Guest Posted November 18, 2005 Posted November 18, 2005 Jackson Brothers on Providence Anyone know of anything else by this same group?????????
Chalky Posted November 18, 2005 Posted November 18, 2005 yes t'other week but as usual I've forgot what the title was....must invest in pen and paper as memory bloody useless
Guest Soulfood33 Posted November 18, 2005 Posted November 18, 2005 Jackson Brothers on Providence Anyone know of anything else by this same group????????? this 1965 recording is their only 60s release in the 50s from 1953 to 59 they had various 45s on Candy, RCA, Atco and Lucky. The atco release came out on UK London. But Jackson is one of the commonest names in "black" USA music and they sure had brothers, so maybe these boys are not the same boys as the 50s boys.
Mike Posted November 19, 2005 Posted November 19, 2005 this 1965 recording is their only 60s release in the 50s from 1953 to 59 they had various 45s on Candy, RCA, Atco and Lucky. The atco release came out on UK London. But Jackson is one of the commonest names in "black" USA music and they sure had brothers, so maybe these boys are not the same boys as the 50s boys. some clipped info (from nancy i think ? ) that sort of says knows some back ground on these bros maybe worth a shout to her see if more background ? below from cd notes of a Italy's Right Combination Soul Society on the www.soul-allnighter.de website https://www.soul-allnighter.de/News/CD_Tipp/body_cd_tipp.html Ronnie North - I've Gotta Hear It From You (Holly) This is a version of the white group, the Jackson Brothers, on Providence, which I haven't listened to in years but I kind of remember the Providence version is more polished in production, and more northern in style. This Ronnie North version (which may be the original for all I know) is more "uptight", jazzy and gutsy, with his vocal as well as the instrumentation being influenced by James Brown. In fact the flip side is James Brown's "Try Me". "I've Gotta Hear It From You" is credited to Blanche "Halos are for Angels" Carter and Roy H. Smith, the genius behind the 70's Cutlass single.
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