Dayo Posted November 23, 2015 Posted November 23, 2015 (edited) London? Somewhere else? I'm thinking about the cities that made what we came to call Northern Soul music. Where the legendary studios, musicians and producers were based. I've listed the top 5 as I see it in the thread title; any arguments? OK, so if there was a best of the rest, which city would get the nod? I've suggested London half seriously, but where would you say gave us the best NS output, other than the obvious five? Or do you disagree with my top 5 choice? Can't be Memphis can it? Edited November 23, 2015 by Dayo
Robbk Posted November 24, 2015 Posted November 24, 2015 I would say that The San Francisco/Oakland Bay Area is next with Fantasy/Galaxy, Music City, Autumn and Sam Geddins' many labels. Then, perhaps, Memphis or Nashville. Memphis with Stax/Volt/Enterprise, Hi, Sun/Phillips, Nashville, with Bob Holmes, Excello/Nashboro labels, Monument/ Sound Stage 7, John Richbourg's labels, Then, the following cities: Washington DC/Baltimore (Shrine, Jet Set, North Bay) Cleveland(Way Out), Cincinnati (King/Federal/DeLuxe/Bethlehem, Fraternity), Pittsburgh (World Artists/American Arts, St. Louis (Ike Turner labels, Bobbin, Teek), New Orleans. Atlanta, Miami, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Seattle, Denver, Houston, 2
Frankie Crocker Posted November 24, 2015 Posted November 24, 2015 You've got the top tier spot on. Next level down for good Northern would be New Orleans, Houston, San Antonio, Atlanta, Bay Area and Cincinnati. Most major cities have made a contribution to the output of sounds worth tracking down and some of the smaller ones such as Mc Allen and Tyler in Texas.
Robbk Posted November 25, 2015 Posted November 25, 2015 I forgot to list Jewel Records (Shreveport, Louisiana). I consider them in a lump in with New Orleans.
George G Posted November 25, 2015 Posted November 25, 2015 10 hours ago, RobbK said: , Seattle, You're kidding, I hope. There are 7 cities in Ohio (Cleveland, Cincinnati, Columbus, Dayton, Akron, Youngstown, Toledo) that produced more soul (Northern and general soul) than Seattle. At least we can partly claim Quincy Jones, although he had to leave to make it big. In general, you can take the largest metropolitan areas in the US during the mid 1960s and 1970s, rank them in population, and that would be the list. 2
Robbk Posted November 25, 2015 Posted November 25, 2015 Yes, Seattle is by far the largest US city that had the least Soul record production per population. Minneapolis and Boston were also relatively weak in Soul music production. Toronto was the biggest Soul production area in Canada, and would probably come in ahead of Minneapolis and Seattle. Toledo is basically in the Detroit Metro area. Akron, Dayton, and Youngstown I would lump in together with Cleveland. Louisville, The Virginia Beach and North Carolina also should have been mentioned, as well as San Diego, and of course Muscle Shoals, Alabama (which was mainly Fame Studios-which was aligned with many Southern and Northern record labels releasing their production).
clevesoulie Posted November 29, 2015 Posted November 29, 2015 Thank you, Robb, for mentioning Cleveland in your post! In addition to Way Out, we also had the Boddie Recording family of labels (e.g, Luau), DeBrossard and maybe a couple of others. Best, Mark
Robbk Posted November 29, 2015 Posted November 29, 2015 2 hours ago, clevesoulie said: Thank you, Robb, for mentioning Cleveland in your post! In addition to Way Out, we also had the Boddie Recording family of labels (e.g, Luau), DeBrossard and maybe a couple of others. Best, Mark Yes, there was also Saru and Courier. Was Compass from Cleveland, or somewhere nearby? I know it was located in Ohio. 1
Sunnysoul Posted November 30, 2015 Posted November 30, 2015 Would New Jersey fit in anywhere in this discussion ? All Platinum / Stang / Turbo etc etc
Robbk Posted November 30, 2015 Posted November 30, 2015 1 hour ago, sunnysoul said: Would New Jersey fit in anywhere in this discussion ? All Platinum / Stang / Turbo etc etc Northern New Jersey is ca subset of The New York Metro Area, while Southern New Jersey is a suburban portion of The Philadelphia Metro Area. All of it was a Dutch colony before it was taken over by you English.
Daved Posted November 30, 2015 Posted November 30, 2015 On 25/11/2015 17:49:09, RobbK said: Minneapolis and Boston were also relatively weak in Soul music production. Minneapolis churned out some great stuff in the 80s with Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis on top form then. Also The Time, Prince, Alexander O'Neal & Morris Day, etc - although this wouldn't appeal to a lot of people on this site.
Ljblanken Posted December 1, 2015 Posted December 1, 2015 On November 25, 2015 at 5:08:12 AM, George G said: You're kidding, I hope. There are 7 cities in Ohio (Cleveland, Cincinnati, Columbus, Dayton, Akron, Youngstown, Toledo) that produced more soul (Northern and general soul) than Seattle. At least we can partly claim Quincy Jones, although he had to leave to make it big. In general, you can take the largest metropolitan areas in the US during the mid 1960s and 1970s, rank them in population, and that would be the list. Yes! Lots of soul in Ohio. Go Buckeyes! 1
clevesoulie Posted December 2, 2015 Posted December 2, 2015 I think Compass was a New York operation. Best, Mark
Robbk Posted December 2, 2015 Posted December 2, 2015 (edited) 11 minutes ago, clevesoulie said: I think Compass was a New York operation. Best, Mark But weren't Johnny Brantly's Vidalia productions on that label (Ohio Players) recorded in Cleveland? Edited December 2, 2015 by RobbK
clevesoulie Posted December 3, 2015 Posted December 3, 2015 Pretty certain Brantley was.based in New York. Don't know where the early Ohio Players sides were cut. Best, Mark
George G Posted December 3, 2015 Posted December 3, 2015 3 hours ago, clevesoulie said: Pretty certain Brantley was.based in New York. Don't know where the early Ohio Players sides were cut. Best, Mark Yes, most or all of the 1968 OP / Brantley stuff (including the Observations in Time LP) was done in NYC. Brantley was definitely in the NYC area. You can probably count on two (maybe one) hands the total number of soul records recorded in Cleveland in 1968. On 11/29/2015 12:37:11, RobbK said: Yes, there was Courier. From Fremont, OH, 70 miles west. The only soul record I recall on Courier was by Ike Perry and the Lyrics who were from Cleveland. 1
Robbk Posted December 3, 2015 Posted December 3, 2015 The Santells (Black female Soul group) had a record out on Courier, and, I believe, I also have a third Courier Soul record (male solo act).
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