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  • Another web page abut her.... https://nwmusicarchives.com/artist/staten-patrinell/ And here she is with the choir....  

  • footsteps in history etc she sang at Jimi Hendrix's funeral Pastor Patrinell Staten Wright tells the story of how she came to sing at Jimi Hendrix's funeral on October 1, 1970 at Dunlop Bapt

  • Tomangoes
    Tomangoes

    Priceless. What a tune. It's got everything . Class, rarity, obscurity, and it stops and starts all over the place. Was it a Mecca play? Up until a few years ago I'd only ever heard of the f

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  On 08/02/2019 at 17:40, Billy Jo Jim Bob said:

I don't know if this has been posted up before, but some nice background on what was one of the biggest tunes at one time provided by an obscure north west artist.

https://www.historylink.org/File/10393

Enjoy !

Andy

Cheers Andy.  Great information.  So they originally pressed 250 copies,  remember when it first got played out and about,  there was supposedly 4 copies.  Don't know how many actually turned up.  Love both sides.  

Steve 

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  On 08/02/2019 at 17:40, Billy Jo Jim Bob said:

I don't know if this has been posted up before, but some nice background on what was one of the biggest tunes at one time provided by an obscure north west artist.

https://www.historylink.org/File/10393

Enjoy !

Andy

 

 

footsteps in history etc

she sang at Jimi Hendrix's funeral

Pastor Patrinell Staten Wright tells the story of how she came to sing at Jimi Hendrix's funeral on October 1, 1970 at Dunlop Baptist Church (Seattle, WA). This scene (available as a bonus on the DVD) is taken from the feature-length documentary "Wheedle's Groove" which tells the story of Seattle's forgotten soul & funk scene of the 1960s and 1970s.

Edited by mike

  • 3 weeks later...

Priceless.

What a tune. It's got everything . Class, rarity, obscurity, and it stops and starts all over the place. Was it a Mecca play?

Up until a few years ago I'd only ever heard of the four sonics on sepia. 

 

Ed

  On 02/03/2019 at 19:46, tomangoes said:

Priceless.

What a tune. It's got everything . Class, rarity, obscurity, and it stops and starts all over the place. Was it a Mecca play?

Up until a few years ago I'd only ever heard of the four sonics on sepia. 

 

Ed

I don't know whether it was a Mecca play but I did hear that some copies are pressed incorrectly, labels correct but wrong tune playing (nightmare), Butch plays it

 

Edited by Blackpoolsoul
Updated

  On 02/03/2019 at 19:46, tomangoes said:

Priceless.

What a tune. It's got everything . Class, rarity, obscurity, and it stops and starts all over the place. Was it a Mecca play?

Up until a few years ago I'd only ever heard of the four sonics on sepia. 

 

Ed

Found much later than the Mecca, would be in the 90s when found.

  • 2 weeks later...
  On 02/03/2019 at 19:46, tomangoes said:

Up until a few years ago I'd only ever heard of the four sonics on sepia. 

 

Pretty sure it's a different label - Four Sonics label is Detroit-based, with three releases in total.

Story I heard was it was Keb Darge found Patrinell Staten on a digging trip with John Manship, the deal being Keb got all the funk and John got all the soul. So... Keb had to hand it over! ðŸ˜­

  On 12/03/2019 at 00:38, cover-up said:

Pretty sure it's a different label - Four Sonics label is Detroit-based, with three releases in total.

Story I heard was it was Keb Darge found Patrinell Staten on a digging trip with John Manship, the deal being Keb got all the funk and John got all the soul. So... Keb had to hand it over! ðŸ˜­

Yes, the Seattle label had nothing to do with Jack Ashford's Detroit label.  And Patrinell Staten was a Seattle resident.

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