Posts tagged: Chicago Soul

The Vibrations – Love In Them There Hills

By , April 29, 2018 10:01 am

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The Vibrations

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Listen/Download – The Vibrations – Love In Them There Hills MP3

Greetings all.

Today’s selection is yet another chapter in the musical pipeline between Philadelphia and Chicago.

The mighty Vibrations recorded a string of Lps and 45s first for Checker, and then for Okeh between 1960 and 1968, before moving on to the Philly-based Neptune an North Bay labels in the 70s.

Group member Carl Fisher had contributed songwriting to a number of Philly records under his own name and the pseudonym ‘Del Shahr’ during the 60s, and today’s selection, ‘Love In Them There Hills’ was penned by Philly giants Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff (with help from Roland Chambers) and was released in 1968.

The song was covered a year later by Maxine Brown on Epic and then in 1974 by the Pointer Sisters on ABC/Blue Thumb.

The Vibrations version starts off with a Latin flair, before the drums and voices drop in with the funk. The production by Gamble and Huff is tight.

‘Love In Them There Hills’ was the Vibrations last hit, making nto the R&B Top 40 and the Pop Hot 100.

I hope you dig the track, and I’ll see you all next week.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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If you dig what we do here or over at Funky16Corners, please consider clicking on the Patreon link and throwing something into the yearly operating budget! Do it and we’ll send you some groovy Funky16Corners Radio Network (and related) stickers!

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Curtis Mayfield – Kung Fu

By , April 22, 2018 10:42 am

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Sensei Curtis

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Listen/Download – Curtis Mayfield – Kung Fu MP3

Greetings all.

What Better way to east into the week than with some mellow, timely Curtis?

You all know that Curtis Mayfield was/is where it’s at, as composer, Impression, singer, guitarist and spirit of all things soulful.

Today’s selection, ‘Kung Fu’ (and you know there’s some 44 year old out there carrying the name with him) hails from the 1974 LP ‘Sweet Exorcist’, which seems to have been pieced together with some older/existing tracks and some then-current material.

No matter how or why this album was assembled, the bottom line is that it is prime, mid-70s Curtis (‘Kung Fu’ was an R&B Top 5 hit, making it into the Pop Top 40) and it has both a tasty groove, as well as a story to tell.

I have no doubt that Curtis had the strong, stoic wanderer Caine on his mind when he composed the tale of persistence in the ghetto, with a tip of the hat to the Temps ‘Papa Was a Rolling Stone’.

The groove is subdued but strong, with the bass and a stabbing organ setting the tone, with some barely perceptible strings wavering underneath.

This is the sound of the city circa 1974, with Curtis walking a razor between defiance and despair.

It is both a head-nodder and a head-shaker, and if you’re not old enough to remember the early 70s, there’s enough going wrong in the world now for you to identify with the vibe of the song.

I hope you dig it, and I’ll see you all next week.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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If you dig what we do here or over at Funky16Corners, please consider clicking on the Patreon link and throwing something into the yearly operating budget! Do it and we’ll send you some groovy Funky16Corners Radio Network (and related) stickers!

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The Salem Travelers – Wade In the Water

By , March 4, 2018 12:38 pm

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The Salem Travelers

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Listen/Download – The Salem Travelers – Wade In the Water MP3

Greetings all.

How about some deep, soulful gospel to get your week rolling?

The Salem Travelers were one of the more interesting Chicago-based gospel outfits.

Their mid-to-late 60s recordings are a great bridge between classic gospel and the sounds of soul and funk.

Though they’re best known for their string of albums or Checker in the late 60s and early 70s, they got their start recording for Halo, the gospel imprint of Chicago’s One-Der-Ful records.

Their recording of the spiritual classic (and one of my favorite songs) ‘Wade In the Water’ hails from 1966, and as soulful version of the song go, it’s one of my faves.

It has a slightly rough feel to it (the vaguely out of tune piano, possibly the very same one that appears on a number of One-Der-Ful/Mar-V-Lus 45s has something to do with that) but the group’s vocals are tight and take off into the stratosphere, especially after the introduction.

Sadly, I don’t think the Salem Travelers stuff has been comped, so your only way to pick it up is on the original pressings.

If you dig the tune, head on over to the archive for Testify!, my WFMU show and dig the long set of versions of ‘Wade In the Water’, many of them radically different.

I hope you dig the tune, and I’ll see you all next week.

Until next week.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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If you dig what we do here or over at Funky16Corners, please consider clicking on the Patreon link and throwing something into the yearly operating budget! Do it and we’ll send you some groovy Funky16Corners Radio Network (and related) stickers!

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The Shells – When I’m Blue

By , January 28, 2018 12:07 pm

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Listen/Download – The Shells – When I’m Blue MP3

Greetings all.

The record I bring you today is the b-side of one of my al time favorite 45s.

I wrote up the a-side ‘Whiplash’ thirteen years ago in the earliest days of the Funky16Corners blog.

I was hepped to the 45 way back in the day by my buddy Haim and it quickly moved into a permanent place in my Top 10.

Though the record was produced by Jerry Butler, when I managed to ask him about it years ago he absolutely to recollection of the session.

The group – brothers Charles and James Calvin,Willie Exon, and Billy Harper (not the same Shells that recorded doowop out of NYC) – went on to record one other 45, ‘Hot Dog’ for Volt, but it’s their debut effort that ought to cement them a spot in the soul hall of fame.

While both sides of the 45 manage to keep a foot in an earlier vocal group harmony style there is no mistaking that they are pure 1965 soul.

Though ‘Whiplash’ is the unmistakable dancer, ‘When I’m Blue’ has always held a special place in my heart. It combines unusual production and arrangement (the band almost sounds like a rock/garage outfit) with a haunting melody, with the Shells sounding like their being piped in from another dimension.

Both sides combined make this one of the most unusual and unique 45s to come out of Chicago in the 1960s.

It appears to have garnered some regional airplay (‘Whiplash’ was an R&B Top 20 hit in St Louis and ‘Hot Dog’ was popular in NY and Philadelphia) , but nothing significant.

I hope you dig the sounds, and I’ll see you all next week.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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If you dig what we do here or over at Funky16Corners, please consider clicking on the Patreon link and throwing something into the yearly operating budget! Do it and we’ll send you some groovy Funky16Corners Radio Network (and related) stickers!

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Otis Clay – Show Place

By , September 17, 2017 12:08 pm

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Otis Clay

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Listen/Download – Otis Clay – Show Place MP3

Greetings all.

Today we dip back into the catalog of the mighty (mighty) Otis Clay.

Clay is a singer that I came to pretty late in the game. Though I knew his name, I was not all that familiar with his work. Or the breadth of his career, from the deep south, to Chicago and then on to Memphis.

Since then, a number of his records have become big favorites (including ‘I’ve Got to Find a Way’ which sits securely in my personal Top 10), and today’s selection is no exception.

‘Show Place’ was (oddly enough) the b-side of the ballad ‘That’s How It Is (When You’re In Love)’ which features one of the most insanely out of tune pianos I’ve ever heard on a record.

Fortunately ‘Show Place’, which was written by Eddie Silvers (who also arranged and produced the record) does not suffer nearly as much, with the piano buried under a wave of horns, guitar and vocals.

The tune has a big, booming Detroit sound and Clay’s vocals seem to test the limits of the grooves.

It is a deep, powerful record, with enough punch and forward drive for the dance floor and some great hooks as well (it even got a UK release on the President label).

If you’re not hip to Otis Clay, get out there and start digging. Though his early work doesn’t seem to be currently available gathered in one place, his later material for the Hi label is plentiful and readily available.

I hope you dig the tune.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Keep the faith

Larry

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If you dig what we do here or over at Funky16Corners, please consider clicking on the Patreon link and throwing something into the yearly operating budget! Do it and we’ll send you some groovy Funky16Corners Radio Network (and related) stickers!

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The Impressions & Ike and Tina Turner Revue – You Must Believe Me

By , June 18, 2017 10:37 am

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The Impressions

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Mr and Mrs Turner

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Listen/Download – The Impressions – You Must Believe Me MP3

Listen/Download – Ike and Tina Turner Revue – You Must Believe Me MP3

Greetings all.

Before we get rolling….

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My weekly radio show for WFMU’s Give the Drummer Radio, Testify! is on the air live, every Wednesday night from 10-12. If you dig Funky16Corners and/or Iron Leg I think you’ll dig it. So tune in when you get a chance!
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I will go ahead and assume that is you are regular visit to these environs that you are already acquainted with the sounds of the mighty Impressions.

Though the group were much more than just a vehicle for the genius of Curtis Mayfield, there is also no doubt that without him they would never have reached the heights they did.

Today’s selection was a Top 20 hit for the group in 1964, and is a perfect example of the group’s deep, gospel-inflected soul.

The arrangement is pure Chicago class (courtesy of Johnny Pate) but also opens with a taste of Mayfield’s Pop Staples-influenced guitar, sitting there all by itself, laying a foundation of Mississippi Delta soil on which the rest of the song rests (and weaving itself in and out of the arrangement all the way through).

One of Mayfield’s finest ‘begging for forgiveness’ tunes, it treads a fine line between pleading and confidence, with Sam Gooden and Fred Cash’s harmonies riding up in the front seat with Curtis’s voice so closely that it almost sounds like he’s doubling (tripling?) himself.

The way the muted horns rise up and recede again behind the verse is a thing of beauty, making it my favorite Impressions record by a longshot.

I’m also including a very groovy cover of the tune by the Ike and Tina Turner Revue.

Their version appeared on the 1965 LP ‘The Ike and Tina Turner Show Vol2’ on Loma. This, along with the previous year’s ‘Live – The Ike and Tina Turner Show’ is an essential volume and a fantastic snapshot of a live soul revue of the classic era.

If someone were smart, they’d reissue the two discs together.

Though it was recorded not long after the original by the Impressions fell off the charts, Tina introduces the song by saying they were going “way back”.

Ike’s guitar plays pretty close to the original, while the Ikettes and Tina trade lines expertly, giving the tune a fuller, more open harmony workout.

It’s a highlight of the album, which also includes a cover of the Impressions ‘Keep On Pushin’ (coincidentally the Impressions release that immediately preceded ‘You Must Believe Me’) as well as a weird ‘fake live’ version of the Turner’s Northern Soul classic ‘Somebody (Somewhere) Needs You’.

I hope you dig the tunes.

Also, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

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.

PS Head over to Iron Leg too. <

Dennis and the Supertones – Superman Lover b/w Doin’ the Superman

By , May 14, 2017 9:45 am

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Listen/Download – Dennis and the Supertones – Superman Lover MP3

Listen/Download – Dennis and the Supertones – Doin’ the Superman MP3

Greetings all.

Before we get started this week I have some important news.

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Starting this Wednesday, 5/17 from 10PM to 12, and every Wednesday going forward at that time I will be doing a new weekly show on the WFMU Give the Drummer Radio stream called Testify! This show (which had a couple of dry runs elsewhere, earlier on) will see yours truly in a more free-form bag, taking the worlds of Funky16Corners and Iron Leg and mashing them together, with soul, rock, funk, pop, garage, psyche, R&B, Now Sound, jazz and anything else I think sounds good. The show will originate live from the Funky16Corners Subterranean Blogcasting Nerve Center and Record Vault, and will be archived thereafter.

So if your ears are free Wednesday night, turn them toward WFMU.org, click on the Give The Drummer stream and dig what it is that I am putting down.
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The tracks I bring you today are yet another small, but groovy chapter in the very interesting career of Ed Townsend.

Townsend got his start as a hit singer in his own right, with ‘For Your Love’ in 1958, went on to write songs for Theola Kilgore (For the Love of My Man), later co-wrote ‘Let’s Get It On’ with Marvin Gaye, and in between was part of Perry and the Harmonics, and the group I bring you today, Dennis and the Supertones.

The group recorded only one 45 – ‘Superman Lover’ b/w ‘Doin’ the Superman’ – in 1963, and that, as they say, was that.

Both tunes (which are separated by a hair’s breadth of originality) lean heavily in the direction of the mighty Rivingtons (the “ZOOM ZOOM ZOOMS” are right out of he Papa Oom Mow Mow playbook) and are a very cool slice of R&B-going into-soul.

Interestingly enough, ‘Superman Lover’ was covered later that same year by a group called Andy and the Marglows (brothers Andy, Jimmy and Terry Huff) on Liberty.

It’s the kind of party-starting stuff that I dig the most, and I hope you dig it, too.

See you all on Wednesday.

And, while you’re at it, make sure to follow Funky16Corners on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

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.

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

E. Rodney Jones – R&B Time Pts 1&2

By , April 9, 2017 1:53 pm

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E. Rodney Jones at the mic!

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Listen/Download – E. Rodney Jones – R&B Time Pt1 (Vocal) MP3

Listen/Download – E. Rodney Jones – R&B Time Pt2 (Instrumental) MP3

Greetings all.

The new week is dawning, and what better way to slide into the groove than with the intersection of Chicago soul, motor mouth DJs and a certified Northern Soul classic?

We have covered the work of the mighty E. Rodney Jones here many times before, usually in connection with the oeuvre of Jerry-O.

Jones was one of the top DJs in Chicago during the 1960s, and like many of his compadres (see Funky16Corners Radio v.44 ‘Hey Mr DJ’) waxed a few records of his own.

‘R&B Time Pts 1&2’ was released in 1965 and was a minor hit in St Louis, as well as getting play in NY and Miami (why it didn’t chart in Chicago, where it was no doubt in heavy rotation, I do not know).

Fully credited to Jones (though I’d say it was a safe bet there were actual musicians involved) the tune is a hard charging dancer (thus the Northern Soul popularity) with a bizarre faux-Asian introduction and Jones rapping over the tune with instructions for the dancers. The flip is a straight instrumental dub (minus the weird intro).

The price of the record seems to have varied wildly, running anywhere from 30-100 dollars, and there is also a local pressing on Charisma that goes for big bucks.

It is a groover, and I hope you 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.

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Bull and the Matadors – The Funky Judge (and Instrumental)

By , March 12, 2017 11:01 am

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Listen/Download – Bull and the Matadors – The Funky Judge MP3

Listen/Download – Bull and the Matadors – The Funky Judge (instrumental) MP3

Greetings all.

Time to get the new week rolling with something fun and funky, as well as a taste of that Hammond juice as well.

Before we get started, my new (roughly) monthly show, Testify!, on the WFMU Rock’n’Soul Ichiban Stream debuted today. It’s an intersection of the Funky16Corners and Iron Leg vibes. I archived it over at Iron Leg, so check it out when you get  chance.

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Bull and the Matadors ‘The Funky Judge’ has been since the dawn of the funk 45 collecting era, one of those basic, DNA-level building blocks of your basic funk crate.

It’s a groovy, funny, and relatively easy to score 45 on one of the great Chicago labels.

It has enough punch for the dance floor, and enough of that jive to get people singing along.

‘The Funky Judge’ was a pretty sizable hit, making it into the R&B Top 10 in 1968 and the Pop Hot 100 (higher in a bunch of East Coast and Midwest markets), and got new life when it was reissued as part of the Rhino ‘Beg, Scream and Shout’ boxed set in 1997.

Bull and the Matadors, James Lafayette “Bull” Parks, Milton Hardy, James Otis Love and Robert Holmes hailed from East St Louis, IL and recorded a handful of 45s for Chicago’s Toddlin’ Town label between 1967 and 1969.

Their only other chart success seems to have been centered around Chicago and St Louis.

Naturally, ‘The Funky Judge’ ties into the late 60s ‘Here Come de Judge’ craze, based in a routine by Pigmeat Markham that was made famous when riffed upon by Sammy Davis, Jr on ‘Rowan and Martin’’s Laugh-In’, spawning a whole shitstack of records by all kinds of people, as well as countless high school sophomores wandering the halls repeating ‘Here Come de Judge’ ad nauseum.

The Bull and the Matadors 45 featured a groovy lead vocal with some nice backing vocals, a funky base coat and a wild bit of feedback at the end.
In an extra added attraction, the flipside (also called ‘The Funky Judge’) is a groovy Hammond instro (played by I known not whom).

The other Bull and the Matadors 45s I’ve heard are excellent, though in amuch more conventional (non-novelty) soul vein.

‘The Funky Judge’ was covered (pretty nicely) a few years later by none other than the J Geils Band.

I hope you dig the tracks, 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.

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Sons of Blues – Sex Machine

By , February 5, 2017 11:43 am

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Sons of Blues

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Listen/Download -Sons of Blues – Sex Machine MP3

Greetings all.

I hope the new week finds you all well.

The tune I bring you today is yet another iteration of the old saw wherein a very familiar song is presented in a relatively unfamiliar setting.

I cannot recall exactly where I first heard about Billy Branch and the Sons of Blues version of James Brown’s ‘Sex Machine’, but I can tell you that I had to have it (in my never ending search for James Brown covers) and it took quite a while to track down a copy of the album it appeared on (‘Where’s My Money’) for my crates.

The Sons of Blues were a Chicago-based blues band and their album ‘Where’s my Money’ was released in 1984 on the independent blues label ‘Red Beans’.

The leader of the group (and its most consistent member) was harp player/singer (thought the vocalist on this track appears to be drummer Moses Rutues) Billy Branch who often got top billing on their records.

The Sons of Blues take on ‘Sex Machine’ is more accurately described as a medley of that song, ‘Licking Stick’ and ‘I Don’t Want Nobody To Give Me Nothing’.

Though the vibe isn’t purely funk, the band is certainly funky, with a kind of loose-limbed vibe that sounds like it probably developed out of an extended, largely improvised jam.

The band is tight, and the harmonica – largely working here as a horn section substitute – adds an interesting flavor.

The Sons of Blues maintain the call-and-response structure of the original, and the jam stretches out for close to 7 minutes.

The rest of the album is pretty much entirely era-appropriate electric blues.

As I said before, the record is fairly scarce (there’s also a CD version), but not terribly expensive when it does turn up.

I hope you dig the tune, 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.

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

Two (more) by the Staple Singers

By , January 8, 2017 11:45 am

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Listen/Download – The Staple Singers – Nobody’s Fault But Mine MP3

Listen/Download – The Staple Singers – I Wish I Could Hear My Mother Pray Again MP3

Greetings all.

I was recently gifted (in conjunction with Christmas) with the absolutely amazing Staple Singers boxed set, ‘Faith and Grace, A Family Journey 1953 – 1976’.

First released in 2015, and compiled by Joe McEwen, it is the first collection cover the Staples’ entire career, from their very first record in 1953 to their commercial heyday at Stax in the 1970s, with stops at VeeJay, Riverside, D-Town and Epic along the way.

Gospel has become a collectible genre among soul fans over the last ten years or so with some of the deeper cats – like Greg Belson – mining the depths for the soul, funk and even disco iterations of the genre.

While I have never collected gospel records in earnest (I still have a lot to learn), it is nearly impossible to listen to soul music from the classic era and not yearn to investigate the wellspring from which so many of its greatest practitioners came.

Gospel music is at least as big a contributor to what we know as soul music as was R&B, in both its style – brought forward by countless singers who spent their childhoods (and often adulthood) singing the music – and its repertoire, much of which made its way into the soul catalog via osmosis, theft and homage.

The mighty Staple singers are a perfect bridge for those with a taste for soul music who want to find a way into the gospel realm.

The group was in many sui generis, in that their approach to the genre was unusual (becoming even moreso as the years passed), with Roebuck ‘Pops’ Staples Delta blues inspired guitar style and Mavis Staples uniquely powerful voice.

They were deeply influential, inside and outside of gospel, and work as a touchstone to pure, gospel quartet singing, and socialy conscious soul music.

As a listener of music, I have always been more attuned to the overall sound, as opposed to lyrics, effected first by the feel of things, and the Staple Singers had a sound that was remarkable.

It’s not that elements of their music blend can’t be found in earlier performers. Pop Staples grew up near the Dockery Plantation in Mississippi and learned to play the guitar while listening to Charley Patton, Robert Johnson and Son House, and Mavis’s voice has echoes of both secular (Patton) and sanctified blues (Blind Willie Johnson). However nobody combined the sounds of the Delta and gospel harmony like the Staple Singers did.

Their sound – and it’s interesting to listen to how its power persisted through the different production styles over the years – was unique, spiritual (in every way) and at times almost ghostly, in its ability to carry the voices of the past into the present.

I’ve spent a great deal of time since Christmas listening, and relistening to ‘Faith and Grace’, and diving deep into the sound of the Staples’ music.

Though I was already familiar with much of the second half of the set (the late Riverside, Epic and Stax periods), the earlier recordings were a revelation.

To listen to their earliest recordings, like ‘It Rained Children’ (from 1953) and their first hit ‘Uncloudy Day’ (from 1956) and realize that Mavis’s booming, richly layered and masterfully controlled voice was coming from a teenager, verily boggles the mind. And it must be acknowledged that even that supreme instrument was only one component of the group’s sound. Pops’ high, keening voice, tremelo-soaked guitar, and the harmonies and call and response of Pervis, Cleotha and Yvonne (the line up changing frequently over the years) all came together to make something remarkable.
The two tracks I bring you today hail from the Staples 1965 and 1966 Epic LPs, ‘Amen!’ and ‘Why’, and are both included on ‘Faith and Grace, A Family Journey 1953 – 1976’.

The first, ‘Nobody’s Fault But Mine’ is a gospel standard that was first recorded by the aforementioned Blind Willie Johnson in 1927 as ‘It’s Nobody’s Fault But Mine’. It should also be familiar to listeners of Led Zeppelin as just one (particularly egregious) example of their thievery.

The Staples take advantage of a small-band backing to add a brisk, rolling propulsion to their version of the song, with Pops’ guitar edging right up to an almost rockabilly sound (a recurring motif in songs like ‘Swing Down Chariot’ and ‘I’m So Glad’), and his vocal in the lead, with response from his children.

The second tune, ‘I Wish I Could Hear My Mother Pray Again’ is another gospel chestnut, which was recorded over the years by a variety of performers, many of the coming from the white/country gospel sound. You can hear traces of that sound in the Staples’ version.

The astounding quality of the music on ‘Faith and Grace’ will blow away the most jaded listener, and certainly spur many of you to head out and find as many of the original releases as possible. There are a few omissions (I wish that they had included the Larry Williams produced reworking of ‘Why Am I Treated So Bad’) but there are so many great moments (including a couple of rare live recordings) that nobody outside of pedantic record collectors will find any reason to quibble with the selection.

So dig the sounds, and go out and find yourself a copy of this collection, and settle in for several hours of amazement.

I hope you 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.

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

G.L. Crockett – Every Hour, Every Day

By , November 13, 2016 9:16 am

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G.L. Crockett

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Listen/Download – G.L. Crockett – Every Hour, Every Day MP3

Greetings all.

I hope that the new week finds you all well.

The record you see before you this fine day is something I picked up at a record show a long time ago, thanks to the presence of ‘It’s a Man Down There’, a Top 10 R&B hit in 1965 and an iteration of the Sonny Boy Williamson song ‘One Way Out’ that was redone to great success by the Allman Brothers a few years later.

While that particular track is a very groovy, very mellow Jimmy Reed-esque number with that juke joint drive, it is the flipside of the 45 that we gather to discuss.

‘Every Hour, Every Day’ is one of those records, like Tommy Tucker’s ‘Long Tall Shorty’ that takes a little time before it hits its stride, but when it does it is something else indeed.

‘Every Hour, Every Day’, which makes the most of a spare, almost rudimentary backing and rough hewn (very live sounding) production almost sounds like it’s being cranked to life like an old jalopy, but when it gets rolling it is a thing of beauty.

G.L. Crockett’s history is short, and comes to a sudden end a few years after his very short discography. He came to Chicago from Mississippi, and apparently had himself a hard-driving/hard drinking lifestyle, and he died of a cerebral hemorrhage in 1967.

‘Every Hour, Every Day’ resides in the rarified zone where blues, R&B and soul dwell together, never settling firmly in any of them, yet transcending all of them.

Though the production style is similar to the A side, the feel of the record is marked by an unusual beauty. The backing vocals (sounding like one bass and one falsetto) complement Crockett’s voice which comes across like a very fine grade of sandpaper. The band, guitar, bass, drums and a very prominent tambourine, is stellar and the combination of instruments and voice is very nearly hypnotic.

I can imagine you might be tempted to slip this into a mid-tempo set, but I think that everyone would eventually stop dancing so they could concentrate on the music.

I think you’ll find yourself giving this one repeated listens.

I hope you dig it, and I’ll see you 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.

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

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