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BBC Radio 6 Music celebrates the 50th anniversary of Wigan Casino with a 'Northern Soul All-Nighter'

BBC Radio 6 Music celebrates the 50th anniversary of Wigan Casino with a 'Northern Soul All-Nighter' magazine cover

Mainstream media are at it again. this Saturday, BBC Radio 6 Music offers the below,,....

BBC Radio 6 Music celebrates the 50th anniversary of Wigan Casino with a Northern Soul All-Nighter

6pm-9pm Craig’s Northern Soul special edition of his regular Saturday night Funk and Soul show (6pm-9pm) kicks off the all-nighter. The show will feature a ten-piece soul house band – The Signatures – and special guests including Wigan Casino legend, Richard Searling and all-female R&B group, The Flirtations. Craig will also be going in search of the rarest Northern Soul record, recently sold for £100k.

9pm-12am Stuart Maconie joins the party, as he and Craig introduce a broadcast of the Northern Soul Prom, created by Stuart and recorded with the BBC Concert Orchestra.

12am-4am 6 Music begins an audio tour of the UK’s iconic all-nighter venues, with hour-long playlists by DJs who were there at Golden Torch (12am-1am), Wigan Casino (1am-2am), Twisted Wheel (2am-3am) and 100 Club (3am-4am). These key figures from the scene share stories and songs, taking listeners back to the dance floors of these legendary spaces.

4am-7am, 6 Music’s Morning After Mix, Northern Soul Special, brings listeners a playlist of mellow soul numbers, featuring classic ballads and as well as contemporary selections.

7am Stuart returns to the airwaves an hour earlier than usual at 7am on Sunday morning (10 September) to present Lights On With Stuart Maconie. He’ll being the party to a close and bring listeners the original versions of Wigan Casino’s famous Three Before Eight – Time Will Pass You By by Tobi Legend, Long After Tonight Is All Over by Jimmy Radcliffe and I’m On My Way by Dean Parrish.

The Craig Charles Funk and Soul Show, Northern Soul Special (6pm-9pm), The Northern Soul Prom (9pm-12am) and All-Nighter Playlists from Golden Torch, Wigan Casino, Twisted Wheel and The 100 Club are produced by TBI Media.

Morning After Mix, Northern Soul Special (4am-7am) and Lights On With Stuart Maconie (7am-8am) are produced by Audio Always.

Info from

https://www.bbc.com/mediacentre/2023/6-music-northern-soul-all-nighter-50th-anniversary-wigan-casino

 





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The beeb finally get it right letting those who were there and involved tell the story of some of the iconic all-nighters. We also learn that there was a scene before and after the Casino 🙄😂 The only one that let it down was the one that featured the venue that we are celebrating, Russ and the Casino.  Not just his choice of music but his constant rewriting of history and bollox.  I get the grudge between Richard and Russ but to airbrush the venues greatest Dj out altogether was simply criminal.  Some of the scene most iconic records were first played there and we get Ghost in My House ffs.  More cobblers about the records he “discovered” plus the DILY saga. 
 

Would have been nice to hear some modern soul and show the scene wasn’t all about 60s stompers. 

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I mean...50 years for the media to come to terms with this thing, they'll never truly understand, get to grips, sit easy with it...they still want to gloss it like some Hollywood show...it isnt Wrexham fc ( though, very best of luck to those boys, make hay whilst the sun shines ) 

It has been said to me, only a day ago, that if youre going to do a 50th anni at the WG, its a bit remiss not to include Winstanley, Brady & Vincent...the rift will always be...i wonder if Charles or Maconie are planning to attend that and if theyll ask that question?

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Finally found Richards contribution which was on the nose and much more pertinent with regards to the Casino.  Had suffer some rubbish from Charles and some of his guests to find it mind.

Hopefully, once this is all over Marconie and Charles will not be allowed anywhere near the subject again. 

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27 minutes ago, Owd Codger said:

Charles credited RS with being a Wheel DJ I think....will that go down in ( BBC folklore?)

Full of inaccuracies, Signatures have played with all the major soul acts.  Said it not once but twice 🙄 

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The BBC play ten hours straight of music from the golden years of the NS scene and still it’s not enough for some people who prefer to concentrate on negative comments. It’s obvious there is no definitive’right’ or ‘wrong’ about the history of the scene. It’s open to interpretation and fifty years on memories are set and for many unyielding.

I stayed awake most of the night listening to BBC six music and thoroughly enjoyed the music. The guest DJs were a nice idea that was only partially a success. The music was a total success. Well done the BBC. 
 

 

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45 minutes ago, Dukeofburgundy said:

The BBC play ten hours straight of music from the golden years of the NS scene and still it’s not enough for some people who prefer to concentrate on negative comments. It’s obvious there is no definitive’right’ or ‘wrong’ about the history of the scene. It’s open to interpretation and fifty years on memories are set and for many unyielding.

I stayed awake most of the night listening to BBC six music and thoroughly enjoyed the music. The guest DJs were a nice idea that was only partially a success. The music was a total success. Well done the BBC. 
 

 

It’s because we want it done right.  I found the Torch, Wheel and 100 Club enjoyable, Richards contribution too.  Russ was all about him again.  It’s not just about the music though, the history and getting it right is also very important IMO. 

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The Music was very good.

 however,If they don't get the facts right, the piece loses credibility.

Daily Mail did a recent s**t raking story on Man United Director of Football John Murtough ( Fair enough, however the photo attached to the piece was the CEO Richard Arnold. So if they can't get that right, you take the story with a ton of salt.

 

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Any promoter or plugger will tell you that a soon as the very word "soul" is mentioned in connection with a new release then the BBC is going to classify it as "specialised". It is shaming to think how hard "soul" records and artists have to struggle in order to get equal air-time from the BBC.

Sadly (or luckily) "soul" music has never become sufficiently trendy or chic to gather much of a middle class following and so it remains unknown amongst the mass public.

No, not me

 

Dave Godin letters extract, The Guardian 1975.

Oh how he would have gone to task with this lot now!

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16 hours ago, Owd Codger said:

 

The Music was very good.

 however,If they don't get the facts right, the piece loses credibility.

Daily Mail did a recent s**t raking story on Man United Director of Football John Murtough ( Fair enough, however the photo attached to the piece was the CEO Richard Arnold. So if they can't get that right, you take the story with a ton of salt.

 

I do agree Owd Roger but unfortunately a pioneer to one person is often an irritant to someone else. We live in an age when the truth is often obscured because it doesn't fit what many want to believe. There are now dozens of memoirs about northern soul and indeed other genres of soul. A number are excellent and a number are dismal but having read a few they do not express a uniformity on what happened and how it happened.

I avoided any direct criticism of individuals when I posted. I was a tad frustrated by the overall negativity but also I'm not qualified to comment as I don't know enough about how the scene was back in the day. There are some esteemed contributors to this site whose knowledge continues to impress me and it's to them I give way.

To avoid being totally anodyne in my criticism about the programme I'll express the layman's opinion that RW was the weak link. Thoroughly enjoyed the musical content though.

 

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Dukeofburgundy,

That's a fair summing up.

I think what frustrates some , is the fact that the BBC ( having made a big splash about NS) didn't use some qualified people to explain the history of Soul Music both here and the USA, and how that translated into 1,000s of 45s being introduced to the UK and building upon an underground club scene, rather than things like interviewing " Northern Soul LEGEND"  Lorraine Silver.

But the music was enjoyable.

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2 hours ago, Kenb said:

Any promoter or plugger will tell you that a soon as the very word "soul" is mentioned in connection with a new release then the BBC is going to classify it as "specialised". It is shaming to think how hard "soul" records and artists have to struggle in order to get equal air-time from the BBC.

Sadly (or luckily) "soul" music has never become sufficiently trendy or chic to gather much of a middle class following and so it remains unknown amongst the mass public.

No, not me

 

Dave Godin letters extract, The Guardian 1975.

Oh how he would have gone to task with this lot now!

I think it was the early 70's when Godin asked readers of his B&S column to write to BBC to ask for more soul music coverage.

I did, and to the best of my recollection, the answer was that the demographic didn't warrant more exposure.

At the time I assumed the demographic referred to was based on colour rather than class.

 

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