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Posted (edited)

Recently purchased a copy of this record , and have already gathered that there are only about three known copies in the hands of dj's on the mod / Northern scene , so its pretty rare ....

i have done some research on this record , and still have gaps to fill ... because it all seems a bit of a mystery . For a start , the chief discography ends at label number 7040 , and this is label number 7043 ( it also has a different design label to the standard chief labels ....

I actually contacted jean , but even she couldnt understand why this record was pressed on chief , she said she recorded the songs for starville records when she was 11/12 years old , and this was one of the two labels Mel London ( the owner of chief records ) went to after chief went bust in 1964 ...

it leaves me with a few questions , if this is number 7043 , where are 7041 and 7042 and what are they ? And if this was recorded for starville , why was it pressed on chief ?

Jean doest have the answer to these questions , and mel london unfortunately died in 1975 , so i am hoping somebody on here will have the knowledge to piece the story together

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Edited by soulgirl85
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Posted

Amazing record...big thanks to Michael Robinson for bringing it to my attention on his Jester Wild mix. I managed to pick one up off a very reputable record DJ/Collector shortly after, I can't wait to give it some main room spins and see how it goes down!

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Posted

here is the record i have. it is really good soul actually, and Tom Lewis owned Starville. Also, Charles Mays was the guitarist for the Desires. This is not as rare as the Jean Shy, which I don't have.

 

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Posted

Hi Bob , So this suggests that the chief label was being contunied long after it was closed mid 60s ?

 

it looks like tom lewis maybe picked it up with mel before starting starville

Posted

Interesting .. So these are maybe the hardest and rarest ones to pick up then ? all late 60s i presume , just after Mel finished with bright star ? It still leaves the question , as to why jean wasnt aware of it being done on chief , which suggests it didnt get a release straight after it was recorded ......

Posted

Interesting .. So these are maybe the hardest and rarest ones to pick up then ? all late 60s i presume , just after Mel finished with bright star ? It still leaves the question , as to why jean wasnt aware of it being done on chief , which suggests it didnt get a release straight after it was recorded ......

 

why do you think late '60s? I think mid '60s. Also, I thought bright star was johnny moore and jack daniels.

Posted (edited)

I got the info about bright star from here

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mel_London

 

Its all a bit confusing .. i think it def sounds late 60's , But lillian offitts version of "the man wont work" was released in 1959 ,  according to Jean shy , She actually wrote "that man wont work"    but it was originally titled  "I looked in my pocked book " and was done on starville records ( which was after chief and bright start ) and was released in 1967    https://www.soulfulkindamusic.net/jshy.htm   so the times and release dates dont match up ...  im wondering if " i looked in my pocket book" has im a bad go getter on the b side ??

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