Saturday, January 21, 2023

Kent 390 - Various Artists - South Texas Rhythm 'n' Soul Revue (2013) + Booklet - Rare Soul (FLAC)

Huey Meaux recorded more soul music in the 60s and 70s than any other producer in Texas, leasing some of it to nationally distributed labels such as Jamie and Scepter and issuing even more of it on the dozens of labels he ran in conjunction with various business partners. He wasn’t the only producer in South Texas but the number of singles that bear the legend Produced by Huey P Meaux could fool anyone into thinking he was. Many of soul’s greatest names got their break with the Crazy Cajun. Some worked with him for only a short time, others such as Barbara Lynn stayed with him for virtually all of their active careers. If Don Robey’s Duke and Peacock labels shaped the template for 50s R&B in Houston, then hundreds of 45s that Huey put out between 1960 and 1980 provided the same service for those decades. kents researchers had been working their way through the beautifully filed tape vault in Houston’s Sugar Hill studios, transferring the many masters that comprise Huey’s recorded legacy. This volume of “South Texas Rhythm ‘n’ Soul Revue” is a welcome by product their work.Some names here will be familiar to serious soul fans: Johnny Copeland, Johnny Adams, Jean Knight, Jackie Paine and Joe Medwick, for example. Others will surely become much better known as a result of this compilation. To represent all facets of 60s Texas soul kent also included great sides by swamp pop greats such as Warren Storm, whose take on ‘Tennessee Waltz’ is a highlight of the set, and Chicano octet Sunny and the Sunliners who do Earl King’s ‘Trick Bag’ a similarly splendid service. They even got young Johnny and Edgar Winter tearing through ‘Out Of Sight’ in a manner that would make James Brown himself proud. The highlights for many will be the unearthed original demos of soul classics ‘Neighbor Neighbor’ and ‘You’ll Lose A Good Thing’ by their authors, Alton Valier and Barbara Lynn respectively, which offer a priceless opportunity to hear how these songs sounded before they became hits. All in all, a window on what the music scene in and around Houston was like almost 50 years ago. Some very expensive gems on here and those gorgeous northern dancers!

AMM


                                                                      The Tasters!








15 comments:

Anghellic67$ said...

Awesome Tracklist AMM Thank you very much

PeterH said...

Let's listen to South Texas! Thanks for review, P.

trinity said...

Sounds great. - thank you for the review mate

Lordchester said...

Great tracklist, thanks for this one.

richsoul said...

Some great sounds along with some good information of the music put out by Huey Meaux. Thank you AMM.

andr3 nalin said...

Yessireee, please take us down south :) ✌🏻☀️☮️

Little Bill said...

Flac and Kent is a great combination thanks

soultime said...

top quaity choons Cheers AMM

bigcravings said...

Great review

Bill said...

EXCELLENT album and review! THANKS!!

RMstorm said...

Thanks AMM. Love Warren Storm swamp pop.

hakase said...

wow "tape vault in Houston’s Sugar Hill studios" thats my dream place! thanks for this much AMM

reb.jukebox said...

Thank you AMM for another great Kent comp Reb

Rush said...

Thanks for the review AMM

pedro B said...

Undoubtably a great set of side on this album great post and review AMM

Cheers Pedro