Thursday, February 1, 2024

Various Artists - Foxy R&B - Richard Stamz Chicago Blues (2013) Ace + Booklet - Rare R&B/Soul/Blues (FLAC 306MB)

Harold Burrage fans are in for a treat here!...Richard Stamz was a colourful R&B and soul DJ who operated in Chicago throughout the 50s and 60s. A slick, jive talker who hosted a groundbreaking black TV show in the city in 1956, his on air persona ran from crown prince to royal highness. Around 1960 he took over the Cobra/Artistic/Abco studio and the Paso label, which he continued to run alongside his own Foxy operation. Bluesman Harold Burrage was already at Paso, he and Stamz began working closely together, with Burrage recording, composing songs, playing sessions and even voicing ads for Stamz’s radio show. Burrage’s 45s for Paso and Foxy are superb examples of early 60s blues as it moved towards soul. His extremely rare original version of Betty Everett’s ‘Please Love Me’ will be of great interest to new breed R&B fans, as will many of the tracks on these largely uncharted labels. Blues fans will be thrilled by the presence of some of Howlin’ Wolf’s sidemen in the Willie Williams band, including guitarist Hubert Sumlin; the outfit provides three previously unreleased blues instrumentals. Influential guitarist Freddy Robinson appears as a session man on many tracks. His own 45 from the Queen label is also included, one side in an alternate take. Tough voiced blues singers Mary Johnson and Flora D provide excellent R&B sides that complement the male contenders from Burrage, Lee “Shot” Williams and Detroit Jr. The uptempo decks of these discs are avidly hunted by new breed collectors. The Ideals and Ze-Majestics represent the vocal group side with R&B-flavoured numbers. The other previously unheard masters include a good R&B dance tempo song from Tony Gideon of the Daylighters, a jazz-influenced groover from Loretta Branch and the rare and mysterious Robert & The Rockin’ Robins singing about ‘Romeo Joe’. Musicologists Richard Shurman and Patrick Roberts, the author of a book on Richard Stamz’s life, provide fascinating musical and entertaining sociological facts about the recordings and the man. Stamz’s daughter Phyllis gave the compilers and writers access to the family’s memorabilia which illustrates the package, providing a taster of Chicago musical life at the dawn of the 60s. While sorting through his Chief label 45s Richard Shurman, a co-compiler of this CD, realised that the artist described as Tony Gideon (as Ace had been informed) on ‘I’m Gonna Put You To Work’, was in fact fellow Chicago blues singer Bobby Stone. That song was unissued but the second Stamz recording by that artist, which Ace used on “New Breed Blues With Black Popcorn” CDKEND 393 as ‘So Strange’ by Tony Gideon was a different recording of Stone’s 1960 Chief release ‘I Feel So Strange’. It followed that from the same session with the same vocalist ‘I’m Gonna Put You To Work’ must be Stone too. Stone also recorded for Dream and Regent in the early 60s. He was coupled and billed with Lucy Hayes on the Dream 45 and on the flip of the Chief release ‘It’s Nothing’; she can also be heard uncredited on the ‘I Feel So Strange’ Chief release but not on the Stamz sourced take. Lucy was the wife of Chicago R&B producer Otis Hayes. Jimmy Burns recently told Richard Shurman that Stamz was Bobby Stone’s manager hence the recordings. Some killer Northern R&B tracks included!...Love it!!!

AMM

                                                                                                           The Tasters!






17 comments:

PeterH said...

Bluesy thursday treats ... almost as good as Japanese fusion Sunday treats ;-) Thanks for review, P.

Guy said...

Thanks for this review, now looking at the back cover for the first time it makes sense.

oldsoulrebel said...

Yes I'm a fan of Harold Burrage so this will go down very well thank you

gmortars said...

This is way out, baby!
Thanks, AMM!

tpee said...

I enjoyed a few Harold Burrage tracks back in the day. He seemed to slip under the radar for many folk but he had a great voice. Also his influence on other singers as a producer etc was not realised by all. Thanks for honoring his memory with this excellent selection.

DrHepcat said...

Thanks AMM for a windy city good'un!

Ray said...

Thanks for this review AMM

RMstorm said...

Thanks AMM for the Foxy R&B review - another treat for today.

Big Dave said...

A gem of a compilation... many thanks for this review AMM

BigD

tsi&hrjs said...

Thank you AMM for another exciting review. Lots of good stuff tucked away in here!

Anghellic67$ said...

Such a great Comp & Tracklist,Thanks Again AMM

reb.jukebox said...

AMM thank you, looks interesting

bigcravings said...

Excellent comp

Carlos Uria said...

Thank you AMM for the review

UNKNOWN said...

Your review convinced me to request this slab of rare Windy City Blues & SOUL.
Looking forward to it AMM!
Cheers!
Bill(b3will@msn.com)

richsoul said...

This is another good comp. Thank you so much AMM.

pedro B said...

Don't mind a bit of blues just melting away 40c today as I melt this cool things down nice review AMM Thanks

Cheers Pedro