Tuesday, January 24, 2023

Various Artists - Quinton Claunch's Hidden Soul Treasures (2007) P-Vine Japan - Rare Soul (MP3) HQ

Quinton Claunch’s passing in april 2021 didn’t make the news, nor did it cause national networks to scrap their scheduled programming for the rest of the day, and broadcast hour after hour of tributes to his achievements. Although it should have done. News of Quinton’s death may have flown ‘under the radar’ but as soon as it was announced, word quickly spread among a sad soul community that he had gone, and the subsequent tributes across soul’s social media have been many, and glowing. Quinton Mavis Claunch accomplished a great deal in his 99 years, almost 80 of which were spent as a musician, songwriter, producer and record company owner. Although he was always indelibly associated with Memphis in all those capacities, Quinton got his professional start in Muscle Shoals with country band the Blue Seal Pals. He quickly formed a songwriting partnership with fellow group member Bill Cantrell that lasted until the end of the 1950s, and that gave the world many hillbilly classics that were not really intered in here. he played on many Sun recordings during the early 1950s as a regular member of label boss Sam Phillips’ pool of musicians. In 1957 Quinton and Cantrell were also involved in the incorporation of another legendary Memphis imprint, Hi Records, but by the end of the decade Quinton had sold his share. He took a five-year break from full-time record production in 1959, but still encouraged and produced tracks by local talents such as Jeb Stuart and O.B. McClinton, which he either licensed out or issued on his own small Bingo label. The arrival on his doorstep of songwriter Roosevelt Jamison in 1964 brought Quinton back to full-time music production with a bang. Jamison had two pals in tow that he was trying to get on record. They had both been turned down by Stax, at that time, the biggest game in town, but Jamison believed in them. Their names were Overton Vertis Wright and James Carr. Quinton agreed to produce both for a new label he had recently started called Goldwax.As the decade progressed, Quinton and his business partner Doc Russell added many other significant names to the Goldwax roster. He signed the Ovations, nurtured the songwriting talents of George Jackson and Dan Greer, added Spencer Wiggins to his honour roll of southern soul icons and so many more besides. Although the Goldwax Label will always be associated with Memphis, Quinton recorded his artists both there & at studios all over the city,also in Muscle Shoals, at locations owned by his old friends Rick Hall (FAME) and Quin Ivy (Quinvy). Without question, the pinnacle of Quinton’s production career was James Carr’s ‘Dark End Of The Street’ in early 1967. Few would dispute that it’s one of the greatest pieces of music ever to be committed to tape. If it had been the only record Quinton produced, it would be enough to make his name as celebrated as those of the men who wrote the song – Chips Moman and Dan Penn , and the one who sang it James Carr. Goldwax shut up shop in 1970, but Quinton continued to produce independently, if infrequently. In the 1990s he started a new company called Music Garden, releasing two albums of new recordings by his former flagship artist, the troubled James Carr, who many believed would never make another record. Ace licensed the albums for release in the UK. A friendship grew from these licenses, and as the 20th century drew to a close, Ace was delighted to purchase Quinton’s Goldwax catalogue and begin an extensive series of CD reissues of this incredibly important inventory. Over the next 20 years or so, Ace maintained close personal and professional ties with Quinton, visiting him on assorted A&R trips to Memphis and always having first refusal on the new recordings he was still producing in his 90s. The album he cut in Muscle Shoals on soul hero Willie Hightower when Quinton was 95 years old was as good as anything he produced 50 years earlier. You got the impression that Quinton would go on producing great records forever. But 99 is a great age to live to, and all deaths are sad, but we will always have a wealth of wonderful recordings to remember Quinton Claunch by, and they will sound as great in another 99 years as they do today. Those of us wholove our soul music. This album captures later work on Jerry L, Ollie Nightingale, Willie Hightower, & Joe L Thomas Giants in the Southern Soul world and nurtured their careers to a great extent.

AMM


                                                   Sorry No tasters From This Album Available


 

 


28 comments:

RMstorm said...

Thanks AMM. His passing should have made the news more than it did.

Guy said...

Cheers for this, an education for me

Anghellic67$ said...

Thank you for this Album AMM Much appreciated

simon said...

yes please! what an album thx amm

soultime said...

Brilliant review cheers AMM .

USMAN47 said...

Here is a beautiful and rare compilation of our Japanese friends !!!

Thanks AMM

Yves

oldsoulrebel said...

This looks really good, thanks for the review AMM

bigcravings said...

Great

Big Dave said...

Oh yeah, some real gems on this one.
Many thanks for the review AMM

BigD

Jumpstart said...

This looks interesting. Thanks for the review.

/Jumpstart

PhilN said...

Thanks for the review of this superb compilation.

KansasJoe said...

Thank you for this great and in depth review.

Kenji said...

soooo goode thx!

ELtel said...

Many thanks for a great review MM.
cheers,ELtel

soul quinquin said...

Driven by curiosity , I ask for it . Thank you AMM
Pierre

richsoul said...

Thank you for a fabulous review that only you can write. Thank you much history presented here. Thank you for this AMM.

Carlos Uria said...

Thank you AMM, super compilation, look very interesting

deadwoodie said...

Great producer!

hakase said...

actually unissued album of Willie Hightower rec at Hi in 1982 + bonuses
thanks for that AMM but really hope some day upgrade in flac

pedro B said...

Looks like we got some hiden gem right here right now Thanks AMM

Cheers Pedro

BillyMac said...

We're going to church with claunch. Legendary stuff.

PeterH said...

How many treasures may there still be hidden? Thanks for review, P.

reb.jukebox said...

looks like a very interesting album AMM
many thanks reb

Bill Pritchard said...

Every time I think I'll just give it a rest for a few days and play some of the gems you've already given you come up with another bloody winner!

Rush said...

Great in-depth review thanks AMM

Gustavo said...

Thanks AMM for this great gem

Anton said...

Big Time Goodie!
Thanks For Sharing

Lordchester said...

Thanks for reviewing this beautiful compilation AMM