Van McCoy & Friends - Dancin'- Club Soul Lp
Help Is On The Way
The Charly Records imprint Club Soul has just pushed out a new vinyl release.
Dancin' - Van McCoy & Friends - Charlyl 318
Dancin' is a reissue plus of the 1970s lp that was released by SSS in 1976, which was actually made up of late 1960s recordings from... Van McCoy & friends.
The company blurb below follows the preview clips and has the full story and details.
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VAN McCOY & FRIENDS - DANCIN'
Originally released in 1975 on SSS International LP 33
REMASTERED FROM ANALOGUE TAPES
INCLUDES PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED INSTRUMENTAL OF "AIN'T GOT NO LOVE"
HEAVY-WEIGHT VINYL
Side One
Sweet And Easy
If I Could Make You Mine
The Generation Gap
Help Is On The Way
What Kind Of A Man
Side Two
The Woman Who Made Me A Man
Just Another Dress Rehearsal
With All My Heart
Ain't Got No Love
Back Trackin'
Ain't Got No Love (BONUS Instrumental)
Van Allen Clinton McCoy was born in Washington D.C., Jan 6, 1940 and would go on to become an internationally acclaimed music producer, arranger, conductor and writer with over 700 songs to his credit.
To the pop buying public he is known for his 1975 Grammy Award® chart-topper “The Hustle”, which at the time of recording was a throw-away track on a low-budget instrumental album called Disco Baby. McCoy was unable to repeat the success, and within three years, in 1979, he died of a heart attack at the age of only 39.
To rare soul fans Van McCoy is a hero: THE most prolific writer and producer of Northern Soul of all time, working with a host of legendary artists including… Barbara Lewis, Jackie Wilson, The Vonettes, Gene Chandler, The Sweet things, Barbara Mercer, Irma Thomas, Ruby & The Romantics, Gladys Knight & The Pips, Bobby Reed, David Ruffin, The Ad libs, Billy Woods, Dee Dee Warwick, Chris Bartley, Tony Talent, Betty Everett, Juanita Williams, and Kendra Spotswood (aka Sandi Sheldon) with whom he had a five year relationship.
DANCIN’ was released by Shelby Singleton in 1976 on his SSS International label and attributed to Van McCoy & Friends, although none of the “friends” are actually listed on the album. Clearly this was released to cash in on the worldwide success of “The Hustle” and McCoy himself probably had little to do with it. All of the ten original songs were recorded much earlier, circa 1968-69, and all but three – “Sweet And Easy”, “If I Could Make you Mine” and “The Generation Gap” – had been languishing, unheard and unreleased, in the Nashville vaults ever since.
It is hard to believe that the album, with its kitsch cover and out-of-kilter track list, garnered any commercial success at the time, although it did get a release in Australia. However, copies soon filtered through into the UK and into the hands of club DJs at Wigan Casino with perhaps “Help Is On The Way” becoming the stand-out track. Richard Searling played the mid-tempo “Just Another Dress Rehearsal” in the latter days of the club while unreleased instrumental versions of “Ain’t Got No Love” and “Dress Rehearsal” were played post-Wigan.
It has long been contested just who the mysterious vocalists are. Chris Bartley is the favourite, although Van himself almost certainly appears on some of the tracks. Either way, Club Soul are proud to present the first ever reissue of this cult album, complete with the aforementioned, previously unreleased, instrumentals.
https://clubsoul.club/VAN-McCOY-&-FRIENDS-DANCIN-LP-p132011914
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