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Some Blue-Eyed Northern Soul, Anyone?


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No I'm probably confused by her having no black facial features and her skin not being black :rolleyes:

I've seen threads on other sites where similar discussions have taken place. My perception is that she identified herself as a back artist (and a black servicewoman come to that) and that's been good enough for me. I'm out of this part of the thread before it gets into an area I'm not comfortable with. :thumbsup:

Edited by Godzilla
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I've seen threads on other sites where similar discussions have taken place. My perception is that she identified herself as a back artist (and a black servicewoman come to that) and that's been good enough for me. I'm out of this part of the thread before it gets into an area I'm not comfortable with. :thumbsup:

She got whiter

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And whiter ...... LOL

But with hind sight I probably should not have added her into a list of blue eyed soul

she looks hipspanic / latin to me .

great singer !

Edited by dancecrasher
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That John Bull Breed 45 may be a cover of soul tune but it's not Blue Eyed Soul - more Freakbeat if you had to hang a label on it, I guess.

Bloody great record though - wish I still had mine!

Agree, great record, fortunately available to us lesser mortals on a Polydor demo lookalike. Got it on my jukebox.

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  • 2 weeks later...

few for me,least i think they are all 'blue eyed' :rolleyes:

singing swinging counts - along the way

sue lynn - dont pity me

paul anka - i cant help loving you

gary haines - keep on going

jan foreman - your last chance

warner brothers- im going your way

sandpipers - lonely too long

Im shure i read somewhere that Jan Foreman was black artist , i know she sounds white, can anyone confirm this?

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Guest audiavant

Wot about that old casino stomper-take me back-the flock!!!!!!

or in the same vein-run baby-dalton,james and sutton!

wahey!

just remembered-bobby goldsboro-too many people(great dancer)

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IMHO the finest example of blue eyed soul is Those Lonely nights by the Soul Communicaters on Fee Bee, with Chuck Corby as lead singer.....Stunning record, and oh so Soulful :yes:

And how about the flip "please don't go". So soulful it hurts. Though in terms of 'danceability' "those lonely nights" is the side to play.

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Guest lambrettanik

chris clarke-somethings wrong best of the bunch so far mentioned for me.how about gil bernal "can you love a poor boy"!? when was this last ever played????

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Guest lambrettanik

how about paul newmann and the excaliburs-"aint you got the heart to tell me" are they white? they sound it.how about "god knows"-mike mcdonald!!.nightwatch-"from your lips to your heart" all played at wigan( i again i think this group is also white?)

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sorry steve will concede this one as well......................but most of this stuff?...........you'll never hear todays proper dj,s playing any of it............garbage!!!!......and then some......see ya tezza

What's the difference between a proper dj and a non proper djthen ???

Edited by spike1
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few of my favs!

inmates - this is the day

ellusions - you didnt have to leave

rufus lumly - stronger than me

sammy ambrose - welcome to dreamsville (not sure if he is white?)

the chants - baby i dont need your love

jerry naylor - city lights

chapter 5 - you cant mean it

so many of em!

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Taken from https://www.alwynwturner.com

You don't get a more credible start to your career than Eddie Amoo; his band, The Chants, made their debut appearance at The Cavern in Liverpool, playing three songs in the middle of a Beatles gig. That was 1962. Fourteen years later Eddie finally had his first hit, as a member of The Real Thing, Britain's first disco band.

Like everyone else in Liverpool, The Chants got a record deal during the Merseybeat explosion of 1963/64, in their case with Pye, but - as Eddie points out - 'they had no idea what to do with a black doo-wop group, they just had no idea.' Over the next decade they released a string of singles, some of them - 'Man Without A Face' and 'Trying Trying' - very good indeed, but all of them unsuccessful.

By the early 70s The Chants were wedded firmly to the cabaret circuit, and Eddie was looking outside the group to satisfy his creativity. He began writing songs with his younger brother, Chris Amoo, and these songs became the basis of the material performed by Chris' group The Real Thing.

The Real Thing appeared on Opportunity Knocks and Top of the Pops, were managed by British showbiz legend Tony Hall, and were critical favourites on both sides of the Atlantic - even so they went through a succession of record companies and flop singles before they finally made it. When they did, it was because of a variety of factors. Firstly, David Essex used them as backing vocalists on his 1975 album All The Fun of the Fair, and on his subsequent tour, for which they were also the support act in their own right. Then the rise of disco made the idea of black British bands more acceptable to the broadcast media and the record industry. And finally they were given a perfect pop song by writer Ken Gold: 'You To Me Are Everything'.

The combination took The Real Thing to #1 in Britain in 1976 and Eddie Amoo - who had finally wound up The Chants and joined his brother's band at the end of the previous year - got his first decent break. The fact that 'You To Me' and some of the subsequent releases were more pop than soul may have typecast the group somewhat unfairly, but there were some heavier records as well; Eddie would particularly like to draw your attention to Four From Eight, their 1977 album that comes close to the socio-soul of their hero Curtis Mayfield. (The 'Eight' in the title refers to Liverpool Eight, the district where the band lived.) It also contains their greatest recorded moment, 'Children of the Ghetto'.

The Real Thing are still working on the live circuit and still feature Chris and Eddie Amoo. Go see them, partly because you need to pay respect to Britain's disco pioneers, and partly because they're damn good.

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Guest Awake 502

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Village Sounds

Third from the right, looks like the Seeds front man Sky Saxon ??

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Oxford Knights

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Edited by Awake 502
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