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Garethx

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Everything posted by Garethx

  1. Neither a boot nor a re-issue, G. as no original issue existed at the time it was recorded (I'm guessing 1968-70).
  2. I suspect this was pressed in the UK too, don't have a copy to hand to check but it wouldn't surprise me if that were the case. As SITB says it would be very difficult to find a copy in the US other than those bought from UK-based sellers. As for the price it seems excessive, but as Ian says a rare record is worth precisely what someone is willing to pay in order to own it. In numerical terms it's probably as rare as Angela Davis (though obviously more copies of that 45 were trashed than have actually survived) with, I'm guessing, a pressing run in the low hundreds. I sold the copy I bought as a relatively new release on here for £110 last year. I could have sold it many times over (in fact I had more PMs for it than any other 45 I've ever offered for sale on the forum). It was bought by a well-respected record dealer who knows the price of fish.
  3. Completely correct gents. Released in about '87. Eugene Davis's daughter was married to an English guy at the time and living somewhere in Essex I believe: she was involved somewhere along the line with distributing the record but didn't get far beyond dumping the stock in a few record shops in the south east. I bought mine from John Manship a few months later for £20 and was a bit non-plussed by the look of the 45 when I took it out of the envelope as it was quite obviously a brand new record with modern typesetting. Guy spun this on a dub made from master tape and covered it as Eula Cooper.
  4. Generally speaking with Patti's Coral sides the demos seem more plentiful. On this title I've personally seen a fairly equal split. Some of the others are pretty scarce on issue. All this is pretty general speculation though.
  5. Yellow deejay copy, multi-coloured issue.
  6. Part of a great run of singles on Cotillion by the group, all worth getting and all dirt cheap. Their album on the label collects all the sides but is a bit more expensive. The playing of the American Studios band is truly beautiful and the songwriting from various group members is top notch throughout. Baz, I think the group on Dyna is a different one, from the Carolinas.
  7. Hi Currently looking for nice copies of the following 45s: OVIDE 241 MASTERS OF SOUL DO YOU REALLY LOVE ME?/ BY THE TIME I GET TO PHOENIX CHECKER 1220 GENE CHANDLER GO BACK HOME/ IN MY BODY'S HOUSE ASTROSCOPE 118 THE RIMSHOTS DANCE GIRL/ WHO'S GOT THE MONSTER TIA for any leads gareth
  8. Hi What's the current going rate for: OVIDE 241 MASTERS OF SOUL DO YOU REALLY LOVE ME?/ BY THE TIME I GET TO PHOENIX TIA gareth
  9. Polydor is a strange label when it comes to black music: obviously for an extended period of time James Brown was the standard bearer and they were obviously keen to try to expand that side of their business. Often it's a case of them promo-ing the 'wrong' sides of records. Had they gone with the 'other' sides in many cases they might have had hits. The New World is a classic example, where "We're Gonna Make It" is so obviously more commercial than the flip. The Pep Brown example you cite is a more complex thing as both sides of the stock copy are (for the mid 70s) pretty deep ballads. Another one where the dance side got lost in the promo process is the J.J. Williams 45: there are many demos of Lord Have Mercy On My Soul about, yet the stocker with Love Market is quite scarce. One thing to bear in mind with all this is that we're often looking at dance music as being the be-and-end-all of the equation, whereas Black radio in the 70s could make massive hits out of ballad/sweet sides, an important component of the radio formats then and now.
  10. I don't think I'm providing an opposing point in the debate: in many cases I'm in more or less complete agreement with the tone and essence of your original post. I do, however, fundamentally disagree with your point about the extent of Motown's historical importance. Motown's impact in musical terms was unquestionably large for a period of time, but as a totem of Black enterprise it has to be said that the overall story in 50 years of existence has been one of heroic failure. As each generation passes the richness of the company's musical legacy will ebb away as the marketing becomes ever more formulaic and removed from the roots of what made that music vital and special. If you don't believe me have a look at comments from young people worldwide on sites like youtube. Awareness of Motown as a brand is vague at best in that demographic. Outside the confines of communities like this one Motown's importance registers no more than a footnote in wider stories like that of, for example, Martin Luther King, or indeed, Michael Jackson. That isn't a qualitative judgement (I own and like hundreds of Motown records but have never bought a Michael Jackson release), I'm just looking at the jackson Memorial from a slightly wider perspective. The media frenzy and the banality of much of the coverage and reaction to Jackson's death and indeed the skewed logic and questionable taste of much of last night's event is cause for much reflection from our sometimes insular perch as soul fans, but as Brian and Ady and others point out, it's the way things seem to be done nowadays. yours in soul, gareth
  11. Very droll, Colin. You've cheered me up no end. In a serious answer to the question I honestly think James Brown had few rivals when it came to innovative and influential dancing from the stage. In the group stakes I'd have to say The O'Jays in their prime were far better movers than The Temptations.
  12. You win the prize for 'Week's Most Self Righteous Post".
  13. Hold on a second. You clearly don't know me very well to conclude from the above that I am keen to go in to bat for American capitalism. Jackson's ability to make and squander money was one of, if not the most noteworthy aspects of his life and celebrity and certainly worth commenting on. In answer to your question "Does it really do any individual any good to be worth billions of dollars, be they black or white?" I am clearly less qualified than you to make the sweeping generalisation implied by it. As for your long list of child showbiz casualties I'm aware of both high profile and more obscure cases, but I have to suspect that tales of woe from these quarters can often exaggerated in order to scratch the itch for continued exposure to the narcotic that is celebrity. It is of course entirely possible to taste success in the field of entertainment and then melt away from the public eye and enjoy a life of mundane, un-damaged normality. I suspect that the numbers in the respective camps would tend not bear out your theory of inevitability. In any case, the extent of Jackson's fame was highly unusual and his exposure to the limelight extremely prolonged, so drawing parallels with erstwhile soap opera stars who go off the rails is perhaps unhelpful. You state: For all the insane hype surrounding him, MICHAEL JACKSON individually is less important historically than MOTOWN as a collective, something which is perhaps in danger of being obscured by the fanatical hysteria being accorded to JACKSON in death. Yet it is possible that it is Berry Gordy and the Motown phenomenon which are as culpable in the tragic dimensions of what came to be Jackson's predicament as Joe Jackson, the American media and global capitalism (and by extenion in your argument, record buyers worldwide). Child entertainers in R&B were a not uncommon part of that field of entertainment in the mid 1960s. While The Jackson 5 were making independently distributed records in and around their hometown. Tony Talent, Little Gary Ferguson, Larry Chubby Reynolds, The Admirations and a host of others were doing the same throughout the States, with varying degrees of success. While precocious the Jacksons were not in themselves unique. That they were eventually signed by Gordy, groomed, styled and sold in the patented Motown manner was to be both their blessing and their curse. In creating unprecedented demand for the products of a group of adolescents it was Motown which exacerbated the strains on the vulnerable young performers. Yes, Motown has cultural significance, but it is entirely possible to argue that it actually has far less cultural significance than the Michael Jackson phenomenon. By the early 1980s Motown was a spent force aesthetically and economically. Indeed the recording arm of the Corporation could be said to be a failure of almost unparalleled dimension by that time, with operating costs and other outgoings wildly at odds with the revenues tricking in from an extremely mediocre roster. Berry Gordy was acutely aware of the need to sell the company in order that the legacy of the songwriting and publishing archive could be 'safeguarded' (i.e. kept in his own hands). The years of Motown representing an unqualified Black Success Story actually represent quite a short time span in the company's life. If the barometer of success is 'crossing over' in terms of sales and profile (and we must use that barometer because these were the terms in which Gordy himself saw success) then very few could actually be said to be successful. Outside of Jackson, Gordy himself, Smokey Robinson, Diana Ross and Stevie Wonder no Motown artist or figure achieved lasting, concrete success (in Gordy's terms) outside of cult fame in their lifetime. Motown Records would mean practically nothing to most people in the world in current terms outside a core of afficionados, whereas Jackson's iconic status is guaranteed now. Michael Jackson's Memorial Concert was broadcast live globally. Berry Gordy's will not be, and I think that's beyond question. That's different from asking whether that should be the case, but then I'm not the one making judgements.
  14. Jackson's achievements were of course in micro when compared to the monolithic slabs of money he helped accrue for corporate America. His management (and this includes Joe Jackson, however unpalatable that seems to many) should be applauded for capitalising on their client's undoubted ability by facilitating the generation of sums of income which for an entertainer in America, particularly an African-American entertainer in the mid 20th century, were unprecedented. I don't agree with your assertion that it was 'almost certain' for Jackson's life to develop in the way it did given his childhood.
  15. No aspect of the memorial show was remotely surprising. As a side note I think the constant innuendo about Joe Jackson's role in Michael's upbringing and the family's life is now overcooked. To say that the Jackson children had a hard life is hyperbole out of all proportion given the genuine danger, fear, famine and uncertainty faced by literally millions of children worldwide every day. Yes, Joe exploited the young Michael's talents: as their manager it was his role to ensure they wouldn't experience the blows he felt as a veteran of the seedy, segregated world of American Showbiz. He undertook to see that his family would genuinely break the glass ceiling that existed in the entertainment industry for a long time. If MJ's life came to stand for anything it is the final smashing of those barriers. All those mentioned in the forerunners thread last week, from Louis Armstrong to Smokey Robinson, helped of course, but Jackson Senior's determination to ensure that it was his brood's destiny to reap those benefits is, in some ways, laudable. Jackson's life and career is an interesting signifier of attitudes towards race in America over the last 50 years. The contradictions and ironies inherent in Michael's personality, looks and attitudes to race qualify all this in myriad ways. All this was encapsulated in last night's sometimes troubling spectacle.
  16. Hi Currently looking for a copy of DAN BRANTLEY KEEP ON TRYING / I'M SO LONELY HOLLYWOOD 1133 Issue or WDJ, ideally in above VG+ condition. TIA for any leads, gareth
  17. Some fascinating snippets of information on Robert Tanner/The Jivers/The New Sound on John Ridley's website here, plus soundfiles of the wonderful ballad sides of the two Megatone 45s: https://www.sirshambling.com/artists/R/robert_tanner2.html
  18. For a long time I was led to believe this was a one-off. Time and experience have shown that not to be the case, but it's still pretty rare. I think Dylan got a worn but perfectly serviceable copy from ebay a couple of years ago, possibly when one of the premier Japanese deep collectors was offloading some choice records. At the same time there was a mint copy on gemm for $500 (the exchange rate was about 2:1 then). I was severely tempted and it hung around for months. By the time I had made the decision to bite the bullet it had, of course, gone. One of the greatest female group southern soul records: a truly brilliant double-sider. Good luck in your search Tony.
  19. Are The Modulations on Buddah the same group as the one on Savoy (i.e. featuring Glenn Jones)? I have reservations about that. One group which was torn apart by crime and guns was The Rotations on DeBrossard.
  20. Far superior to Betty Moorer too, in my opinion. This floats and stings where Betty shouts and wavers. Maybe the quintessential group crossover record.
  21. Not the case at all, I'm happy to say. I'm pretty sure Tommy Potts, who's a member on here, has met him in the last couple of years in California.
  22. Lee Harris did indeed do a version of 'Don't let Our Love Fade Away': unquestionably the best version too. The backing track was recycled as "Nothing I'd Rather be Than Your Weakness" by Marva (Whitney) Taylor (possibly replayed but certainly based on the same rhythm section) later re-released as the MWT Express. I prefer the organ version of Gene Williams, but both are pretty good small-label indie-soul with committed vocalising and interesting low-fi production. Until many of the Forte releases were de-rarified a few years ago by label owner Ellis Taylor releasing old stock these records had a degree of mystique and were pretty sought after. As is often the case a relative flood of copies on the market has seen interest in the titles wane as collectors become blase and dealers slash prices to sell. A shame as there is some good raw soul on the logo.
  23. Let's hope so Mark. Can't have a club captain who wears jeans and trainers to matches, can we? To be honest we could use the money from the sale to overhaul a severely weakened United. best, gareth
  24. Original release is on ABC/Peacock. The album is called "2000 Years", released in 1978. Haven't heard the Heat label version to comment on whether it's a re-recording.


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