Cecil Davis ‘El Pajarito’ con su Super Orquesta – Let’s Have a Ball

By , May 26, 2011 10:16 am

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Artists conception of El Pajarito

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Listen/Download – Cecil Davis ‘El Pajarito’ con su Super Orquesta – Let’s Have a Ball

 

Greetings all.

The end of the week is here and I don’t know about you kids but I am currently being overtaken by the need to cut loose.
This has been an exceptionally long and tiring week and I – for one – have had just about enough.

I can’t say for sure, but I may very well open and consume a beer (or two) this weekend.

Look out world.

That said, part of the busy-ness has been preparations for this years Funky16Corners Pledge Drive.

For those of you unfamiliar with the concept, once a year, right around the beginning of June, I make like Oliver Twist and come before you with hands outstretched so that your generous donations might help to pay for server space and related costs for the year.

This time out I’m planning on repeating last years ‘Allnighter’ concept, with a selection of hot mixes from yours truly and a variety of some of the finest selectors I know. I already have some of these cooling on the server, and others are on their way.

I can assure you that it will be a good time, so stay tuned. If things go as planned and all the required materials show up things will get rolling on June 5th.

In other news, this week’s edition of the Funky16Corners Radio Show is upon us and will be gracing the airwaves of the interwebs this (and every) Friday night at 9PM over at Viva Radio, with the MP3 version of the show being posted the following day.

It’s a hot one this week, so don’t miss it.

I should also mention that I am – thanks to a generous (and early) Father’s Day gift – now the owner of a PA system, rendering the Funky16Corners Sound System 100% mobile, so if you’re having a shindig (wedding, stein hoist, bacchanal, etc) and wish to hire someone for the expert spinning of the best in vintage funk and soul, drop me a line, because, to paraphrase Richard Berry, ‘Have Records, Will Travel’.

That said, now on to the aforementioned cutting loose.

It was a few years back that the mighty Soulmarcosa mentioned a record on a message board we both frequent that sounded quite interesting.

The tune in question ‘Let’s Have a Ball’ by Cecil Davis ‘El Pajarito’ con su Super Orquesta was available on eBay, in quantity at a very low price. Having complete faith in his taste, I grabbed myself a copy of the record (unheard).

When it fell through the mail slot my suspicions were confirmed, and it was indeed a serious gas.

Time and experience have proven that you cannot always take a record label at its word, with many things labeled ‘funky’ that are not, and so on through all genres.

‘Let’s Have a Ball’ – labeled a ‘boogaloo’ – is that rare record that meets, and exceeds all claims on the label.

It is a certified party starter, filled with latin soul goodness, made all the better by an exceedingly enthusiastic performance by Mr Davis, who comes across like someone threw Christopher Walken’s ‘The Continental’, Mr Mambo,  and Fred Armisen’s El Fericito (‘Ay Dios Mio!’) into a blender with a gallon of Puerto Rican rum and a box of firecrackers.

The band cooks on this one, but it’s ‘El Pajarito’ who really makes it, trading lines with a chorus of ladies, pumping out a series of sampleable lines like ‘Sock It To Me Baby!’,‘Shall we do the boogaloo?’ and ‘Tighten up baby! Shall we have the balllllll????’ but the best part is where the background singers break into a sideline cheer, including what sounds like a heavily accented ‘sis boom bah!’.

Crazy stuff.

Even crazier is how obscure a record this hot still is.

As far as I can tell, the Dial that this record was released on bears no relation whatsoever to the jazz and soul label of the same name, and Mr Davis has proven to be all but un-Googleable. There was apparently an R&B singer by that name in the Midwest, but the vocal on this one suggests to me that he is not the same cat, since ‘our’ Cecil has a very thick accent (though that could be a put-on).

Other than that, just about all that shows up on-line is listings for people selling the 45, and there aren’t even many of those (it’s price has gone up quite a bit).

I have inquired of those who are deeper in the boogaloo game than myself, and haven’t come up with anything there either.

All I can say for certain about Cecil Davis ‘El Pajarito’ and his Super Orquesta, is that they created one hell of a great record.

I hope you dig it as much as I do, and I’ll see you 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 recr 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.

 

The Four Tops – Something About You

By , May 24, 2011 1:33 pm

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The Four Tops

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Listen/Download – The Four Tops – Something About You

 

Greetings all.

If the world blew up on Tuesday, it wouldn’t be reflected in this piece, since it’s being written (and assembled) on Monday morning on account of the fact that I’m DJ-ing on Monday night and I have a calendar full of responsibilities on Tuesday to attend to (starting at 7:00AM), so I won’t be in the mood, or any kind of condition to do this on Tuesday proper.

Did that make any sense?

Maybe not, since if the world blew up on Tuesday, no one – aside from the great spirit of the interwebs – would be reading in, so if all (or most) of us are here, just disregard that opening paragraph and continue moving forward (in this piece, as well as life in general…good rule of thumb, that.).

The tune I bring you today is one of my all-time favorite bits of Motown-iana by one of that storied label’s greatest groups the Four Tops.

I would be lying if I didn’t admit that I have been remiss in covering the greatness of the Four Tops here at Funky16Corners.

I last posted one of their records (‘Shake Me Wake Me’) back in 2008 to commemorate the passing of the mighty Levi Stubbs, and even then I was re-posting the song from its initial appearance in 2006 (time does fly, doesn’t it??).

That said, at the time Mr Stubbs slipped this mortal coil, I made it a point to say that I considered him the greatest male singer in the Motown stable (including Marvin Gaye and Eddie Kendricks), and surmised that if he had been given the chance, he could have had a serious solo career.

Whether that chapter in history remained unwritten because of his loyalty to the group, or via the label politics that seemed so prevalent at Motown, I do not know.

There is however no denying the greatness of the Four Tops.

Though I don’t know how their chart success lines up against other Motown groups, or other musical outfits in general, I do know that a cursory glance at their undeniably amazing string of hits in 1965 and 1966 verily boggles the mind.

(Discography listing borrowed from Soulful Kinda Music)

Motown 1073 – Ask The Lonely / Where Did You Go – 1965
Motown 1076 – I Can’t Help Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch) / Sad Souvenirs – 1965
Motown 1081 – It’s The Same Old Song / Your Love Is Amazing – 1965
Motown 1084 – Something About You / Darling, I Hum Our Song – 1965
Motown 1090 – Shake Me, Wake Me (When It’s Over) / Just As Long As You Need Me – 1966
Motown 1096 – Loving You Is Sweeter Than Ever / I Like Everything About You – 1966
Motown 1098 – Reach Out I’ll Be There / Until You Love Someone – 1966
Motown 1102 – Standing In The Shadows Of Love / Since You’ve Been Gone – 1966

Right there in the middle of the pack, is today’s selection ‘Something About You’.

Strange as this may seem, I first knew this song by a vaguely new wavey cover by Dave Edmunds from 1984. Though his version didn’t chart here in the US, the video was a staple of the early years of MTV.

It was only a few years later, after picking up an old Greatest Hits LP that I realized that the song was a Four Tops original.

The song is yet another testament to the greatness of the pens of Holland, Dozier and Holland, and the record is a work of storming, dance floor genius.

Though ‘Something About You’ was a Top 40 hit in 1965, it was never (at least not in the New York area) a staple of Oldies radio, a format which pretty much killed Motown for me for a long time. The endless repetition of a select few Motown hits all but ruined them for me, and stopped me from digging deeper into the label’s catalog until I was much further into the game.

That situation has since been remedied, but even now I still have to force myself to get Motown stuff digimatized for inclusion on the blog, so strong is the temptation to take it for granted.

The production on ‘Something About You’ is dense and explosive, with layers of guitars, vibes, drums (listen close for what’s either a kick drum or tom tom going fast and furious behind the chorus) and saxes, all piled on a propulsive tempo, which despite all of this power, never obscures the Tops voices.

Though ‘Shake Me Wake Me’ will always be my fave Tops tune, ‘Something About You’ runs a very close second.

I hope you dig it, and I’ll be back on Friday (hopefully recovered and blogging in something close to real time).

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 recr 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.

 

Bobby Doyle – River Deep Mountain High

By , May 22, 2011 3:16 pm

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Bobby Doyle from the cover of ‘The Bobby Doyle Introductory Offer’ (above)
The Bobby Doyle Three, with Kenny Rogers at left (below)

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Listen/Download – Bobby Doyle – River Deep Mountain High

 

Greetings all.

Before we get rolling, I’ll remind you that I’m going to be returning to Spindletop @ Botanica, alongside the host with the most Perry Lane this Monday, 5/23 starting at 10PM. This time out I’ll be taking a short break from the funk and soul and returning to the garage punk, beat, freakbeat and frat rock of my youth, so if you dig yourself some fuzz, some caveman drums and teen hollering, fall by and soak up the sounds.

Speaking of sounds, how about some cool ones.

If you come by Funky16Corners, and have read the words I spill several times a week, you’ll know that I am nothing if not enthusiastic, and that I’m constantly in search of groovy stuff that I haven’t heard before.

This particular story begins a while back when, in a decidedly non-musical moment of repose, I was chilling, watching a documentary about the life and work of Hugh Hefner. It was during this film that I had another one of those cool, unexpected epiphanies.

They got to the dot on the timeline in the late 60s where the TV series ‘Playboy After Dark’ took to the airwaves, and during a retrospective thereof, they ran a clip of a dude that I’d neither seen nor heard before, dropping a very soulful version of Bob Dylan’s ‘Blowin’ In the Wind’. That cat was  Bobby Doyle.

The name rang only the tiniest of bells, so I ran to the interwebs and started looking for information.

There wasn’t a lot out there, but what I did find was very interesting.

Doyle, who just happened to be blind, never really broke through on a national level, yet was something of a Texas institution.

He was born in 1940 in Houston, eventually moving to Austin to study at a school for the blind.

He began his recording career waxing rock’n’roll for the mighty Back Beat label, eventually making 45s for a variety of local labels as a solo, until forming the Bobby Doyle Three.

As it turns out, I had heard of Doyle before, and it was via the bass player in the Bobby Doyle Three, a youngster by the name of Kenny Rogers (yes, THAT Kenny Rogers). Rogers played bass and sang backup in Doyle’s group from the late 50s until 1965*, when he left, eventually moving on the First Edition and then huge success as a pop/country singer.

The Bobby Doyle Trio toured the country playing their mix of jazz and pop in a variety of venues, including several Playboy Clubs, which seems to be how he eventually got booked on Playboy After Dark.

By the late 60s, Doyle had relocated to Los Angeles, where he made albums for the Warner Brothers and Bell labels while working with producer Mike Post.

The tune I bring you today, Doyle’s funky take on ‘River Deep Mountain High’ was the non-LP B-side of his version of ‘Blowin’ In the Wind’ and seems to date from around 1968.

Doyle was a fantastic singer, with a soulful tenor voice that managed to hit gospel heights while still maintaining a level of restraint, something that made him an unusual commodity, especially in the late 60s.

Interestingly, his obit mentions Doyle having done session work for Phil Spector around this period, though I haven’t been able to connect that with Doyle’s recording of this song.

Doyle’s take on ‘River Deep…’ is one of the best versions I’ve heard, with a tight arrangement, featuring his voice and piano, horns and backing singers. It manages to be funky in that generalized, Leon Russell, soul/rock/gospel way without ever going over the top (unusual, especially in relation to this particular song, which seemed to inspire excess).

Though he did appear on TV and release albums for WB and Bell**, Doyle never really connected on a national level, coming close in the early 70s when he was for a short time David Clayton Thomas’s replacement in Blood Sweat and Tears.

Unfortunately Doyle didn’t gel with the group (which appears to have been going through a number of personnel changes at the time) and only appears on piano and vocals on a few songs on the 1972 ‘New Blood’ LP.

Bobby Doyle was probably doomed to obscurity by the fact that even in a time when people were stepping over genre boundaries on the reg, he was too hard to pin down. He was possessed of a genuinely soulful voice, but slipped effortlessly between rock, jazz and soul (which in another time would have been an asset) but perhaps his freak flag wasn’t flying high enough to get noticed.

Doyle went on to work steadily, performing in lounges in Las Vegas, and a variety of venues back in his native Texas, before he passed away at the age of 66 in 2006.

Bobby Doyle is a supreme testament to the fact that sometimes even prodigious talent is no guarantee of fame and fortune. It’s not hard to imagine that there are many such undiscovered/forgotten gems out there, which is the main reason I keep digging.

As far as I can tell very little of Doyle’s work (aside from a few Bobby Doyle Three tracks on a Kenny Rogers box set and some early stuff on rockabilly comps) remains in print. His WB and Bell albums can be picked up fairly inexpensively, as can his 45s from the same period***.

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

Peace

Larry

 

 

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*Some of the group’s records were produced by Kenny’s brother Lelan, who would also produce the 13th Floor Elevators and a wide variety of soul and funk artists for the House of the Fox, Silver Fox and Blue Fox labels.

** Doyle also has a song (‘The Girl Done Got It Together’) on the soundtrack to the cult film ‘Vanishing Point’

***His early 45s and the Bobby Doyle Three album are much more collectible.

 

 

 

 

 

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 recr 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.

 

James Carr – A Losing Game

By , May 19, 2011 12:45 pm

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Mr James Carr

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Listen/Download – James Carr – A Losing Game

 

Greetings all.

How’s by you?

Me, I’m groovy.

Got some cool records waiting to be digimatized, still breathing, you know the drill.

I will remind you that this Friday marks the weekly appearance of the Funky16Corners Radio Show on Viva Radio (Fridays at 9PM). This week is a Hammond funk-tacular of sorts with an hour of the finest, funkiest, organ-iest 45s from my crates placed side by side in such a way as to get folks to dance (or at least listen more closely). It’s a good one and you won’t want to miss it.

Then, next Monday 5/23 I’ll be back at Spindletop @ Botanica (47 E. Houston St, NYC) with a box full of garage and mod 45s, which should naturally be very groovy and something you won’t want to miss if that’s a bag that you find yourself in.

The tune I bring you today is another great 45 from the catalog of the legendary James Carr (we’ve featured several in this space over the years).

The very cool thing about ‘A Losing Game’ is that unlike Carr’s best known tunes, many of which are classics of the Southern soul ballad, ‘A Losing Game’ is a hard-hitting, some might say storming dancer with a killer vocal by the masterful singer.

If you’re not familiar with James Carr (and I know I say this all the time, but I assume nothing), get out onto the interwebs, or grab yourself a copy of Peter Guralnick’s classic tome ‘Sweet Soul Music’ and get hip. Carr was, to keep things short and sweet, one of the finest soul singers of the 60s, with all-time greats like ‘Dark End of the Street’ (many would say his is the definitive version) in his discography. He recorded much amazing music for the storied Goldwax label between 1964 and 1969, and then trailed off almost completely during the 70s thanks in large part to a life-long struggle with mental illness.

He did manage to make a return to recording before his untimely death (at age 58) from cancer in 2001.

While the temptation – since he was the equal (or superior) of many more famous singers – is to try to say something profound about James Carr, the sensible thing is to let his music make that statement.

‘A Losing Game’ is one of the toughest numbers Carr ever recorded. It was written by the singer and someone named Denny Weaver. I can’t find any info on Weaver (much the same as when I tried to track down the ‘B. Husky’ who wrote Carr’s ‘Talk Talk’) , which makes me wonder if the name was a pseudonym for someone else.

Either way, ‘A Losing Game’, which was later covered by both a post-Gram version of the Flying Burrito Brothers, and Fairport Convention vocalist Sandy Denny (her version is outstanding), is a great soul record.

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

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 recr 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.

 

Shuggie Otis – Ice Cold Daydream

By , May 17, 2011 11:40 am

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Mr John Alexander Veliotes

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Listen/Download – Shuggie Otis – Ice Cold Daydream

 

Greetings all.

I’m sitting here, looking out the windows of the Funky16Corners Blogcasting Nerve Center and Record Vault, looking at yet another grey, wet spring day and finding some small consolation in the fact that at least it’s not also freezing out.

So far the spring has been a huge letdown, with any sunshine or warmth generally coinciding with other responsibilities that preclude outdoor recreation. I know it will probably resolve itself and I’ll be bitching about the heat before long, but it’s just a drag.

Blaarrrghhh….

There…now that I have that out of my system, I should mention that next Monday, 5/23 I’ll be taking my 45 box back up to Spindletop @ Botanica to join my man Perry Lane for some of the most excellent sounds you’ve come to expect from that night. I have some interesting things in mind, so if you’re in the neighborhood drop by and grab yourself a barstool and something cold to drink so that you might soak up the vinyl goodness.

It’s also looking like the acquisition of some crucial equipment is in the offing, that should make the Funky16Corners Mobile Sound System (for all your soulful and funky needs) complete, so if you have a shindig coming up for which the addition of the best in funk, soul, jazz and rare groove would serve as the complement to the proceedings, drop me a line.

That said, the tune I bring you today is something upbeat and very groovy from the mighty Shuggie Otis.

Shuggie is a very interesting cat indeed. Son of Johnny, talented guitarist, songwriter and performer, Shuggie Otis was performing and recording at his father’s side from his very early teens, playing guitar on funky jams like ‘Watts Breakaway’ and ‘Country Girl’ (as well as stuff like Preston Love’s ‘Cool-Aid’) before heading into the studio and recording two of the great lost classics of the 70s, ‘Freedom Flight’ in 1971 and ‘Inspiration Information’ in 1974 (in actuality his third and fourth solo albums, his earlier stuff being mainly blues).

Though these records didn’t make much of dent in the public consciousness at the time,  the Brothers Johnson’s faithful cover of Shuggie’s ‘Strawberry Letter 23’ hit big on both the R&B and Pop charts in 1977, putting a little cash in Shuggie’s wallet.

Shuggie was all but forgotten when, in 2001 David Byrne’s Luaka Bop label reissued ‘Inspiration Information’ (with several tracks from ‘Freedom Flight’, including today’s selection), restoring him in the public consciousness, at least to the point where he became a respected cult figure.

At the time the hype machine was going full blast, with various and sundry alt-world figures hailing Shuggie as the great lost genius, and his music as some kind of ‘whole new thing’ that the world had missed the first time around.

While these albums are very cool, and evidence of a serious talent, the sounds on them are not without precedent. The early 70s was full of genre splicing/crossing artists (especially Sly Stone), mixing the same basic ingredients in different ways.

This isn’t to take anything away from Shuggie’s talent, or the quality of these two albums especially, which are both very cool, but rather an indicator that if they are new to you, they should be ingested with the hype pushed to the side.

‘Ice Cold Daydream’ was the flipside of Shuggie’s original version of ‘Strawberry Letter 23’ in 1971, and it’s a great example of the stew he was cooking, mixing funk, soul and rock sounds.

The tune rolls over a stop/start rhythm with a percolating Hammond organ running underneath, jumping repeatedly to an uptempo section with some groovy fuzz guitar. You can hear bits of Sly, Jimi Hendrix and Curtis Mayfield, but never so much that Shuggie’s vision is obscured.

Currently, of the two albums in question, only ‘Freedom Flight’ is available on iTunes, though you can get ‘Inspiration Information’ (which is out of print) fairly cheaply. Both ‘Freedom Flight’ and ‘Inspiration Information’ have also been reissued on vinyl as well.

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

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 recr 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.

 

Sam Butera – Love Bandit

By , May 15, 2011 4:39 pm

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Sam Butera

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Listen/Download – Sam Butera – Love Bandit

 

Greetings all.

I hope that your world is just as groovy as can be.

I’m coming off a very busy, yet oddly relaxing weekend.

The fam and I managed to hit up a great barbecue where we hung with some very old, end very excellent friends, and I was working on the new annex to the Funky16Corners Blogcasting Nerve Center and Record Vault family of fine interwebs products.

What am I speaking of you ask???

Well, since I’ve been having so much fun doing the weekly Funky16Corners Radio Show over at Viva Radio, and then archiving the shows here at the blog, I got the itch to expand upon the theme.

Initially the thought was to do something like a second, shorter edition of the Funky16Corners Radio Show, to be posted here.

That still may happen, but ultimately I took a different tack, and worked up a show based on the goings on at the other blog in the Funky16Corners family, that being Iron Leg.

Iron Leg – if you haven’t been there – is where I rap about music from the same general time period that I cover here (60s/70s), but the concentration is not on funk and soul, but rather pop and rock, covering garage punk, psychedelia, sunshine pop and the like.

I know that many of the folks that fall by Funky16Corners will not necessarily find those sounds to their liking, but I also know that a lot of you are like me, i.e. musically omnivorous – where all good music is worth hearing – and will dig at least some of what I post at Iron Leg.

That said, the Iron Leg Radio Show will be posted once a month (for now), and since it is not bound by the same time constraints as the Funky16Corners show, will generally in and around 90 minutes (though this inaugural episode runs over two hours).

If this sounds like a bag you might find yourself in, motor on over to Iron Leg to check out the playlist, and if that tickles your fancy, pull down the ones and zeros and give it a listen.

I think you’ll dig it.

Now, here at Funky16Corners, I figured I’d open things up this week with something interesting, so adjust your reading glasses and your earholes and get yourself some Sam Butera.

I’ve covered the late, great Mr. Butera here a number of times, mainly in his capacity as the bandleader for the equally late, also great Louis Prima.

Though Prima and Butera are mainly known for a very swinging variety of jump jazz (the very root of rock and roll), as the years wore on, and stylistic relevance outpaced their old sound, Prima and the Witnesses – the backing band usually billed as ‘Sam Butera and …’ – recorded some funky stuff, usually for Prima’s custom label.

Though billed as ‘Love Bandit’, what you’re actually hearing here is a funky reworking of Johnny Guitar Watson’s R&B classic ‘Gangster of Love’ (though the Cadets also recorded the song in 1956 with the ‘Love Bandit’ title).

Interestingly, though Butera and the Cadets before him used the same basic set of lyrics as Watson, neither one uses his tune.

Butera’s version takes the song at a funky, sock soul pace and Sam plays up the humorous aspect of the lyrics with a band that I assume has to be the Witnesses and some female backing singers.

The arranger Maxwell Davis and the producer Bill Lazerus both spent a lot of years working at Modern Records on records by folks like Lowell Fulsom and BB King.

I have no hard data on when this was released, but I have seen a discography for the Coliseum label – which features some jazz artists like Count Basie and others that look like studio orchestras covering pop hits – with material that would seem to place this in the range of 1966 or 1967. This is only an educated guess, so if any of you good folks know for sure, and I’m wrong, please let me know.

Anyhoo, I hope you dig it, and I’ll be back on Wednesday with something cool.

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 recr 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.

 

Charles Mann – Do It Again

By , May 12, 2011 3:27 pm

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Charles Mann

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Listen/Download – Charles Mann – Do It Again

 

Greetings all, and welcome to the end of the week.

All is well – relatively speaking – with nothing overtly positive to report, but nothing horrifying either, so I’ll just remain tied to the mast and hope the boat stays on course.

This is of course the part of the week where I remind you that the Funky16Corners Radio Show is about due for its weekly eruption over at Viva Radio, with all of the groovy sounds you have – as a connoisseur of the finer things in soul – become accustomed to. Friday night at 9PM is the time, followed over the weekend by the appearance of the MP3 version thereof over at the blog, where you can pull down the ones and zeros at your leisure.

The number I bring you today is another very groovy cover version (making it a clean sweep this week) of one of my all time favorite groups, that being Steely Dan.

The song in question is their 1972 hit ‘Do It Again’, and the covering artiste is Charles Mann.

I first heard this take on the song via a forum post on the interwebs, and as a huge fan of the Dan, and of interesting cover versions in general, I set out to find a copy of my own.

I’d never heard of Charles Mann before, and I have to admit that despite some searching I still don’t know much.

He recorded his version of ‘Do It Again’ in 1973 for the ABC label with a collection of Philly all-stars, including Bobby Eli (under an alias), Norman Harris, Earl Young, Ronnie Baker and Vince Montana (pretty much the heart of the MFSB crew), with background vocal support from Bunny Sigler (among others).

Tracking down information on Mann proved difficult because there’s a prominent swamp pop singer of the same name (who happens to be white), and because it would appear that aside from this album for ABC and some disco 12”s for the LA label, the soulful Mr Mann didn’t leave much of a trail.

His cover of ‘Do It Again’ ramps up the tempo and fleshes out the arrangement considerably) with the Philly heads adding a healthy dose of danceability to the song. The intro is ripe for sampling/looping and Mann’s vocal is excellent.

The record has that great, Philly-based pre-disco funk vibe, and the guitar work (there are two great solos, one with fuzz and one without) is superb.

Mann recorded three 45s for ABC, and oddly enough ‘Do It Again’ doesn’t appear to have had a domestic release on 45 (though it did come out in Europe). It is possible that since Steely Dan was also on ABC, the label didn’t want to have competing versions on the singles charts.

It’s also unusual because there aren’t a lot of vocal covers of Steely Dan material out there, though I’ve found a number of instrumental versions of their material (by Woody Herman who did a whole album of it, and Herbie Mann). If you’re game to hear something unusual, check out the cover by Waylon Jennings.

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

 

Dorothy Morrison – Spirit In the Sky

By , May 10, 2011 1:20 pm

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Miss Dorothy Morrison

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Listen/Download – Dorothy Morrison – Spirit In the Sky

 

Greetings all.

I hope all is groovy on your side of the interwebs.

The tune I bring you this fine day is something I only heard earlier this year, though the artist been bouncing around in my subconscious since I was a little kid.

I first heard of Dorothy Morrison’s version of Norman Greenbaum’s ‘Spirit In the Sky’ when I saw it on an auction list earlier this year.

I picked up a copy without having heard it, on the strength of Morrison, a well-known gospel artist, crossing over into (mostly) secular territory.

Though I didn’t initially know it was her singing, I fell in love with Morrison’s voice as a child when the Edwin Hawkins Singers ‘Oh Happy Day’ (on which she was the lead) hit the charts. A major hit in the US and internationally in 1969, the decidedly lo-fi, yet incredibly powerful and inspirational number is one of the great musical moments of the peace and love era (which I’ll have to post here sometime soon).

Flash forward some years later, as a teenager burning the midnight lamp (and whatever else was laying around) I first saw what became one of my all-time favorite music documentaries ‘Celebration at Big Sur’.

A remarkable artifact of the hippie era, ‘Celebration…’ was a film about the 1969 Big Sur Pop Festival which was held at the visually stunning (but wholly unlikely, mostly unsuitable) Esalen Institute on the cliffs overlooking the Pacific Ocean.

Featuring a stellar line-up, helmed by Crosby Stills Nash and Young, Joni Mitchell, John Sebastian and Joan Baez, the film also featured a rousing performance by Dorothy Combs Morrison (as she was billed before and after her secular sojourn) and the Combs Sisters, performing ‘All God’s Children Got Soul’, a minor chart hit 1969, as well as reprising ‘Oh Happy Day’ with an all-star group.

Morrison, possessed of a powerful voice and herself physically stunning (she reminds me somewhat of Teresa Graves) was an ideal candidate for crossover success, and for a short time made the non-gospel rounds, touring the festival circuit, appearing on a number of television shows and recording secular records. She would eventually return to her gospel roots, winning a number of Grammy Awards during the 70s and 80s.

Her 1970 version of ‘Spirit In the Sky’ takes the spacey tempo of the original and kicks it up a few notches, adding a muscular horn section and percussion, making the religious underpinnings of Greenbaum’s version and pushing them to the fore.

The transition of gospel artists into the world of soul was certainly not unique, with countless soul artists having sharpened their instruments in the gospel world (most notably Sam Cooke). The influence of church singing on secular soul is so great as to be practically immeasurable, and the artists that created and then (sometimes) burned bridges – in both directions –  between them are at the heart of a story that someone with a deeper understanding of that world than myself needs to tell.

Not being privy to the intimate details of her career, I wonder if Morrison, who’s husky voice was a powerful and at times deeply sexy instrument, had a greater level of success in the secular world, would have continued on in that direction.

As far as I can tell her secular career lasted about half a decade, including a few 45s on Elektra (including ‘All God’s Children Got Soul’) prior to her 1970 album on Buddah, a 45 for MGM (covering Jackie Wilson on one side and Marvin Gaye on the other) as well as a (now expensive) 1975 45 for Oakland’s Brown Door label, written and produced by none other than Marvin Holmes. A look at the most of the material that she recorded during that period seems to indicate that she never committed to the secular sound completely, always keeping one foot partially planted on the gospel border.

It’s important to note that as far as stylistic influence is concerned, the gate swung both ways. The black gospel world of the 60s and 70s has grown considerably as a genre of importance with funk and soul collectors, and this can be traced directly to the fact that while singing styles were traveling across boundaries, instrumental styles were doing so as well, often in the opposite direction, producing gospel recordings that are, aside from their lyrical bent, unmistakably soulful and funky.

This may have been merely the result of the growth of funk, since its influence can be heard in jazz and rock as well, but it is all the more remarkable when you consider how unusual it is for some to acknowledge the crossover between the sacred and the profane.

The flipside of this record is a cool version of another very interesting song, Barry Mann and Cynthia Weill’s ‘Black California’, also recorded a year or so later by Patti Austin.

I hope you dig the tune, and I’ll be back on Friday with another interesting cover.

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 recr 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.

 

Muscle Shoals Horns – Breakdown

By , May 8, 2011 7:29 pm

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An earlier pic of the Fame Gang, many of whom play on this very 45.

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Listen/Download – Muscle Shoals Horns – Breakdown (Black Skin Blue Eyed Boys)

 

Greetings all.

To borrow a phrase from the mighty Slim Gaillard, the weekend was mellow like a cello, with some unexpected downtime, and some lovely Mother’s day festivities.

As a result I am reasonably well rested, or at least well chilled, so I figured we’d get the week started with something a little hot.

The tune I bring you today is yet another testament to the wonders of Facebook.

I have a plethora groovy friends on the interwebs, many of who are also DJ types or otherwise classifiable as record nerds, and on any given day someone is posting up something cool that I hadn’t heard before, many of which I’ve found myself pursuing so that I would have a copy for my very own.

This is one of those records, and sadly I cannot remembered who posted it, but I do remember where the post led me, which was here (Groovesville USA) where I learned that the record in question was a UK-only 45, which was my jumping off point to finding one for my crates.

Surprisingly enough, that took almost no time and very little money (the perfect combination) and before you know it ‘Breakdown’ by the Muscle Shoals Horns is on the old turntable being digimatized so that I might post it in this space.

The groovy thing about ‘Breakdown’, aside from it’s obvious smoking hot funky disco sound, perfect for the dance floor, is the fact that if you read the label closely enough, or apply your ears just so, you’ll discover that what you are listening to is in fact an instrumental cover of the Equals 1971 ‘Black Skin Blue Eyed Boys’.

The Equals’ OG was itself an important record during the very early days of the discotheque culture in both the UK and the US.

I can’t say for sure how the Muscle Shoals Horns (in actuality the Fame Gang with the horn section leading the way) got their hooks into it four years on, but it does seem that the Bang/Shout label connection probably had something to do with it.

The Bang label had its initial run from 1965 to 1971, with the Equals ‘Black Skin Blue Eyed Boys’ being the last record they released. The label was reactivated in the mid-70s, with groups like Brick and the Muscle Shoals Horns.

‘Breakdown’ was issued in the US on the ‘Born to Get Down’ LP in 1976, and for some odd reason only saw 45 release in the UK on the groovy gold label you see above.

It’s cool that the tune had a second coming of sorts (though it was also covered by NY-area band ST-4 in the early 70s), with an update for the discos.

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

 

Mac Rebennack and the Soul Orchestra – The Point

By , May 5, 2011 4:09 pm

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The young doctor as intern…

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Listen/Download – Mac Rebennack and the Soul Orchestra – The Point

 

Greetings all.

Following yet another Sisyphean (Sisyphusian?) slog the end of the week is finally upon us.

This has been another one of those weird weeks where any attempt to fall into the lockstep of routine was thwarted by the intrusion of both the necessary and the unexpected.

I had some doctor type ish to deal with as well all that brings with it, as well as the flotsam and jetsam of daily life, including still recovering from vacation.

Despite any number of valiant attempts to switch my mind to cruise control, I was given to contemplation, and came to the realization that despite all my crabbing about how busy I am and haw many things I have to do, I am in the end extraordinarily lucky.

Aside from the obvious (and sometimes not so) joys of married life and fatherhood, I also have the opportunity, via the blog, the Funky16Corners Radio Show (this and every other Friday night at 9PM on Viva Radio) and DJ gigs to share the music I love so much with you good people.

Aside from any adolescent aspiration to become a 21st century Hugh Hefner, the fantasy that preoccupied me in the past was to engage in what I just described.

Sure, it probably manifested itself in an image closer to Wolfman Jack in ‘American Graffiti’, howling in the depths of the night while transmitting musical hoodoo over the airwaves, but as I listen (in the furtherance of both quality control and ego gratification) back to the interwebs radio show I put together each week, and then get feedback from folks that actually listen to the show, I get just enough of that spark running willy nilly up my spine and stabbing me right in the old pleasure centers to make do.

The days of the great masters of the ether are long gone, but if I can rub two sticks together and whip up just a little bit of that heat each week, I’m happy.

The tune I bring you today is yet another white whale of mine that I chased like Melville’s crazed mariner for many a year.

I do not recall where Mac Rebennack’s ‘The Point’ first made its way into my earholes, but as I am a connoisseur of both the sounds of New Orleans and the mighty electric organ (Hammond or otherwise), and a devotee of the mighty Dr. John (Mr. Rebennack’s later nom de musique), I did not merely want a copy of this particular record, but rather needed it quite desperately.

While I would not say that the Crescent City is particularly well known for organ 45s, it does have some spectacular examples of the subgenre to its credit, including James Booker’s ‘Gonzo’,  Bo Jr.’s ‘Coffee Pot’, the instro flipside to Candy Phillips’ ‘Timber’ (in actuality a certain Mr. Bocage on the keys) as well as the tune I bring you today.

As the story goes, young Mac Rebennack was set on spending his career squeezing sounds out of a guitar until he got shot in the hand and found his way (thanks be to the strange ways of fate) onto a piano bench. The rest as they say is history, with the good Doctor being one of those cats to whom one might spend a happy eternity listening to as he tickled the ivories. He is part of the long line of masterful New Orleans piano masters that includes Professor Longhair, James Booker and Eddie Bo, and as such probably ought to have a retinue following him around, with someone to hold his drink, another to dust off the keys and yet another to spread rose petals in his path on account of he deserves no less.

That said, ‘The Point’ was waxed in 1962 for the storied AFO (All For One) label, an organization founded as a self-determined black musicians collective. During the label’s original 1961-1963 run they issued just over a dozen singles by artists like Barbara George (with the million selling ‘I Know’), Tammy Lynn, Ellis Marsalis, Prince La La (as in ‘Who Shot the…’) and Willie Tee.

Though ‘The Point’ was not his first 45 (the crazed guitar instro ‘Storm Warning’ came first in 1959) it was his debut as a leader on the keys, and it is a record of singular brilliance.

This is not to say that it is any kind of display of technical virtuosity, but rather a small vinyl artifact that carries in its grooves all manner of soul, menace, night-time atmosphere, up to an including the ability to place in the listener’s mind the image of a young woman in some sort of brief and suggestive (perhaps fringed) outfit shaking (upon a purpose-built, raised platform of some sort) what the gentlemen of the time would refer to as her ‘moneymaker’ (if you know what I mean and I think that you do) in a smoky bar filled with cold beer and broken dreams, and whether or not someone’s out back in the alley turned upside down so that the contents of their pockets might spill out and satisfy a debt matters not because the kid behind the organ and his band (and the young lady) have you hyp-mo-tized with the groove.

It’s that kind of record, and as far as I know Mister Rebennack, either inside or outside his duties as Dr John the Night Tripper never really stepped into something like this again.

The flipside of the record is a nice enough jam, yet it lacks the whiff of eau de roadhouse (though the horns are real nice).

The aforementioned Mr Booker, a renowned master of the 88s also recorded some very tasty organ sides, but they are every bit as elegant and fine as his piano work, which is not a bad thing at all, but compared to the jagged edge of Mac’s sound here is something else entirely.

A very tasty record indeed, and one that filled a miniscule but important hole in my crates. Also a groovy window into the soul of young Mr. Rebennack before the left coast called and he packed up his John the Conqueror Root, Mardi Gras feathers and attitude and headed out to Cali-For-Ny-Yay.

I hope you all dig it as much as I do, and I’ll see you all on Monday.

Oh, but before I go, you will most definitely want to check this out:

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Some very groovy folks down in DC and Virginia have put together what promises to be the show of the year under the name the Chocolate City Soul Revue, with performances by Marva Whitney, Martha High, Vicki Anderson, both Clyde Stubblefield and Jabo Starks (?!?!?) legendary James Brown MC Danny Ray, original members of the JBs, the Impressions, and 21st century soul man Eli ‘Paperboy’ Reed and his band the True Loves.

I mean, honest to god people, does it get any better than that?

The shindig goes down on June the 4th at the D.A.R. Constitution Hall in Washington, DC.

You can get yourself tickets via Ticketmaster.

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 recr 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.

 

F16C Soul Club Presents sets from Sweet Exorcist 4/22/11

By , May 1, 2011 5:35 pm

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DJ Andujar and Funky16Corners @ Sweet Exorcist @ The Peoples Pint 4/22

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Studebaker Hawk (above), D.J. Andujar (below)

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Listen/Download – Studebaker Hawk @ Sweet Exorcist 4/22/11

Studebaker Hawk Set List
Dave Valentin – Sidra’s Dream (GRP)
Phantom Slasher – Furry Whiplash (Noid)
Pia Zadora – The Clapping Song (Elektra)
Marsha Hunt – (Oh, No! Not) The Beast Day (n/a)
Gypsy Lane – Show Me How To Groove (Drive)
The Love Machine – Sex-O-Sonic (London Records)

 

Listen/Download – Funky16Corners @ Sweet Exorcist Set 2 4/22/11

Funky16Corners @ Sweet Exorcist Set 2

Nanette Workman – Lady Marmalade (Pasha)
Lynda Lyndell – What a Man (Volt)
Rufus Thomas – Funky Penguin Pt1 (Stax)
Lou Courtney – Hey Joyce (Popside)
James Brown – Get On the Good Foot (Polydor)
Chuck Carbo – Can I Be Your Squeeze (Canyon)
Gene Chandler – In My Body’s House (Chess)
Marva Whitney – It’s My Thing (King)
Eddie Bo & Inez Cheatham – Lover and a Friend (Capitol)
Willie Tell and the Overtures – Kick Back (Chess)
King Curtis – Pop Corn Willy (Atco)

Listen/Download – DJ Andujar & Studebaker Hawk @ Sweet Exorcist 4/22/11

DJ Andujar @ Sweet Exorcist Set 1

James Brown…I Got Tha Feelin (45)
Dyke & the Blazers…Let a Woman… (45)
Ivo Meirelles & Funk N Lata…Baile Funky (make it funky) (LP)
Lou Toby & his Heavies…Heavy Steppin (45)
Lyn Collins…Think (45)
Toots & Maytalls…Funky Kingston (LP)


Studebaker Hawk Set List

Williams Brothers – I Feel Good (New Birth Records)
Kabbala – Ashewo Aro (Red Flame)
Panama – Long Train Runnin’ (Pathé Marconi EMI)
Dorothy Morrison – All God’s Children Got Soul (Elektra)


Listen/Download – DJ Andujar Set 2 @ Sweet Exorcist 4/22/11

Greyboy with Sharon Jones & Quantic…Got To Be A Love (Paul Nice rmx) (12″)
Gizelle Smith…June (LP)
Clarence Reid…Masterpiece (45)
Charles Wright & Watts 103rd…What Can You Bring Me (45)
Orchestra Baobab…Kelen Ati Leen (45)
Ripple…Funky Song (45)
Bob Marley…Could You Be Loved (12″)
Gwen McCrae…Rockin Chair (45)

 

Greetings all.

I hope the new week finds you well.

Things are finally starting to settle down here in the Funky16Corners Blogcasting Nerve Center and Record Vault after the busiest month of DJ activity I’ve seen in a long, long time.

We already covered my appearance at the Subway Soul Club, and today’s post will tell the tale of my journey to the great state of Massachusetts for a pair of very groovy nights.

I’d like to get started though by telling you how I spent my weekend, which dovetails nicely with everything else and kind of puts a cap on things.

As has been related in this space before, for a couple of vary important reasons (those being our sons) our family is involved with POAC (Parents of Autistic Children, you can follow the link at the bottom of this or any other recent post).
POAC organized a dodgeball tournament, and they asked me to come out and spin some records during the festivities, which is how I spent my Saturday (with Miles acting as my roadie).

I packed up the decks and mixer in my new road case (I think I’m going to stop referring to it as a coffin, which is slightly morbid nomenclature and has to be explained every single time I use it in conversation), packed up a case of funk and disco 45s, filled the record bag with albums and 12”s, and headed over to the local rec center.

Despite years of DJing, this is the first time I took the old Funky16Corners Sound System on the road, and it was a resounding success (even if I forgot to bring a surge protector and an extension cord, but the audio gods look out for the foolish and forgetful, and I was covered).

It was a gas (including a bunch of high school kids singing along with ‘Pass the Hatchet’ which I’m 100% certain they’d never heard before), and despite a couple of close calls, wherein the dodge balls inadvertently came in contact with the sound system (but never the turntables, thankfully), things went swimmingly.

The trip to Massachusetts was similarly excellent.

A few months back my man DJ Andujar got in touch as asked if I might be interested in coming up his way to do his (and Studebaker Hawk’s) night in Greenfield, MA (Sweet Exorcist), followed by a Saturday in Northampton, MA with Snack Attack and DJ Cashman (Wooly Bully).

I checked the calendar and discovered that the dates in question intersected with the Funky16Corners family spring break, so arrangements were made to wrap the two nights into our vacation.

We’d been up to Northampton last year (for vinyl and yarn digging) and found the area to our liking, so the wife and I were both psyched about a return trip.

The Monday before the gigs I phoned in to DJ Andujar’s Radio Clandestino Show on WMUA-FM, and did an interview, which he was kind enough to record, and which I’ll post here for your listening pleasure.

Download/Listen: DJ Andujar Interviews Larry Grogan/Funky16Corners on WMUA-FM, UMASS Amherst, 4/18/11

Sweet Exorcist is held at a very groovy joint called the People’s Pint in Greenfield, MA, and I have to tell you, if you’re in the area, and crave some excellent food and drink, this is the place for you. I’m a ginger beer fanatic, and the People’s Pint makes their own, as well as house made cola, root beer, and a few varieties of regular beer (I tried the oatmeal stout and was very pleased).

The records started spinning around 10PM, and the night was a gas. Both DJ Andujar and Studebaker Hawk brought the heat (as you’ll hear when you pull down the ones and zeros) and I did my level best not to disappoint.

The peeps were dancing, the vinyl was spinning and a good time was had by all. Many thanks to the DJs (and the staff at the People’s Pint) for a great night.

The following night I was on my own (my wife was with the little Corners) and I packed up the record box and headed over to Northampton for Wooly Bully at the Basement.

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Yours truly staring intently at the PA system @ the Basement, somehow sensing impending failure…

Run by Snack Attack and DJ Cashman, Wooly Bully runs a little more in the 60s soul direction, and I’d packed a grip of Northern and 60s dance floor soul for the occasion. The Basement is a small room in the back of a building, but by the time the music got started it was packed to the rafters with party people who never stopped dancing until the lights came on and the door guy ushered them out into the night at closing time.

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Hazy cellphone pics of the Basment

(Top) Billy Butler on the decks

(Bottom) Imagine these people plus about 100 more revelers, packed like soulful sardines

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The place was a madhouse, and much good music was spun and danced to.

Unfortunately – and this was the only sour note of the whole trip – my recordings from the Basement were unusable. The levels were set too high and the recordings were distorted. There were other technical issues (the PA system overheated at one point) but they were all surmountable.  Hopefully, if I make a return visit during the summer, I can remedy the situation and bring back a couple of sets by Snack Attack and DJ Cashman, who both rocked the house.

Today I’ll be trying something new, which is basically posting sets by everyone who spun at Sweet Exorcist. I won’t be posting my first set, since there was a problem with a ground wire and there’s an annoying buzz that cuts into the music at a number of points.

It’s interesting to hear the different sensibilities of three DJs, all funky, but coming at the sound from different angles.
My assessment of a quality night is one where I walk away from the evening with new records added to my want list, and Sweet Exorcist definitely fit the bill.

I hope you dig the sounds, and I’ll be back later in the week with something cool.

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 recr 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.

 

King Curtis – Pop Corn Willy b/w Patty Cake

By , April 28, 2011 12:01 pm

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King Curtis

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Listen/Download – King Curtis – Pop Corn Willy
Listen/Download – King Curtis – Patty Cake (Valdez In the Country)

 

Greetings all.

I hope the end of the week finds you all robust, rosy cheeked and filled to the gills with soul.

I am – as usual – up to my substantial ass in alligators, with an exceptionally busy vacation followed immediately with an equally jam packed week.

I will save my recap of my DJ gigs in Massachusetts (which were a gas) for next week, but I did want to fill out this week’s posting with a very recent acquisition, that has (and this should come as no surprise) an interesting story attached to it.

The first part of our family vacation was occupied with an ongoing, very important errand, and as a result, when an opportunity opened up to do a little on-the-road 45 digging, I was both surprised and very pleased.

I hit a spot in upstate NY, that has – like many record stores that I haunt on the reg – seemed like a case of diminishing returns, i.e., the more I go back, the less there is to look through.

This time out was a different story, and by the time I had worked my way through the soul and funk section I had built up a nice stack of 45s to peruse, including some new (to me) stuff, one longtime want list item, 45 versions of things I previously had only on LP, as well as a couple of nice items for the trade box.

Among the new things was a King Curtis 45 with two tracks that were both previously unknown to me.

The one that caught my eye was ‘Pop Corn Willy’, which seemed – thanks to the mention of the funky snack food in the title – to be part and parcel of the 1969 dance craze.

Once I got it to the listening station, my suspicions were confirmed. It was extremely funky, and fast moving, and I gave it a spin when I took to the decks in Northampton, MA.

‘Pop Corn Willy’ is one of those cheap 45s that would likely be worth a nice chunk of change if it were rarer.

I gave the other side a brief needle drop, but since it didn’t grab me right away, I didn’t give it much thought.

When we finally returned home, and I got all my ducks in a row – including the acquisition of a brand new DJ coffin (not something you bury a DJ in, but rather a road case for two turntables and a mixer) – I sat down to digimatize the new records so that I might include them in next week’s edition of the Funky16Corners Radio Show (which by the way will air, on schedule, this Friday evening at 9PM on Viva Radio), I decided to give the King Curtis flipside a closer listen, and it’s a good thing I did too.

When I put the needle on the record, the song coming out of the speakers was pleasant enough, but after about 20 seconds it started to sound oddly familiar, and by the time the chorus rolled around I realized that although the song was titled ‘Patty Cake’, what I was actually hearing was a version of one of my favorite Donny Hathaway tunes, ‘Valdez In the Country’.

I’d first heard the song in a cover by the Soulful Strings, then by Hathaway himself, and eventually in a smoking version by Cold Blood.

The thing that bugged me though, was why it had been recorded by Mr Ousley under a different title.

As it turns out, this may very well have been the initial waxing of this composition. Hathaway himself (credited here, oddly as ‘Don Hathaway’) wouldn’t record it until 1973 on his ‘Extensions of a Man’ LP, after the Soulful Strings, Cold Blood, Nite Liters and Black Sugar (it would later be covered by George Benson).

As it turns out, the keyboardist on this session (recorded in August of 1969) was none other than Hathaway himself*, which would explain where King Curtis got his hands on the song. I don’t know for sure, but it’s possible that Curtis changed the title (the song would only appear on a non-LP 45) in an effort to keep it simple for the juke boxes and the dance floor. It’s also possible that it had yet to take on the ‘Valdez…’ title (I’ve never been able to discover the origin or significance of the title), though the Soulful Strings version, also recorded in 1969 carried the longer title.

That all said, it’s a great song (one of my favorite instrumentals), and I hope you dig it.

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

Peace

Larry

 

 

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*Interestingly, Hathaway also plays on (as well as produced and arranged) the Cold Blood version, and may very well have had something to do with the Soulful Strings version as well. He was clearly proud of the composition and did a lot to get it out there.

 


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 recr 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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