Jump to content

Geeselad

Members
  • Posts

    4,023
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    20
  • Feedback

    100%

Everything posted by Geeselad

  1. I'm not being specific, just most influential! Harlem shuffle had to be a great call.
  2. Worldwide, the Most influential in not just soul but any genre. bobby parker was influential in terms of rock as well as the development of black music
  3. Thanks for all the contributions so far. Plenty of worthy suggestions, some I don't know but will listen to everything suggested. I was born in 1969 so often don't get the context of the market/ music scene at the time and find this stuff really useful. Please keep them coming
  4. Thanks, I honestly didn't know that but can see the significance. I'm assuming Clyde mcphatter on lead there, what a strong lead vocal.
  5. Good call, not just on black music, I saw Alex Harvey talking in an interview about how influential that record was, in Hamburg at the time of release.
  6. Looking forward to it, sunny Biddle! Never had a green room before.
  7. Always source of interest for me, I often try to pin down the records that would have formed the models for most black music of the 60's, you have to limit it to sone extent, 70's to follow perhaps. I used rhythm and blues in the most general terms, records aimed at or created by black Americans. Be they funk, soul, R&B, gospel ect. Anything goes here. I'll start with a few I'd suggest as crucial to the development of black music, although pretty obvious, there must be loads more to go at. Be great to have you top 5's, year would be nice too. Wilson pickett- midnight hour - stax studios 1965 Fontella bass- rescue me- chess 1965 Bobby parker - watch your step- V tone Washington 1961 Friends of distinction - grazing in the grass- RCA 1969 Temptation - I know I'm loosing you - Motown 1966
  8. Listen at 20 seconds or so to this editing! Someone who wasn't great at splicing tapes.
  9. There's a track by fats Domino, that uses a very similar backing track, could almost sound like the vocal, just wondering if that's what your missus heard covered up? Was it the instrumental she heard?
  10. It's by baby earl and the Trinidad's if it's the instrumental you missus heard. Few on discogs starting around £300 not sure it's been pressed
  11. Well just over a week big event for this mighty little town
  12. Obviously I can't check the CU's but some great soul music there, and perfect for Sunday afternoons, however hope I never heard any at an all-nighter, they'd just kill any energy in the room for me. I love some 70's and 80's sounds but the tempo and production that's reflected in some DJs taste is a real turn off, where's the cajones?
  13. See if I can make this one, well done on making it to you first anniversary guys.
  14. I think your searching for a definition that's impossible for anyone to define. If it's not 60's and post 1970 northern then someone will define it as modern, somewhere, it's a looser term than the nuts in Dave envision's record trolly.
  15. Last call for tomorrow. Some people are really passionate about this tits night, we do just three a year. Come listen and dance from 9pm.
  16. It's alright, not as good as the original, to cite and northern soul cliche. However it's id probably sooner here it than black box, Lisa Stanfield, soulutions, Dina carol or a host of other, 'dance-light' productions that are staples at northern soul nights across the country.
  17. Here's something I'll be giving a spin on Saturday at some point,
  18. And finally Dean Read; Dean was one of our first choices when we set up the night, playing at our first event almost 12 months ago. Dean's played just about everywhere on the upfront circuit over the years as well as being involved in the sadly missed go go children all-nighter in Bristol. Expect quality rhythm, soul and funk from a guy who always has something decidily original to play.
  19. Just remembered I saw him do this live at trentham all-nighter.
  20. Quality! Those off kilter stabs work so well, his voice that ominous rumble of bass. Yes! More like it.
  21. I'm not sure yet, going to play this more, before I decide if I like it. I was buying stuff similar to this 10 years ago as new releases, I do like the production and there definitely soul in there.
  22. Steve Cato; Steve's nights in Manchester ' nothing but soul' and 'different strokes' for me and many others introduced a new world of music people and possibilities. Since then he's gone on to be heavily involved in the much loved Manchester international soul weekender. He's a one off, and sadly don't play out enough anymore, but you can here him in a certain dark basement this weekend.


×
×
  • Create New...