Thursday, December 1, 2022

Kent 343 - The Minits - Follow Your Heart - The Sounds of Memphis Recordings (2010) + Booklet (FLAC)

From the 1950s right through to the 1970s Memphis was a record town, awash with studios, record companies and distributors. Its industry proved to be an irresistible magnet for artists from all over the South and often beyond, especially black artists. Country acts would head the few hundred miles up the road to Nashville, and the West Coast was a hub for rock’n’roll’s golden dream, while Memphis  sometimes known as Soul City USA  attracted aspiring soul or R&B performers. The closer you were to Memphis, the greater the pull.  The Minits were from not too far away in Montgomery, Alabama. The three girl vocal group we celebrate in this CD headed to Memphis and released a mere three singles on the Sounds Of Memphis label. Their records were moments of pure pop soul magic. Their second 45, ‘Still A Part Of Me’, commands a price of well into three figures due to its dancefloor appeal. Left in the vault were five further numbers which Kent have released slowly over the past few years. ‘Hook Line and Sinker’ is a Dan Greer tune and one of my fave songs with a snappy hook line that must have been a candidate for a single but remained unissued until recently. ‘Natural Reaction’ and ‘Stepping Stone’ are both in a similar high quality pop soul vein. The trio’s version of Aretha Franklin’s ‘Pullin’’ is another thing altogether, the rhythm section hits a groove and takes this one straight to the dancefloor. ‘If You Don’t Like My Apples (Don’t Shake My Tree)’ was found in the vaults only in 2009 and has become one of my favourite Minits discoverys so far. It’s a slamming slice of double entendre sister funk that made it into DJ sets as soon as it became known. For some reason their records failed to catch on and the Minits never became the stars their records suggest they should have been. The girls are almost completely forgotten today, yet the music they left behind reveals an act that should have achieved more. It may well have been that, despite top of the range production values and high quality songs, there is just too much of the south left in the recordings for them to have sat comfortably on pop radio. Then again, it may just be that they were never championed by the right people at the right time which seems more the case (same old,same old). What is for sure is that their recorded legacy makes for one hell of a listen. A lot of money was clearly spent on styling and taking wonderful photographs of the girls in a bid to represent them as stars. It wasn’t to be but those wonderful photographs now allow me to give you not just some great music but a stunning booklet to go with it. They may not be very well known but ask any northern fan ans he,ll tell you otherwise!

AMM

                                                                       The Tasters!


                                                       






22 comments:

Little Bill said...

Great KENT record AMM, thanks for posting it

gmortars said...

Okay, I'm following my heart and it says, "Gimme!"
Which also happens to be my natural reaction to this post... 😎
Thanks, AMM!

PeterH said...

And we are following the Minits - everywhere. Thanks for review, P.

soultime said...

yet another great release from kent

Lordchester said...

thanks for posting this review AMM;

RMstorm said...

Thanks AMM. I like them apples.

tpee said...

I wonder if it wasn't timing. In the seventies the taste of the record buying public (or the manipulation of the music business) was shifting more toward long hair, white singer songwriters, supergroups or just plain pop banality in fancy dress. A bit of disco and funk managed to struggle into the charts along with the odd curiosity from Jamaica but with a few exceptions soul music was consigned to the sixties and the realms of nostalgia. Fortunately it was appreciated by some and still is but not enough to make it interesting for the "business". Perhaps if The Minits had come along in the mid sixties? Just a thought.

tpee said...

PS. I see that they were signed to Dan Greer's Sounds of Memphis label in the mid-'60s yet their music wasn't released till the seventies. If this was indeed the case what was he thinking? They are top class. Pity they didn't go to Hi.

Smokey said...

Thank you for these Minits!!

bigcravings said...

Obscure? Maybe, but if it's Kent . . .

soul quinquin said...

Another one I need! Great post. Thank you AMM.
Pierre

Rush said...

Thanks for the review AMM did not know Denise LaSalle was member great info

Anghellic67$ said...

Great Review Thank you AMM

hakase said...

thanks a lot AMM for this another gems from the great Sounds of Memphis!

Bill Pritchard said...

Looks a real winner!

Tel said...

Great Review As Always, Not Well Up On This Group But It's Kent

reb.jukebox said...

Thank you AMM for another great kent comp
Reb

deadwoodie said...

Another great Memphis label

CanoMan said...

Great review to have thanks for sharing

DrHepcat said...

This is the music that makes the mind real (sic)!

Bill said...

Just escaped hospital,straight onto "Music is the Colour"to find this greatbpost!

richsoul said...

The mints was a great group. Kent did us all a favor for letting us listen to these sounds. Thanks AMM.