Ljblanken Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 i, of course, just spin for fun here in california - so i play just whatever strikes my fancy. something i got for $2 dollars or $200. no one cares because no one in my crowd knows soul any more rare than "baby love" by the supremes. at the "big" events in england, however, do the DJs ever spin cheap/common records mixed in their set? (like i mean super cheap/common - like "right back where we started from" by maxine nightingale, or "be thankful for what you've got" by william devaugh) or is everything rare and pricey? what are the most cheapie/common things "top shelf" DJs play? do you ever get hassled for it? just curious!
Sjclement Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Yes sometimes it can a breath of fresh air, I've heard Sam play I Told You So Delphonics & I'll Be Around (Detroit ) Spinners , among some of his big priced records .
Steve G Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 (edited) i, of course, just spin for fun here in california - so i play just whatever strikes my fancy. something i got for $2 dollars or $200. no one cares because no one in my crowd knows soul any more rare than "baby love" by the supremes. at the "big" events in england, however, do the DJs ever spin cheap/common records mixed in their set? (like i mean super cheap/common - like "right back where we started from" by maxine nightingale, or "be thankful for what you've got" by william devaugh) or is everything rare and pricey? what are the most cheapie/common things "top shelf" DJs play? do you ever get hassled for it? just curious! At non northern events it happens all the time. Plenty of Djs don't have any rare records. At northern / rare events, yes the odd ones fit in nicely. Admirations on One-Der-Ful, and The Performers on Mirwood are two I've slipped into sets in the last year. I know Chalky plays a lot of underplayed cheaper 60's stuff. But you couldn't play "Be Thankful" or stuff like "maxine Nightingale" at a northern night and walk away with your credibility in tact....they are handbaggers records!!!! Edited October 24, 2013 by Steve G 1
Smudger Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Agree totally can be a breath of fresh air especially when its a very underplayed sound that just takes you back to a time and place long forgotten.
Guest Dancrgettinspinz Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Where do you spin in California? I used to DJ in LA in the late 90's early 2000's. I live in Ojai now, 20 mins inland from Ventura. Been collecting top shelf soul for the past 4-5 years. Can't get enough of it. These English guys and gals sure know their soul I'll say that. Headed to Austin tomorrow for the ARC. Can't wait.
Popular Post Davenpete Posted October 24, 2013 Popular Post Posted October 24, 2013 The brilliant Darlene Love 'Lord if you're a woman' used to be massive for Pat Brady at Bradford, spun in amongst a lot of really rare stuff. Dx 5
Guest Sean Haydon Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 2 quid or 2000 quid, if it's good, then play it!
Popular Post Tiggerwoods Posted October 24, 2013 Popular Post Posted October 24, 2013 Not enough cheapies played .... dj's that are really passionate about what they play know how to play cheap alongside expensive. Next time I'm asked to do an early doors spot I'm going to play all cheapies and take the time to make sure they fit!! 6
Sutty Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 At non northern events it happens all the time. Plenty of Djs don't have any rare records. Plenty do but don't play them just because they are rare, but because something else just as quality is a better option at the time LOL 1
Raremusicdirect Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Might be worth people giving the ratio of what they think is played, Rare / Expensive / Hard To Find v Common / Cheap / Easy To Find I'd say, in my (limited) experience about 95% to 1-5% for main name djs
Popular Post Little-stevie Posted October 24, 2013 Popular Post Posted October 24, 2013 Lets see if some " big djs " will come and answer that..... Not enough feedback from " big djs" or " big "promoters on so many topics... That would be of interest to many..... 4
Popular Post davidwapples Posted October 24, 2013 Popular Post Posted October 24, 2013 trouble is once they spin a cheapie all the sheep that follow them buy copies and start playing it , often not realizing that it was probably spun for a bit of a laugh etc , then the £10 oldie becomes £50+ because a big name is spinning it 9
Little-stevie Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 (edited) Edit.. Edited October 24, 2013 by little-stevie
Popular Post Shsdave Posted October 24, 2013 Popular Post Posted October 24, 2013 trouble is once they spin a cheapie all the sheep that follow them buy copies and start playing it , often not realizing that it was probably spun for a bit of a laugh etc , then the £10 oldie becomes £50+ because a big name is spinning it Think it was Mick Smith who played Ain't no mountain high enough at 100 club Anniversary a few years back, a great cheap track that you just wouldn't expect to hear played amongst the rarer stuff. Problem was you couldn't go to a night in the south for years after without some dj giving it a spin. If it's such a great record why didn't they ever play it out previously, ? Why the fcuk does a name DJ have to play something before others "dare" to play it ? 10
Quinvy Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Think it was Mick Smith who played Ain't no mountain high enough at 100 club Anniversary a few years back, a great cheap track that you just wouldn't expect to hear played amongst the rarer stuff. Problem was you couldn't go to a night in the south for years after without some dj giving it a spin. If it's such a great record why didn't they ever play it out previously, ? Why the fcuk does a name DJ have to play something before others "dare" to play it ? Don't think there was anything good about playing that track at a nighter. I would have been mortified. It's hardly northern is it? Just another collector who shouldn't be Djing in my humble opinion. Too many big name dj's going through the motions. 2
Popular Post Corbett80 Posted October 24, 2013 Popular Post Posted October 24, 2013 (edited) Don't think there was anything good about playing that track at a nighter. I would have been mortified. It's hardly northern is it? Just another collector who shouldn't be Djing in my humble opinion. Too many big name dj's going through the motions. Mick Smith - 'just another collector who shouldn't be DJing'....hahaha! Priceless. Edited October 24, 2013 by corbett80 13
Popular Post Guest Posted October 24, 2013 Popular Post Posted October 24, 2013 Just another collector who shouldn't be Djing in my humble opinion. Really? C'mon, Mick has been packing dancefloors for more years than most and is a cornerstone to the London scene...and an influence to many. I applaud a DJ throwing in a cheapie...for whatever reason...it usually puts smiles on faces, feet on a dancefloor and reminds folk that it is not just about the big money tunes. In fact, every DJ should chuck in a cheapie to spice things up and potentially shine the spotlight on a worthy forgotten/overlooked tune. 15
Corbett80 Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Really? C'mon, Mick has been packing dancefloors for more years than most and is a cornerstone to the London scene...and an influence to many. I applaud a DJ throwing in a cheapie...for whatever reason...it usually puts smiles on faces, feet on a dancefloor and reminds folk that it is not just about the big money tunes. In fact, every DJ should chuck in a cheapie to spice things up and potentially shine the spotlight on a worthy forgotten/overlooked tune. Fishing for responses Dave. Was a good one though.
Lovemusic Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 As "just another collector who shouldn't be DJing" I only play when asked to, or if no-one else is playing stuff I want to hear, run my own events. I play records I really love and think others might as well. I've never spent more than £125 for a record and most of my records probably cost under £5 (although the prices are creeping up nowadays). I,m constantly amazed when playing some great soul track, the amout of people running up to the decks and asking what it is, mainly from guys who I'd expect to know virtually everything in my box. And it hits home if I sell something, and regret it years later, to find a huge jump in price on a £1 record from a market or a £5 import from beating rhythm because the big boys may have picked up on it. I think the moral of the story is, play what you love, in among the classics and don't rely on just the established playlists full of overplayed, expensive trophy items. That's what keeps the scene interesting and music driven. Steve G played "let me be a winner" an old Stafford track one Saturday at Yarmouth a few years back. I picked one up and played it out a couple of times and no one knew it and all loved it. If I go out I want to hear something different and new to me at least once or twice a night, or it's just another night out. One I pushed to anyone who would listen was Johnny Adams-you're a bad habit baby, and from absolutely no-one knowing it (apart from Colin Dilnot who pushed it to me ten years earlier) it seemed to be on everyone's playlist for a time. Years ago I shoved Rhonda Davis-can you remember down everyone's necks and that did well. Eventually. 3
Popular Post Pete S Posted October 24, 2013 Popular Post Posted October 24, 2013 (edited) Don't think there was anything good about playing that track at a nighter. I would have been mortified. It's hardly northern is it? Just another collector who shouldn't be Djing in my humble opinion. Too many big name dj's going through the motions. It was an anniversary and it's the same as Keith Minshull playing Hey Girl Don't Bother Me at the Casino 7th anniversary really. And it's an utterly brilliant Motown record which if it hadn't been a hit, would have been a perfect Northern record. Mick and his mates also discovered a lot of the foundation tracks on the Northern scene like Quick Change Artist, Times A Wasting and Crazy Baby...can't wait to see his response Edited October 24, 2013 by Pete S 9
Steve S 60 Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Is success judged by the cost of the record on the deck or the number of feet on the dance floor? It's the old adage about knowing the price of everything and the value of nothing. 2
Simsy Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Was thinking of Butch and Towanda Barnes, but had a look and it's a hundred and fifty quid! He paid six shillings and ninepence from John Anderson in 1912 though, so it's all relative innit! 2
Guest Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Fishing for responses Dave. Was a good one though. In the absence of exclamation marks or smilie faces I had to believe that the original poster meant exactly what he wrote...and that's fine as everyone is entitled to their own opinion. That said, I am happy to defend all the 100 Club Regular DJs for their enjoyable sets over the (many) years....even Irish Greg ...but naturally I'll have to draw the line at you mind Joel hohoho...see you over New Years hopefully 1
Popular Post Chalky Posted October 24, 2013 Popular Post Posted October 24, 2013 (edited) I've always played cheaper records (thanks Steve), mainly cause I'm a tight tw*t, something to do with the Yorkshire blood in me but mainly because the expensive stuff is out of my league or played by several others already. There is nothing worse than hearing record after record you can't afford or will never own. It gives me more pleasure when someone takes the time to ask what that record was you played and they then come back from the record bar with one in their hands and a big smile on their faces. Then again I don't consider myself a big DJ......except round the waist Edited October 24, 2013 by chalky 25
Guest northernsoul62 Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 It depends on the venue.....i was introduced to northern soul about 82ish and i still love every tune that got me into the music.landslide,maxine nightingale,your ready now ,love on a mountain top..but when i played skiing in the the snow at a long running venue i got red carded.whats wrong with the invatations ,then when i went to a venue in the east of uk (towie)i got called a soul snob for moaning that cds were being played...retired from the scene but still love the music but selling my priced collection.
Pete S Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 .except round the waist When did that happen???
Guest northernsoul62 Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 if i like a record i will dance.band of gold,it takes two,build me up buttercup,landslide,catch that teardrop,whats the problem oh a by the way one of my fav records is you,re ready now .....but i still like and own rarer stuff
Chalky Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 When did that happen??? Life in a tin can (lorry)... I could do with losing a stone or so.
Popular Post Russ Vickers Posted October 24, 2013 Popular Post Posted October 24, 2013 The only criteria is quality....do people really say to themselves I'll play that because its cheap or I'll play that because its rare....I bloody hope not otherwise we really have lost the plot....I thought DJ's played soulful dance records because they were good n they believed in them...another irrelevance that no doubt will be dissected to within an inch of its life...... Russ 15
Mark Bicknell Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 (edited) I can speak from both sides here having been involved as a DJ playing pretty much all the top venues over the years and I always tried to mix it up, when I first started playing things like Reggie Alexander, Curly Moore they were nothing records value wise just became popular over time which is what most DJ's set out to do, it should never be about the value of a tune more the standard and quality being up there however we all know that many of the better records are the big ticket items its just the way it is supply not meeting demand and all that, nothing better to place a little cheap gem something like Syl Johnson - Try Me next to a big ticket item and it working or better still over shadowing the big tunes. Not really being too involved with DJ'ing anymore having moved on the big stuff when I do DJ the odd gig or at my own new venue in Hull I do my best to maintain the quality over being worried how much the records are worth, it's great to hear all the rare stuff but so many records get passed by and over looked because they cost a fiver and that can't be right, think Curly Moore cost me eight quid when I picked it up then bang up it went. Edited October 24, 2013 by Mark Bicknell 3
Popular Post Simsy Posted October 24, 2013 Popular Post Posted October 24, 2013 This isn't an off topic flag wave of cheap good sounds, but an on topic prove a point clip. 20 quid, never played out. Records that would be that good for that much, you must be able to count on the johnny fingers of one hand? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hVk2eahL7Pw 4
arnie j Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 cheap,quality records are great when played amongst the big tunes,gives us poor folk a chance to build nice collections,i used to be ecstatic at stafford when the djs played cheap records in amongst the rare ones,willie harper-but i couldnt and almost persuaded-june conquest spring to mind and there a many thousands more,its a great feeling when you hear a record and think "i bet thats expensive" and then find out its only ten or fifteen quid ! big djs playing rare records are great but ive always admired djs pushing the cheaper,more available stuff jason 2
Steve G Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 (edited) Off topix - the Majestics Barry White in the background..... Apparantly it's really the Atlantics. Edited October 24, 2013 by Steve G 3
Corbett80 Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 (edited) I can speak from both sides here having been involved as a DJ playing pretty much all the top venues over the years and I always tried to mix it up, when I first started playing things like Reggie Alexander, Curly Moore they were nothing records value wise just became popular over time which is what most DJ's set out to do, it should never be about the value of a tune more the standard and quality being up there however we all know that many of the better records are the big ticket items its just the way it is supply not meeting demand and all that, nothing better to place a little cheap gem something like Syl Johnson - Try Me next to a big ticket item and it working or better still over shadowing the big tunes. Not really being too involved with DJ'ing anymore having moved on the big stuff when I do DJ the odd gig or at my own new venue in Hull I do my best to maintain the quality over being worried how much the records are worth, it's great to hear all the rare stuff but so many records get passed by and over looked because they cost a fiver and that can't be right, think Curly Moore cost me eight quid when I picked it up then bang up it went. And how good a record is Try Me?! I think the last time I saw Chalky we talked about what a great record this is. Absolutely brilliant. Edited October 24, 2013 by corbett80 2
Steve G Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 I've always played cheaper records (thanks Steve), Then again I don't consider myself a big DJ......except round the waist Sorry didn't mean it in a negative way - always interesting stuff played I think it's your trademark.... Second point - Nor do I, only an occasional northern DJ....
Popular Post Louise Posted October 24, 2013 Popular Post Posted October 24, 2013 (edited) Don't think there was anything good about playing that track at a nighter. I would have been mortified. It's hardly northern is it? Just another collector who shouldn't be Djing in my humble opinion. Too many big name dj's going through the motions.Where have you been then Phil if Mick Smith ain't a northern DJ?you'll be telling us that Alex Ferguson never managed Man United next!I bet Mick won't be accepting any bookings in the Burnley area after this.Dave Edited October 24, 2013 by Louise 5
Steve G Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 (edited) It's a great pop record and the best record Ashford & Simpson ever wrote. In fact Nick auditioned for Motown with a demo of it having originally written it with Maxine Brown & Chuck Jackson in mind. Maybe it's just me but I am struggling to square it with an all nighter. But anniversary explains it. Dick Sniff is a good egg. Cheers. Edited October 24, 2013 by Steve G
Guest enchantedrythm Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Think it was Mick Smith who played Ain't no mountain high enough at 100 club Anniversary a few years back, a great cheap track that you just wouldn't expect to hear played amongst the rarer stuff. Problem was you couldn't go to a night in the south for years after without some dj giving it a spin. If it's such a great record why didn't they ever play it out previously, ? Why the fcuk does a name DJ have to play something before others "dare" to play it ? NIGHTMARE!!!! Mick Smith, just a nightmare, should be ashamed
macca Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Sometimes they can hit you in the face and remind you of what a snob you can be, musically speaking. NYE last year in Edinburgh, dancefloor heaving to stuff played by Yogi like Tear Stained Face, sounds I'll never ever own, and then he hits you with Show & Tell by Al Wilson. It sounded glorious, so much so much I logged onto Ebay there and then (sad git) and bought one, a UK demo for a fiver. One of those priceless moments in one's Soul career... 2
Frankie Crocker Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Don't think there was anything good about playing that track at a nighter. I would have been mortified. It's hardly northern is it? Just another collector who shouldn't be Djing in my humble opinion. Too many big name dj's going through the motions.Mick Smith, top collector, top DJ, top floor-filler and top bloke. Anything Mick plays is good enough for me.
Frankie Crocker Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 This isn't an off topic flag wave of cheap good sounds, but an on topic prove a point clip. 20 quid, never played out. Records that would be that good for that much, you must be able to count on the johnny fingers of one hand? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hVk2eahL7PwSimsy - great track. I would call it medium-pace, somewhere between up-tempo and mid-tempo. 1
Staceys Dad Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 nice cheappie sunny sunday bunny sigler 2
Guest Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Remember at one of the busy Manchester Ritz allnighters in the 1990's. Richard Searling was halfway through his spot of rare records when he played "Washed Ashore" by The Platters. I don't think anyone was expecting it, the place just lifted a notch in atmosphere!! Great!
Chalky Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Sorry didn't mean it in a negative way - always interesting stuff played I think it's your trademark.... Second point - Nor do I, only an occasional northern DJ.... No need to apologise as I realised you meant nothing negative by it. I also think the cheaper stuff are the more unknown as everyone chasing and talking about the rarer stuff and often ignoring some quality music. 3
Dave Abbott Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Think it was Mick Smith who played Ain't no mountain high enough at 100 club Anniversary a few years back, a great cheap track that you just wouldn't expect to hear played amongst the rarer stuff. Problem was you couldn't go to a night in the south for years after without some dj giving it a spin. If it's such a great record why didn't they ever play it out previously, ? Why the fcuk does a name DJ have to play something before others "dare" to play it ? I too was there at the 100 that nite...and it was a special moment :-)
Guest Ivor Jones Posted October 24, 2013 Posted October 24, 2013 Mick Smith, top collector, top DJ, top floor-filler and top bloke. Anything Mick plays is good enough for me. Ditto. Can't believe anyone would come out with such nonsense against Mick. Also, Mick is the absolute epitome of a collector who CAN cut it with the best DJs this scene has to offer. Unlike so many in my opinion. Top bloke.
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