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Posted

Hi Ste

3 minutes ago, Winsford Soul said:

Mick. I was one of those teeny bopper soulies in 1975😁 when as a not quite innocent 16 year old I walked down station road for the very first time,  that experience honestly changed my life and turned me into the even less innocent 61 year old person that you have before you now. 🤔waiting impatiently for the nighters to reopen 👍

Trust all is well and safe Mick 

Ste

I know that Steve and that’s why I mentioned it in the first paragraph, I’m the last person in the world to try to steal that happiness you felt everybody starts somewhere, myself being in my mid twenties at that time it seemed more than one generation apart, however 10 years on you had all caught up and we were all on a level playing field and in it together to enjoy the Scene which had matured as well as the people who loved it and that is why I remember 85 to 95 so fondly

I am safe and well Ste hope you are too fingers crossed for things to ease up soon

ML

  • Up vote 1
Posted

two well 3 times from age 12/13 at local youth clubs from 69/72 for just regular club soul and some ska/blue beat 72 till about 79/80  from 15 years old till 23ish attending dare and nighters and normal soul nights (Mecca) all over the country but petering out towards the end of 79 as I thought it was all over and friends were drifting away or getting married and having families. then started again in about 1994 attending and collecting again and running a soul night for almost 14 years. 

  • Up vote 1
Posted

What a good post, my journey started at the fair in macclesfield in the early sixties when motown was played on the waltzers, where the mods would gather, seeing the lambys and 🛵. On the last night the rockers would come down and it would kick off Brill days. So my journey had started going to local working men's clubs and my first Ben sherman shirt which my mum scorched it when she ironed it. Zoom too the future and still doing it, and this lockdown won't finish it off either, stay safe everybody ktf

  • Up vote 2
Posted
1 hour ago, Mark B said:

two well 3 times from age 12/13 at local youth clubs from 69/72 for just regular club soul and some ska/blue beat 72 till about 79/80  from 15 years old till 23ish attending dare and nighters and normal soul nights (Mecca) all over the country but petering out towards the end of 79 as I thought it was all over and friends were drifting away or getting married and having families. then started again in about 1994 attending and collecting again and running a soul night for almost 14 years. 

 

Posted
4 hours ago, Hooker1951 said:

Hi Ste

I know that Steve and that’s why I mentioned it in the first paragraph, I’m the last person in the world to try to steal that happiness you felt everybody starts somewhere, myself being in my mid twenties at that time it seemed more than one generation apart, however 10 years on you had all caught up and we were all on a level playing field and in it together to enjoy the Scene which had matured as well as the people who loved it and that is why I remember 85 to 95 so fondly

I am safe and well Ste hope you are too fingers crossed for things to ease up soon

ML

Such a true statement.  We all seemed to catch up with the older guys as you say mid 80,s when it was a true underground scene and it stayed there for probably 10 years just like you said.  Amazing times, amazing records, amazing friendships formed . 

Glad to hear you're ok.  All good here too thanks mate 👍 

  • Up vote 1
Posted

Happy birthday for tomorrow Len , the northern soul road has taken so many twists and turns since my induction as a 15 year old but I only have one regret and (I have said this to all the young ones that have came on the scene since ) my friend from Kettering, Paul Panton took me to the Torch and apparently I was classed as quite a mover , but I felt so in awe I could not move ,, please anyone reading don't be afraid to get on the floor it's there for dancing on,, it's not STRICTLY,, Monny 

  • Up vote 1
Posted

1975, St. Ives, totally fcking blocked on G & Clears caps, didn't feel like standing up or sitting down, so tried a bit of dancing. Useless I was, but didn't realize it until some chick started laughing. That freaked me a bit, but then I couldn't get rid of her and my dancing improved bit by bit.

  • Up vote 2
Posted
25 minutes ago, ratt said:

1975, St. Ives, totally fcking blocked on G & Clears caps, didn't feel like standing up or sitting down, so tried a bit of dancing. Useless I was, but didn't realize it until some chick started laughing. That freaked me a bit, but then I couldn't get rid of her and my dancing improved bit by bit.

Great story, great choice of gear ,, I used to love st Ives , still do the reunions ,, not quite the same for some reason ,, filon was my choice in 75 ,

  • Up vote 1
Posted
1 hour ago, Monny1916 said:

Happy birthday for tomorrow Len , the northern soul road has taken so many twists and turns since my induction as a 15 year old but I only have one regret and (I have said this to all the young ones that have came on the scene since ) my friend from Kettering, Paul Panton took me to the Torch and apparently I was classed as quite a mover , but I felt so in awe I could not move ,, please anyone reading don't be afraid to get on the floor it's there for dancing on,, it's not STRICTLY,, Monny 

Thanks Monny. 

Paul Panton is a name I am familiar with, and I'm certain I have met him.  Although I was born in Harrow (Middlesex), I have spent most of my life in Northamptonshire, so have been to many events in the surrounding areas such as Kettering.

You're absolutely right about just getting out there on that dance floor.  I suppose the 'uninitiated' expect people to immediately take the p*ss, which of course never happens.

Edit - Never 'usually' happens :wink:

Len :thumbsup:

  • Up vote 2
Posted

St. Ives surely was the best. Loved Wigan, but when the oldies room opened at Ives, there were individual people filling the place, all in their own world, or more precisely on their own planet. I never did get to have a go with Filon, but rest assured over the next 30 years or more I hammered just about everything, and they repaid me in kind. But I'm still up for a soul night or nighter, just take it a bit easier on the potions.......most of the time!!!!

  • Up vote 1
Posted

Just thinking about this today.

76 77 all those girly poppy soul tunes like the flirtations, sapphires, Paula Durante, Dena Barnes, Poppies, Jeanette Harper, Etc really drew me into the scene. 

However this lockdown has produced more free time to research stuff on line, and the results have been great. So many quality tunes I'm just discovering now.

Ed

  • Up vote 2
Posted

My time started at school Beeston fields in Notts I had 3 top mates a year or so older Tony Clarke Glyn Sissons and Tommo (Notts)  they would bring records to school with portable player and we'd spendunch break in the annix  dancing, my first venue was a Friday soul night  called Colemans in Nottingham, you went there  before we could go to the legendary Brit club. From there I attended the Casino every Saturday from 74 till the first last night, along with Mick H. and a few others, after the casino shut it was Clifton Hall, St Ives, cleethorpes, Stafford was the Turing point for me musically as a Dj. I had previously had a massive oldies collection which I decided to sell, as I'd always like dancing to the newer discoveries, so I broughtoads of Stafford sounds and lots of unknowns at the time, still buying u knows now, as for venues after well stayed with the nighters up till around 3 years ago still do weekenders, but as years march on prefer a good quality soul night, with a bit of everything,so can't wait to get going again. 

 

Regards Steve 

  • Up vote 1
Posted

Till the first last night.....like it.....I got bored of them, how many was it? In the end I don't think I went to the actual 'last' one. They had blown a gasket anyway, died a death, sunk to an all time low, blah blah.


  • 4 weeks later...
Posted
On 29/08/2020 at 18:01, Petedillon said:

full on pharmaceutical powered indulgence, my theory that the gear every bit as much as the music made the scene. I always had a theory that the best clubs were dark cellars downstairs.. but VaVa’s  gave that theory a kicking . A top under-rated club with top quality tunes which later were credited to the Casino. 
 

This!

My time 72 Torch and everywhere up 77

  • Up vote 1
Posted

I think for all of us our best years were when we were 18-25 (though for me probably also 30-40 thanks to Pete - though that was a mad time) when we were starry eyed and full of youthful energy... It doesn't matter what period that covers; Wheel, Mecca and Torch, Mecca, Early Wigan, Late Wigan and Stafford, Morecambe, The 100 Club, Bradford Queens Hall; whatever, you'll have had your best days at that age - regardless of which clubs you were old enough to attend. Dx

  • Up vote 1

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