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Posted (edited)

I got another one that I need help on and I think is sounds like a soul record unlike the last one I asked about.

Edited by briank
Posted (edited)

A strange thing is that it was recorded at 78 rpm...why would they do that? I do not think it is that old.

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Edited by briank
Posted

Lovely, not heard it either. The Doug Banks version that Tony mentioned is the other side to 'I Just Kept On Dancing'

All the best,

Len.

  • Helpful 1
Posted

Note...all the label says is: "Baby" and Hill and Range at the bottom.

Another different thing is that it's recorded at 78 rpm!!! That's different for an acetate is it not?

Posted

We do not know how much it predates it....Ramsey Lewis Argo 5481 release date is October 10, 1964 and Doug Banks is Argo 5483 which is after this. Mass production of 78s stopped around 1960 from what I've heard. I'm not in disagreement, but just wondering why they opted to record it at 78 rather than 45. Out of this collection of acetates of which there were over 100 this is the only one done this way. I have heard especially from 78 collectors that 78s sound better than 45s and maybe that's why this was done.

Posted

Note...all the label says is: "Baby" and Hill and Range at the bottom.

Another different thing is that it's recorded at 78 rpm!!! That's different for an acetate is it not?

Hill and Range is he publishers isn't it?

Posted

I just found another copy which confirms the previous statement by Prophonics2029. Attached is scan with lyric sheet This one is recorded at 45rpm.

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Posted

The Doug Banks is a masterpiece of Big City soul and a record I could never bring myself to sell no matter how much I loathe "I Just Kept On Dancing". This is more like a songwriters' demo and lacks all the peaks, troughs and tension in the arrangement and the masterful vocal control which makes the Argo release so great. The vocalist sounds white to me.

Interesting though and thanks for posting it.

Posted

The second file you've posted sounds just like a Doug Banks vocal but over a different instrumental take to the finished Argo 45. Are these both on the same acetate?

Like Tony says above it was not completely unusual for acetates to be cut at 78rpm well into the 1960s.

Posted

These are two different acetates. Thanks for the input to all. I do not have the Argo 45 at all, so I could not compare. I could not find the cut on utube that is included above for some reason.


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