Monday, January 31, 2022

Various Artists - Never to be Forgotten The Flip Side of Stax 1968-74 (2012) Light In The Attic - Rare Soul

Stax Records was black and white music personel coming together in a pioneering integrated music enterprise. Native Tennessean Jim Stewart founded Satellite in the late 1950s but soon joined up with sister Estelle Axton and re-christened the label Stax Records (the “St” and “ax” of Stax respectively derived from the first 2 initials from their surnames). This ever-evolving Memphis-based label became one of the landmark touchstones of soul, R&B, and funk throughout the 1960s and 70s, its finger snapping logo brand synonymous with sonic quality and heartfelt integrity. Releasing hundreds of long players and 45-rpm singles during its heyday, the imprint and its many subsidiaries also birthed the legendary careers of Booker T & The M.G.’s, Otis Redding, and Isaac Hayes. Never To Be Forgotten: The Flip Side Of Stax 1968-1974 was Light In The Attic’s Record Store Day of 2012 highlighting some of the lesser-known Stax Records artists, collected and presented in a knock-out 7” vinyl box set. Containing 10 faithfully reproduced 45-rpm singles from Mable John, Bernie Hayes, Lee Sain, Melvin Van Peebles, Roy Lee Johnson & The Villagers, and John Gary Williams, in addition to label stalwarts Johnnie Taylor, Mad Lads, Emotions, and Rufus Thomas, prepare to move, groove, and be enthused.While Stax met a dramatic and disappointing fate in a tangled web of business, politics and finance in 1975, its enduring legacy shines on as one of the all-time great record labels of Soul music. If industry competitor Motown billed itself as “The Sound Of Young America,” then Stax certainly earned each and every letter of its namesake “Soulsville U.S.A.” Though both labels brought black music to the United States and the rest of the world, Stax’s underdog status combined with a deep catalogue of the most life affirming and authentic sounds around shall retain a special place in our hearts, never to be forgotten.

AMM


                                                                          The Taster!


                                                                          Tracks Below



Willie Henderson ‎– Dance With Willie Henderson The Master (1974) Brunswick - Rare Soul

To add to Saturdays post as promised is Willie,s only other album with some tracks not listed on the other album.

                                                                **********REQUEST**********

                                                                        The Taster!


                                                                       Tracks Below




Various Artists - That Philly Sound Presents - The Best Of Northern Soul Vol 1 (2006) That Philly Sound - Rare Soul

From John Madera,s "That Philly Sound" Label comes these 2 Fabulous Albums packed with Rare,Known,& Unknown Records that have graced the dancefloors of the Northern Scene.

 

                                                                          The Taster!


                                                                        Tracks Below

                                                                    





Various Artists - That Philly Sound Presents - The Best Of Northern Soul Vol 2 (2006) That Philly Sound - Rare Soul

 

                                                                         The Taster!


                                                                       Tracks Below



Sunday, January 30, 2022

Sunday Documentary/Movie - Get on Up - The James Brown Story (2014)..Staring Chadwick Boseman

In many ways, James Brown defies comprehension. He performed relentlessly for nearly six decades, beginning in the early nineteen-fifties. When he put his shows together, he rehearsed every move, every step, every interlude. In front of an audience, however, he surged beyond calculation, and entered a region both frenzied and rapturous. Other R&B and soul performers may have had greater gifts (Otis Redding, Aretha Franklin, Sam Cooke) and some rock-and-roll stars may have been just as entertaining (Little Richard, before he found God), but no one else had Brown’s convulsive blend of musical genius and ecstasy. He was strong enough and shrewd enough to cast aside good taste; he screamed and grunted and, turning his head, telegraphed indecipherable messages to his backup players, all of it part of an unstoppable flow. He was an overwhelming talent, and also an overtly sexual presence onstage,something that whites did not see much of in black male celebrities in the fifties and the early sixties, before Muhammad Ali changed everything. For many in the audience (especially the white audience), James Brown was exciting and discomforting in equal measure. “Get On Up,” the bio-pic devoted to Brown’s life and music, is surprisingly candid. The movie insists that “the godfather of soul” could be soulless,at least in his personal relationships. Again and again, Brown (Chadwick Boseman) is manipulative, violent, greedy, and just plain elusive. He hurts many of the people who are close to him (though the film only hints at the brutalities of his later years). At the same time, “Get On Up” does something that most fans would not have thought possible: using the original recordings and a lot of lip-synching, staging, and choreography, the movie re-creates Brown in full cry. Surrounded by his band and his singers, he gives everything of himself to his audience. That’s where the man’s soul was, the movie tells us. It’s hardly a fresh insight, but to see it reënacted with this much skill is thrilling.  “Get On Up,” as a portrait of a singer-songwriter, surpasses expectations. This movie will never need reviving. Brown’s innovative rhythms will always make his music sound contemporary. It has taken a long time for Hollywood to recognize what Brown and other soul musicians accomplished. Taylor Hackford struggled for fifteen years to get his Ray Charles bio-pic, “Ray” (2004), off the ground. The producer Brian Grazer obtained the rights to James Brown’s story thirteen years ago. He developed a script with the British screenwriting team of John-Henry and Jez Butterworth. But Brown died in 2006 and the project stalled, until Mick Jagger, who then held the rights, proposed to Grazer that they join forces. (Jagger, who learned so much from Brown, has been making his own film about him—collaborating with Alex Gibney on a documentary.) Grazer and Jagger hired Tate Taylor, a white Southerner, who directed “The Help” (2011), the soft-grained movie about black servants and white bosses in early-sixties Mississippi. Taylor’s involvement turns out to be a mixed blessing. Altering the Butterworths’ screenplay, he has attempted to elevate the standard tropes of a Hollywood bio-pic into a radical new form. As Taylor shows us, James Brown had a terrible time as a child. Abused and beaten by his father (Lennie James) and abandoned by his mother (Viola Davis), he grows up in Depression-era rural Georgia, under the protection of Aunt Honey (Octavia Spencer), an all-seeing woman who runs a brothel, and who tells him that he’s meant for greatness. His mother, before she left (for unexplained reasons), told him the same thing. These solemn predictions give a corny, mythical aura of destiny to a triumph that was actually built on talent, hard work, daring, and opportunism; if anyone was self-made, it was James Brown. As Brown, Chadwick Boseman is sensational. In “42,” he played Jackie Robinson, who could make history in the major leagues only if he ignored the race-baiting snarls from other players and from the stands. Boseman’s lionlike eyes conveyed some of what Robinson went through, but, except on the field, the performance never took off physically. He conquers all restraint in “Get On Up.” Thirty-seven years old, he assumes the role of Brown as the performer turns seventeen, squeezing his words into the young Brown’s strangled, high-pitched blur. (Eddie Murphy said that he never understood a word Brown said.) Acting with his arms and his shoulders,Brown’s body wasn’t yet fully liberated.Boseman makes him a little overeager, a young man with a killer smile and enormous charm, especially when he wants something from someone.Brown and a group of other young musicians, obsessed with the impassioned style of Pentecostal gospel music, form a group called the Famous Flames. At the demand of a booking agent, Ben Bart (Dan Aykroyd), and a record producer, Syd Nathan (Fred Melamed), the name of the group is changed to James Brown and His Famous Flames. The rest of the band is furious, but Brown agrees. He makes everyone, including his friend and musical collaborator Bobby Byrd (Nelsan Ellis), address him as “Mr. Brown.” At first, the formality seems a hipster joke, a way of announcing that he has arrived. But Brown takes it very seriously, and also fines anyone in the group who plays a wrong note or does drugs, any drugs, including marijuana. He insists on respect from whites, too, but, in Taylor’s apparently ironic telling, Brown’s ways with black musicians become increasingly domineering and egotistical. The situation grows worse when Brown starts making millions but denies his salaried musicians base pay and taunts them into quitting. As Brown’s music moves from gospel to rhythm and blues (and later to funk), audiences go crazy, and Boseman reveals what success does to Brown’s body. The smile is no longer welcoming; it’s sharklike, a demand for recognition. Offstage, Boseman gently swings his torso as he walks, as if Brown were teasing the sexual opportunities that are open to him. He enters a room with his head slightly turned; he has his own angle on what’s going on, and won’t submit to anyone else’s. He does look directly at Bart, a fond and protective music pro, but otherwise he’s distant and impersonal, a man incapable of acknowledging anyone who isn’t a member of his audience.Onstage, in blue silk, and with abundant ascending hair, Boseman in one continuous motion grabs the mike, drops it, pulls it back by its cord, and launches into “Night Train.” The beat is driving, constant, even ferocious, but Boseman’s movements are liquid. A spectacular dancer (the choreographer Aakomon Jones worked with him), he does Brown’s swivelling side to side, his scissoring splits. To my eyes, his performance is both accurate and a marvellous interpretation, an extension of Brown’s greatness. The filmmakers give us plenty of music-making: the famous night at the Apollo, in 1962, which became a hit album and brought Brown to national attention; the 1964 T.A.M.I. Show, filmed at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, in which he blew the Rolling Stones off the stage; and the Paris concert of 1971, when he performed three stunning numbers—“Get Up (I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine,” “Super Bad,” and “Soul Power.” In a rarity in these bio-pics, the movie captures a musician’s shifts in style. Rehearsing, Brown teaches his rebellious backup band to emphasize rhythm rather than melody. “Every instrument a drum,” he says, and persuades the horns to play, in unison, a single chord. Funk takes shape before our eyes, with hip-hop beckoning down the road. The presentation of Brown’s music is extraordinarily generous, and I have only one quarrel with it. Brown made records from 1956 almost until his death. The filmmakers transferred all the recordings to a different digital format, adding some new sounds and deleting some old ones. These versions tame the rawness of the original records, particularly the early ones, the incomparable assault, aimed at your heart and your body, that leaped out of radios, loudspeakers, hi-fi equipment. Grazer, Jagger, and Taylor (and probably a host of sound technicians) undoubtedly wanted clarity and dramatic emphasis. But, no matter how you heard it, James Brown’s music was devastating, and it shouldn’t be plumped and smoothed. Brown helped create the contemporary taste for rawness in popular music; it’s what people have always loved him for......LEGEND!....link below poster good for 7 days only

AMM

                                                          Review Courtesy Of Hakase

               https://mega.nz/file/V540EZQT#yqoyH1AwyIJjezxNv35m0Uwah7BeKDAQgxsQxSxUXaA

Saturday, January 29, 2022

Maurice & Mac - Lean On Me (1984) Chess P-Vine - Rare Soul

Continuing on from yesterdays Radiants post is the mega rare album that was a japan only release, featuring  Maurice McAlister and McLauren Green.....Half the tracks were laid down in Chicago the rest in Muscle Shoals...whilst still searching for my copy Bill very kindly sent me his!....Top Man!..What a fantastic album this is!,,,How good were these guys!

AMM

                                                           Review Courtesy Of Bill Pritchard                                        
                                                                          The Taster!


                                                                     Tracks Below




Harlem Underground Band (Feat George Benson ) - Harlem Underground (1976) Paul Winley - Rare Soul/Jazz (FLAC)

This is one of George,s rare forays where he teames up with some jazz super stars  & label owner Paul Winleys wife Ann....

                                                                         The Taster!


Line Up

Guitar – George Benson
Saxophone – Willis Jackson
Vocals – Ann Winley
Bass – Sterling McGee
Drums – Earl Williams
Harmonica – Buddy Lucas
Organ – Dave "Baby" Cortez
Producer – Paul Winley

                                                                  Tracks Below (FLAC)


              

Willie Henderson & The Soul Explosions - Funky Chicken (1970) LP Brunswick (2003) CD Vampi Soul Expanded - Rare Soul (FLAC)

Killer work from one of the funkiest leaders on the Chicago scene.I remember how i first heard "Dance Master" when i was younger and being blown away especially when i bought his albums!....the mighty mighty Willie Henderson, the force behind some of the city's greatest soul tracks and funky 45s! This album's like a stack of lost funky nuggets laid back to back with lots and lots of bass heavy grooving from the band, and plenty of instrumental riffing on guitar and horns! Most tracks are instrumental, but often feature some nice shouted or spoken bits  and the whole thing's stuffed to the rafters with great breaks, beats, and grooves! Titles include "Funky Chicken (parts 1 & 2)", "Off Into A Black Thing", "Soulful Football", "Sugar Sugar", "Can I Change My Mind", and "Is It Something You Got".I Will post up his 1974 album also on Brunswick-"Dance With Willie Henderson The Master"..that contains some tracks not featured on here.The crazy thing is some record company,s dont do their research very well.You,ll notice on the back cover of the CD that 2 Instrumentals are listed as unknown(also on discogs)..what rubbish..they were both featured on his other album..This annoys me as its very misleading to the Purchaser of the CD.I,ve corrected this in the tagging for you...Brilliant early Soul/Funk that still sounds great today! 

THE MAN...HIS MUSIC...HIS CAREER

Willie Henderson was born 1941 in Pensacola, Florida. He is an American R&B and soul musician & prolific song writer. Henderson moved to Chicago with his family while still a child, and began playing the baritone saxophone. He gigged with local artists like Otis Rush, Syl Johnson, Alvin Cash, and Harold Burrage while in his twenties, and began working for Brunswick Records in 1968 as the label's Chicago studio bandleader. Henderson and producer Carl Davis did arrangements for musicians such as The Chi-Lites, Jackie Wilson, Tyrone Davis, and Barbara Acklin. Henderson played on many of these records and also did some production work himself, especially for Tyrone Davis, with whom he had a string of R&B and Hot 100 hits in the late 1960s and early 1970s on Brunswick subsidiary, Dakar. Henderson also released several singles, which included "Funky Chicken (Part I)", as Willie Henderson and the Soul Explosions (#22 R&B, #91 pop); the Lowrell Simon-written 1974 instrumental "Dance Master", "Break Your Back" and "Gangster Boogie Bump", on Playboy Records. He also released two albums on Brunswick in 1970(FEATURED HERE) and 1974. Henderson left Brunswick in 1974 and began working independently as a producer. He produced the group Essence for Epic Records and former Brunswick singer, Barbara Acklin for Capital Records, continuing to produce into the 1980s and occasionally self-releasing singles on his label, Now Sound. He formed the Chicago Music Organization in 1999, and still occasionally performs in the Chicago area.

AMM

                                                                           The Taster!                             


                                                                   Tracks Below (FLAC)



Friday, January 28, 2022

The Radiants - Baby You Got It - The Ultimate Collection (1995) Titanic - Rare Soul

Amazingly these guys never recorded a studio album!..This is the only collection available that has nearly their entire output. Ive included more Bonus tracks that should have been on here. Maurice McAlister and Green "Mac" McCLauren recorded quite a few 45,s as a duo (Maurice & Mac) and they had a japan LP only release in 1984...when i find it i,ll post it up. Chicago has been known as a blues mecca ever since giants like Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf made their way north from Mississippi seeking greater opportunity. In fact, the electrified and electrifying sound they and others developed would come to be known as Chicago Blues. But the music coming out of the Windy City was not limited to blues. Soul music giants like Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions, Jerry Butler, and Billy Stewart called Chicago home as well. The Radiants never quite reached the level of success that the artists I mentioned above achieved but they did manage to send a few records up the charts in the 1960s. The group’s original lineup of lead vocalist Maurice McCallister, baritone Wallace Sampson, second tenor Jerome Brooks, bass singer Elzie Butler, and first tenor Charles Washington met while they were singing in the youth choir at Greater Harvest Baptist Church. Like other artists who got their start in church, the Radiants began their career singing gospel in churches but also adding in some secular R&B songs that McCallister wrote. It wasn’t long before the Radiants abandoned gospel altogether. Before their first recording session, Washington had left the group and been replaced by McLauren Green. The group recorded demos and shopped them around but couldn’t get a bite. All of the big labels turned them down including Motown and Chess. But Chess eventually had a change of heart and signed the Radiants. At Chess, the group was mentored by Billy Davis, one-time songwriting partner of Berry Gordy, Jr. The Radiants’ first single for the label was released in 1962. “Father Knows Best” b/w “One Day I’ll Show You” was unsuccessful everywhere with the exception of Cleveland, where it was a local hit. Chess singles “Heartbreak Society,” “Shy Guy,” and “I Gotta Dance to Keep My Baby” followed and while they all sounded like hits, none of them were. Poor promotion by the label seems to have been the culprit. Green was drafted and he was replaced by Frank McCollum. But by 1964 the Radiants were in disarray. Things got so bad that the group actually broke up, leaving only McCallister and Sampson to form a new lineup. Leonard Caston, Jr. had been the organist at Greater Harvest and his return from the army was timely as he became the third member of the new Radiants lineup. Now a trio, the Radiants released “Voice Your Choice” in late 1964. It was their biggest hit, reaching #16 on the R&B chart, and #51 on the Billboard Hot 100. The follow-up single was “It Ain’t No Big Thing” and although it failed to make the Pop chart, it reached #14 R&B. The Radiants modeled themselves after the Impressions on these records, with McCallister and Caston trading lead vocals, and employing the Impressions three-part harmony style. Caston had his eye on a songwriting and production career and left the Radiants in 1965. James Jameson replaced him and he can be heard on the single “Baby You Got It.” That’s about the time that things got complicated. McCallister left the group shortly after the single was released and the departure of the group’s founder should have put an end to things, right? Well, no. There was another Chess group called the Confessions and they were led by a guy named Mitchell Bullock. They recorded a single called “Don’t It Make You Feel Kinda Bad” but broke up before it was released. Davis had the idea of enlisting Bullock to work with Sampson and Jameson. When they added Caston’s brother Victor, the Radiants were a quartet again. Remember that Confessions single? Without re-recording it or changing anything Chess released it as a Radiants single. “Don’t It Make You Feel Kinda Bad” wasn’t a big hit, only reaching #47 on the R&B chart, but the next Radiants single, “Hold On,” managed to reach #68 on the Pop chart, and #35 R&B in 1968. It would be the last chart record for the Radiants. They left Chess the following year and broke up in 1972. McCallister went on to have some success with as part of a duo that also included former Radiant McLauren Green. They two collaborated as Maurice & Mac on a single called “You Left the Water Running” which is revered by soul music aficionados. Chess never released a Radiants album but did include several of the group’s singles on compilation albums....Superb!

AMM 

                                                                     The Classic Taster!


   

                                                          Tracks & Bonus Tracks Below


Bonus Tracks

30 I Gotta Dance To Keep My Baby
31 Noble The Bargain Man
32 (Don't It Make You) Feel Kinda Bad
33 One Day I'll Show You (I Really Love You)
34 Father Knows Best


Kent 354 - Love And Desire - The Patrice Holloway Anthology (2011) - Rare Soul (FLAC)+++Artwork

Patrice Yvonne Holloway was born 1951 passed 2001. The youngest of three children, Patrice is the younger sister of Motown artist Brenda Holloway. Patrice also had a contract with Motown, recording songs such as "The Touch of Venus" and "For the Love of Mike", none of which were released. She recorded a few minor singles for the Capitol Records label during the mid-1960s, notably "Love And Desire", "Ecstasy" and "Stolen Hours", which became popular on the Northern Soul scene in the 1970s. She sang background vocals with her sister on many records for other artists, including Joe Cocker and the Grease Band's 1968 cover version of The Beatles' "With a Little Help from My Friends", later the theme song to the 1980s television series The Wonder Years. Patrice also recorded the soul classic, "Stay With Your Own Kind", which was noteworthy for its direct treatment of inter racial relationships at a time when this was highly controversial. Patrice also co-wrote 'You've Made Me So Very Happy', which in 1969 rose to No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 when the band Blood Sweat & Tears covered it, two years after it was co-written and originally recorded by her sister Brenda. “Patrice was beautiful, she was sassy. She was extraordinarily creative and way ahead of her generation. I loved her very, very much.” said Motown producer Frank Wilson. Kents guy who did the research and wrote the Booklet included here, had the opportunity to immerse himself in the life of this fascinating unsung artist through interviews with a host of her legendary colleagues, stellar session vocalists such as Clydie King and Edna Wright(Sandy Wynns) as well as Motown icon Brenda Holloway, Patrice’s sister. What emerged was a portrait of a singularly talented, spirited and fascinating young woman who was truly beloved by all who knew her. What didn’t emerge was the answer to an age-old riddle. Who sang backup behind Diana Ross on ‘Someday We’ll Be Together’? Brenda Holloway clearly hears her sister on the track, and Merry Clayton shared a vivid anecdote about rehearsing and recording it with Patrice. After the notes were sent to the printer, Motown stalwart Gloria Jones insisted that she had cut the vocals with Carolyn Willis and Patrice. Of course, the late producer Johnny Bristol claimed it was the Waters. File this one under Unsolved Mysteries. But here’s the biggest mystery. How did Patrice Holloway not become a superstar? “Love & Desire” showcases this brilliant vocal stylist on 25 rare tracks bursting with charisma and personality. Her complete output for Capitol is here, nine tracks released on five singles during two tenures with the label. ‘Stolen Hours’, ‘Ecstasy’ and ‘Love And Desire’ have long been Northern Soul favourites, and 1971’s ‘Evidence’ and ‘That’s The Chance You Gotta Take’ personify the “value for money” single. Another highlight is 1967’s ‘That’s All You Gotta Do’, written by future Motown luminary Willie Hutch. Did I say Motown? An excursion into the Hitsville vaults has yielded a treasure trove of exciting rarities. A few have sneaked out on compilations in recent years, such as Patrice’s original version of ‘The Touch Of Venus’, her duet with sister Brenda on ‘Come Into My Palace’ and her seldom-heard double-sided tribute to her teenage heartthrob, ‘Stevie’ and ‘The Boy Of My Dreams’. (Incidentally, Brenda spills the beans in the booklet notes on her little sister’s romance with young Mr Wonder.) Ten Motown tracks see light for the first time anywhere. There’s further flirtation with Stevie on a lively cover of his ‘Surf Stomp’, a Smokey-produced version of the Miracles’ ‘All That’s Good’ and an authoritative take on Mary Wells’ ‘My 2 Arms – You = Tears’. Barely in her teens when she committed these tracks to tape, Patrice is yearning and tender on ‘Love Walked Right In’ and boisterous on ‘Flippitty Flop’. Versatility abounds over a wide variety of styles including doo wop (‘Crying’), mid-60s pop (‘The Go Gang’) and testifying soul (the powerful ‘I Got To Change’). As I previously stated, everyone who knew Patrice loved her. Interesting to note that patrice was a member of the following groups-Josie And The Pussycats,The Belles,The Brothers & Sisters, The Four J's,The Ikettes(Unofficial),The Sequins, & The Wooden Nickels. Names familiar to fans of Northern soul & Collectors in General. A superb album & such a shame this very talented Lady is no longer with us.

AMM 

                                                         Review Courtesy Of Oldsoulrebel                  

                                                                         The Taster!


                                                                  Tracks Below (FLAC)




Thursday, January 27, 2022

Various Artists - Reggie Young - Session Guitar Star (2019) Ace - Soul/Country/Pop (FLAC)

Have you ever wondered who the Guitar player was on Well Known Records. Willie Mitchell,s Northern Anthem was one of the records that sprung to mind...and now i know....A long-awaited overview of Reggie Young’s six decades as Memphis and Nashville’s most in-demand guitarist. Bobby Bland, King Curtis, Elvis Presley, Dusty Springfield, Joe Tex, Johnny Cash, Solomon Burke, Merle Haggard, Jackie DeShannon, James Carr … these are just a few of the many musical heavyweights whose recordings have been embellished by the talents of Reggie Young, Memphis and Nashville’s most versatile and in-demand session guitarist. They’re all here on this CD overview of Reggie’s six-decade career, along with 14 other prime examples of his uncanny ability to play exactly to a song’s requirements while at the same time leaving his own indelible stamp. “Session Guitar Star” shows Reggie completely at home in all the various genres that have provided top class material for so many LPs and CDs for the best part of 40 years. Thanks to his versatility we were able to make our selections from a wide range of R&B and blues, rock’n’roll, instrumentals, rockabilly, soul and pop, as well as a number of left-field country cuts to reflect the amount of time he plied his trade in Nashville. 18 of the 24 tracks are new this CD. Reggie Young’s guitar work has been heard on many Ace compilations over the years, most notably our “Memphis Boys: The Story Of American Studios” CD of 2012 Posted here recently. Ace have consciously avoided any duplication of tracks here, although several of the same artists are featured, including Dusty Springfield with her gorgeous version of Goffin & King’s ‘Don’t Forget About Me’, the gritty Memphis R&B of King Curtis’ ‘In The Pocket’ and Joe Tex with the madcap, funked-up ‘Chicken Crazy’.
From Eddie Bond’s rockabilly classic ‘Slip, Slip, Slippin’ In’ to the southern boogie of Waylon Jennings’ ‘Where Do We Go From Here’, we continue our musical trip via Bobby Bland’s sublime ‘A Touch Of The Blues’, James Carr’s country soul gem ‘More Love’, Elvis Presley’s romping take on Percy Mayfield’s ‘Stranger In My Own Home Town’ and a somewhat diverse arrangement of Hank Snow’s ‘I’m Movin’ On’ from the Box Tops. After an outing for Reggie’s very first single, a strong instrumental version of ‘Dream Baby’, we can ‘Drift Away’ with Dobie Gray, experience some of James & Bobby Purify’s ‘Morning Glory’, avoid line dancing to J.J. Cale’s ‘Cocaine’ and take the Merle Haggard option, ‘I Think I’ll Just Stay Here And Drink’. Although fifty percent of this album only will appeal to Soul fans it,s interesting to see what the great man has done in other genre,s of music.

AMM


                                                                        The Taster!


                                                                   Tracks Below (FLAC)



Randy Crawford - Now We May Begin (1980) WB - Soul/Jazz/Funk (FLAC)+++Artwork

This was Randy,s Fourth studio album where she collaborated with the Crusaders as Producers; Joe Sample,Wilton felder, & Stix Hooper for the first time and her career really took off with the help of these experienced guys & legends!... The song "Last Night At Danceland" was a hit, while the album cut "One Day I'll Fly Away" got widespread radio airplay and did well in the international market. Crawford's quivering delivery and eclectic nature has made it difficult for record companies to target and market her material, this was one of the few times she penetrated the urban contemporary and R&B markets. 

Veronica "Randy" Crawford was  born in 1952 in Macon Georgia. She has been more successful in Europe than in the United States, where she has not entered the Billboard Hot 100 as a solo artist. However, she has appeared on the Hot 100 singles chart twice. First, was in 1979 as a guest vocalist on The Crusaders's top 40 hit "Street Life". She also dueted with Rick Springfield on the song "Taxi Dancing," which hit #59 as the b-side of Springfield's hit "Bop Til You Drop." She has had five Top 20 hits in the UK, including her 1980 number 2 hit, "One Day I'll Fly Away", as well as six UK Top 10 albums. Despite her American nationality, she won Best British Female Solo Artist in recognition of her popularity in the UK at the 1982 Brit Awards. In the late 2000s she received her first two Grammy Award nominations. Crawford first performed at club gigs from Cincinnati to Saint-Tropez, but made her name in mid-1970s in New York, where she sang with jazzmen George Benson and Cannonball Adderley. She signed with Columbia Records and released her first single, "Knock On Wood" / "If You Say the Word" in 1972. Adderley invited her to sing on his album, Big Man: The Legend Of John Henry (1975). During a brief tenure at Columbia Records, Crawford recorded "Don't Get Caught in Love's Triangle".She is also one of the vocalists on Fred Wesley & The Horny Horns' A Blow For Me, A Toot To You (1977). In 1978, Crawford sang vocals on "Hoping Love Will Last", the opening song on side two of Please Don't Touch!, which was the second solo album by the former Genesis guitarist Steve Hackett. She led R&B veterans the Crusaders on the transatlantic hit "Street Life" (1979). A specially re-recorded version was featured in the soundtrack for the films "Sharky's Machine" and "Jackie Brown", and appeared in commercials in the early 2000s. She later recorded for Warner Bros. Records. Crawford was named the 'Most Outstanding Performer' at the 1980 Tokyo Music Festival.Randy also recorded the love theme ("People Alone") for the film soundtrack of "The Competition" on MCA Records in 1980. Her follow-up solo efforts included "One Day I'll Fly Away" (1980) and "You Might Need Somebody" (1981), which became soul standards, and a cover of the Tony Joe White song, popularised by Brook Benton, "Rainy Night in Georgia". The album, Secret Combination (1981) stayed on the UK Albums Chart for sixty weeks, after which her profile dipped, despite a return to the UK Top Ten with "Almaz" in 1986. In June 1981, Crawford also released another hit, "One Hello", from the album Windsong. She continued to record for Warner Bros through the 1990s, but was unable to score either a big R&B hit or major crossover success. Naked And True (1995) brought Crawford back to her roots, it included George Benson's "Give Me the Night", and confirmed her soul heritage by featuring Funkadelic members Bootsy Collins, Bernie Worrell and the Fred Wesley Horns. She enjoyed her highest profile of the decade when rising starlet Shola Ama had a worldwide hit with her 1997 cover of "You Might Need Somebody". Crawford recorded a live session with Joe Sample on July 24, 2007, at Abbey Road Studios in London for "Live from Abbey Road". The episode she shared with David Gilmour and Amos Lee was screened on the Sundance Channel in the US and Channel 4 in the UK. She has sung with Bootsy Collins, Johnny Bristol, Quincy Jones, Al Jarreau, Rick Springfield, Katri Helena, Michael Kamen, Zucchero, David Sanborn, Steve Hackett, the Spanish band Presuntos Implicados, the Norwegian jazz-rock band Lava and Joe Sample amongst others. Randy Crawford was set to perform "The Farewell South Africa" tour in Cape Town and Pretoria in October 2018 but it was cancelled due to her suffering a stroke. This would have been Crawford's final performance prior to retiring. One Hell of a Voice That is going into AMM,s catergory of...LEGENDS!

AMM


                                                                         The Taster!


                                                               Tracks & Line Up Below (FLAC)

 

Line Up

Randy Crawford - Vocals
Joe Sample - Keyboards, Arranger (Strings)
Oscar Brashear - Trumpet
David T. Walker, Dean Parks, Roland Bautista, Tim May - Guitars
Wilton Felder - Bass, Tenor Saxophone
Abraham Laboriel - Bass
Stix Hooper, Mike Baird - Drums
Eddie Brown, Paulinho Da Costa - Percussion
Gwen Owens, Julia Tillman, Maxine Willard, Melvin Franklin - Backing Vocals
Producer - Stix Hooper, Joe Sample, Wilton Felder (Crusaders Records Productions Inc.)



Various Artists - Fillies of Soul (1994) Titanic - Rare Soul

 From Italy comes this quite obscure album with some real gems!..All Northern Soul Belters!


                                                             Review Courtesy Of Trinity

                                                                        The Taster!


                                                                         Tracks Below




Wednesday, January 26, 2022

George Benson - Blue Benson (1976) Polydor - Rare Soul/Jazz/ - LP Only Release

A Rare outing from the legend that is George Benson,Master vocalist and exponant of the famous Ibanez Guitar that gives him that unique sound. With a staggering 67 albums and 130 odd singles he,s been there,done it and got the t-shirt !...first came to my attention with his superb albums on the CTI(Creed Taylor Inc)Engelwood,New Jersey Record Label..These are like Gold dust to now obtain..So pleased i have the entire catalog as i forsaw the day would come when these would be very sought after. Here,s his only album ever on Polydor and still Vinyl only release. This guy really has done it all R&B/Jazz (all Genre,s Huge following on the Jazz-Funk Scene here in the UK) Soul & even had a couple of 45,s & LP Tracks played on the Northern scene! I last saw him in 1980 with my wife at Wembley, London with guest Stevie Wonder.All i can say is WOW!...what a gig! 

 THE MAN,HIS LIFE,HIS MUSIC

Benson was born and raised in the Hill District in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. At the age of seven, he first played the ukulele in a corner drug store, for which he was paid a few dollars. At the age of eight, he played guitar in an unlicensed nightclub on Friday and Saturday nights, but the police soon closed the club down.  At the age of 10, he recorded his first single record, “She Makes Me Mad”, with RCA-Victor in New York, under the name “Little Georgie”. At the age of 21, he recorded his first album as leader, "The New Boss Guitar", featuring Jack McDuff. Benson’s next recording was "It’s Uptown" with the George Benson Quartet, including Lonnie Smith on organ and Ronnie Cuber on baritone saxophone. Benson followed it up with "The George Benson Cookbook", also with Lonnie Smith and Ronnie Cuber on baritone and drummer Marion Booker. Miles Davis employed Benson in the mid-1960s, featuring his guitar on “Paraphernalia” on his 1968 Columbia release, "Miles in the Sky" before going to Verve Records. Benson then signed with Creed Taylor’s jazz label CTI Records, where he recorded several albums, with jazz heavyweights guesting, to some success, mainly in the jazz field. His 1974 release, Bad Benson, climbed to the top spot in the Billboard jazz chart. By the mid- to late-1970s, as he recorded for Warner Bros. Records, a whole new audience began to discover Benson. With the 1976 release "Breezin", Benson sang a lead vocal on the track “This Masquerade”, which became a huge pop hit and won a Grammy Award for Record of the Year. In 1976, George Benson appeared as a guitarist and backup vocalist on Stevie Wonder’s song “Another Star” from Wonder’s album "Songs in the Key of Life". He also recorded the original version of “The Greatest Love of All” for the 1977 Muhammad Ali bio-pic, The Greatest, which was later covered by Whitney Houston as “Greatest Love of All”. During this time Benson recorded with the German conductor Claus Ogerman. The live take of “On Broadway”, recorded a few months later from the 1978 release Weekend in L.A., also won a Grammy. He has worked with Freddie Hubbard on a number of his albums throughout the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. The Qwest record label (a subsidiary of Warner Bros., run by Quincy Jones) released Benson’s breakthrough pop album "Give Me The Night", produced by Jones. Benson made it into the pop and R&B top ten with the song “Give Me the Night” (written by former Heatwave keyboardist Rod Temperton,an Englishman). He got many hit singles such as “Love All the Hurt Away”, “Turn Your Love Around”, “Inside Love”, “Lady Love Me”, “20/20”, “Shiver”, “Kisses in the Moonlight”. More importantly, Quincy Jones encouraged Benson to search his roots for further vocal inspiration, and he re-discovered his love for Nat Cole, Ray Charles and Donny Hathaway in the process, influencing a string of further vocal albums into the 1990s. To commemorate the long-term relationship between Benson and Ibanez and to celebrate 30 years of collaboration on the GB Signature Models, Ibanez created the GB30TH, a very limited-edition model featuring a gold-foil finish inspired by the traditional Japanese Garahaku art form. In 2009, Benson was recognized by the National Endowment of the Arts as a Jazz Master, the nation’s highest honor in jazz. Benson performed at the 49th issue of the Ohrid Summer Festival in Macedonia on July 25, 2009, and his tribute show to Nat King Cole An Unforgettable Tribute to Nat King Cole as part of the Istanbul International Jazz Festival in Turkey on July 27. In the autumn of 2009, Benson finished recording a new album entitled "Songs and Stories", with Marcus Miller, producer John Burk, and session musicians David Paich and Steve Lukather. In June 2013, Benson released his fourth album for Concord Records, "Inspiration: A Tribute to Nat King Cole", which featured Wynton Marsalis, Idina Menzel, Till Brönner, and Judith Hill. In September, he returned to perform at Rock in Rio festival, in Rio de Janeiro, 35 years after his first performance at this festival, which was then the inaugural one. In July 2017, Benson marked his 40th anniversary and Ibanez has created a limited run of his signature guitars for the occasion.He still continues to this day writing songs,performing & recording....A LEGEND!

AMM


                                                                         The Taster!


Line Up

Guitar, Vocals – George Benson
Piano – Herbie Hancock, Paul Griffin
Bass – Bob Cranshaw, Ron Carter
Fender Bass - Chuck Rainey
Congas – Johnny Pacheco
Drums – Billy Cobham, Jimmy Johnson, Leo Morris
Flute – Arthur Clarke, George Marge
Harmonica – Buddy Lucas
Tenor Saxophone – Arthur Clarke, George Marge
Trombone – Garnett Brown
Trumpet – Clark Terry
Vibraphone – Jack Jennings
Strings – The Winston Collymore Strings


                                                                        Tracks Below




Various Artists - Phil Spector - The Early Productions (2010) Ace - Pop/R&R/R&B/Soul+++Booklet

In the early 60s, pop was a hidden industry whose interface with the public existed only at performance level. The big money wasn’t around then and the record game wasn’t seen as a legitimate vocation for sons and daughters. In this subterranean world, income depended on factors that were both difficult to predict and control and it seemed a safer bet becoming a lawyer, a doctor or a dentist. This was the awesome challenge facing 21 year-old Phil Spector as he barnstormed his way through recording circles, making an immediate impact with major hits such as ‘Spanish Harlem’ (Ben E King), ‘Pretty Little Angel Eyes’ (Curtis Lee) and ‘Corinna Corinna’ (Ray Peterson). It all began for Spector with the Teddy Bears, an ad hoc vocal group he organised as a vehicle for his songs back in 1958. Events had moved fairly quickly in his life since he’d moved with his mother and sister from the Bronx to Los Angeles in 1953. By the time he’d graduated from Fairfax high School in 1957, Spector had become proficient on the guitar and turned his hand to song writing. Some crudely recorded demos including ‘Don’t You Worry My Little Pet’ caught the attention of Doré Records who sanctioned further recordings resulting in the worldwide hit ‘To Know Him Is To Love Him’. Driven by personality conflicts, the Teddy Bears soon disbanded and Spector teamed up with Lester Sill and Lee Hazlewood, the force behind twangy guitarist Duane Eddy’s hits. Placed in charge of Sill’s new signing Kell Osborne, Spector wrote and produced the gritty ‘That’s Alright Baby’. Spector then expressed a desire to move back East. As a favour to their old mentor, Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller agreed to look after him. Alternating between coasts, Spector recorded the Paris Sisters, a vocal trio signed by Sill. His faith in Spector was more than justified when the trio’s ‘I Love How You Love Me’ climbed to #5. Following a short stop at Liberty records, the only official staff post he ever held Spector walked away to concentrate on his own Philles label. Four years had lapsed since he’d stepped untrained into a recording studio with three friends to record a hit almost by chance. Since then, he’d learned his craft, paid his dues and finally become his own boss. Now, at 23, he had the industry in the palm of his hand and only himself to account to. “Phil Spector: The Early Productions” covers this formative phase of Spector’s career without duplicating too many hits available on other CD,s. 12 of the generous 28 tunes are new to CD at the time of release and both the sequencing and mastering make them a delight to the ear while the booklet is a presentational tour de force. Let’s remember him this way rather than the other.

THE MAN..HIS LIFE..HIS CAREER

Phil Spector, in full Harvey Phillip Spector, (born 1940, New York City passed 2021, French Camp, California-Prison), This famous but tormentered record producer of the 1960s, was described by the writer Tom Wolfe as the “First Tycoon of Teen.” There had been producers since the beginning of the record industry, but none had assumed the degree of control demanded by Spector. At age 18 he and two Los Angeles school friends recorded “To Know Him Is to Love Him,” a simple teenage ballad written by Spector, its title taken from his father’s gravestone. Released under the name of the Teddy Bears, it was one of the biggest hits of 1958. But the group was never to be heard from again, because Spector had other ideas. He moved to New York City and served an apprenticeship with the writer-producer team of Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller before branching out to supervise the recordings of Curtis Lee (“Pretty Little Angel Eyes”),the Paris Sisters (“I Love How You Love Me”), and others. In 1961, needing to escape the restraining influence of older and more conservative opinion, he formed his own label, Philles Records, and, working at Gold Star Recording Studios in Los Angeles, he began to release a string of records that demonstrated his unique vision of what pop music could achieve in its age of innocence. With the Crystals’ “Da Doo Ron Ron” and “Then He Kissed Me” and the Ronettes’ “Be My Baby” and “Baby I Love You,” Spector blended conventional teen romance sentiments with orchestral arrangements of immense scale and power in what he described as  “little symphonies for the kids.” .He didnt give Darlene Love the credit for singing lead on most of the crystals hits which has remained a mystery to everyone in the business including Darlene. Others called it the wall of sound, and the style reached a peak in 1965 with the blue-eyed soul of the Righteous Brothers’ epic “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’,” a huge worldwide hit. Spector threatened to top it with Ike and Tina Turner’s majestic “River Deep,Mountain High” the following year, but some sectors of the music industry,jealous of his success and irritated by his arrogance, ensured its Commercial failure.
A wounded Spector went into a retirement from which he briefly emerged in 1969 to work on the solo records of John Lennon and eorge Harrison, at whose behest (and to Paul McCartney’s lasting displeasure) he completed the post production of "Let It Be", the Beatles’ final album. Later collaborations with Leonard Cohen and the Ramones were no more successful than his attempts to re-establish his own label. His time had gone. Spector was absent from the spotlight for most of the next few decades, during which he gained a reputation as a recluse. However, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1989. Spector then made headlines in 2003, when actress Lana Clarkson was fatally shot at his home. He was subsequently charged with murder, and his 2007 trial ended in a mistrial after the jury was unable to reach a unanimous decision. At Spector’s retrial, begun in October 2008, the presiding judge ruled that jurors could consider the lesser charge of involuntary manslaughter as well as the original murder charge. After six months of testimony and 30 hours of deliberation, the second jury found Spector guilty of second-degree murder, and in May 2009 he was sentenced to 19 years to life in prison. His health later deteriorated, and in 2014 he was transferred to a prison-run medical facility. Spector died from complications 2021.Love him or hate him the guy was a genius in the studio,shame about the flawed personality!

AMM

                                                              The Original Song Taster!


                                                                      Tracks Below



Shirley Brown - Diva Of Soul (1995) Malaco - Dome Expanded - Rare Soul (FLAC)

I,ve posted the Dome version of the album over the Malaco CD as it contains extra tracks. Shirley was born on in 1947, in West Memphis, Arkansas. In 1956 her family moved to St. Louis, Missouri, and soon after that across the river to Madison, Illinois, a small town with a population only about 4,500. It was located five miles north of East St. Louis. Albert King, a premier blues guitarist and singer, was born Albert Nelson in Mississippi in 1923 (passed away in Memphis in 1992), but since the mid-50s he had been residing in the St. Louis area and worked there alongside Ike Turner and Little Milton, among others. In 1966 he moved to Memphis and signed with Stax, cut numerous albums for them and stayed with them till the demise of the company in the mid-70s. Shirley hooked up with Albert in the early 60s, and this is what she told Denise Hall (for the # 2/75 issue of UK Black Music Magazine) "When I was about fourteen, I would play hookey from school to rehearse with Albert's band… Prior to that, the only singing I had done was in church." Albert became Shirley's manager, and she worked not only with Albert's band, but also with such names as Little Milton and Johnnie Taylor. After nine years with Albert, in the early 70s Shirley switched from the Albert King Revue to Oliver Sain's Revue. Oliver was born in 1932 in Mississippi (passed away in St. Louis in 2003) and after working in many cities he finally settled down in the St. Louis region in 1959. A producer and a recognized saxophone player, he was also known for discovering new talent, such as Fontella Bass, Bobby McClure, Ann Peebles and Barbara Carr. Oliver scored biggest hits under his own name on Abet around mid-70s with such numbers as "Bus Stop" and "Party Hearty"....with King’s assistance Brown signed with Stax Records in 1974. Her initial single for the company, "Woman to Woman", was a hit. Written by James Banks, Eddie Marion and Henderson Thigpen, the song spent two weeks at the top of the Billboard Hot Soul Singles chart, reached No. 22 on the Hot 100 and sold over a million copies. Her full-length debut album, also titled "Woman to Woman", was likewise successful, charting at No. 11 on R&B Albums and No. 98 on the Billboard 200. Woman to Woman would also prove to be Stax’s last hit single, and the company folded in 1975. After releasing three albums on various labels, Brown signed with Malaco Records in 1989. Produced by Brown, Jim Stewart and Winston Stewart, "Fire & Ice" appeared later that year and reached No. 66 on Billboard’s R&B Albums chart. Brown’s passionate duet with Bobby Womack on Brenda Lee Eager and Billy Osborne’s "Ain’t Nothin’ Like the Lovin" We Got also charted, rising to No. 46 on Hot R&B Singles. Other standout tracks include the yearning "Take Me to Your Heart", co-written by Brown with Winston Stewart, the rousing Homer Banks / Lester Snell ballad "Sowed to the Wind" and George Jackson’s stirring "I Wonder Where the Love Has Gone". "Timeless" followed in 1991, peaking at No. 63 on Billboard’s R&B Albums chart. Jim Stewart was executive producer, with Brown, Winston Stewart and Bobby Manuel contributing production as well. Brown, Homer Banks and Lester Snell collaborated on the soulful "Three Way Love Affair", and Brown turned out a tender performance on Brenda Lee Eager and Robert Bowles’ "Let’s Make Love Tonight". Brown’s next release for Malaco was "Joy & Pain" in 1993. Frederick Knight joined Brown, Winston Stewart and Bobby Manuel as an album producer, with Jim Stewart again serving as executive producer. Brown and Knight co-wrote the spirited title track, and Knight also penned "Hearts Are Made to Be Loved" and "It’s a Pleasure Easin’ Your Pain". Brown composed "A Two-Way Thang", an answer song to "Three Way Love Affair", with Earl Randle and John Ward, and the poignant "It Don’t Hurt Like It Used To" with Winston Stewart. The backing musicians include the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section and guitarist Will McFarlane, and Harrison Calloway contributed horn arrangements. Brown’s 1995 record "Diva of Soul" brought her back to the charts, reaching No. 67 on Billboard’s R&B Albums. Brown and Manuel co-produced the release and shared writing credits on "Good Loving Man" and "You Ain’t Woman Enough to Take My Man". The latter also proved popular and rose to No. 80 on the Hot R&B Singles chart. Full of fine ballads, including Brown’s own "Sprung on His Love", Living Blues critic Peter R. Aschoff asserted that Brown’s admirers would “find Diva of Soul to be one of the finest Southern soul/blues outings in recent memory.” Released in 1997, "The Soul of a Woman" features production from Brown, Manuel, Richard Cason, Tommy Couch and Wolf Stephenson. The Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section again provided support, as did Will McFarlane and Lester Snell. "Why You Want to Love Me Like That", by Brown and Manuel, is masterful and funky, and their Female Player incorporates hip-hop elements into its slinky groove. Brown also wrote" Don’t Go Lookin’ for My Man" with Snell and Homer Banks and "You Left a Good Woman for a Good Time" with George Jackson. Cason penned four of the album’s tracks, including the anguished "Who Is Betty". Brown delivered Dottie Rambo’s "He Looked Beyond My Faults" with heartfelt fervor, and the Mississippi Mass Choir supplied the gospel song with soaring harmonies. Joined by several of the same studio personnel as her previous album, Brown’s 2000 release "Holding My Own" found her doing just that. Her own "sassy Sweet Lips2, "Big Hips" and Denise LaSalle’s regal "The Best Woman" are album highlights. Cason’s "How Close We Came" is heartbreakingly beautiful, and the Mississippi Mass Choir buoyed Brown a second time on Frederick Knight’s uplifting "Through the Storm". "Woman Enough" arrived in 2004, and Brown, Cason, Couch, Snell and Stephenson produced the release. Keyboardist Vick Allen was among the backing players, which included Brown session veterans such as David Hood and Clayton Ivey. The earthy "Poon Tang Man", composed by Brown and Snell, was a hit on southern soul radio, as were Frederick Knight’s "I’ve Got to Sleep with One Eye Open" and "Too Much Candy".
Brown’s last album for Malaco was "Unleashed" in 2009. Allen contributed production to the release alongside Brown, Cason, Knight and Stephenson. The blistering "(You Promised Me Heaven, But) You Gave Me Hell" by Larry Chambers, Raymond Moore and John Ward, is the apex of the set. “Brown is in typically awesome voice throughout,” declared Living Blues critic Lee Hildebrand, “her radiant mezzo pipes soaring with melismatic majesty.”..As you can gather i am a massive fan of her work that spawned 16 albums and 40 odd 45.s...to me she is a soul LEGEND!..Raw unapologetic Soul!

AMM 


                                                                          The Taster!


                                                                    Tracks Below (FLAC)



Tuesday, January 25, 2022

R.I.P...........Freddie Hughes..........Kent 337- Freddie Hughes - Send My Baby Back (2010) - Rare Soul (FLAC)+++Booklet Etc

It really upsets me to have to be the bearer of another terrible loss to the world of Soul music and all it stands for,but sadly hear we go again...I have cancelled much of the music reviews i was going to post because of these 4 sad losses to our music in the last few days.I felt i have had to do these tributes as these guys have given us so much pleasure over the years with their Phenomenal Records. But this Album sums up a very talented life....... 

 

HIS MUSIC

One of the best performances on Freddie Hughes’ 1968 album “Send My Baby Back” – the first legitimate reissue of which is now available on Kent since 2010 – is a song entitled ‘Natural Man’. It is Aretha’s classic reworked from a male perspective, but the tune’s title pretty much sums up Hughes’ abilities and his incredible voice. Though he came from a church background that many soul singers share, Freddie’s gift was one hundred per cent his own, an untutored and breathtaking instrument, with a flexibility and range that makes him completely distinctive. When married to the compelling arrangements of producer Lonnie Hewitt, it’s a match made in 1960s soul heaven. Let’s get one thing straight right away. Our Freddie is NOT the same artist that sang ‘Oo Wee Baby’, or recorded for Vee-Jay or Brunswick. With all due respect to that fellow, he couldn’t hope to scale vocal heights such as those represented on this CD...IMHO. The lingering fondness for Freddie’s best known number, the charming and completely soulful mid-tempo ballad ‘Send My Baby Back’ means that many believe it to have been a bigger hit than it actually was (#20 on Billboard R&B in July 1968). Freddie’s artistry is clearly on display on every track of this classy longplayer and if I had to choose a favourite song, by a narrow margin it would have to be "Natural Man" apart from his wonderful Dance classics! Adding bonus tracks to the album’s rather brief running time was easy in theory, not so in practice. Freddie’s background with San Francisco duos: the Impression-istic Soul Brothers with Ken Pleasants, the storming, searing Casanova II with Wylie Trass, was familiar enough, but the rights to certain cuts were in flux. Just a couple of years ago, there was a breakthrough, which came along with the exciting discovery of several unissued songs from the Soul Brothers. These superlative items, derived from Freddie’s first prolonged period in the studio at Music City of Berkeley, include early arrangements of tunes recorded later, as well as the unknown and fabulous ‘She’s Coming Back’ and ‘Station L-O-V-E’. All this additional material gives us not just an intimate glimpse of Freddie’s evolution as an artist in the San Francisco Bay Area, but is some damn fine soul music in its own right.

HIS LIFE & CAREER

(Born 1943 Passed 2022)Freddie was born in Berkeley and raised in Oakland’s segregated Harbor Homes housing project, Hughes had four siblings. Like many African Americans drawn to the region by plentiful war industry jobs, his parents came to the East Bay from the Dallas/Fort Worth area. His father, Fred W. Hughes, was a longshoreman and pastor who helped found Oakland’s Good Samaritan Church of God in Christ, and his mother Lola Mae Anderson was a singer and missionary. Oakland brimmed with young talent in the 1950s. As a youth Hughes sang in a choir that included Betty Watson and Edwin Hawkins, who went on to co-direct the Edwin Hawkins Singers (the group that recorded the 1969 international gospel hit “Oh Happy Day” at Berkeley’s Ephesian Church of God in Christ). “Freddie was singing lead with the grown-up choir every Sunday at 12 years old,” recalled Johnny Talbot, who also sang in the Good Samaritan children’s choir with Hughes. “The way he could sing later was the way he could sing at 12.” Hughes made some of his first recordings for Compton-based Melotone Records in the late 1950s with a vocal quartet called the Markeets. He went on to sing in a variety of vocal groups and by 1961 had taken up with The Four Rivers, a combo that caught the attention of Capitol Records in Los Angeles. But legal threats from the group’s erstwhile manager, who wanted to maintain control of the band’s recordings, put the kibosh on any potential record deal. Back in the East Bay, The Four Rivers became a house combo for Ray Dobard’s Berkeley-based Music City label, singing backup for acts such as Richard Berry, James Brown, and Big Mama Thornton. Looking to make their own way, Hughes and fellow Four Rivers vocalist Ken Pleasants started performing as a duo known as The Music City Soul Brothers, recording several singles, like 1965’s “Let Our Love Go On.” “Together we developed a style reminiscent of Curtis Mayfield and The Impressions,” Pleasants told British music journalist Opal Louis Nations. “We sang double falsettos on the melody and harmonized on the bridges and at the breaks.” Hughes scored his big national hit with 1968’s imploring “Send My Baby Back,” breaking into R&B’s Top 20. The success of the single, released nationally by San Francisco’s Wee Records and internationally by Scepter-Wand Records, quickly led to an album of the same name. This 2010 reissue by Kent Records, includes 14 bonus tracks covering much of his 1960s output. While international soul aficionados were paying hundreds of dollars for his vintage 45s, Hughes cut a modest figure on the Bay Area scene. In recent decades he held down regular gigs at no-cover venues like Berkeley’s Cheese Board, where he often performed with Oakland blues band Kickin’ the Mule, and at the Mission District bar the Royal Cuckoo, where he performed with keyboardist Chris Burns. Chris Siebert, the Red Hot Skillet Lickers pianist and husband of the band’s vocalist Lavay Smith, books the Royal Cuckoo (which is owned by Smith’s brother). Burns was holding forth on the Hammond B-3 organ installed behind the bar shortly after the Cuckoo opened in 2011 when Hughes, unbilled and unannounced, started singing without a mic and hushed the room. Siebert quickly figured out who possessed those glorious pipes, and Hughes and Burns became fixtures in the Cuckoo rotation. “We fell in love with his singing,” Siebert said. “His version of ‘A Change Is Gonna Come’ was as powerful as Sam Cooke’s. He was a beautiful guy, and his delivery reflected the culture he came from in the Church of God In Christ. His voice brought tears to our eyes often.” Hughes is survived by his brother, Wayne Hughes of Oakland; five children, Sonia Hughes Farmah of Hanford, Derick Hughes of Oakland, Derene Hughes Jones of Alameda, Lena Hughes, and Jelani Hughes; 23 grandchildren, and many great-grandchildren.
Plans are underway for a jam session and memorial concert in Hughes’ honor. Another terrible loss to the soul Community but his legacy in music will live on forever!

AMM (Additional info courtesy of Yves)


                                                                         The Taster!


 

                                                                    Tracks Below (FLAC)