most folks grab this disc, it having been included on Rhino’s ‘What It Is’ boxed set.

A funky, guitar and organ led instro, the tune features a great (Philly sounding) horn line, wild effects laden guitar (or keyboard, I’m not sure, but was eventually sampled by Method Man) and a very nice bass breakdown as well.

The groovy thing is, both of Christopher’s Atlantic 45s are relatively easy to find, and fairly inexpensive as well.

Unfortunately, according to Sir Shambling’s site, Christopher passed away some time ago.

I hope you dig the sounds, 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).

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

James Brown: On Film and Vinyl

By , August 5, 2014 4:15 pm

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The Godfather of Soul

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For the trainspotters in the crowd, this is the 1970 Capitol Record Club issue of ‘Ain’t It Funky Now’

 

Listen/Download James Brown and the James Brown Band – Use Your Mother

Listen/Download James Brown and the James Brown Band – Give It Up Or Turnit A Loose (Inst)

 

Greetings all

I had something else planned for today, but then the Missus and I took in a showing of ‘Get On Up’ at the local cinematheque, and those plans changed.

Back some months ago, when trailers started to emerge for the James Brown biopic ‘Get On Up’, I was both excited, and filled with trepidation.

I mean, someone was finally working on a biopic of the Minister of the Super Heavy Funk.

On the flip side of that coin was the thought, ‘Oh, shit, how many ways are there to fuck up such an undertaking?”

Since the last week saw reports from trusted sources start to dribble in, so we decided to catch a matinee.

I am here to tell you that – in the words of the corporate world left behind – my expectations were met, and exceeded.

The first thing you should know about ‘Get On Up’, is that it is quite good.

It certainly had weak spots from time to time, but I have to admit that it stood up relatively well to my own high level of James Brown nitpicking.

Chadwick Boseman, who plays Brown, was amazing, and if he’s not nominated for an Oscar, they need to turn out the lights and shut the doors on that operation.

The performance sequences of the film are fantastic, and beautifully filmed.

The supporting cast, especially Nelsan Ellis as Bobby Byrd, was excellent.

If I had a fairly substantial beef with the movie, it would be that whatever (or more importantly, whoever’s) source material was used had an axe to grind with Maceo Parker*.

The way he is portrayed in ‘Get On Up’ seems at the very least unfair. Though it was Parker that led the (just) band revolt against Brown, he is portrayed not only as an incessant complainer, but also seemingly oblivious to the evolution of the funk.

There’s a scene in the film regarding a rehearsal of ‘Cold Sweat’ in which Parker has to be stepped through the paces of the song like some kind of amateur, which makes no sense at all.

My suggestion would be that readers check out Maceo’s book ‘98% Funky Stuff’ for a look at his side of the story.

That said, I thought that Brown’s own story was exceptionally well told, with a pretty serious level of detail, considering that this is a major motion picture, and not a multi-part documentary (which he certainly deserves).

I’d like to hear what those of you that saw the movie thought about it, as well.

Since I’m writing about the movie, I thought that this was an excellent time to dip into the crates and pull out some little-heard James Brown (and band).

The 1970 LP ‘Ain’t It Funky Now’ – credited to ‘James Brown and the James Brown Band’ – is a collection of mostly instrumental tracks (some original, others like ‘Cold Sweat’ existing tracks with overdubbed guitar**), some dating to 1966.

The tracks run from long-form funk vamps like ‘Ain’t It Funky Now’, to bluesy cuts like ‘Fat Wood’.

There are a couple of exceptional tracks, that never appeared (as far as I can tell) anywhere else.

The first of these is the funky ‘Use Your Mother’, with some tasty horns and a superb rolling bass line. It has the feel of a slightly underdeveloped James Brown funk 45 of the classic era.

The second, is an extended instrumental take of ‘Give It Up or Turnit A Loose’ with some exceptional guitar work from Jimmy ‘Chank’ Nolen and Alphonso ‘Country’ Kellum. This is one of at least three different LP versions of the tune released in 1970 alone!***

While I wouldn’t describe ‘Ain’t It Funky Now’ as essential, if you find it, grab it, if only for these cuts.

I mean, come on, it’s James Brown.

That said, dig the tracks, see the movie, and I’ll see you all on Friday.

Keep the faith

Larry

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 * I have a suspicion that we may have litigation to blame for some of the omissions in the film

** There are several times on the album where JB’s original vocals bleed through into the instrumental track

***On ‘Ain’t It Funky Now’, ‘It’s a New Day So Let a Man Come In’ and ‘Sex Machine’

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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

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Idris Muhammad Was Super Bad

By , July 31, 2014 11:58 am

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Idris lays into the traps…

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Listen/Download Idris Muhammad – Express Yourself

Listen/Download Idris Muhammad – Super Bad

Listen/Download Leon Spencer – Message From the Meters

Listen/Download Lou Donaldson – Everything I Do Gohn Be Funky From Now On

Listen/Download Lonnie Smith – See Saw

Listen/Download Melvin Sparks – Thank You Pt1

Listen/Download Melvin Sparks – Thank You Pt2

Listen/Download Bob James – Nautilus

Greetings all

I logged on to the interwebs last night only to be greeted by rumors of the passing of the mighty Idris Muhammad.

It wasn’t long before the rumors were confirmed by this obituary out of his home port of New Orleans.

Idris Muhammad was born Leo Morris in New Orleans in 1939.

He was childhood friends with the Neville brothers, and one of his first gigs was playing on Fats Domino’s 1956 smash ‘Blueberry Hill’ (he also played on the seminal Crescent City track, the Hawketts ‘Mardi Gras Mambo’).

Muhammad left New Orleans in the mid-60s and headed north to make his bones as a jazz drummer.

He soon became a fixture on a seemingly endless succession of heavy New York soul jazz dates, playing alongside a wide variety of organists, guitarists and others (dig the discography in his Wikipedia entry), eventually leading his own dates for Prestige starting in 1970.

Idris has appeared here at Funky16Corners many times over the years, both as leader and sideman.

His drumming style was steeped in the New Orleans second line, and was deeply funky, both in the wayback Ninth Ward way and also in the post-James Brown get down.

I’m posting a wide variety of tracks blessed with his beats, but that mixture of Big Easy and Good Foot was never more obvious than  in  the solo in his cover of Charles Wright and the Watts 103rd St Rhythm Band’s ‘Express Yourself, the opening track’ from his 1970 debut as a leader ‘Black Rhythm Revolution’. Listening to it is hearing a very groovy bunch of uptown jazzers suddenly morphing into a high-stepping, umbrella-waving parade.

It is bad-ass.

I’m including the flipside of that 45, his cover of JB’s ‘Super Bad’ (bringing it all back around, as it were) as well as a grip of sessions from the late 60s/early 70s that feature Muhammad. It’s worth noting that two of the best tracks hail from NOLA, Lou Donaldson covering Lee Dorsey and Leon Spencer, the Meters.

The last track, Bob James’ epic – heavily sampled, see below* –  1974 track ‘Nautilus’, in which Muhammad lays out one of the smoothest/tastiest breaks ever.

Idris Muhammad went on to play with a host of jazz greats, spending may years working with Ahmad Jamal, before retiring to his home town in 2011.

He was a master of the skins, who carried the beat in his heart and soul.

He will be missed.

See you on Monday

 

Keep the faith

Larry

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     *Songs that sample ‘Nautilus’ (from the-breaks.com)

     A Tribe Called Quest’s “Clap Your Hands”
     Alkaholiks’s “Daaam!”
     All Natural’s “Think Again”
     Basement Khemist’s “Correct Technique”
     Camp Lo’s “Black Nostaljack”
     Chubb Rock’s “Keep it Street”
     DJ Food’s “Spiral Dub”
     DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince’s “Jazzy’s Groove”
     Dream Warriors’s “Voyage Through the Multiverse”
     EPMD’s “Brothers on My Jock”
     Eric B and Rakim’s “Follow the Leader”
     Eric B and Rakim’s “Let the Rhythm Hit ‘Em”
     Freestylers’s “Warning”
     Geto Boys’s “Snitches”
     Ghostface Killah’s “Daytona 500”
     Group Home’s “Inna Citi Life”
     Ice T’s “?”
     JCD and the Dawg lb’s “Over Pussy”
     Jeru’s “My Mind Spray”
     Joe Budden’s “Yo, Yo, Yo”
     Jungle Brothers’s “Book of Rhyme Pages”
     K-Solo’s “Everybody Knows Me”
     Keith Murray’s “The Rhyme”
     King Sun’s “Big Shots”
     Kruder & Dorfmeister’s “Original Bedroom Rockers”
     Large Professor ft Pete Rock’s “The Rap World”
     Leaders of the New School’s “Show Me a Hero”
     Lord Shafiyq’s “My Mic is on Fire”
     Lyrical Prophecy’s “You Can’t Swing This”
     Main Source’s “Live at the Barbecue”
     Mary J. Blige’s “Just Mary”
     Mary J. Blige ft Nas & DMX’s “Sincerity”
     Mekon’s “Phatty’s Lunch Box”
     Mike Zoot’s “Scene”
     Naughty by Nature’s “Cruddy Clique”
     Nice & Smooth’s “No Delayin’”
     Onyx’s “Black Vagina Finda”
     Onyx’s “Throw Ya Gunz”
     Organized Konfusion’s “Stray Bullet”
     Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “Take You There”
     Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “The Sun Won’t Come Out”
     Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “What’s Next on the Menu?”
     Poison Clan’s “Paper Chase”
     Poor Righteous Teachers’s “Word is Bond”
     Project M’s “The Place to Be”
     Public Enemy’s “Anti-N*gger Machine”
     Puff Daddy ft Busta Rhymes and Notorious BIG’s “Victory”
     Queen Mother Rage’s “Slippin’ into Darkness”
     Red Myers’s “Shoplifter”
     Run-DMC’s “Beats to the Rhyme”
     Run-DMC’s “Groove to the Sound”
     Salt-N-Pepa’s “Doper than Dope”
     Slick Rick’s “Children’s Story”
     Soul II Soul’s “Jazzie’s Groove”
     Tame One’s “Torture Chamber”
     The Roots ft Mos Def’s “Double Trouble”
     Threat’s “Bust One Fa Me”
     Tim Dog’s “Bronx Nigga”
     Tim Dog’s “I’ll Wax Anybody”
     Tim Dog’s “Low Down Nigg*”
     Ultramagnetic MCs’s “Ced Gee (Delta Force One)”
     Ultramagnetic MCs’s “Moe Love on the One & Two”
     Ultramagnetic MCs’s “Raise it Up”

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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

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

William Bell & Mavis Staples – I Thank You

By , July 29, 2014 1:21 pm

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William Bell and Mavis Staples

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Listen/Download William Bell and Mavis Staples – I Thank You

Greetings all

A couple of weeks ago, not long after I finished reading Greg Kots’ most excellent ‘I’ll Take You There: Mavis Staples, the Staple Singers, and the March up Freedom’s Highway’, it just happened to be Ms. Mavis’ 75th birthday.

I have been listening to a LOT of Staple Singers ish the last few years – especially the Epic era gospel stuff – and consistently marveling at the pure, soulful power of Mavis Staples’ voice.

It just so happens that a few months before (I’ve been reading a lot, you see) I had read Robert Palmer’s also excellent ‘Respect Yourself: Stax Records and the Soul Explosion’.

Palmer’s book is an indispensable guidebook to the history of that mighty soul label, especially his coverage of Stax’s late 60s rebirth.

Having been left in the lurch thanks to a shady deal with Atlantic Records, which cost the label their masters (and one of their top-selling acts, Sam and Dave), Stax, led by Al Bell, regrouped with the intention of reestablishing their market presence/dominance.

Part of Bell’s ambitious plan was a huge wave of new releases, which brought the label’s talent to the very edge of exhaustion.

One of Stax’s recent acquisitions, was the Staple Singers.

Having departed Epic records, the Staples came to Stax, already having loosened up a little bit.

Their catalog had already started to include non-religious (yet still inspirational) material, like their 1967 cover of the Buffalo Springfield’s ‘For What It’s Worth’, and their original songs, like ‘Why Am I Treated So Bad’ had been covered by the likes of the Sweet Inspirations, Bobby Powell and Brian Auger and the Trinity.

One of the cornerstones of Stax/Bell’s big push was a two-LP set composed of duets, mixing and matching the label’s male talent, like Eddie Floyd, William Bell, Johnnie Taylor and Pervis Staples, with its female stars like Carla Thomas, and Mavis and Cleotha Staples.

Composed of 22 tracks, the ‘Boy Meets Girl’ collection is, despite the daunting size (and the fact that these were all new recordings) actually quite good.

With the recording spread between Memphis, Detroit and Muscle Shoals, and a number of arrangers and writers, the resulting tracks are not consistently ‘Stax-like’ – there are a number of cuts that sound Motown-ish – but there’s lots to dig.

My favorite track from the collection is William Bell and Mavis Staples funky duet on ‘I Thank You’.

Originally recorded the previous year by Sam and Dave, the 1969 recording – produced by Al Bell and Isaac Hayes – is a something of a lost classic.

The arrangement is unusual – the first 45 seconds consist of Bell and Staples trading lines over just congas and tambourines – but when the band kicks in things get funky.

The clavinet from the OG is still there, but it gets some company from fuzz guitar, and the drums keep up the heat through the whole record.

Bell sounds great, and it’s cool to hear Mavis in one of her earliest purely soulful outings.

The power of her voice was always a revelation, but especially so here. She never soars, or showboats, choosing instead to add subtle but perfectly chosen turns here and there.

She really is a singer that demands your attention, and her performance here ought to be better known.

Unfortunately – though Stax released six singles from the collection – ‘I Thank You’ was not among them.

It doesn’t help that the reissues (including the version currently on iTunes) of the ‘Boy Meets Girl’ collection have often been changed to exclude some of the original tracks and add new ones.

Fortunately for those of you with turntables, the original vinyl version of the set seems to be in plentiful supply and can usually be scored for less than twenty bucks.

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

Keep the faith

Larry

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

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

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Wilbert Longmire – Give It Up Or Turnit A Loose

By , July 27, 2014 1:41 pm

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Wilbert Longmire

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Listen/Download Wilbert Longmire – Give It Up Or Turnit A Loose

Greetings all

I hope the new week finds you well.

I’ve had Wilbert Longmire’s name bouncing around in my head (along with his guitar stylings) since I picked up a Pacific Jazz loss-leader comp years ago.

Always a big fan of jazzers working the funky side of the street, the late 60s jazz scene was practically overflowing with goodies.

Even a hardass like Buddy Rich felt the need to accessorize (along with some flares and a paisley ascot) and keep his book fresh with tunes like ‘Chameleon’.

I had included a Longmire track (his take on ‘Scarborough Fair’) on an older mix, so when I put my hands on his 1969 LP ‘Revolution’, I handed over some folding money and took it home.

Good thing, too, since that LP included the very groovy track you see before you, a cover of James Brown’s ‘Give It Up Or Turnit A Loose’.

The session, which featured heavies like Cal Green, Leon Spencer, Jr and Paul Humphrey (as well as a couple of omnipresent Crusaders) is tasty indeed, seasoning some straight ahead funk with jazzy horns.

There’s a moment (at around 1:23) where a wave of trombones comes in and kind of fills your ears to overflowing ( I highly recommend the use of a headphones).

Longmire is in top form, and Larry Gales bass is next level.

The rest of the album is more jazz than funk, but if you can get it for less than twenty bucks, it’s worth it for this cut alone (at least I think so…).

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

Keep the faith

Larry

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

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

 

Example Example

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Clarence Curvan – Feeling Nice

By , July 17, 2014 7:01 pm

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Clarence Curvan

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Listen/Download Clarence Curvan – Feeling Nice

Greetings all

The end of the week is at hand, and so I will remind you once again that the Funky16Corners Radio Show takes to the airwaves of the interwebs each and every Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio. If you cannot be there at airtime, you can subscribe to the show as a podcast in iTunes, or grab yourself an MP3 out of the Archive here at the blog.

The song I bring you today is one of those ‘white whale’ 45s that I chased (fruitlessly) for years.

I first heard Clarence Curvan’s ‘Feeling Nice’ many years ago when the esteemed Dave Withers did a guest set at the Asbury Park 45 Sessions.

As soon as the needle hit the record I was running up to the decks to see what the song was.

I plugged the info into my (old) phone, and started looking.

It bears mentioning that that was two phones ago.

I had the record plugged into an E-Bay saved search, which continually came up snake eyes.

I had all but given up hope that I would ever get my hands on a copy of the 45 (It popped up once but got bid out of my grasp pretty quickly), when it finally showed up early this year.

This time (thanks to a healthier bid..cough..) I prevailed, and in a few short weeks ‘Feeling Nice’ was heating up my play box.

Clarence Curvan was a Trinidadian drummer/bandleader who recorded traditional island sounds and calypso as well as soul and funk over the years.

He and his band migrated to the United States in the early 70s, where they recorded ‘Feeling Nice’ for Brooklyn-based Charlies Records.

‘Feeling Nice’ is as aggressive an ode to the wonders of the kind bud as has ever been laid down (maybe a little too aggressive for most folks smoking it…), but one shouldn’t let that get in the way of a good party, and this party is GOOD.

The bass (especially groovy), organ and guitar chug alongside the drums with a wailing vocal, all over a funky rhythm with a distinct island flavor.

So slip this one onto your podlike thingy, make yourself up a nice, fruity tropical drink and start dancing.

Have a great weekend.

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

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Boz Scaggs – Hercules

By , July 13, 2014 1:01 pm

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Boz Scaggs

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Listen/Download Boz Scaggs – Hercules

Greetings all

When I was picking through tracks trying to decide on something to start the week, my natural inclination was to go back into the dark recesses of the archives, yet I was met time and time again by the siren song of something brand new.

Not long ago, while searching for something else entirely (as is often the case)I happened upon a completely unexpected cover version of a familiar song.

I first heard Aaron Neville’s original version of ‘Hercules’ (written by Allen Toussaint) close to 15 years ago on an old Charly Records CD comp of New Orleans soul and funk.

The song –a very tasty groove indeed – lodged in my consciousness soon after when I realized that the original 45 – of which there are very few – had become a sought after disc among collectors of my ilk.

While I have never encountered a copy myself, I remain on the lookout.

That said, while seeking something else Toussaint-related, I came across a listing for a cover of ‘Hercules’, by none other than Boz Scaggs.

Now, if you grew up in the 70s (like me, for instance) the sounds of Mr Scaggs were inescapable. He had a number of big hits in the decade, including groovers like ‘Lowdown’ and ‘Lido Shuffle’.

It was only many years later that I discovered that he had a much deeper history, having recorded his first solo records in the 60s, and spent time as a sideman with the early Steve Miller Band.

When I discovered that Scaggs had covered ‘Hercules’, I set out in search of a copy of the record, which proved both easy and cheap.

Appearing on his 1974 LP ‘Slow Dancer’, Scaggs’ version of ‘Hercules’ is very groovy indeed.

Though it lacks some of the heat of the NOLA-based OG, it comes awfully close.

Produced by Johnny Bristol with arrangements by HB Barnum, this version of ‘Hercules’ is a funky, slow burner.

Scaggs takes the song at a slightly slower pace than Neville, but the groove here is deep indeed. The addition of strings gives this version a slightly smoother, nighttime vibe.

As far as I can tell, Boz Scaggs’ ‘Hercules’ has remained largely unnoticed for the last 40 years, instead of heating up dance floors, where it should have been. I suspect that this has something to do with Scaggs’ (somewhat undeserved) reputation as a middle-of-the-road pop artist.

Give this one a spin and then pass it on to someone who will dig it.

Keep the faith

Larry

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

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

 

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PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Bob’s Band – Score

By , July 6, 2014 12:23 pm

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Charles Fox (2nd from left) with co-writer Norman Gimbel,
Lily Tomlin, Roberta Flack and Isaac Hayes

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Listen/Download Bob’s Band – Score

Greetings all

Here’s a very groovy one for you to start the week.

Groovy, and somewhat sonically deceptive, if you have your ears attuned to the library.

If memory serves I grabbed this 45 while digging through the interwebs for Hammond sounds.

When I first heard a clip of the song, the first thing that went through my head was ‘UK Library’.

‘Score’ has all the hallmarks of late 60s/early 70’s UK library composers like Alan Hawkshaw and Alan Moorhouse, with it’s groovy, fast moving organ and drums action.

Once I got my hands on the 45, the first thing I noticed was that the song was composed by Charles Fox.

If you don’t know, Fox, who got his start arranging for Latin bandleaders in New York, was a major hitmaking composer of the 70s, writing/co-writing songs like Robert Flack’s ‘Killing Me Softly’, ‘I Got a Name’ by Jim Croce and the themes to tons of sitcoms and game shows.

Fox was also writing incidental music for the NFL and ABC’s Wide World of Sports, which is where ‘Score’ comes in.

Composed as the theme music for ‘Monday Night Football’* in 1972, ‘Score’ was produced by Bob Israel (the ‘Bob’ in ‘Bob’s Band’ no doubt…) the man in charge of the company Score Productions, which was an American ‘library’ music house.

Formed in 1963 to compose TV themes and background music, Score (where Fox had worked) created original music for new programs, game shows, TV movies and sitcoms, and is still active today.

The funky ‘Score’ was used as the theme to ‘Monday Night Football’ from 1972 to 1975.

It is very groovy indeed, and one of my favorite recent finds.

I hope you dig it too.

Keep the faith

Larry

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*Coincidentally, one of the best known pieces of Monday Night Football music  – Johnny Pearson’s ‘HeavyAction’ was from the KPM Library in the UK.

 

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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

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Bobby Womack 1944-2014

By , June 29, 2014 11:56 am

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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

 

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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.

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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.

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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.

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‘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.

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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.

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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.

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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

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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

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Funky16Corners 2014 Allnighter/Pledge Drive – Vincent the Soul Chef – Life is More Like a Box of Records –

By , June 18, 2014 11:27 am

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Vincent the Soul Chef – Life Is More Like a Box of Records!
01 Runaway Child Running Wild-Earl Van Dyke (Soul)
02 Jump Back-Rufus Thomas (Stax)
03 The Charge-Alvin Cash (Mar V Lus)
04 Buster Browne-Willie Mitchell (Hi)
05 Poppin Popcorn-South St. Soul Guitars (Silver Fox)
06 Uptight-Ramsey Lewis (Cadet)
07 Dance Dance Dance-Tommy Duncan (Falew!)
08 Just Ain’t Enough love-Isley Brothers (Tamla)
09 I Can’t Forget-Bull & The Matadors (Toddlin’ Town)
10 Try My Love Again-Bobby Moore & The Rhythm Aces (Checker)
11 New Love-The Fantastic Johnny C-Phil LA Of Soul
12 Don’t Be Sore At Me-The Parliaments (Revilot)
13 Girls On The Rocks-The Bob Crewe Generation (DynoVoice)
14 You Ain’t Ready-Lou Courtney (Riverside)
15 I’ll Take Those Skinny Legs-Syl johnson (Twinight)
16 Flower Power-The Sandpebbles (Calla)
17 Karate-The Emperors (Mala)
18 Instant Groove-King Curtis (Atco)
19 Look At Granny Run Run-Howard Tate (Verve)
20 Green Power-The Bagdads (Double Shot)
21 Listen To Me-The Esquires (Bunky)
22 Let My Heart And Soul Be Free-The Tan Geers (Okeh)
23 Let My People Go-Brother Jack McDuff (Caet)
24 Set your Soul On Fire-Jerry Washington (Excello)
25 Rocks In My Head-The 8th Day (Invictus)
26 You Are My Sunshine-Dyke & The Blazers (Original Sound)
27 Spooky-The Fame Gang (Atlantic)
28 Point It Out-Smokeu Robinson & The Miracles (Tamla)
29 Yeah You Right-The Sister & Brothers (UNI)
30 Master Of Eyes-Aretha Franklin (Atlantic)
31 Tell Me-Willis Robinson & The JM’s Funk Factory (Saluda)

A note from Vincent:

It’s such a thrill every time I get to send some soulful vibes your way. Here’s a nice little timeline full of inspirational goodies from my newly remastered rips. Inspirational in that since I joined the social media bandwagon last week, Ive been floored by the outpouring of support from old friends and long time heroes. The tracks containd in this mix represent some of that recent inspiration, especially after listening to some episodes of F16C Radio and Gail Smith’s most amazing Work Your Soul series, just to name a few… Thanks to all of those who saw fit to friend a struggling cratedigger. You can visit me at mixcloud.com/fufustew fufustew.wordpress.com or facebook.com/vincent.soulchef

 

Listen/Download Funky16Corners Presents: Vincent the Soul Chef – Life Is More Like a Box of Records!

 

NOTE: Today’s mix comes to us courtesy of my man Vincent the Soul Chef of the long-running Fufu Stew blog.


I got to know Vincent back in the day when he guested at the Asbury Park 45 Sessions, and his always excellent mixes have appeared in this space a few times over the years.


Like all the other selectors in this year’s line-up, Vincent has both taste and deep crates, the perfect combination when mixing soul.


Make sure to check out Fufu Stew when you get a chance.


See you tomorrow, for a spectacular Jamaican mix by DJ Bluewater!
Larry

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Contest!

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Anyone that donates today to the Allnighter/Pledge Drive will (in addition to getting the badge and stickers) be entered into a random drawing for a copy of the Cultures of Soul reissue 45 of Emanuel Taylor’s ‘You Really Gota Hold On Me’ b/w ‘Society’ 45. Recorded and originally issued in 1978, Taylor was a Detroit singer in a Stevie Wonder-ish groove.
There will be more drawings over the next week for CDs by Fantastic Voyage, and 45s from Cultures of Soul!

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The winner of the Fantastic Voyage ‘Soul City Chicago’ 2-CD set is Jim Grathwohl !
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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, many of whom have participated in the Allnighter before, as well as a couple of great new contributors.

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, as well as some stickers from the archive (as long as they last).

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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 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

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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

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

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