Felice Taylor – It May Be Winter Outside (But In My Heart It’s Spring) + 2

By , December 25, 2011 2:41 pm

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Felice Taylor

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Listen/Download – Felice Taylor – It May Be Winter Outside (But In My Heart It’s Spring)

Listen/Download – Felice Taylor – I’m Under the Influence of Love

Listen/Download – Felice Taylor – Love Theme (Inst)

Greetings all.

I’d like to take this opportunity to ease you all into another groovy week here at the Funky16Corners.

I hope all is cool in your part of the universe and that those of you that celebrate had a wonderful Christmas.

Right now, my lovely wife is home with us through the New Year, so we’re all very happy about that.

I picked up the first of today’s selections  last year on the same day I got my car towed in Jersey City.

I’m always on the lookout for soul 45s on the Mustang label (known mainly for the Bobby Fuller Four) because of the involvement of none other than Barry White.

When I happened upon this disc by Felice Taylor, though I wasn’t familiar with her music, I did know that she was one of the artists that White had worked with, so I grabbed the record.

Good thing too, because when I got it home I discovered some very nice uptempo Northern soul, with a singer that bore a striking vocal resemblance to Diana Ross.

The California-born Taylor didn’t have an especially long recording career, having started recording as a member of the Sweets (with her sisters Darlene and Norma) in 1965, and then closing out her career three years later in the UK on the President label.

She recorded two 45s with White at Mustang, ‘It May be Winter Outside (But In My Heart It’s Spring) and ‘Under the Influence of Love’, in 1966 and 1967.

‘It May be Winter Outside’ is taken at a brisk but relaxed pace with a sweet, almost baroque opening before dropping down into a danceable beat. The record is a remarkable slice of imitation Motown, up to and especially because of Taylor’s voice.

‘Under the Influence of Love’ is more of a floor filler, with an opening that seems as if it were modeled after ‘Reach Out’ by the Four Tops. It’s with this 45 that the resemblance to Diana Ross is most pronounced, making it perhaps the finest Supremes 45 the group never actually recorded.

I’m also including the instrumental dub from the flipside (entitles ‘Love Theme’) which I’ve played out before.

I find it surprising that records this infectious didn’t make a dent in the charts and I’m thinking that Barry White felt the same way because in 1973 and 1974 he would resurrect both of these songs and re-record them with Love Unlimited.

Taylor would go on to record two 45s for Kent, and then in the UK, two more for the President label, with two-sides of one of them (see picture sleeve above) written and produced by none other than Derv Gordon and Eddy Grant of the Equals.

After that, it would appear that she never recorded again.

I hope you dig the sounds, and I’ll be back later in the week with the 2011 Year In Review mix.

 

Peace

Larry

 

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Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

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F16C Christmas Pt5 – Harvey Averne Band – Let’s Get It Together This Christmas

By , December 22, 2011 3:25 pm

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Harvey Averne

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Listen / Download – Harvey Averne Band – Let’s Get It Together This Christmas

 

Greetings all.

I’ve been dropping Christmas funk and soul all week, and when I got home today from running my various and sundry holiday and hospital-related errands it occurred to me that I had yet to repost this most excellent tune, and since I didn’t have a fifth cut ready to go, why not grab the old HTML, add a little contemporary verbiage and let fly.

So, here it is.

I should remind you once again that we have a very special Funky16Corners Radio Show Christmas Special dropping tomorrow (Friday) at 9PM on Viva Radio, and popping up in this very space as an MP3 on Christmas Eve, just in time  to fire it up while you’re torching the Yule log at home.

I will not be posting again until next week, so if you’re in the midst of Hannukah, or anticipating Christmas, or just chilling awash in the wonder of the season(s), our best to you and yours.

Peace

Larry

 

Originally posted 12/21/10

>>Christmas week has finally arrived, and so, as is the custom, have some funky and soulful holiday 45s.

I managed to get in a nice dig/hang this weekend down at the world famous Asbury Lanes where I managed to grab some excellent records (both the 45 and LP varieties) and meet up with some of my old mod scene compadres (Mr Luther and Mick) as well as AP45 Sessions’ very own DJ Prime Mundo. It was a nice way to spend a Sunday afternoon.

I’ve made mention of the fact that I have never been a big collector of holiday music, Don’t get me wrong – I dig the jingle bells and the ho ho ho and what not – but with rare exception (generally the records that I feature here around Christmas time) I don’t go out of my way to add this kind of stuff to my record box.

Occasionally – as is the case with the Soulful Strings Christmas LP – such a record dovetails nicely with an existing obsession. Sometimes, as was the case with Clarence Carter’s ‘Backdoor Santa’, we might be talking about a record that kicks ass solidly despite the fact that it’s aimed at a Yuletide audience.

This week I’ll be bringing you two great holiday selections (Monday and Wednesday) and then taking the rest of the week off to enjoy the holiday with the fam.

I wouldn’t leave you hanging though, so make sure you tune into the Funky16Corners Radio Show this Friday at 9PM, Christmas Eve for the first annual Funky16Corners Radio Christmas Special, for an hour of the coolest funk and soul sounds for the holiday. You’ll hear the Soulful Strings, Clarence Carter, James Brown and many, many more.

The tune I bring you today is nice but of funky Latin soul by the mighty Harvey Averne.

Averne was – like his bandmate and fellow Latin music legend Larry Harlow – a non-Hispanic (both men were Jewish) who played a big role in the history of the storied Fania label.

Averne, a vibraphonist, got his start under the name Arvito and his Latin Orchestra, playing during the 50s mambo craze, eventually taking over a band that included Harlow on piano.

He had a great deal of success as a musician (and in the construction business) but had probably his most important role as the mad behind the day to day operations of Fania.

Hired by label owner Jerry Masucci, Averne worked at Fania as musician, producer (of Ray Barretto’s ‘Acid’ LP among many other classics) and A&R man.

Oddly enough, his first record, among them the boogaloo classics ‘The Micro Mini’ and ‘You’re No Good’ were released on the Atlantic label, with Averne eventually having a bunch if stuff released on Fania and its Uptite subsidiary.

The tune I bring you today ‘Let’s Get It Together This Christmas’ is a funky mover, with the punchy bass, the jingling jingle bells, and an upbeat message for the season.

I haven’t been able to nail down a release date, but the catalog number would suggest something in the area of 1969 or 1970.

The flip side is a an otherwise groovy version of ‘The Christmas Song’, marred by the ‘contributions’ of a barking dog (who gets credit on the label!).

‘Let’s Get It Together This Christmas’ was also included on the excellent ‘In The Christmas Groove’ comp.

I hope you dig the tune.<<

 


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F16C Christmas Week Pt4 – Two from the Soulful Strings

By , December 21, 2011 8:21 pm

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The LP (above), Miss Dorothy Ashby (below)

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Listen/Download – The Soulful Strings – Jingle Bells

Listen/Download – The Soulful Strings feat. Dorothy Ashby – Merry Christmas Baby

Greetings all.

Today’s Christmas presents were originally posted back in 2007.

You know I’m a HUGE Richard Evans/Soulful Strings fan, and their version of ‘Merry Christmas Baby’ is in a dead heat for the title of my all-time fave Christmas record.

Don’t forget to tune in to the Funky16Corners Radio Show Christmas Special, this Friday at 9PM where you’ll hear many of the old favorites and some newly discovered goodies as well.

If you celebrate, have a great Christmas, if not, have a great weekend all the same.

See you next week. – Larry


>>As I’ve stated repeatedly in the past, I’ve never been much of a holiday music collector. However, once in a while a personal obsession of mine also happens to have a Christmas record. In the case of Richard Evans and the Soulful Strings, their 1968 LP ‘The Magic of Christmas’ is a real gem.

The first tune I selected was the obvious choice (at least for me) because I can’t think of another version of ‘Jingle Bells’ that opens up with an honest to goodness drum break. I’m not sure who’s laying it down here (though I’m guessing that it is in fact Morris Jennings Jr.).

The second selection is a lush, sublime reading of Charles Brown’s classic ‘Merry Christmas Baby’ which features the brilliant Dorothy Ashby on harp. If you aren’t familiar with Ashby – I included her ‘Soul Vibrations’ on my collab with DJ Prestige ‘Beat Combination Pt2’ (check out the Flea Market Funk Mixes page)– she was one of the few harpists who could actually play jazz on the instrument, and the three albums she recorded for Cadet between 1968 and 1970 (in collaboration with Evans) are brilliant.

If your nerves are frayed (like mine) and the consumerist madness of the holiday season has you down, give this version of ‘Merry Christmas Baby’ a listen and all will (at least for a few minutes) be well, as it is positively sublime.

I’ll be taking the next week off to enjoy the holiday with my family and do a little visiting. I will most definitely be back with something for New Years Eve, so hang tight, enjoy your Christmas and I’ll see you all soon.<<

 

Peace

Larry

 

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Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

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F16C Christmas Week Pt3 – Two Little (Funky) Drummer Boys

By , December 20, 2011 8:10 pm

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West Coast/East Coast

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Listen/Download – George Conedy – El Nino Del Tambor

Listen/Download – Lenox Avenue – Little Drummer Boy

Greetings all.

Today’s Christmas goodies appeared here at Funky16Corners at different times over the last five years (or so). They are both extremely cool versions of a song that I’m not particularly fond of in it’s natural incarnation, so you know they must be good for me to post them.

Dig – if you will – and stay tuned for more on the morrow.

First – George Conedy and ‘El Nino Del Tambor’

>>On the flippity flop, I bring you the result of a happy accident (referring not to the recording of the record, but rather the circumstances by which it landed in my Crate du Hammonde).

The record in question popped up a while back on the sale list of a pal of mine, who’s taste in music I hold in very high regard (howdy Agent 45…).

So, on this list I see a record with the brief (but wholly sufficient description of “funky Hammond version”), directly adjacent to a very reasonable price, which was at the end of a line that began with a Spanish song title (which I didn’t bother to translate). So, I pay my money, some time elapses and the record in question pops through the mail slot at Funky16Corners headquarters. I whipped it on the turntable, and in a few short seconds (about as long as I suspect it will take you) it became apparent that the title was in fact ‘The Little Drummer Boy’ en Espanol.

I have to say that even as a tike, when they still showed the animated special of the same title, this was far from my favorite Christmas tune, certainly not the kind of thing I thought capable of funk-a-fi-zation. Little did I know that sometime in the late 60’s or early 70’s an organist named George Conedylaid down an LP of Christmas tunes for the gospel subsidiary of the Kent label, which I am assuming was the source of the music on this very 45**.

All I have to say is that George took an overly solemn carol and turned it into a slow, funky jam that sounds like it dropped out of the long lost (so long lost as to never have existed..) Santa-sploitation classic “Superfly Santa the Hard Way” aka “Hell Up in the North Pole”, in which our hero, Saint Nicky, wearing a red (of course) velvet suit, and driving a red and white Caddy brings Christmas joy to all the poor kids (and a few of the better looking women) on his route.

I’ve gone a-Googling, and as far as I can tell Mr. Conedy has vanished into the ether.

Well, wherever you be I say Huzzah! And Merry Christmas to you George!<<

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Second – Lenox Avenue and ‘ Little Drummer Boy’ (originally posted 12/09)

>>The tune I bring you today is something I picked up this year (and oddly enough I can’t remember the circumstances of its arrival in my crates). It’s a funky take on that old holiday chestnut ‘The Little Drummer Boy’ by a group called Lenox Avenue. This, their sole 45 was released on Chess in 1970.

Though I haven’t been able to find any info on the group, the names on the label suggest to me that this may in fact be an early incarnation of the group that recorded an album a few years later under the name the Chuck Rainey Coalition (on the Skye label).

Bassist Rainey and his cohorts – including keyboardist Richard Tee – were major hired hands in the New York (and elsewhere, natch) studio scene, showing up on all kinds of records from the late 60s onward.

Lenox Avenue’s take on ‘The Little Drummer Boy’ is taken a slow, but funky pace with some groovy female backing voices. As I mentioned a while back when I posted the equally cool George Conedy version of the tune, this has never been one of my fave Christmas carols, yet when someone injects it with a dose of funk, I really dig it. <<

 

Peace

Larry

 

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Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

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If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

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F16C Christmas Week Pt2 – Clarence Carter – Back Door Santa

By , December 19, 2011 7:29 pm

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Clarence Carter

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Listen/Download – Clarence Carter – Back Door Santa

Greetings all.

As promised, I’ve returned early this week (and will continue to do so) to bring you some of my favorite tunes from Funky16Corners Christmases past.

First up is probably my fave soulful holiday tune, Clarence Carter’s ‘Back Door Santa’, first posted here back in December of 2006.

>>As I’ve gone over a few different times, I’ve never been a big collector of (any) holiday themed funk and soul. I may pick up a piece here and there – when it turns up – but I don’t generally seek it out. This is the main reason it may take a decade or so before you see me post a Christmas edition of Funky16Corners Radio. I just don’t have the raw material at my disposal.

That is not to say that I would ever let the time of year go by unnoticed, and this time out I have a couple of excellent funky yule logs for ye, one you may have heard, and another that you almost certainly haven’t.

The former may very well be my all time favorite funk/soul Christmas record, by one of the truly great voices of 60’s and 70’s soul. The singer, Mr. Clarence Carter, the song, ‘Back Door Santa’.

First off, I suspect that someone, somewhere in the funky blog-o-sphere will be dropping this chestnut, and I don’t care, on account of I love this record, and you should too, and much like spinach and yams, more than one serving will only serve to improve your overall well being.

That said, Clarence rips it up here, whipping every last bit of funk they had hidden at Fame studios on you (as well as jingle bells and egg nog), with all the good Santa-related double (hardly) entendres money can buy. Get this on thy-Pod post haste, so that over the weekend, when some wet blanket tries to throw ‘Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer’ (or, God forbid that thing where the dogs bark out ‘Jingle Bells’) on at the Christmas gathering, you can parry (and thrust) with this big, jangling set of Christmas balls and really get the party started.

I mean, seriously…how can your ears suck up this groovy gravy, and your butt fail to respond– in the words of the great Lee Dorsey (without whom everything you do can’t be funky) – with the make-a-shake-a-make-a-hula, or however it is you likes to shake it (but don’t break it).

By the way, if some youngster starts tugging on your scarf when this starts playing, it’s because he heard this songs very essence sampled by none other than Run DMC (It’s Christmas in Hollis Queens! Etc etc).<<

 

Peace

Larry

 

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Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

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If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

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F16C Christmas Week Pt1 – James Brown – Santa Claus Go Straight To the Ghetto

By , December 18, 2011 2:41 pm

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Ho Ho Hyeaahhh!

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Listen/Download – James Brown – Santa Claus Go Straight To the Ghetto

Greetings all.

The time has come, as it does once a year for yours truly to let loose with the Ho Ho Hos and the jingle bells and what not on account of the fact that Christmas is approaching rapidly.

As has been mentioned here before, this is a multi-religious household, with myself representing the (extremely) lapsed-Catholic and my wife repping the Jewish and the Little Corners an interfaith bouillabaisse, their eyes and hearts filled to bursting with the childhood wonder of the season.

Which is really what it’s all about, at least from my vantage point, where what I want is no more or less than their happiness, and my wife’s good health.

You know that I’ve mentioned here (every single Christmas since this blog has been extant) that I have never been a prodigious collector of holiday music. Whether this has to do with my acceptance (almost at the DNA level) of the cheesy/classic seasonal sounds of my childhood, to the point where I can sit back and take some comfort in the sound of the voices of Andy Williams or Jim Nabors (and surprisingly enough, I can), or that seeing limited appeal/value in holiday music, I’d rather spend my money on reg’lar old soul and funk is in the end meaningless, since there always seems to be something cool dropping in from the margins to satisfy the Funky Kringle in us all.

I bring you today’s selection in particular because it is a favorite of bot myself and my wife, and naturally because it is a very groovy, upbeat and cheerful Christmas offering from Mr Please Please Please (HO HO HO?) himself, James Brown.

When I listen to ‘Santa Claus Go Straight to the Ghetto’, I realize that what we get with this record is both funky and danceable, but also poignant, especially in these days where there’s a tent city of homeless families not 10 miles from my warm, toasty house, and Mr Brown was thinking of how this, the most precious of holidays for children especially, could be rough for the poorest among us, and we should remember that while we listen to this song.

We should also remember that James Brown, who gave us such a great Christmas song, left us on that very day five years ago.

So dig the tune (there’ll be many old faves dropping as the week progresses) and remember that not everyone has the wherewithal to have a groovy holiday.

So try to remember that even if you are (like me) not a religious person, that the Christmas season can just be about brotherhood in the general ‘Family of Man’ sense, which is cool too, especially when times are tough (which they are for so many).

See you on tomorrow.

 

Peace

Larry

 

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Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

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James Rivers – Fonky Flute

By , December 15, 2011 12:45 pm

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James Rivers

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Listen/Download – James Rivers – Fonky Flute

Greetings all.

The end of another week is upon us, and so I must remind you all that the Funky16Corners Radio Show will be hitting the airwaves of the interwebs this Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio. This week we have Part 2 of our international excursion, with stops in Africa, the West Indies and the UK, so make sure to stop by and dig it. If you are unable to do so, but still wish to hear the show you can fall by here and pick up the ones and zeros on Saturday when I post the show as an MP3 here at the blog.

The tune I bring you today is a groovy one that I’ve been holding out of the spotlight for a while (though it did drop in a mix about four years ago).

The artist in question, James Rivers is a cat that I’ve been following ever since I started to get deep into the sounds of New Orleans.

Rivers was a multi-instrumentalist (equally adept on sax and flute) who recorded a number of excellent 45s under his own name for labels like Instant, Eight Ball, Kon-Ti and J.B.’s, as well as at least one album. He was also a busy sideman in the studios of New Orleans, working for cats like Eddie Bo.

Rivers recorded several 45s for Lionel Worthy’s Kon-Ti label in the late 60s and early 70s (see Dan Phillips article on Rivers’ Kon-Ti sides at the always excellent Home of the Groove) and the catalog number seems to place today’s selection in the vicinity of 1969 or 1970.

I picked up my copy of ‘Fonky Flute’ in an auction years ago, and have never seen another copy since then (which is why I’ve never had the opportunity to ‘mint up’).

The record starts out innocently enough, with a pleasant melody being stated by the band (organ, piano, drums and bass) and River’s flute lead.

The flute soloing begins to get gradually more intense, until about the 1:30 mark at which point Rivers goes absolutely batshit with the overblowing and the vocalizing, eventually closing out the passage with a whistle (?!?), in the Rahsaan Roland Kirk stylee.

The song then pops back into the groove, with Rivers getting just a little bit crazy again before the run out groove.

You know I’m a huge jazz flute fan, and the first time I heard this record I just about flipped my wig.

Rivers was a versatile instrumentalist – which is probably made him such a popular studio hand – and this can be seen in his own recordings. He was capable of playing blues, jazz, New Orleans second line parade sounds, soul and funk.

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

 

Peace

Larry

 

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Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

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If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

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Dizzy Gillespie – Soul Kiss Pt1

By , December 13, 2011 4:07 pm

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Dizzy Gillespie

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Listen/Download – Dizzy Gillespie – Soul Kiss Pt1

Greetings all.

I hope the middle of the week, aka dio del humpo finds you all well.

If you fall by Funky16Corners on the reg, you already know that I often find myself in a jazz bag, but even the most devoted might be surprised on how deep that bag really is.

Thanks to my father, a musician and a fan, I’ve been hearing jazz my entire life, from Dixieland, to Chicago style, West Coast cool, and hard bop (in my parents house) and adding post bop, fusion and free jazz in my adulthood.

There was even a period in my late 20s to my early 30s where I listened to little else.

There are often jazz and jazz-related features here on Funky16Corners (and on the radio show) but those are generally restricted to the groove-based and the funky.

I’m not here to tell you that I’m going to start rhapsodizing about my deep and abiding love for Clifford Brown and Thelonious Monk, or that I’m going to start another blog, because I’m not (insane), but rather to preface the inclusion of another groovy, funky track, that happens to have been made by one of the most prominent innovators in the history of jazz.

It has been discussed here before, but to reprise briefly, there are two kinds of jazzers you will find here at Funky16Corners, those who’s career is rooted almost exclusively in soul jazz/groove, in that those sounds were their figurative bread and butter, and old school players who found themselves on the margin as the 60s arrived and took a detour into a more contemporary sound in an effort to stay current.

John Birks ‘Dizzy’ Gillespie found himself in 1971 teetering on the border between those two groups.

It was Gillespie, who along with Monk, Charlie Parker, Kenny Clarke and many others verily gave birth to Bebop in the 1940s.

Dizzy had the extra added benefit of also being a hepcat supreme, becoming in essence the face of the movement with his beret, goatee and hip lingo. People might have heard of Parker or later (much later) Monk, but they knew what Dizzy looked like, and in the earliest days of the spread of electronic media, that meant that for many, he was THE face of modern jazz.

I was lucky enough to see him twice in the late 70s and early 80s.

The tune I bring you today was recorded in 1971, when keyboardist Mike Longo was working in Dizzy’s band.

While there were old school boppers like James Moody on the session, you also had Longo, Bernard Purdie and Phil Upchurch as well.

The sound of ‘Soul Kiss’ is about soul jazzy as Dizzy ever got, and it’s not hard to see cuts like this as his bid to stay in the rapidly evolving game.

The groove is hard, the organ wails, and the only indication the listener gets that Gillespie was involved are the short, sharp trumpet bursts in the chorus.

The album that it comes from ‘The Real Thing’ is a very funky affair, especially for Gillespie, and as a result it is sweated heavily by the crate digging set.

I have yet to find a vinyl copy of the LP, but the 45 I bring you today will do for now.

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

 

Peace

Larry

 

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Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

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Meadowlark Lemon – Shoot a Basket

By , December 11, 2011 2:34 pm

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Meadowlark Lemon

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Listen/Download – Meadowlark Lemon – Shoot a Basket

Listen/Download – Bonus Track – Globetrotters – Globetrotters Theme

Greetings all.

The new week is finally here, and once again I have to kind of take a step back and shake my head at the losses the world of music saw in the past week.

I am not a superstitious lad, but I seem to recall going through periods like this – in which the Funky16Corners main page spends a week looking like the obit section of Billboard – at least a few times in the past.

We get wind of the passing of some musical great, and then just when you get back on your feet, somebody else goes.

The sad truth is, considering that the classic soul era got its start about half a century ago, the fact that many of its remaining standard bearers are passing on shouldn’t be at all surprising. That doesn’t make it any easier to take, especially – as in the case of Howard Tate – where the artist has managed to get some well-deserved recognition late in life.

That said, if Funky16Corners has a guiding force, it has always been to bring the great music and artists of the past to light, and if we have to do so posthumously, in an attempt to keep the music alive, then we will.

Fortunately, the artist in today’s post is still with us.

If you were a kid in the 60s and 70s, you surely know the name Meadowlark Lemon.

You just might not expect to see his name in a soul music blog, since Mr Lemon (just Meadow to his Mama) is best known as the one-time leader/frontman of the mighty Harlem Globetrotters, which was ostensibly a basketball team, but were in actuality so much more.

If you’re unfamiliar with the Globetrotters, it should suffice to say that they were a showboating/barnstorming basketball squad that took run of the mill sport, mixed comedy with incredible ball-handling skills and evolved into a major pop culture force.

They got their start in 1927 and were for decades mainly a sports team, performing in exhibition matches due in large part to the still-segregate world of professional basketball.

The team (which over the years included several players that moved on to the NBA) eventually evolved from a crack, ‘straight’ basketball squad into a comedy/trick-shot organization.

By the 60s, with players like Meadowlark Lemon and Curly Neal at the forefront, the Globetrotters made their way off of the basketball court and into the wider pop-cult arena, appearing on TV (having their own animated series from 1970-1973, a live action show in 1974 and another cartoon in 1979) and in the movies.

Meadowlark recorded today’s selection for the New York-based RSVP label (which also released 45s by Curtis Knight and garage punkers the Faine Jade) in 1966, with a version of Lloyd Price’s ‘Personality’ on the a-side.

It’s the flip we concern ourselves with today, on account of it’s a much groovier affair, with Meadowlark and some backup singers working a soulful, ever so slightly funky re-working of Junior Walker’s ‘Shotgun’, complete with basketball-related lyrics.

As records by sports stars go, it’s pretty good. Meadowlark may not have had the long-term ambitions of Roosevelt Grier, but he acquits himself nicely*.

Interestingly enough, the Globetrotters had nothing to do with the soundtrack album that accompanied their animated TV show, which doesn’t make the brief theme any less funky, which is why I’m including it here.

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

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

 

*Globetrotter Nate Branch also had a band with Wally Cox, with whom he recorded the very funky ‘Za Zu’

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

 

Dobie Gray 1940 – 2011 – The Dance Floor Trilogy

By , December 7, 2011 10:50 pm

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Dobie Gray – at the go go.

Example

Listen/Download – Dobie Gray – The In Crowd
Listen/Download – Dobie Gray – See You At the Go Go
Listen/Download – Dobie Gray – Out On the Floor

Greetings all.

I was going to drop this for Friday, but the music has my mind racing and if I don’t post it now, I’m not gonna sleep.

I come to you at the end of what has been an especially tough week for fans of quality sounds.

Things got started with the passing of Howard Tate, followed with the loss of Howlin’ Wolf’s guitar man Hubert Sumlin, and closes now with news that the mighty Dobie Gray had slipped the surly bonds of earth.

Though he was known to most for his huge 1973 hit ‘Drift Away’, any soul fan worth their wax will tell you that he made his first and most lasting mark with the ‘In Crowd’ in 1965.

That particular record holds a very special place in my heart and my own soul music ‘story’.

Back in the garage/mod days of the mid-80s, most of my experience with the sounds of soul was limited to the Southern sounds of Stax, Goldwax and the like.

Fortunately for me (and my ears) I fell in with a pack of modernists, the scooter riding, parka wearing kind, who hepped me to the stylish sounds of the mod dance floor.

A cornerstone of my introduction to that sound was ‘The In Crowd’.

Though that record has its obvious sonic charms – it has a subtle, but driving power – it’s the lyrics that really made a dent in my mind.

When you’re a young cat, on the prowl with your mates, out to hear some loud music, drink some cold beer and ease your way up beside a fine young lady, you are, whether in actuality or just in your own fevered brain, in the ‘In Crowd’.

If there was a song made during the classic soul era that was tailor made for such a scene and its adherents that was better than ‘The In Crowd’, I have yet to hear it.

I’m in with the in crowd
I go where the in crowd goes
I’m in with the in crowd
And I know what the in crowd knows

Anytime of the year
Don’t you hear
(Havin’ a ball)
Dressin’ fine, makin’ time

We breeze up an down the street
We get respect
From the people we meet
They make way day or night
They know the in crowd is out of sight

From the opening snare roll, through the horns and the throbbing bass, the song is positively brilliant. Even yours truly, with gravity and grace my sworn enemies found myself driven out onto the floor, hand clapping, head moving, heart pounding.

You ain’t been nowhere til you’ve been in.

Hell yes, Dobie Gray.

Despite the fact that he wouldn’t really have another chart hit until ‘Drift Away’ you cannot mention Dobie Gray and ‘The In Crowd’ without making note of the fact that that particular record is only the cornerstone in mod dance floor trilogy of sorts, running through ‘See You At the Go Go’ and ‘Out On the Floor’*.

If you’re going to discuss one, you have to discuss them all because they are all very, very groovy, and because they all speak to facets of the same basic experience.

It’s as if your set stepped out the door with ‘The In Crowd’, made their plans with ‘See You at the Go Go’ and then put their moves to work ‘Out On the Floor’.

They were released in 1965 and 1966 (all on Charger), and the sound of the three records blends together brilliantly (the first two written by Billy Page, the third by Fred Darian and Al DeLory).

All three are well regarded, but ‘Out On the Floor’ is a big record with the Northern Soul crowd, so much so that it grazed the UK Top 40 in 1975, nearly a decade after its initial release.

They are all testament to the early greatness of Dobie Gray.

If you get the chance, head out on the floor this weekend in his memory.

See you on Monday.

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

 

*Unfortunately I do not own an OG of ‘Out on the Floor’ (yet…) thus the change in sound quality.

 

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

 

Happy Birthday Little Richard!

By , December 6, 2011 1:58 pm

Example

Mr Richard Wayne Penniman

Listen/Download – Little Richard – Poor Dog (Can’t Wag His Own Tail)

Listen/Download – Little Richard – I Need Love

Greetings all.

It was yesterday, while I sat beside my wife in the hospital, surfing the web that I discovered that it was in fact the 79th anniversary of the birth/eruption of the mighty Little Richard.

Mr Penniman is one of the true greats of American music, and next to Jerry Lee Lewis, just about the last of his kind still prowling the earth.

I thought that in the absence of a cake, I ought to get something together to mark the occasion (albeit a day late), and since I had some very groovy, very soulful Little Richard tracks dry-aging in the Funky16Corners Soul Cellar, that I would do so.

What you get here are two smoking tracks from his 1966 Okeh set ‘The Explosive Little Richard’ (for which I can neither locate the label scans not muster up the energy to dig out the album), as well as a republication of one of my fave pieces from the blog in which I rhapsodize about the greatness the man.

If this is familiar, but somehow “un”, it is because that it was originally posted back in 2007 in tandem with his early 70s cut ‘Nuki Suki’.

I thought that since the writing was recycled, I ought to cough up some tunes that hadn’t appeared here before, so there you go.

I hope you dig the music and the words, and I’ll see you all on Friday with something new.

Peace

Larry

 

Originally published 2/4/07

 

>>Whether you spent a day in your smoking jacket, reclined on the settee with a good book and a snifter of brandy, or the night out, sweating up your best tee-shirt with an icy bottle of beer in your claws, I’m guessing you certainly deserved it – as do we all. This, opposed to the lot of the neckties of the world, who spent their weekend poring over spreadsheets and such, concocting new ways to endear themselves to the uber-bosses by thinking of methods to keep the rest of us down. This I suspect – whether they know it or not – will provide them with a lifetime of regrets, which they will savor in some cold, substandard “care facility” long after their children have forgotten them.

That’s what the weekend is all about. Avoiding that kind of future. The kind where all you have is regrets. I mean, when I’m 65 (or 70, or 90 if I’m really lucky) I’ll have lots of wonderful, non-spreadsheet related memories to keep me warm, as well as my wife, kids and (one hopes someday) grandkids, to whom I will bequeath the contents of my bookshelves and crates, which by that time will be seen by most as little more than arcana and the ephemera of a bygone age

However, when the vast majority of the teenagers of the future (which by the way would make a wonderful band name and/or title for a 1950’s drive in flick) are doing the NuRobot to the strains of Zontar 2100 (or whatever they’re showing on Venusian MTV), my progeny will be the keepers of a wellspring of valuable cultural knowledge. Whether they use this knowledge for good or evil (I suspect that somewhere in the roots of my family tree yet to be there lurks the leader of some kind of soul 45-based mystery cult) is yet to be revealed. I am however sure of one thing…though they may walk the earth clad in tinfoil suits and six-foot platform boots, they will know who Little Richard was. I’ll make sure of that my friends.

Oh yes, I will.

Why?

Well I’d hope that if you were a regular visitor to the Funky16Corners blog you’d already know the answer to that particular question, but then again, maybe not.

Maybe you’re one of those people that can’t abide by the sounds of anything before a certain cut-off date and you see Little Richard as little more than a relic of bygone age, or even worse as that comical old queen in the bad wig yelling at Alf on the Hollywood Squares.
If that’s what you’re thinking my friend, well…you have another think coming.

Because…well…pay attention on account of I’m about to start testifying.

The 1950’s were the very heart of the atom age and while that usually brings to mind images of mushroom clouds aglow over the Nevada desert, it reminds me of another explosion entirely, that being the equally jarring arrival of a young Georgia dishwasher named Richard Penniman on the American scene.

I have often (usually every time I see a film clip of Little Richard) given much thought to what it must have been like to see him for the first time. How must it have felt to be a 13-year-old kid in ultra-white bread Republican middle America, the very heart of staid I-Like-Ike-ism, turning on the radio and hearing a record like ‘Good Golly Miss Molly’. A 45 that carried with it (aside from all manner of earth shattering cultural implications) a 50-megaton payload of ear bending, bone rattling, dare I say it LIFE CHANGING music, the likes of which – if not entirely unprecedented – had probably never been heard by most of the growing suburban world.

Imagine the kind of psychological/aesthetic tattoo hammered into countless listeners via the piano keys exploding under the flying fingers of Little Richard.

And then there’s that voice.

The history of rock’n’roll is littered with screamers of all types, but rarely (and I do mean rarely) has anyone taken the power of an honest to god scream, and endowed it with a controlled musicality the way Little Richard did, though I’m certain that the Moms and Dads of America didn’t see it that way. What they saw (when he finally flew into view on some TV variety show or other) was a creature so alien, so seemingly built from a grab bag of offensive elements (running the gamut from his blackness, aggression, sexual thrust and/or orientation, though more likely a combination of all of the above) that he quite literally blew their minds. It was as if some mad scientist had created in his mountaintop lair, with the assistance of lightning and a rogue atom or two – this was after all the 50’s – a monster engineered to cut a wide swath of offense through the white middle class status quo, creating in the process an army of zombie teens, each and every one overflowing with a newly fired libido, a bottle of fortified wine in one hand and a love letter to Chairman Mao in the other.

Popular culture of the 50’s and 60’s is rife with images of adult authority figures, eyes rolling back in their heads as they drop to the floor in a faint at the mere sight, sound or suggestion of rock’n’roll, but the only artist capable of causing those kinds of reactions (until his onetime employee and disciple Jimi Hendrix more than a decade later) was Little Richard.

That these people missed the irony of the situation shouldn’t be surprising. Mid-50’s America was like the idea of the boom-town played out on an unimaginably huge scale. This was a country bursting at the seams with both a surplus of ready cash, and an equally huge stockpile of repressed sexuality (buried under a foul smelling cloak of puritanical hypocrisy and denial that seems to have made an unwelcome return in our own lives and times) both of which they wasted no time in using. This was the age of gigantic, almost-priapic automobiles, and the explosion of Madison Avenue controlled electronic media. Everything in the culture, from the new consumerism right on through to nuclear paranoia was outsized and out of control. How anyone could have been surprised that an age with this much electric current running through it could spawn a being as awe inspiring as Little Richard is a testament to the equally strong current of denial and racial ugliness that existed in the background.

While the American cultural underground was filled to the brim with the products of cutting edge creativity and innovation, the Kerouacs, Coltranes, Monks, Warhols et al, that are often cited as the undercurrent that gave birth to the changes of the 1960’s, the art created by these people, in its time existed largely in the margins, as did those that were aware of these words and sounds.
Little Richard on the other hand was on the radio, TV, and in the movies and he wasn’t pulling any punches. He wasn’t “foreshadowing” anything. He WAS the 1960s ten years ahead of time. He was explosive and flamboyant (in all senses of the word) in a way that was still cutting edge when the 60’s became, in one of the great nostalgic clichés of our age – “a turbulent time”.

The world was filled with Pat Boone-y types, and here came Little Richard, with his conk piled high, his eyes blazing, teeth flashing, pencil thin moustache in stark contrast to a thick layer of pancake makeup, hammering away at his piano, screeching/preaching about a girl who “sure liked to ball” (how did they miss that???) and slamming up against the inside of Americas TV sets. His image grabbed the parents of the world by the collar and shook them violently, all the while screaming

Wake the fuck up Momma and Daddy ‘cuz I’m coming for your kids! WAAA-OOOOOOOOOO!!!!!! (Shut up!)”

It pays to stop for a second and take into consideration the jet propulsion that was present on so many of his best records. If you listen to a track like ‘Long Tall Sally’ or ‘The Girl Can’t Help It’ it is immediately obvious that these slabs of wax acted as transmitters, taking the energy that Little Richard expended recording them and entering the listeners (not unlike the holy spirit of legend) causing all manner of ecstatic convulsions. They are still capable of doing the same thing 50 years hence.

How many poor kids got grounded and were forbidden to listen to (nay, think about listening to) Little Richard after their unsuspecting parents encountered him on TV? Probably the exact same number who were driven to defy such edicts, raid the liquor cabinet and slip their hands under their best girls sweater (or allow the boundaries of their sweaters to be breached). These were the kids that left home to go to college years later and ended up throwing bricks (real and symbolic) through the windows of the establishment.

Look at a band like the MC5 and it’s not hard to see that there is a direct line running from their sounds back to those of Little Richard despite the differences – real and imagined – between the two, I’m here to tell you that they were most certainly working the same side of the street, selling the same kind of salvation. As many times as I’ve listened to ‘Kick Out the Jams’, I’ve always wanted to believe that Rob Tyner, Brother Wayne Kramer and the rest of the Five were working their Mailer-esque “white negro” schtick (which would not have existed for them without John Sinclair and his White Panther-isms) with wholehearted sincerity, because they transmit an energy on that album that is redolent of a love of real rock’n’roll (especially Little Richard) that is 100% pure. The boys from Michigan may have been serving up their Tutti Frutti with a side of hand grenades and trans-love energy, but maybe that’s what was needed in 1968. I can’t really fault them for taking the implicit politics of the Little Richard sound and translating them into explicit connections to the un-realpolitik of the moment because the end result was so exciting. I’m not sure if Little Richard approved (or even knew who the MC5 were) but I’ve seen film of them on stage and they certainly seemed like his kind of people.

As it is, the spirit of Little Richard, a fiery cornerstone of rock’n’roll, didn’t get a whole lot of play in the days of the MC5, or in any time since.

The tragedy is that Little Richard (the man and the legend) fell victim less to the vagaries of the marketplace than to a veritable tidal wave of religious guilt that alternately fueled and doused his fire through the years. The devil on his left shoulder kept pushing him to break new ground (of all kinds, read his biography) while the tight-assed angel on the right repeatedly dragged him back, forcing him to throw his jewels overboard and thump a bible instead of a piano.

He spent much of the 60’s running back and forth from the sacred to the profane, stopping along the way to create some above average soul 45s (for Okeh, Brunswick and Reprise*) and watching his musical descendants become an unstoppable juggernaut. When you see the man on TV raving about how he “invented the Beatles” it pays to remember that he’s not too far off the mark.

By the early 70’s, the godfathers of rock’n’roll were prowling the stages of the world once again at the behest of their followers. I can hardly think of one of the greats, the Chuck Berrys, Bo Diddleys, Fats Dominos or Little Richards (even cats like Muddy Waters, Howling Wolf and John Lee Hooker) , that didn’t make an effort – to wildly varying levels of artistic success – to remain relevant.

Little Richard re-entered the studio in 1972 with a hand-picked crew of his old NOLA compadres (Earl Palmer, Bumps Blackwell, Lee Allen, George Davis) and some newer cats (Bill Hemmons – who wrote ‘Nuki Suki’ – and believe it or not the recently departed Sneaky Pete Kleinow) to make some music. The album that he made, ‘The Second Coming’ may not have been perfect, but it is evidence that Little Richard knew which side his bread was buttered on, and while clearly eager for 1972 style success, he didn’t screw with the basic elements of his sound too much.

That is with the marked exception of the lascivious – and funky – ‘Nuki Suki’. That’s Richard on the clavinet – and the shrieking, moaning and yelping (of course), on a record that in his 1950’s heyday would probably have changed hands only under the counter in a plain brown wrapper. By current standards it couldn’t be more harmless, and even in 1972, as America, in a haze, staggered along in their fringe vests, unaware of how bad a hangover was ahead, it wouldn’t have raised a single eyebrow. And you can be sure, that he meant every word – all five or six of them – with a deep conviction that can only come in the mid-life of the man that Leon Russell once celebrated as the “Undiluted Queen of Rock’n’roll”.

As it is, it’s probably just a footnote in the history of Little Richard, but a funky footnote nonetheless (the kind of footnote we specialize in around here), with no discernable impact in comparison to a monster like ‘Long Tall Sally’, yet strangely reassuring when you see the man, in a star-spangled pant suit yukking it up on a game show panel. Dig it.<<

 

 

Example

 

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

 

Upsetters – Down Home b/w Don’t Be Cruel

By , December 4, 2011 5:22 pm

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The Upsetters LP

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Example

Listen/Download – The Upsetters – Down Home

Listen/Download – The Upsetters – Don’t Be Cruel

Greetings all.

Welcome to another week at the Funky16Corners blog.

My wife goes back in to the hospital this week for round two of chemo, so please keep her in your thoughts.

I quite literally stumbled over today’s selection during an Ebay search for Hammond 45s, saw the track, gave it a listen and knew I had to have a copy.

Fortunately it was quite affordable, and along with the groovy instro, carried with it an unexpectedly excellent flip side.

The little I have been able to discover about the Upsetters (these Upsetters) is that they hailed from Baltimore, and had nothing to do with Little Richard or Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry.

These Upsetters were led by singer Jimmy Wess, and recorded one album for ABC in 1968 entitled ‘We Remember Otis’. The group consisted of Wess, Lee Foy (sax), Barry Sachs (guitar), Harry Hoehn (trumpet), Howard Ridgley (bass), Danny O’Day (drums) and John Baseman (organ).

The album included several Otis Redding covers, as well as a number of other contemporary tunes.

The track that led me to this 45 is a little number called ‘Down Home’, even though a cursory listen reveals it to be a rip-off (way too blatant to be an homage) of the Spencer Davis Group’s ‘Gimme Some Lovin’. Despite the fact that it has been appropriated, it is a rough and ready interpretation of the source material and the band really lays it in the groove.

The real surprise for me however, was waiting for me on the flipside.

No one sane would ever describe me as an Elvis fan, so when I saw that the other side of this 45 was a version of ‘Don’t Be Cruel’, I was less than enthused.

But then I listened to it.

Wess and the Upsetters really lay into the tune, revving it up with a strong beat and a great horn chart.

Though Wess doesn’t sound a whole lot like Otis (despite a lot of effort in that direction) whoever did the horn arrangements really had their ear aimed in the direction of Memphis, and the results are excellent.

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

 

Peace

Larry

 

Example

 

 

Also, make sure that you check out the POAC link below (click on the logo). It’s a fantastic organization that provides services to our local autism community, with education and recreational events, and any contribution you could make would be greatly appreciated.

Example

 

If you want one of the new Funky16Corners stickers (free, of course) click here for info.

Check out the Funky16Corners Store at Cafe Press

PS Head over to Iron Leg too.

 

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