Ady Croasdell
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Everything posted by Ady Croasdell
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Whispers It Only Hurts For A Little While
Ady Croasdell replied to Ady Croasdell's topic in Look At Your Box
Thanks Robb, If you have a spare copy Bob will snap your hand off. I'm OK with Dave's at the moment. Ady -
Whispers It Only Hurts For A Little While
Ady Croasdell replied to Ady Croasdell's topic in Look At Your Box
Yep that's why I need it, the previous Dore CD put the wrong version on. I'll PM you on it Dave. Thanks ady -
Anyone got a copy we could borrow please? Kudos and quality CDs await as a thank you. Ady
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Cleethorpes Weekender Any News Ady
Ady Croasdell replied to Speedlimit's topic in All About the SOUL
Just waking up from Xmas, end of tax year and a demanding Mary Love project. I'm onto it now and should have acts finalised by March. Cheers Ady Cleethorpes 9 landscape.pdf -
And a 100 club exclusive for quite a while
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Shouldn't have flogged mine then!
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Songs That Really Pull At Your Heart Strings . . .
Ady Croasdell replied to a topic in All About the SOUL
Loleatta Holloway Cry To Me and I've Done It Again- I think its the Charmels unissued Stax out on Kent. And of course Jaibi You Got Me for Godinophiles -
Songs That Really Pull At Your Heart Strings . . .
Ady Croasdell replied to a topic in All About the SOUL
Odyssey, If You're Looking For A Way Out-every time. -
Or one of Lew's brainless instrumentals? Ady
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Five months ago a young Northern Soul fan was filmed by her mother dancing along to an excellent but very obscure 60s soul recording on the steps of the Yury Dolguruky Monument in Moscow. 50,000 You Tube hits and lots of enthusiastic, kind words encouraged the girls to repeat the stunt, this time in their home town of Bristol, to the prescient Pied Piper production of ‘Give Me Lots Of Lovin’’ recorded in Detroit by Freddy Butler. The hits doubled. Another selection of quirkily-set dance arenas were used for the next four great slabs of vintage rare soul and then the big one. Set at a nondescript Bristol street corner, Lev begins grooving to Pharrel Williams ‘Happy’ which breaks effortlessly into the Northern Soul classic of the same title by Chicago group Velvet Hammer. That captivating video went viral and has so far notched up more than half a million views. Slightly taken aback by the success of their modest works, Lev’s mum Eve, a 100 Club Northern all-nighter, die-hard back in the 1980s, contacted me about getting some recognition for the artists and music makers on the tracks they were using. The licensing details on some of the music was not always clear-cut and the publishing details could also be problematic, so I suggested they work with an Ace Records controlled track where we could cover them for any licensing eventualities and get recognition to the right people. Of the suggested recordings Lev, who seems to have a taste for the rarer end of the soul spectrum, chose a track by legendary Detroit artist September Jones of which there is only one known acetate copy-featured at the start of the video. Like the Freddy Butler recording used in the second video it was a Pied Piper production and Ace had made a deal with original Funk Brother Jack Ashford and his Pied Piper partner’s successor so the fabulous 1967 recording is featured in the latest installment, graced by Lev’s dance moves and a Spanish brass band. The recording has become hugely popular at the 100 Club all-nighters and now Ace have made the previously unissued track immediately available on download and there is a 7” vinyl Pied Piper single being released in a few weeks as a taster for the 2nd CD volume of the Pied Piper story. Ady Croasdell; Ace/Kent Records http://acerecords.co.uk/voodoo-mademoiselleim-coming-home-mp3 You tube link http://youtu.be/IEaDjc5SLlg Northern Soul Girl Dancing in El Burgo Village in Spain. Featuring the local Band - Bct Ntra Sra de la Encarnación RoburtJan 30 2014 02:10 PM Great video. Much credit goes to all involved. Hope this vid goes viral as well & helps the track sell (& Lev use her talents for her personal benefit). Detroit soul music really has stood 'the test of time' so well. spacehopperJan 30 2014 02:26 PM cheers ady..great tune,been a thread on fb about when this will get a 7" release...good vid too...think lev will be even more popular this weekend at gogo :-) dean Steve LJan 30 2014 02:48 PM Brilliant!! Like Johnny One TroutJan 30 2014 03:01 PM Excellent well done Eve and Lev dancing in the street for real... Trouty x .. Eddie HubbardJan 30 2014 03:16 PM Fabulous stuff , can't wait for this 45 , and the 2nd CD ... autumnstonedJan 30 2014 09:06 PM Love it ! Always have a groove to it myself when its played at the 100 Club. Interesting to see Bob Babbitt's name in the songwriting credits on the label scan. pomonkeyJan 30 2014 09:45 PM First heard this track back in 2011, not here but on a garage site as it was a garage collector, not a soulie, who first got hold of this acetate - and many others - out of Shelley H's archives, glad it's now officially seeing the light of day thanks to Ady and co. ajbJan 30 2014 09:57 PM Cracking tune, can't wait to pick one up. and if there was an advertisement for northern soul for the youth of today, its there. round of applause all round. Ernie AndrewsJan 30 2014 11:14 PM Well done Everyone ! Great Tune! markwJan 31 2014 02:20 AM Great stuff. Like The Phantom JanitorJan 31 2014 04:50 PM Enjoy watching her videos, she always chooses great songs, she's becoming quite a celeb. Like MattJan 31 2014 09:05 PM Well done Levanna, Eve,Ady and all. Living near Bristol I know how passionate Levanna and Eve are about their music and it's great to see people enjoying the music we all love who previously have had no idea what a rare soul tune sounds like. It can only be good news for the artists involved ktf and keep on keeping on! Jim Elliott photo Tape swappers fav Jim ElliottJan 31 2014 09:48 PM Fab. sunnysoulFeb 02 2014 03:20 PM Elaine Constantine really ought to have Levanna busting her moves front and centre at the premiere of the Northern Soul movie later this year .... Mick Reed likes this lynn59soulFeb 15 2014 04:57 PM Great tune when will it be available on vinyl ? Like
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Five months ago a young Northern Soul fan was filmed by her mother dancing along to an excellent but very obscure 60s soul recording on the steps of the Yury Dolguruky Monument in Moscow. 50,000 You Tube hits and lots of enthusiastic, kind words encouraged the girls to repeat the stunt, this time in their home town of Bristol, to the prescient Pied Piper production of ‘Give Me Lots Of Lovin’’ recorded in Detroit by... read more Tap to view this Soul Source News/Article in full
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Not just released in the UK but recorded in London with the Ladybirds backing him! It featured on Kent's 1st Mod Jazz CD
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Do You Feel Sorry For Northern Soul Collectors Starting Out
Ady Croasdell replied to Wiganer1's topic in All About the SOUL
What thread's the Poets story in? -
Vol 1 is deleted so grab it while you can!
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Split them in two and that's the latest ETA, I'm glad I don't work in films; though it'll be worth the wait
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In the mid 1990s musician and record producer, Joe Evans, moved from his New Jersey home to enjoy retirement in Richmond, Virginia. He decided to study the history of black music at Virginia Commonwealth University. After a brief conversation with the lecturer Dr Christopher Brooks, Joe lent him “A Carnival Of Soul” Volume One the first of three Kent CDs of music from Joe’s Carnival label released in the UK. At the next class, after reading the CD booklet notes, Dr Brooks announced to the other students that there had been a mistake; he should be sitting alongside them while Mr Evans taught the class! That relationship would eventually lead the pair to write Joe’s autobiography Follow Your Heart. Joe had a remarkable career. The highlights included playing alto saxophone in the bands of Jay McShann, Lionel Hampton, Cab Calloway, Louis Armstrong and Fats Waller among many others. He was a regular member of the house bands at such legendary black music venues as the Savoy Ballroom and the Apollo Theatre at the very height of their fame; entertaining the dancers and backing the likes of Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, Sam Cooke, Jackie Wilson, Ruth Brown and Clyde McPhatter. After a spell as a record promoter for Ray Charles’ Tangerine label and running his own early 60s R&B label, Cee Jay, with Clarence ‘Jack Rags’ Johnson, he went back on the road with the Choker Campbell Orchestra on the very first Motown Revue. They backed Mary Wells, Marvin Gaye and the Supremes at the start of their illustrious careers, thus helping create a new sound for the nation’s youth. Having tasted the excitement of the independent record business, he was hungry for more and teamed up with his old boss, band-leader Paul Williams, to form Carnival Records in 1962. Originally based in New York, by the time of their big hit with the Manhattans’, ‘I Wanna Be (You’re Everything)’, Paul had left. By the issue of Barbara Brown’s ‘So In Love’ (Carnival 508), the label’s address had switched to his New Jersey home. There he ran the business with his wife Ann taking charge of the mundane but vital office work. She helped groom the acts and acted like a mom for many of the teenage singers. The music continued to be recorded in New York studios but with a younger nucleus of musicians which included guitarist Eric Gale, drummer Bernard ‘Pretty’ Purdie and bass player Jimmy Tyrell, instead of the big band stalwarts Williams had used on the early recordings. The success of the Manhattans dominated the mid-60s releases. When they weren’t recording hits they were helping on background vocals with Barbara Brown and writing songs for their friends and protégés the Lovettes, Phil Terrell, Norma Jenkins and Harry Caldwell. The Manhattans’ sound, which became the Carnival sound, was very much based in doo wop and its inherent strong, simple melodies. The group was blessed with two superb songwriters, Winfred ‘Blue’ Lovett and Edward ‘Sonny’ Bivens. To have witnessed the guys sing at their creative peak must have been a great experience. Needless to say it was Joe Evans’ musical knowledge, experience and talent that got the sound down so well. Apart from his entrepreneurial skills and musical vision, his own songs and collaborations with other writers and singers were of a very high quality. By 1969 the Manhattans had left Carnival to record for the King subsidiary De Luxe. Their potential successors Lee Williams and the Cymbals had also moved on. Joe didn’t find an adequate replacement until 1970 when the Pretenders, a three guys, one girl outfit, cut a rousing, uptempo version of ‘I Wanna Be’ that wowed the dancefloors of the UK’s Northern Soul scene when “discovered” by those DJs a handful of years later. The distinctive Carnival label has been revered by UK 60s soul music lovers since the first copies reached these shores. Prior to the Pretenders popularity here, a four-piece girl group called the Lovettes had, unknown to them, scored a belated dancefloor hit with the scorching ‘Little Miss Soul’, a track that the fans would have called a “monster sound” in the Northern Soul clubs of the early 70s. This song, though written by Blue Lovett, was more in the Motown than the Carnival mould. Adrenaline-powered and feisty, it was tailor-made for Northern Soul all-nighters, where dancers could let themselves go to the Detroit-inspired beat and revel in the glorious harmonies of the sassy girl group. Other cherished tracks for the retro dancers of the UK included the Topics ‘Hey Girl (Where Are You Going)’ and the Metrics ‘Wishes’ both released on the tiny Chadwick subsidiary and now fetching hundreds of dollars to collectors when located. Local school teacher Phil Terrell had two great 45s on the label including the in-demand ‘Love Has Passed Me By’, Norma Jenkins’ ‘Me, Myself And I’ is a beautiful number as is Barbara Brown’s ‘So In Love’ and the rest of the Lovettes, Pretenders and Lee Williams & The Cymbals sides-that’s without counting the fabulous Manhattans. The Carnival label was a guarantee of soul music excellence; drop a needle on any of the singles and it is going to be a listening pleasure. Kent have issued four 24 track CDs, a vinyl album, both Manhattans LPs on one CD and dotted countless other Carnival gems about on Various Artists compilations over the thirty years we have worked with Joe and lately the Westwood Music Group. That project began in the early ‘80s when I flew in to Newark to meet up with Joe for tape research and an interview. I landed just as the Eastern Seaboard was being hit by its worst snow storm for decades. That did not deter Joe and his beautiful and charming wife Annie from driving their big old sedan over several miles of icy roads to meet this total stranger. The journey back to theirs was fun with the car skidding and sliding along serenely. We stopped for lunch at a “surf ‘n’ turf” where Joe and I found we had a shared love of good food. Joe was already taking several pills for his health and Annie was concerned for him, but Joe’s charm and his impish sense of fun earned him a good meal. Eventually living to three years short of a century, I guess he read it about right. That cold spell continued and nobody fancied another slide-a-thon to get me to my hotel so of course the lovely pair offered me the spare room, another good feed and an early start to work the next day. Apart from the priceless tapes and beautiful studio photographs of his acts, Joe showed me two fully signed programmes from the very first Motortown Revues that he played with. He told me stories about playing with Louis Armstrong, performing with John Coltrane and Charlie Parker shortly prior to Parker converting to Bebop. He recalled his times backing the big stars at the Apollo and Savoy, chuckling at stories about Satchmo and how Jackie Wilson jumped off the stage at the Apollo and knocked out three loudmouths who had called him a faggot, all in the instrumental break of the song. Annie treated me like family and a few years later I was happy to attend his 80th birthday party and present him with an award from Ace Records in Europe specifically for his achievements in soul music. It was very sad that he lost Annie a few years later but he soldiered on and I’m sure he continued to entertain, amuse and enlighten through his later years. Ady Croasdell: Ace Records PhilReeves photo Second Issue PhilReevesJan 21 2014 09:35 AM RIP Joe .Thanks for the wonderful music. Like Tony SmithJan 21 2014 09:57 AM RIP Joe Evans, we salute you. soul shrews likes this Like v billbJan 21 2014 11:12 AM Well done Joe Evans and RIP Well wrote and a great tribute, would loved to have watched Jackie Wilson jump off stage and knock out the three loudmouths. Like souljer6Jan 21 2014 11:17 AM The world should salute Joe, and Ady too for bringing it's attention to the beauty of the Carnival label. For me, the greatest music label ever. Trancendental! and I never really properly appreciated it until that series of cds was released. Track after track of otherworldly ....heaven! Thank you Joe. And thank you Ady. ( And what a beautiful obituary; which other Northern promoters have shown that level of love for our music?) peter burke, PhilReeves, billb +1 more like Like soulman chrisJan 21 2014 06:51 PM Thanks Ady for a wonderful obituary and for getting together with Joe to release those sublime soulful tunes recorded on the Carnival record label,those early Manhattens tunes were fantastic..As a tribute to Joe i think i will dig out all the Carnival records and CDs that i have got and play them over the next few days. I also loved the story about Jackie Wilson knocking out the three loadmouths.Wasnt Jackie a great amateur boxer?As well as being a superb singer.. RIP JOE. maccaJan 21 2014 08:24 PM Nice one... I Wanna Be was one of my favourite tracks back then, 1975/6. RIP... rubengijoncatJan 22 2014 02:19 AM R.I.P. Joe & thanks for your music. Nice obituary, well done. richo991Jan 22 2014 07:42 AM RIP Joe your musical talants & experience will never be replaced Richo soul shrewsJan 25 2014 09:20 PM Just back fro a record fair today with a Manhattons 45 on Carnival. The music lives on. Thanks Joe !!! Cheers Paul polyveltsJan 27 2014 08:42 PM A lovely read, well done Ady. RIP Joe and thanks for bringing people such great music ! Like
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An expert saxophonist he played with Charlie Parker, Louis Armstrong and Lionel Hampton as well as being a regular in the house bands of the Apollo and Savoy.He toured with the first ever Motown Revues and recorded The Manhattans, Lovettes, Lee Williams and the Cymbals, Pretenders, Norma Jenkins and many... Tap to view this Soul Source News/Article in full
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I didn't think it was patronising at all Mick. Ady
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Here are 2 extracts from my sleevenotes which don't add that much but a little. I'll speak to Darrell/Rony soon. Priscilla Page’s name was Priscilla Gilmore by the time of her Topper contract. She had already had a release in 1962, ‘My Letter’ / ‘Dreaming’ that came out on Detroit labels Rose G and then Alcor out of NYC. ‘I’m Pretending’ was issued in two forms. We put the original release on CDKEND 154; this is the remix with less percussion and other more subtle changes. ‘Shoo Be Doo Be (Now That You’re Gone)’ is the last of the Topper releases to be issued by Kent (excluding the white rock release by the Decisions). It is admittedly a rather twee duet with Rony Darrel, but still has charm and some good moments. 14. THROW THE POOR DOG A BONE (Dave Hamilton, Rony Darrell, Priscilla Gilmore) PRISCILLA PAGE & PEPE THE POODLE (1965) Dave’s enthusiasm for this song is reflected on the original tape box where he has written “throw the damn dog a bone”. Whether it was the inanity of the song or the problems that he had in adding the barking sound affects, we can’t be sure, but he seemed to have had a hard time with it judging by the number of false start and aborted incomplete versions he left on tape. Priscilla Page (real surname Gilmore) co-wrote it with Dave and Darrell after Louise Sheely, (the wife of one of the label’s backers, Ted Sheely, who played piano on the session) suggested it. It’s a harmless enough girly dancer; if you can stand that barking. Darrell remembers Motown’s Uriel Jones being the drummer on this session. This and the flip ‘I’m Pretending’ were re-mixed and re-pressed by Topper because the original Roberts recording machine that they used left the over-dubbed horns out of synch with the rest of the music.
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Has anyone got a good copy of this I could borrow in return for a bunch of CDs? Ta Ady
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Last night the lovely and extremely talented 97 year old musician and record producer died. An expert saxophonist he played with Charlie Parker, Louis Armstrong and Lionel Hampton as well as being a regular in the house bands of the Apollo and Savoy. He toured with the first ever Motown Revues and recorded The Manhattans, Lovettes, Lee Williams and the Cymbals, Pretenders, Norma Jenkins and many others. He was incredibly kind, friendly and funny and very appreciative of his European admirers
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That's the feller; Discotrons! I've got a great photo of the Harboro skins dancing round one on a Corby estate about 7am summer Sunday morning.
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Excellent info Robb, I'll try and get it in a note one day. Ady
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Sorry Bob, I was going to look it up today but got carried away with a new tape discovery! I'll check on Monday and can ring up Darrell Goolsby her singing partner for a catch up. He was in the Steppers, you may know him. Ady
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Ever Done Anything Drastic In The Name Of Soul
Ady Croasdell replied to mark and donna's topic in All About the SOUL
Ha. Sameish area, probably around 72 I went to see Frankie Valli when You're Ready Now was a hit at the Cali in Dunstable. Hitched it there and a grebo van stopped and let me in the back with them. They hadn't noticed my crombie as I'd got very long hair and proceeded to tell me how they kicked all the local skins in around their area. I had bright red socks under my sta prest and brogues and was trying to cover them up the whole trip. They were either having a laugh or incredibly dumb; I got away unscathed.