Wednesday, December 28, 2022

UPGRADE*******REPOST R.I.P. Thom Bell - Kent 488 - Various Artists - Ready Or Not - Thom Bell's Philly Soul Arrangements & Productions 1965-1978(2020) + Booklet - Rare Soul (FLAC)

I hope you all had a great Xmas guys, but on a sedder note...I posted this way back in 2020 in mp3...i think maybe on the old blog .. so ripped to Flac in this tribute..Thom sadly passed on December 22nd as BillyMac kindly informed me. So thom never recorded any albums just this one compilation From kent reviewing his major work on other artists. Thom was a Composer, arranger, conductor, producer and multi-instrumentalist. Born Thomas Randolph Bell in 1943 in Kingston, Jamaica, but raised in Philadelphia. He was inducted in the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2006. Along with Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff, Thom Bell was one of the three people responsible for The Sound Of Philadelphia, a lush, orchestrated take on soul music that dominated the charts in the early to mid-70s. Using the most unusual instrumentation harpsichords, French horns, & sitars. Thom,s arrangements built the careers of the Delfonics and the Stylistics, and reinvented acts as varied as the Spinners, Dionne Warwick and Johnny Mathis. The distinctive sound of a Thom Bell arrangement is largely down to an upbringing devoid of R&B. Growing up in a middle-class Philadelphia household, he was playing piano, drums and flugelhorn by the time he was nine. “We didn’t have any radio or anything, we were trained classical musicians,” says Bell. “From when I was five ’til I was 17, I studied two or three hours a day. First thing I heard on the radio was Little Anthony & the Imperials’ ‘Tears On My Pillow’. I thought, What kind of music is this? This is nice music!” He became a singer in a duo with Kenny Gamble. A year later the duo expanded to a five-piece, Kenny Gamble & the Romeos, and started to pick up work as session musicians at Philadelphia’s hot Cameo and Parkway labels. It was another Little Anthony & the Imperials hit, ‘I’m On The Outside (Looking In)’, that inspired him in 1964. “Writer and producer Teddy Randazzo, he was my leader ‘Outside Looking In’, ‘Hurt So Bad’ … now we’re talking. I never got to meet Teddy Randazzo, and I’m sorry about that. Randazzo and Bacharach, those were my leaders. They tuned me in to what I was listening to in a more modernistic way.” Cameo-Parkway eventually gave Gamble, Bell and Leon Huff (Bell’s replacement in the Romeos) more of a free hand, resulting in some beautiful 45s for Eddie Holman, the Orlons, Dee Dee Sharp and the Delfonics that helped to cement the lush, atmospheric Philadelphia sound. When the label folded in 1967, Bell took the Delfonics with him, and when the group moved on a few years later, he began to work with the Stylistics and then the Spinners, creating even bigger hits. Throughout these years, he kept a close-knit team around him, and the lyricist he worked with the most was Linda Creed. They worked together for nine years & when she died in 1986, aged 37, he was at her side. As a writer, producer and arranger, Thom Bell’s originality and the quality of his work deserves the same acclaim as that heaped on Nile Rodgers or Burt Bacharach. He prefered to stay in the shadows, though, and over the years has allowed Gamble and Huff to take the Philly soul limelight. Still, when he talks about his work, there’s an acknowledgment of lucky breaks but there is no false modesty. “Some people were like ‘Are all these strings necessary, why don’t you make regular R&B?’ Because I’m not R&B. I make music. Nobody else is in my brain but me, which is why some of the things I think about are crazy – I hear oboes, and bassoons, and English horns. But I’m lucky, I cross styles. I was enthusiated. Not enthused, enthusiated. I had my own language, and I was able to do what I wanted to do.” Bell established himself as one of the most important R&B/Soul music figures of all time. A legend in soul circles and in Philly who will be missed.

AMM


                                                                        The Tasters!





23 comments:

RMstorm said...

Thanks AMM for the upgrade. RIP Thom Bell.

Guitarradeplastico,scraping oddities said...

Many thanks for the info

soultime said...

what a awesome talent . this is the sound track to house partys in 70s . Thanks AMM .

Guy said...

You have to love an upgrade, thanks for your review

bigcravings said...

RIP indeed

MusicFan59 said...

Another huge loss to the music world. I grew up listening and dancing to these groups in basement parties as a young man. RIP...

ELtel said...

Another sad loss MM. Must have missed this the first time around.
cheers,ELtel

Bill said...

This looks like a must-have from your review!

Anghellic67$ said...

Great tracklist,Thank You AMM

pedro B said...

What a great muso this man was RIP Thom Thanks AMM
Cheers Pedro

hakase said...

to me La La Means I Love You is stll top of his things RIP Thom thanks much AMM

CanoMan said...

Thanks for the upgrade on this review

richsoul said...

thank you Bell for giving us great music. Ready or not, he was a great soul artist. Thank you
AMM for this fine review. Thank you.

Little Bill said...

R.I.P Thom, thanks for the upgrade AMM.

Rush said...

Great review thanks AMM
RIP Mr Thom Bell

Rocco said...

Topclass review my friend.

PeterH said...

Another great one has gone from us ... sorry to hear that. Thanks for review, P.

reb.jukebox said...

very sad another one gone, thanks for the upgrade to flac AMM
Reb

BillyMac said...

You outdid yourself. Tremendous review.

andr3 nalin said...

Oh yeah, sadly another great one gone. Superb review and a great selection to have (just in case anyone didn't know already). Thx x 1000 ✌🏻☮️☀️

Smokey said...

Thank you for this review. A Sad loss.

imnokid said...

I missed this the first time around. Thanx!

IAN said...

Genius, nothing more to say.