
Stevesilktulip
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The problem with the critics of Thatcher is that they always pick on the wrong things to criticise. Do we really want our children to leave school and get a job working underground? I grew up in Durham City but most of my friends lived in pit villages round about and I spent a lot of time in them and frankly, they were all dives. Her lasting legacy is that everything is now about her favourite son - Blairs 3 favourite things in the world: jobs, the economy, childcare. In other words, everything’s about money. Right now we’re constantly being reminded how awful the seventies were after years of being told of the great debt we owe to the sixties generation, far more than those who won 2 world wars. They must have been somewhere else ( as usual ) because I remember the seventies as fantastic, and think of the majority of baby-boomers as the greatest manifestation of mass culture outside Nazi Germany and terrible squares, entirely under the spell of the newly emergent mass media. Briefly in the late sixties and early/ mid-seventies, the people took culture back and, while most people were listening to media/ radio/ commercial/ chart music, they weren’t deluding themselves they were at the cutting edge of culture, which they knew was occupied by either Rock or Soul/Funk at that time. Ironically, it was essentially punkrock that gave power back to the media and the Man. To my mind, the year she came to power — 1979 - was the year it all went horribly wrong. It was also the year I came out from under the shirt-tails of my older brother and Alex. Alex was still in residency at the Coach and Eight in Durham but the Classic Street Funk Bands had all but sighed their last breaths, P Funk was becoming increasingly contrived and was about to implode, and even the new wave of Funk Bands, led by Cameo, Brass Construction, the Brothers Johnson and Con Funk Shun had pretty much ran out of ideas. Alex had turned even further towards Jazz Funk, but still calling it Jazz, which was becoming interminably mindless and atonal, but in a non-musical way, and I just remember hearing endless strained alto solos exemplified by Dave Sanborn, the inheritor of Grovers crown. That year the BBC provided significant coverage of the Montreux Jazz Festival and especially headliner Sonny Rollins - perhaps the greatest Jazz Artist still with us. This was like Grover without the Funk and led to my snobbery towards Jazz Funk and my exploration of the Real Thing ( you to me are everything the sweetest song that I can sing oh baby ). Eventually I would realise it was OK to like both. The same year I bought Steel Pulse Handsworth Revolution from a friend and it completely blew me away. I was familiar with Bob Marleys post Peter/ Bunny pop stuff and novelty records about lollipops and Israelites but that was it. I caught up with Steel Pulse and Matumbi too before the Rebel Music and Creation Rockers compilations catapulted me into the world of Jamaican Music the following year and the rest — as they say - is history. In terms of Soul Music, 79 was the year I consolidated Curtis, Womack, Al Green and others beyond the ‘ hits ‘ which laid the foundations for my discovery of people like Sam Dees, Luther Ingram, OV Wright and ZZ Hill the following year. However, most people I knew were going in an opposite direction and it may seem hard to attribute this to Thatcher but Culture works in mysterious and complex ways and change is never due solely to the ‘ inventor ‘ who has the ism added to their name. When I pronounced my revulsion of the Specials and Madness, I was told it was a natural progression from Northern Soul to Funk to Two Tone, while I just thought ( and think ) of it as glorified punkrock. Some people had hung on to Northern through ( Jazz ) Funk and this was where they got off, which is ironic since others now consider this a stepping stone to Northern the way Motown was for many of my generation. Nobody I knew who was into Northern Soul in 76 was still there by the birth of the new decade. The point was that in the year of her accession, people who ought to have known better were abandoning the ideology and discourse which had determined their cultural choices, in favour of Mass Culture and the market. Basically, it became possible to think you were ‘ cool ‘ even if your preferences were for the stuff all over the media like a rash, just so long as you could point to something else you could claim was even more commercial and naff: new romantics, electro pop, boy/ girl bands, Cowell creations. I’ll take the perfect pop of Abba, Take That, the Spice Girls and Girls Aloud over the naughty pop/rock/ and roll of the Stones, Blur, Oasis and Arctic Monkeys any day. When I was doing the Manor House, the whole point was No More Excuses. Attracting the regions leading Soul Fans removed the necessity to play the same old in-demand, big, cutting edge records. As they made their excuses, supporters would tell me you have to play what people want but I always responded that I didn’t have any Abba, Beatles, Queen, Robbie Williams and Oasis records. Where do you draw the line? In the wake of Thatcherism, the northern scene initially withdrew into itself and did a lot of naval gazing, the response being the preference for an expensive record over a brilliant one. I have gone on about this at length elsewhere so won’t dwell on it here. However, it seemed to me as a 12/13/14/15 year old in the early/ mid-seventies, that we were interested solely in the Music. I recall Soul Self Satisfaction and Seven Day Lover gaining British release and the wave of sympathy for those who had recently paid stupid ( for those days ) money on them. Bill Swift was the person who had Afternoon on the Rhino, but once it gained British release, that was it. Nowadays, reissues don’t seem to have any impact on market forces, or if they do, they increase the value. I recall watching the poll tax riots at a Weekender and her resignation at another and it may have seemed that Soul Music had prevailed. Then we got Blair; how awful is that? When John Peel died, it almost immediately became OK to say you didn’t like punkrock, or that you like Prog Rock which is now suffering a revival comparable to that of Northern Soul, but with new bands prohibiting the canonisation of the classic years. Ironically, this offers far more justification for vinyl over alternatives because of the significance of album sleeves. It would be great to see some retreats from the excesses of Thatcherism following her death. In my view, and many others too, the bottom will fall out of the vinyl market so flog em quick would be my advice. The Thatcherite Right love to claim the ‘ Old Left ‘ is dead, but Academia is essentially based on Marxism and the theories which have rationalised it since. Politicians of all persuasions tend to be sceptical of Academia because Academics deal in truths which are inconvenient to them. Also, like artists and poets, Academics tend to be half a century ahead of society. Long after GDPs and GNPs and interest rates and inflation and strikes and trade union reform and poll tax riots and regulations and deregulations and nationalisation and denationalisation and employment and unemployment and EU rebates and North Sea Oil and the sale of council houses and the Falklands are all part of the history books, Thatcher will be remembered for destroying the Traditional Nuclear Family. Prior to Thatcher, the vast majority of children were brought up almost entirely by their Mothers and Fathers; babysitting was mostly a Saturday night thing and got the teenage girl up the street a fiver and somewhere to pet with her boyfriend; and childcare barely existed. Thatchers ‘ big idea ‘ which was taken up by Brown and Blair, was that Traditional Families are no longer economically viable within late/ high/ advanced capitalism, which is best served by parents earning and spending money, including on childcare, and retired grandparents being absorbed into the family unit to provide resident childcare and spending more on birthdays, Christmas, holidays etc. than they otherwise would have. The media will tell you this has always been the case or used to be the case with the golden age the C19th but check your Austen and Eliot. Culture always works by convincing people that something has always been this way because it’s natural, normal, universal, inevitable, obvious and common sense. Apparently the whole of Britain and America have worshipped the Beatles continuously since 1962 and 1964 respectively. Nowadays, most children are brought up by a conglomerate including their mother, her parents, their father, his parents, nannies, nurseries and child-minders which doesn’t seem to afford them the freedom we had to explore and develop interests, including Music, as they’re shuttled about among people with questionable interest in them and who are probably total nerds anyway. I think I’m right in saying her children didn’t like her very much and liked the country she bequeathed to us even less and her relationship with their children was mostly by photograph. Politicians, ( ironically, with the exception of Jazz Loving Ken Clarke, one of her leading ministers in her final years but ultimately her Judas ) tend not to have lives outside their jobs and think we should all do likewise, and this is the real legacy of Thatcher and her children, including Blair, Brown, Cameron, Osbourne and the Eds - Milliband and Up. So, our children will have lousy music, compilations of their favourite sing-along chunes compiled from the mass media, and their lives and their childrens lives dominated by their mother in law. Rock n Roll Man. ( Almost ) state funeral? I’d have had her kept in cold storage and sent to Shotton Colliery on Halloween, ready for Bonfire Night.
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News: Wholly Holy and Epilogue
Stevesilktulip replied to Stevesilktulip's topic in Front Page News & Articles
Ron Banks, Sam Dees, Frankie Beverley, Alex Lowes, Paul Cook, Rob Bogie ( the third midwife of the weekenders, who introduced me to his girlfriend as a ' living legend ' ) and lots of other names that would mean nothing to you is not quite the self praise you would like it to be. I think the point is that no matter how good you are, people prefer rubbish on vinyl Most of these events happened long before I got a degree and I don't recognise any issue about formats. I'm not saying people should play CDs ahead of vinyl, I'm saying it's not an issue. Your comments merely reinforce the general thrust of the article. Can I add ' cutting edge ' to my list of rare, in-demand, valuable, big records. I'm not terribly intersted in this sort of thing, I just like the Music. You're trying to impose systems of thought I don't recgnise; and trust me, Razzy at Seasons, which is essentially a glorified nightclub, is going some. Words like Straw, Clutching and At spring to mind. Just to prove I'm the Peter Jackson of the Music Forum, something fascinating happened at Hoochie Coochie. Seckou Kouyate played an electrified Kora. I better repeat that in case you thought you'd misread - AN ELECTRIFIED KORA. I've heard a number of Kora players in my time, I've heard them amplified but I've never heard one electrified. The Kora is an ancient and sacred instrument and electrifying it is like putting a harp through a wah wah or setting fire to a sitar on stage. I don't have a problem with this but I don't impose limitations on Music, plus it sounded great, but Hoochie Coochie have a - shall we say - opportunistic approach to technology. It's a great venue for live music though, particularly if you get the act between you and the brick wall behind the stage, you caan easily imagine you're in a Blues Club in Chicago. Even the obligatory swearing and drug boasting by the popstar he was paired with didn't detract from a great night. All of the acts I've seen there have been great: Azymuth, Charles Walker, Fatback Band, Leon Ware and Jean Carn although Jean Carn fell apart a little in the middle when she asked for requests. Irma Thomas does something similar but her band seem to know all of her vast back catalogue. It was a relief she can still sing unlike Leon Ware who was somewhat carried by his backing singer. The tracks off I Want You, and particularly the title track were the highlights. Missed Tashan, Rose Royce, Alex Oneal and Candi Staton due to other commitments or lack of funds. My brother said Rose Royce and Alex Baby were excellent and I know one person who said Candi was rubbish, though my brother saw her in Manchester and said she was great so I imagine the othe person didn't get the Muscle Shoals stuff I imagine she would do, probably alternating with Young Hearts. Luckily the Toon crowd always step up to the mark to fill the blanks left by the Soul Folk and the owner must be wondering who he needs to put on to get them there; except them. For anybody else with a bellyfull of the politics on the Soul Scene, there's lots of great music going on up and down the country every week. In his autobiography, Bill Bruford, erstwhile drummer in Yes, King Crimson, ( Hackett era ) Genesiss, UK and others - but like all the great Rock drummers, with the spirit of Jazz - reckons Cheltenham is one of the two best Jazz Festivals in the country ( though I can't remember the other. Gregory Porter is doing the saturday and, despite two fair albums, each with a standout track, one of which isn't that great, several people have told me he's stunning live, one even compaaring him to Sam Dees at Fleetwood and the first time he saw Frankie Beverley. It's sold out but I believe you can get on a returns list.. Unbelievably, Johns son Ravi Coltrane, also on the saturday, hasn't sold out. Technically he's not as all conquering as his father, but who is? As an innovator, he isn't going to split the atom like his father, but who has? He has a string of fine Jazz albums which are subtle, tasteful and contemporary. Other days have Madeliene Peyroux, a sort of Billie Holliday update for self proclaimed ' serious ' pop people; recently bankrupted Dionne Warwick so I don't know how that works; Polar Bear, from the Soft Macine end of British Jazz and they're great; Van Morrison who doesn't seem to be able to decide these days whether he's Britains answer to Bob ( Waiting For ) Dylot ( they love me on the nerd sites too ) or Irelands answer to Muddy Waters ( in his dreams ). Most important is legendary vibraphonist Gary Burton, one of the prime movers in the emergence of Jazz Rock in the mid/ late sixties whose band spawned Larry Coryell who was Clapton to John McLaughlins Hendrix. Current thinking is that if I make 70, I'll don the disguise and do the rounds on the Soul Scene again and I'm genuinely hopeful fingers will be out, boxes ticked, I's dotted, T's crossed and all S's capitalised.l -
Wholly Holy — Religious symbolism on the Soul Scene. Bricks and Mortar: Wheel, Torch, maybe Mecca, Catacombs, Cleethorpes but predominantly Wigan. Stafford may be coming through and 100 Club if it ever closes, but if they do, I’ll be making a case for Dunelm House and the Three Tuns. Tied in to the all-nighter thing is the issue of substances, and while anyone who knows me will confirm I’m no prude when it comes to these matters, it’s unfortunate it’s become part of the mythology of the scene in the seventies, like it was obligatory; while many of us preferred late nights and all-dayers to early mornings.By far the most divisive and destructive ritual on the scene is the worship of vinyl and I can’t believe I’m still writing about this. Admittedly, Music is my religion, but my mission is to hear as much as possible, not to worship artefacts. Not only is vinyl not the life blood of Soul Music but it’s choking the life out of Soul Music. If Messrs Womack, Green or Dozier want to tell me it’s OK to listen to Jazz, Reggae, Blues etc. on CD, but I have to switch to vinyl to play Soul, I’ll tell them to stop being so stupid.Vinylism is another incidence of discursive practice, whereby those ‘ in the know ‘ are elevated above the rest of us, although none of them can ever tell you why it matters, except to say it’s obvious, normal, natural, inevitable, universal or common sense. I’ve even heard people bemoaning the proliferation of politics in Soul Music and then protest about CDs, which is staggering. There’s a very famous essay from the sixties called the Medium is the Message by Marshall McLuhan. It was recently discussed on a TV programme where it was claimed they didn’t know what it means and didn’t think the author knew either. I think the author did know and, as an active Soul Fan, I know what it means and the issue of vinyl on the Soul Scene is one of the best examples. For some on the Soul Scene, and not as many as they would have you believe, the act of playing vinyl is more important than the music it generates. Computers are another case in point where the act of using a computer may be more important than anything you might do with it. Often on the music forums, you come across people who are clearly about as interested in Music as I am in football. It has been commented that nobody ever changes their mind about vinyl, but Colin Curtis has and I have and lots of others too. Some people seem to think that in the seventies we selected vinyl from a range of alternatives, but there weren’t any alternatives and in my experience, the majority of people who were doing it then don’t care. One I can think of, but I doubt if anybody would take him too seriously. It’s important that those of us who aren’t simply going along with it, shout from the rooftops so vinyl apparatchiks can’t turn it into our problem — it’s their problem - and this includes not humouring people by sticking a slice of vinyl on the turntable while playing a CD, or telling them they’re entitled to their opinion. Like the Emperors New Clothes, it just takes one. Opinion is nowadays used as an excuse for all sorts of things, but how seriously can we take an opinion whereby music is judged by the format it’s played on. Of course people are entitled to the opinion that the sound quality is better with vinyl, and they can choose not to reconcile their own vinyl collection with their ‘ interest ‘ in Music, but it has nothing to do with them how others choose to play Music; that would be fascism. I’ve had people who know absolutely nothing about Soul with no interest in it whatsoever telling me it’s an integral part of the culture; but who says? Chatting with someone recently who did ns in the mid-seventies but now listens to allsorts on vinyl, CD, computer and live, and he thinks it’s ok for ns people to insist on vinyl if that’s what they think. However, who are the people who think this and who gets to decide who the arbiters of ns culture are? As Super Hans says in Peep Show, you can’t trust people; people voted for the nazi party, people like Coldplay. Taken to an extreme, you could say it was OK for the Nazis to kill Jews or for paedophiles to have sex with toddlers. OK so I’m using hyperbole to illustrate a point, but why should people who essentially missed it, who have nothing more than a second hand myth about NS which has emerged since, get to decide what ns culture is and threaten the legacy and the future by turning it into a joke amongst the wider Music community. I know someone who went to Wigan in its final years, bought a few records, the ones Soft Cell covered being favourites, but hasn’t been to a Soul Night or bought a Soul Record since, but still knows it’s not the real deal if you don’t hear the needle hit the plastic.Somebody else got into Soul in the late sixties, played a significant role in transforming it from whatever it was into what those of us of a certain vintage recognise as NS; is widely recognised as number 2 from that Golden Age, and has been an enormously important and influential DJ ever since. Who are any of us to tell Colin Curtis how he should play Music? There are very few certainties in Art and Music but Curtis has 3: Mayfield is the greatest lyricist ever, Superfly is the finest soundtrack ever, and it makes no difference to you that Curtis plays CDs; not a matter of taste or opinion, not a topic for discussion, it just doesn’t matter. Other important players who at least touch base with CDs are the late Dave Godin, Searling, Levine, Chris Hill, Ralph Tee, Russ Winstanley, Tim Brown, Ady Croasdale, Terry Jones, Paul Mooney and Keb Darge and my guess is that some of them, either openly or secretly, are as bewildered as the rest of us by the prejudice. I have always said, 3 years of NS in the mid-seventies is worth 36 years since, and I won’t be taking lessons in Soul from anybody who started in the nowties or nineties or eighties or late seventies, or anyone who’s always been in the wrong place at the wrong time, or took a 30 year hiatus, or have never seen a live band, or buys the occasional record(ing), irrespective of what they pay for it. Come to think of it, I won’t be taking lessons on any music from anybody. If we were to line up the most important names on the Soul Scene in the NE, even before the weekenders, Alex gets bronze, silver and gold. . Accept no substitutes, I was the youngest person on that scene by a couple of years for a couple of years. In fact, the demographic of ns nights hasn’t changed for me except that the grownups are no longer 15 and 16 but 50 and 60. . There is hardly anybody else left who has been around more or less continuously ever since. . I’m on video shaking hands with Frankie Beverly. . I was instrumental in the emergence of the weekenders, probably second only to Alex. . When Sam Dees first arrived at Fleetwood he asked for me by name ( which went down well with Alex ). One of the Dramatics told me I have a good ear for Music. . I’ve seen more live acts than anyone I know ( even if you include endless one hit wonders at countless weekenders ). . I’m fluent in all areas of Black Music except Gospel, perhaps because of my atheism, and hip hop which I consider the punkrock of Black Music. . I am almost as prolific in Jazz, Rock, Blues and Reggae and listen to almost every genre of Music you can name. . I have nurtured 2 multi-instrumentalist sons, one an exceptional guitarist. . I am educated to degree level in Cultural Studies. Anybody in the NE with more impressive credentials without getting paid? So if I don’t have anything to prove to the rest of the NE and Curtis doesn’t have anything to prove to the rest of the world, how come we don’t decide. It seems to me, for the majority of vinyl worshippers, the reason for their disdain of CDs is that they are just not sufficiently interested in Music to either replace or maintain multiple formats, while I know many people who buy CDs but maintain their vinyl collection too. It’s only the real obsessives who just can’t help ourselves and buy everything. For years I wouldn’t buy 12” singles because I feared they would contaminate my albums, but eventually had to put the Music ahead of some misplaced ideology. Updating formats is a good opportunity to clear out the rubbish which inevitably accumulates. There are many recordings I have had on multiple formats: Live in New Orleans I have had on cassette, vinyl, VHS, CD and DVD ( and LA on all but cassette ). People might say I have a special relationship with Maze, having given me the best 5 concerts I’ve ever seen ( I’ve seen them 8 times ), but there are many artists I’m complete in and lots of things I’ve had on multiple formats. Having an open mind to alternative formats is extraordinarily liberating, alleviating the inclination to always play big, in-demand, rare, valuable records. I always hated it when people wanted me to play Curtis Anderson, not because it’s particularly extraordinary, but because it was one of only a handful of copies in the country. This doesn’t mean you don’t play lesser known Music but it levels the playing field so the ideology, sport, economics, religion and politics dissipate and you play the best Music you can. Anybody with a passion and thirst for Music will tell you it’s always a work in progress. When I discovered Amazon ( ssss ) I could suddenly buy about 80 albums I’d been unable to find on vinyl or from the usual outlets, which was fantastic(ally expensive ). My shift at work begins with at least an hour checking the nearly 600 items in my basket to see what I need to buy because it looks like it may go up in price or disappear altogether. During a recent hot spell, I bought an album on vinyl by mistake and didn’t know what to do with it, half expecting it to warp in the heat or break. It cost me £10 but is £300 plus on CD which is increasingly becoming the norm. When I saw Charles Walker at Hoochie Coochie, somebody told me they had his latest album on vinyl while I had 3 on CD. When I bought the latest on the night his wife asked me why I didn’t pay an extra £3 for vinyl and, without thinking, I said cos it’s an antique, prefixing it with an expletive. I realised at that moment I was no longer prepared to encourage, indulge, humour or patronise anyone whose interest in Soul Music is not unconditional, including nights with a vinyl only policy. I would have had to carry it around a busy night club and a lively city centre when I could slip a CD in my pocket and play it on the way home. Not only is it easier to access far more music, but it’s more practical. I have dozens of acts I’m working through their back catalogues chronologically, while back in the days of vinyl, you would end up with key albums or a best of. For instance, I never bought Leroy Hutson albums because they weren’t considered very good, but it turns out each had one or two sublime tracks. Generally, ahead of a live concert, I just buy the entire back catalogue, which you could never do with vinyl from a single source. One day the post man said to me — only one today — and I realised I had a problem. Imagine trying to do that with vinyl. There’s nothing clever about making it even more difficult by erecting an artificial barrier for purely ideological reasons. Anybody remember 78s? Anybody remember 54s? Anybody know anyone who still plays 78s? Things change get over it. Does anybody seriously think manufacturers will continue to produce record players for a few ns dinosaurs? Does anybody seriously think if CDs had happened first, vinyl would have ever got invented. Ironically, while vinyl is becoming antique, CDs are already obsolete. Yes the pop nerds like to harp on about vinyl but that’s because they too are not sufficiently interested to replace them and are perfectly happy to play new music on CD or computer. And the Soul Scene in the Sixties and Seventies was built on a desire for separation from pop nerds, if often a touch naively. I recently discovered that vinyl was developed specifically to sound good on the radio which might explain why the sound quality at ns nights seems so poor now, which we wouldn’t have realised at the time When Alex and I saw Genesis in 73 ( complete with exploding Peter Gabriel ), it remained the best gig I saw until Teddy Pendergrass almost a decade later, and it’s only when you see footage of that tour now that you realise how poor the sound quality was back then. I note jukeboxes are making yet another comeback and this is another example of people who like the idea of Music more than Music so they need something additional to cling to. In the eighties, more discerning listeners noted that MTV and music videos reduced the significance of the music in favour of the visual. Recently I found some vinyl and the shop where I sell CDs were really enthusiastic. While I was there, they told me they sell more vinyl than CDs but only bought 4 vinyl albums ( Yes, Wishbone Ash, Chic and Richard Pryor ), didn’t even look at the singles and bought all the CDs apart from Steps and Michael Buble. While looking through the vinyl, he said the Swamp Dogg album was too late in his career but bought the exact same album on CD without flinching. People like the idea of vinyl; they like the idea of all-nighters, of substances, of the sixties, of Swamp Dogg, and of white musicians at Muscle Shoals. People who collect stamps don’t stick them on envelopes, people who like steam trains still use locomotives, and people with vintage cars generally also have a modern vehicle. As Soul Fans, is that all we aspire to, trainspotting and stamp collecting? By all means have a hobby, but don’t confuse it with Music and don’t let it encroach on others love of Music. If Soul Music manages to survive, future generations will be bewildered that otherwise intelligent people preferred to listen to rubbish on vinyl than the finest Soul Music known to man on alternative formats. Ironically, when I first moved to West Yorkshire I was down to cassettes and the locals, armed with their new high tech CD players, would mock me and I would point out that they were listening to Meatloaf, Madness and Mercury ( Freddie ) while I was listening to Malaco, Miles and Mahavishnu. I bumped in to my rocker friend at the Haddaway gig. He hadn’t contacted me since the Steve Howe Jazz Trio five years ago when I told him I hadn’t seen Steve Howe for 35 years, ostensibly cos he thought I was fibbing but actually because he knew I wasn’t. He understands I’m way ahead of him on Soul, likes to think we’re matched on Jazz, Reggae and Blues ( in his dreams ), consoles himself he’s much better at pop, but can’t handle that I’m ahead of him on Rock. When I told him I’d seen Haddaway before, been to a Blues Festival in Switzerland, seen Sabbath and Metallica at Donnington, Pentangle, Santana twice, two Yes tribute bands, four ( Gabriel Era ) Genesis tribute bands and supergroup Transatlantic ( featuring members of Dream Theater, Spocks Beard, Flower Kings and Marillion ), he sent me a Duke Ellington 26 CD box set and a Weather Report concert, all on computer discs he knew I wouldn’t have the wherewithal to access. Everybody’s at it whatever the format, and this was his way of articulating power over me; but I faced the beast almost 2 decades ago and the Weather Report DVD has been in my basket since its release. The Jazz community ( and I don’t mean Soul people who dabble ) are notoriously prickly regarding change, but this has always been to do with the Music. They too were iffy about CDs but only because of availability, and once that played in their favour, it was more or less universally accepted. At one time they didn’t like bebop but once behind them, they turned against Louis Armstrong because of all that grinning for whitey. Bird and Satchmo are now both rated among the top 4 Jazz Artists ever. For a long time, they didn’t like electric instruments but the guitar needed electricity to get heard in live performance, and then in the seventies John McLaughlin tore it up beyond anything Charlie Christian could have ever imagined. Nowadays, guitar, electric piano and bass and syncopated horns are accepted by all except the extreme dinosaurs. I recall fondly some indie boy explaining to me that Sex is used to sell hip hop and R+B, like when the punkrock/ indie / Britpop bands scowl and swear and snarl and smoke and swagger, it’s all real. I know what I’d rather watch. People listen to Franz Ferdinand because they wear their guitars around their chests and Foals because they’re called Foals and not the Foals, while I prefer bands who wear their guitars around their wastes and bands who have ‘ the ‘ before their names. Then there’s Elvis and SinAtra who were brilliant until others began writing ‘ their own ‘ songs when they became passé. The Monkies were brilliant until it came out they didn’t play ‘ their own ‘ instruments when they became rubbish, even though the Beatles, using their veto, didn’t play ‘ their own ‘ trombones on All you need is love. The Beatles were teeny, then passé, then cult after Lemon got assassinated which ultimately led to them being all things to all people. Zappa and Beefheart were visionary til it turned out they didn’t use drugs after all when they became novelty. Punkrock was ‘ just garbage man ‘ til years later when the fans voices had broken it became revolutionary. All meaningless twaddle of course which, like vinyl, has nothing to do with Music and, collectively, constitutes a serious enditement on music in this country. The only other comparable issue I deal with is tribute bands, although there is clearly more justification for objection. The economic base infiltrates all culture and the issue of vinyl is related to the capitalist preoccupation with ownership — my eldest son is sentimental about CDs in the same way we were about vinyl but my youngest is quite happy to download. The issue of tribute bands is related to another capitalist preoccupation - genius. The key text is Death of the Author by Roland Barthes — nationalty? ( Millie, she’s making me mad Millie ). I’m sure some vinyl bigots relate it to Fine Art and the need for it to be the original which was touched by the artist/ genius; but vinyl is no closer to the artist than CDs or computer downloads, and live music is much closer than all of them. In terms of jouissance, one of the most powerful experiences I ever had was a live performance of Rites of Spring, perhaps the most important piece of music of C20th ( though I have always preferred Petrushka and the Finale to Firebird ); hugely influential, not just in Modern Classical Music, but Jazz, Rock and grown-up pop — an oxymoron in my view. Nobody expected Stravinsky to arrive and start shaking his stick around, not least because he died in the seventies at a grand old age. So why is Blues based music less ‘ worthy ‘ ? The answer of course is that people like the idea of music but aren’t really that interested so are looking for excuses. Incidentally, I don’t own a kindle ( though missus Silk does ) but this is as much because I already have hundreds of books, as my lack of confidence in something out there in the ether. In defence of vinyl, and maintaining the Marvin Gaye theme, I’ve just played I want You on CD for the first time, ahead of Leon Ware, and it sounds disjointed with the short burst of I Wanna be where you are that ends side 1 vinyl followed immediately by the short intro to the title track that kicks off side 2. However, the album always sounded murky to these ears before the CD edition. Similarly, on some albums a particular track makes a great closer and there are many examples of tracks which close side 1 vinyl but seem adrift in the middle of a CD. Furthermore, CD’s have a tendency to be too long. When I Touched a Dream came out, their best album in a number of years, my brother was a massive Teddy Pendergrass fan and arguments inevitably raged about whether Teddy or Marvin Junior were the greater singer. My brother resorted to criticising the album on the basis that it was too short, but artists nowadays try to make their albums 50 to 60 minutes long and seldom maintain the quality and interest throughout. When CDs first arrived I was big on Anita Baker and I remember saying I would get a CD player when Songstress, Rapture and, would you believe, What’s Going On came out. Ironic that Sam Dees has just arrived at last, which we probably thought would never happen. How things have changed. Inner City Blues — MAKES ME WANNA HOLLER. While writing this, Mrs Silk asked whether it is part of the book or just a rant. I want the book to be about all the Music I’ve listened to in my life and not just Soul, although Soul is inevitably prevalent. While I am largely in control of what I listen to, Music does have some autonomy and for the last 2 ½ years, Soul has been dominant, after about 20 years of flitting about between genres. This article is therefore a bit of a diversion while the book is temporarily on hold until I can bring more balance to it. I therefore allowed this part, with licence from Marvins subtitle, to turn into a bit more of a rant. Once over I couldn’t get me on to Soul Source but then, with a little help from my youngest, I couldn’t go on without seeing myself in triplicate. People keep asking who I am and who I think I am and unusually for the Soul Scene, they’re remarkably similar, so by way of setting the record straight. If there is a more complete Soul Fan in the NE I haven’t come across them yet, and I would have. There are some who scratch the surface and others who dig a little deeper. Some know the obvious stuff, others explore lesser known stuff, and some only know the in-demand stuff. Others are more Jazz Funk and some listen to related and comparable Music like Blues, Jazz and Reggae. Others pick off the sixties, some the seventies and others like newer stuff. Some go to live gigs and others go to Soul Nights. Some people only buy singles and others only albums, some only vinyl and others only CDs while some buy DVDs as well and others don’t buy anything. Some people stay local, others travel and some do it all from home. Some read about it, others may read some Black American Literature, and some might even watch the odd Blaxploitation Film. Nobody else has the lot to anything like the same degree. In the seventies and eighties, John Powney and Paul Mooney were the Big Beasts, but I don’t think John’s been anywhere since the eighties and Paul since the seventies; and I don’t know if either have ever seen a live act, and there’s only so far even someone of their stature can go from the luxury of a computer console, or in Johns case a typewriter. I reiterate again how vital live performance is in Music appreciation. Like a grounding in Cultural Studies, live performance can invoke heightened jouissance which will circumvent existing ideology and preconceptions. And there’s nothing quite like it ( except Sex natch ). In Folk Music, I only really like half a dozen Folk Rock Bands and a couple of local chicks but I can still really enjoy it live. While I was a ‘ serious soul boy ‘ everybody got into Kid Creole and I had to be persuaded to go and see him live but he turned out to be a great performer who I’ve seen twice more since. Conversely, sometimes people like the idea of a particular act but only realise how rubbish they are when they see them live. Don’t get me wrong, I loved my NS years - but one resentment - I didn’t see a single live act between George McCrae in 74 and the Commodores in early 78, and imagine who I might have seen in that period. I recall going to an all-dayer at the Mecca to see Eddie Kendricks which I think would have been 77, but he didn’t show. And before you knock George, he was Big Stuff in 74 and Dave Godin no less had Rock your Baby in his Top Ten albums ever at that time. However, the only sure fire way of attaining the next level is a thorough understanding of how culture works. A course in Philosophy is great but perhaps the most difficult to apply to Music. Cultural Studies is ideal and will likely feature Music but even a good Media Studies course, which would definitely include Music, would suffice. Politicians and journalists love to rubbish Media Studies but this is because the Media is the most potent Ideological State Apparatus they have, and the last thing they want are people who, as Captain Beefheart says, have too much to think. I’ve done all three. One of the benefits of an education which teaches you how to think and not just what to think, is that it enables you to grasp constants so you can see into the future, while most people only have a distorted view of the past and the present. In the eighties I was always keen to associate with John and Paul ( though not George and Ringo ) because I knew I would always learn something and hear something I didn’t know. Incidentally, Paul Mooney was the first person I ever corresponded with via Email and when I told my wife he was like me only more so, she said OH MY GOD! But this was before I realised how exponentially my obsession had grown. Nowadays nobody seems to want to learn because everybody knows everything and has heard everything no matter how little they know and how little they’ve heard. I don’t object to people who know nowt — in fact I’m a little envious of their wealth and contentment - but the Soul Scene is loaded with people who know nowt but act as if they know everything. I don’t know whether to blame Blair or Cowell. Anybody who knows stuff is a know all or a big head but people who know nowt can be whatever they want to be, and act as if other people are whatever they want them to be, and claim it all in the name of ‘ opinion. ‘ Film Whatever Year stopped being relevant when they replaced a Film Critic with a succession of TV personalities, neither of whom I imagine had seen as many films as me, prior to their appointment and this is where Culture is now. I remember George Martin saying that, between them, Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney can play just about every instrument you can think of. My sons are 13 and 15 and, with the exception of drums ( which Macca and Steveland both play well ), they can play virtually any instrument you can name between them. My eldest has seen dozens of world class acts from every genre there is and played with a Major Blues Artist when he was 13, but his friends, well versed in their parents Abba and Queen records, or Bob Marley and Stevie Wonder if they’re black, still insist they know more about music than him. He is suspect OCD, evident primarily in his guitar playing, and it became apparent that I’ve been OCD about Music all my life. Once over everybody knew who the Music People were and the rest did it as much for the crack, but nowadays everyone wants to act like they’re big on music, no matter how minimal their interest. I am astounded by some of the people who’ve tried to talk down to me recently, never a great idea but distinctly absurd nowadays.. The most prolific active soul boy in the NE over almost 40 years has been Frankie Lucas. However, he would have increased his stature even further had he listened to more Deep Soul and some Real Jazz ( and even some Blues and Reggae ), but wasn’t so inclined and seems to have retired though he’ll be back. Big Ron falls somewhere between Frankie and the Armchair Apostles but has regressed back to ns and its limitations. The most impressive people I know of now have moved here from outside the region. Tasty Dave Baker is passionate about little known Soul and tries to reflect this in his playlist, but he’s a younger chap and I’m unsure about his hinterland. There will come a time when people from the eighties will come into prominence, but we’re not there yet. Deano, like me, is Jack of all Trades, but he isn’t Master of All. In fairness, he doesn’t claim to be a purist and, indeed, is quite vociferous to the idea. His insistence on only featuring guests at Seasons of Soul who aren’t as good as him is a real shame which will likely finish it, at least as far as credibility goes. Most impressive is Gary Smith who, coming from Blackburn, was lucky enough to spend his life following Searling around. He’s strictly rare Soul Scene but knows everything. Strangely enough, never one for buying Music, he’s recently discovered the joys of vinyl and buys anything he likes the look of, from Pat Boone to Englebert to the Bay City Rollers; which is refreshingly honest. When I discovered just how poor the Soul Scene was in the North East, it wasn’t lost on me that I worked in a hotel with a superb room. I’ve never been a DJ, nor a collector, neither being conducive to playing the best Music, but when people started asking if I could put on a Soul Night, I doubted whether anybody else could do it as well. I thought there were probably 4 people in the NE who can play everything but it gradually dwindled to one and I should have had an open invitation to play any night in the NE. In some cases I’m so in a different league I’m not even on their radar, others know so little they’re oblivious to how little they know and how much others know, but mostly people just don’t want someone who can play more/ better Music than them. Having been around the NE and talked to lots of people, it never occurred to me that others would be ego-tripping out — there I go again, got to give it up, it’s trouble man. One person even told me I needed to go to a ns night s/he was involved in, which I’d been to several times, while s/he never came to the Manor House; which must be like Alex telling Searling he should go to Nevilles X Youth Club to hear Footsie. Nobody who experienced ns in the mid-seventies need ever go to another ns night again and I wonder how those who do can stomach it once the initial nostalgia has passed. I reiterate that time has not been kind to most of these records. I have more than enough music going on in my life, with 4 gigs in March, 5 in April, 2 each in May, June and July, 1 in Oct and 3 in Nov already. I never need to go to any Soul Night ever again; at least not without a disguise or bodyguard. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not at all phased by being public enemy number 1 on the Soul Scene, particularly when it’s so desperately in need of HELP. My place in Music is such that I no longer care if people don’t like me. Music is important and worth falling out with people over. I’ve locked flugelhorn with French Horns many times through the night on the Classical Sites in defence of Post-War Music. On the contemporary sites I attract respect, fear and loathing in equal measures but only get fear and loathing from the NE soul scene. Nobody liked Levine; half the country didn’t like Searling and the other half didn’t like Sam; and nobody ever liked Alex, until he became stinking rich when the rich kids decided they’d liked him all along At what turned out to be the last ever Manor House, I thought I would blast the finest Modern Soul records on the planet, something you can only really do if you’re Richard Searling or not limiting yourself to vinyl. It clashed with Bridlington and I assured one person s/he would hear better Modern Soul at the Manor but I think s/he thought I was joking — I wasn’t. I always intended the Manor to be a sort of Mecca type engine room for the North East to improve the other nights. Deano and the late Rob Bogey made a point of saying Seasons of Soul was to entertain rather than educate, whereas I believe a GOOD education is the best form of entertainment and this was always my intention at the Manor House, with my target audience the North East top Soul Fans, including those who are normally cynical about the Soul Scene and wouldn’t be seen dead at a Soul Night. If this all seems arrogant, I at least know where my ego comes from. I originally thought about a complete education, including all eras and areas of Soul, as well as some Jazz, Reggae and Blues, a little African Music and maybe even bits of relevant Rock ( Zappa, Beefheart, Santana ). It never occurred to me that people assumed I was going to do Nevilles X Club 1976, Julies 1982, Fleetwood 1988 or in-demand crossover and R+B on vinyl. Anybody else with any bright ideas, please don’t waste my time. Rather naively for someone so qualified in Cultural Studies, I assumed that everybody knew how limited and limiting the various nights are and the Manor House would be chocker from day one and we would have the best NE Soul Night since the Tuns, better than the Tuns, as good as any Soul Night anywhere. I even gave flyers to Colin Curtis and Arthur Fenn cos I knew I’d be able to get away with better Music and thought I’d maybe give them a few ideas too. Next time I feel like offering my services to someone who’s struggling cos they don’t really know what they’re doing, I’ll tell them I haven’t been doing it long, don’t really know much, haven’t heard much, never really been anywhere or seen anyone and most of my music isn’t very good. But it’s on vinyl so I’ll see you there. I wonder if Music will ever be front and centre again, like the mid-seventies or late eighties, instead of DJs and promoters scratching their ill-gotten ego’s and terrified to death to put on anyone who might play better Music than them; or was I too young in the seventies and drunk or worse in the late eighties to realise. Let’s get it on — A new Hope. Last year Deano had a birthday bash at the Cooperidge in Newcastle, a North East landmark even longer than John Powney, Pete Donnelly and Paul Mooney. Upstairs was playing housy type new releases and wasn’t bad but the real goods was downstairs. Tasty Dave Baker was living up to his name when I got there. He was followed by Ewan Renton from Darlington who impressed me on his last set at Seasons playing the Whispers version of Make it with you and Razzy I Hate Hate. Here he slipped in Womacks version of Messing up a good thing which I’ve never heard played but was always the best track on probably his most consistent album. The Soul was interspersed with non specific Latin type stuff which went down well. I have this theory which is totally unsubstantiated; that Elvis and the Beatles had less of an impact in Brazil and their pop music is still based largely on Jazz rather than rock and roll, with SinAtra still the main man; a far better result than the King or Fabs in my view. Mickey Powney was hailed as the Rare Soul Man but was at his best playing safe: I want you, Why can’t we be lovers and Rising to the top on a 7” edit — no longer acceptable in this day and age IM(H)O. In fact he played so safe he had to pull out something special and, while The Love I Lost is certainly a perfect record, when you know, not only all the lyrics, but the grunts and groans too, it’s probably not the best choice for a relatively educated and expectant crowd. Bobby Patterson I get my groove and Willie Hutch I’m gonna stay were too little too late and Josie Jo Armstaed I got the vibes, another record strangely missing from the Classic Northern nights, closed his hour. Mickey is one of the people in denial about NS, claiming he was never really into it. The first time I ever met him, he and Alex were dancing around my parents living room while I played tracks off Ric Tic Relics, which puts it in 74 or 75. Oh Pretty Lady was his favourite, and mine too at the time. It’s not our fault what NS has become and it was exactly the correct place to be at that time. Carlo ( from Darlo ) had promised some New York Disco but, when he opened with We the People, it was time for me to go for my nightshift. The night offered an open goal for someone to put together a string of little known gems, but nobody found the back of the net. However, it did confirm for me what Tim Carr and others had told me, which I think I already knew; that for a proper Soul Night in the North East you have to get Darlington and the North Easts Top Modern Soul people. Regrettably, it’s hard to think who in the NE is going to do it, since I have belatedly come to think that maybe the Web is mightier than the Song. Epilogue — In our Lifetime? Reinstating the question mark the record company left off Marvins title for his most under-rated album. Alex has apparently been talking about turning the Soul Room at Minehead back in to a — well — Soul Room. Ironic since he was never really bothered about a Soul Room in the first place. For a moment I thought about what would happen if I were to get involved again. I could scour the weekenders, nighters, dayers, nights, radio shows to assemble the greatest possible team all over again. I would want some young enthusiasm in there, but predominantly, people who were there in the mid-seventies so they have experience of the scene at its most vibrant and frenetic time, but crucially, moved on when it all went terribly wrong circa 77. I would have to question why somebody would stay with it or start with it after it stopped being relevant. I always say that going from ns to Disco/ Jazz/ Funk was like going from black and white to colour, but bearing in mind that Casablanca was in black and white while Hangover 2 is in colour. Clearly, disco became a bit of a joke in the wake of John Travolta and Donna Summer, but it’s aged remarkably well and civvies love it, and it’s now largely forgotten that ns was no less a joke at that time. Is it just me or does it seem that more happened between 74 and 78 than in the 35 years since? Whenever ns or Jazz Funk people boast that they’ve been doing it for 30 years, I always think — better late than never, but you missed it. I would also want people who were there in the late eighties/ early nineties when the Soul Scene was at its absolute best ever. In hindsight, when Frankie left the Weekenders during the Fleetwood era to spend more time with his family, I should have replaced him as the NE representative. Even then, I was in a completely different league to anybody else in the region, between the withdrawal of Frankie and the rise of Ronnie: at least as good as most of the DJs and better than some and my contribution to the Weekender was such that Alex, despite his insane jealousy, could not have refused. However, I was terribly nervous and sensitive ( not to mention hammered ) at that time and couldn’t handle DJing. Had it been a simple matter of pressing a few buttons, history may well have been different and we may have had an informed reappraisal of ns and not just wholesale revival, and No Thing on Me, Aretha Sing one for me, Still Waters and Just Soul may have been the thing a quarter of a century earlier. Oh, and we may not have had all the silliness about vinyl. The bible tells us a prophet is never appreciated in his home town and 39 years of humility and modesty behind the scene hasn’t got us anywhere. When I started going back to ns nights in the early mid-eighties they were playing exactly the same records I’d been listening to 10 years earlier, which I assumed they knew, but it turns out they were oblivious; while I was listening to the stuff they listen to now, which they still don’t seem to realise. Since people are not even catching up but falling further behind, on current form, a hundred years from now they’ll be going to a Soul Night where even the historicists have given up on vinyl, CDs will all be in charity shops and what’s left of vinyl ( Beatles, Frank Wilson ) will be consigned to antique shops; with a DJ who can play the whole of Soul Related Music, selected almost entirely on the basis of quality, with just a tiny nod to the dance floor. I might even be doing a night playing who knows what? Deep Soul; Reggae; Mingus, Miles and Trane; Zappa; Weather Report; Eastern European Modernism, and no doubt still moaning that they don’t come, cos I never learn either
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Part 3 of a series of articles - The final part of this series of words. Tap to view this Soul Source News/Article in full
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Flying High in the Friendly Sky - Brainy Soul. If a bunch of nerds can pseudo-intellectualise about the relative artistic merits of formula rock and the BBC construct of the history of pop, centred on the Sixties and the Beatles; Soul Music and the Soul Scene can easily withstand a little intellectual discourse. And not just at the level of vinylism, remembering names and dates, pitting differing opinions against each other, and people bluffing about where they’ve been, what they’ve heard and who they’ve seen. One of my pop/ Rock friends once said to me that Zeppelin, John Lemon and Simple Minds are a different thing to Simply Red — pop nerds always think we go mad for Red Micks voice — and I replied that I think Led Zeppelin are different to Lemon, SM and SR. He always thought he was ‘ different ‘ from other people because he liked the Beatles ( the most successful act ever ), Elvis ( third ), Zeppelin ( fourth ) and Pink Floyd ( top ten ). Somebody into Classical Music would no doubt say these are all the same, but French post- structuralist philosopher Derrida would agree but would include Handel and Vivaldi as well. Derridas theory of differance amalgamates difference with deference and illustrates how the difference between two Soul Nights or two Soul Records may be arbitrary and provisional and therefore subject to change over time. A simple example would be how Golden Age discoveries are now derided by critics as the same 200 records, but at some point, current in demanders may one day join that illustrious list. Another example might be Levine saying Curtis went too far playing P.Funk at Northern Soul Nights, while I suspect by then Curtis was no longer thinking in terms of NS, even though in 76 I was certainly thinking of specific records by Crown Heights Affair, Cameo and Jimmy Castor as NS, and I imagine Levine and Curtis were too. An example drawn from pop music, whereby in the sixties the Beatles and Stones were perceived as very different: the Beatles as a teeny group and the Stones as much tougher, while now they are largely considered together, and are thought of as the greatest music ever, outside of classical. Travelling up from London after seeing the Ojays in the mid- eighties, I was kindly joined by someone who’d been to Knebworth and, no disrespect to Cliff and his fans, he thought he was out of place amongst gods of rock: Paul McCartney, Phil Collins and Eric Clapton. He too thought he was ‘ different ‘ but hadn’t heard of the Ojays. Phil Collins sang some soul he said no he didn’t I said, to myself. One last example from Jazz: some Jazz Funk people think the term refers to Jazz and Funk and think of the Jazz element as ‘ Modern ‘ ( electric ) Jazz, as opposed to acoustic Jazz which they consider as ‘ Traditional ‘ or Trad. In the history of Jazz, Traditional refers specifically to Dixie/ New Orleans type Jazz with clarinets and banjos and stuff while Modern Jazz is Bebop onwards, generally excluding Jazz Funk, which Jazz buffs would normally consider part of Soul, pop, disco, elevator music etc. Culture operates by a system of binary oppositions which highlights differences. In simple terms, the essence of something is determined as much by what it isn’t as what it is. Post-Structuralism questions any notion of ‘ truth ‘ in culture arguing that it is always based on power which benefits those exercising it. An apparent dichotomy is constructed and represents points on a variable rather than opposition. Bearing this in mind, the potential for debate is limitless: High/ Low Culture. It never ceases to amaze me that Geater Davis and George Perkins are deemed Popular but Beethoven and Mozart aren’t. Parole/ Langue. Used in linguistics to distinguish between words in common use and the full resources of the language, but here to differentiate between records played on ‘ the scene ‘ and the whole of Black Music, History and Culture. Musicology/ Cultural Reception. Appraisal of the primary text ( the music itself )/ how it’s received by an audience. Progrock/ punkrock ( Rock: the Primary Text by Allan F. Moore ). Simple/ Complex. Blues/ P.Funk. Even Theodore Adorno of the Frankfurt School, ( Marxist intellectuals who studied American Culture ( Adornos expertise was Music )), did not preference complicated Music. Novelty/ Innovative. Pop music/ Funk. Authentic/ Superficial. Blues/ Pop. Post Structuralism would argue that any notion of authenticity ( or innovation ) is inevitably constructed. Songwriting/ Composition. ( Verse/ chorus/ solo, generally in 4/4. / Extended pieces, recapitulation, conceptualisation, progression, virtuosity, embellishment, improvisation, atonality, complicated time signatures etc. ). Elements of composition creeping in from the late sixties in the music of James Brown, Ike Hayes, Curtis, Marvin, Lamont, Dan Penn, Eugene Record with the Chilites and P.Funk, following the arrival of classically trained keyboardist Bernie Worrell; with mixed results. Modern/ modern. Rare Seventies/ recent. Mass Culture/ Cult. Media led/ organic(ish). Celebrity DJ/ Soul Fan(atic). Genre/ Brand. Music with common characteristics ( rare, sixties, Motownesque, driving beat )/ Music played at a Northern Soul Night, by a Northern Soul DJ including New York Disco ( DC Larue ), Funk ( Cameo ) and Jazz Funk ( Hubert Laws )). Pop/ Soul. The worship of the popstar and everything s/he does, including their music ( Lemon, Bowie )./ Worship of the 7” of plastic that reproduces the sound. Blues/ Gospel. Determining the third element in Soul Music, required by the ‘ power of three ‘ which is no more than a rhetorical device, but we’ll give it a go anyway. It may be useful to switch Blues for R+B. In fact it may be useful to think of Soul as R+B with Gospel vocalising. The more proficient pop nerds tend to go for country, illuminating underlying racism and focusing on the predominance of white musicians, particularly in the early days at Muscle Shoals, a popular myth they think they’ve discovered. Once read some liner notes claiming the third element is Jazz, which would certainly be valid for Funk, but probably comes from a metonymic misinterpretation of Jazz.My own preference would be for doowop, particularly in Detroit and Chicago vocal groups. Naturally, Art also always plunders folk/ pop music - why waste your energies writing melodies everyone will get to know, when you can just steal some ready-made from people like Lemon or Macca, and turn it into something interesting. Northern Soul/ Modern Soul. The records the ns people think are Modern and the Modern people think are NS: Carstairs, Montclairs, Cashing In, Am I Cold Am I Hot, Collins and Collins, Something new to do, Charles Johnson, Anderson Bros, James Bounty, Nine Times, Sidney Joe Qualls, Touching in the Dark, King Tut, James Govan, Only Way is Up etc. Pop/ Rock. The bands the pop ( rock/ and roll ) people think are rock and the Rock people think are pop: Beatles, Stones, Kinks, Doors, Queen, Sex Pistols, Clash, U2, Smiths, Oasis etc. Modern Soul/ Rare Groove. Margie Joseph Riding High was Rare Groove before myself and others brought it up north when it became Modern Soul. There are many more examples including records by Leroy Hutson, Willie Hutch, Jean Carn and Leon Ware. Modern Soul/ Crossover. If two people ever agree on what crossover is. One of my sons likes Heavy Metal ( he also likes Classic Rock, Progrock, Folkrock, Blues, Reggae, Soul Funk and Modern Classical Music ) and every new band seems to have its own genre drawing on a potentially limitless combination of words including: heavy, metal, classic, industrial, thrash, death, hard, core, progressive, southern, rap, electronic, post, nu, neo, new, wave, grind, crab, black, groove, tribal, punk, pop, British, American, Norwegian. I don’t disagree with genres just so long as they’re meaningful and useful. Anybody see Gaz Barlows face when District 3 said they were totally different to Union J, one being pop and the other more pop/ R+B. I want a night which only plays Crossover, with a DJ who hates Modern Soul. Starting to sound silly? I also want to create two new genres: proto crossover, the bit between sixties and crossover, and I can’t decide between neo and post crossover for the bit between crossover and seventies. Getting even sillier? Since they’re quite small genres I propose a broom cupboard for each at the next weekender. Incidentally, somebody told me there’s a crossover record from the last year or so, and the recent Darrow Fletcher album from the late seventies is referred to as Crossover, suggesting a generic definition which goes beyond something recorded at the stroke of midnight on New Years Eve1969, which is, strictly speaking absent in Northern or Modern. It’s a bit like doctors and lawyers who use Latin, not because of any intrinsic reason why it suits either discipline, but because it gives those using it power over the rest of us. Culture always needs a history and a story, so the media dreams up a linear narrative which generally bears little resemblance to events on the ground; like everything leads to and from the Beatles, and Gospel became Soul became Funk became hip hop. Crossover both links in to and transgresses this particular narrative though, as good a definition as any I’ve heard is ‘ the stuff nobody wanted 10 years ago but everybody ( whoever they are ) wants now, ‘ which I thought was Progrock. I wonder if in time Crossover will simply be used to describe rare seventies and free up Modern to reclaim its literal meaning, further illustrating the deferance of language. Incidentally, the term crossover was in use in the seventies and was interchangeable with Jazz, Funk, Rock, Fusion, pop, disco, commercial to distinguish Jazz Funk from ‘ the real thing, ‘ Itself a construction. The Soul Scene per se can be seen as discursive since it differentiates between ‘ rare ‘ Soul and the stuff everybody knows ( see below ). Soul/ R+B. When I was studying Music at college, a young class member told us about this new music called R+B, to which we objected that it had already been taken. The ns people have reclaimed the term once again but the genre to which they have applied it is quite distinct from either the one in the charts or the original direct Blues derivative which fused with country to become Rock and Roll and Gospel to become Soul. I tend to think of R+B, of whichever guise, as not quite Soul, not quite Blues, not quite rock and roll, not quite anything. Incidentally, in America R+B has been more or less interchangeable with Soul all along. A little more post-structuralism is in order, courtesy another Frenchman ( apologies to the xenophobes ), Michel Foucault. Such distinctions can be seen as discursive practices or bodies of knowledge which are ideological since they are based on power exercised by those who create and articulate them, but since they are constructed, they are both arbitrary and provisional. In short, they don’t actually exist outside the discourse. Discursive practices are maintained through interpellation whereby the ‘ opinion leader ‘ ( DJ, promoter, dealer, serious/ boring soul fan ) invites participants to share in their advanced knowledge/ appreciation of particular records/ labels/ artists/ areas/ format. Just Soul/ Modern Soul. Since Modern Soul does not have a rigid generic definition, does a Just Soul record become a Modern Soul record on its second play? Just Soul/ just Soul. We tend to take language for granted and assume it reflects our experience of the world accurately, but it is not always easy to appreciate how language constructs the world we think we know. The example which is always used is that eskimos have dozens of different words for different grades of snow. It is not possible for someone to control the signified of language in every given situation so it does not always reflect what it’s intended to. For instance, Deep Soul did not settle on the Music Dave Godin intended it for. The Just Soul Nights are another case in point and the more negative connotations of the term ( only soul/ only just soul ) come to the fore, reflecting the music played more than what the DJs think they are playing. Similarly, when my partner in crime at the Manor was guesting on a local BBC Radio Soul Show, he called his slot Beneath the Radar and the music he played reflected what he said rather than what he intended it to mean, while I would have called it Above the Radar. Ephemeral/ Timeless. Pop Music/ Classical, Jazz, Rock, Reggae. Soul if we ‘ Save the Children. Plaissure/ Jouissance/. Enjoyment of music/ physical response ( dictionary definition - orgasmic ). Deep Soul/ Northern or Modern Soul. May be something of an oversimplification since the sheer Soulfulness of the voice can invoke a physical response. A better example may be between enjoying listening to Jazz and Blues from the twenties and thirties for its historical significance, and the way faces light up when Dancing Queen comes on at a wedding, or the first time you hear Whams XMas record each December ( November, October ), which I like to play for my elderly relatives. But enough of my guilty pleasures. Soul Boy ( Golden Age )/ Neo ( new ) Soul Boy ( Late 70s )/ Post ( after ) Soul Boy ( 80s )/ Neo Post Soul Boy/ Post Neo Soul Boy ( Revival ). Vinyl/ CD. The relative aesthetic value of the vinyl album sleeve/ the utility of CD liner notes. Music/ Social History. See Haralambos. Reading it now, it’s interesting to note how perceptions about Blues and Soul have shifted since it was written. The grain of the voice/ Pain in the voice: Otis Redding/ James Carr. . Wilson Pickett/ Bobby Womack. . Sam Cooke/ Johnnie Taylor. These and the following may also be instances of: Soul Music for pop fans/ Soul Music for Soul Fans: Stevie Wonder/ Willie Hutch. Sam and Dave/ Soul Children. Solomon Burke/ ZZ Hill. See Guralnick. Did Aretha become a popstar in the seventies? Did she become a popstar when she stopped singing gospel? Motown/ Stax, Atlantic. A popular myth, particularly with the BBC, that Motown is pure commercial and if you want the ‘ real thing ‘ you have to go ‘ down south.‘ Actually you can stay in Detroit, or bob over to Chicago, New York or Philly. Lots of big soulies prefer Motown to O, Wicked, Lady Soul etc and HDH writing for the Tops is a defining moment in the emergence of Soul Music as an art form, quite distinct from the black pop of the preceding years, alongside Change is Gonna Come, Curtis getting serious, James Carr getting seriously Soulful, James Brown getting Funky and Aretha defying everybody by making not just 1, but 2 classic albums. I’m conscious too that Southern Soul isn’t all quality as previously thought and much of it hasn’t aged well, which suits the pop nerds who think it’s period music - all roots and rustic. Taste/ Opinion. Bourgeois Myth and proletariat excuse/ better but almost half a century into the age of post-structuralism, Soul Fans especially, with our instinctive loathing of all things populist, should be thinking in terms of Ideology, Discourse and Power. Don’t forget, these are all compare and contrast issues with no correct answers, designed to make people think and encourage debate ( and not just who can hate me the most ) and hopefully get some better music out there. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Save the Children — Who really cares? The purpose of this article is not to offend a large part of the constituency, who are what the Pentagon would call collateral damage. Vinyl worshippers have an investment in plastic entirely disproportionate to their interest in music, which they will take to the grave. My hope is to help deconstruct the prevailing ideology and plant the seed of an idea for younger folk and future generations that it isn’t about politics and religion, never was and never will be. In hindsight, because of their proximity to the Golden Age, the neos and posts were always likely to want something of their own. Sixties Newies went some way to fulfilling that need but was largely dire, so it became ( original ) vinyl we could never have afforded even if we gave a damn. And then the dinosaurs joined in. It’s easier to accept missing something 30 years ago than 5 years ago. The pop nerds make a similar charge against my generation for not liking the Beatles, but there’s a difference between thinking something you listened to as a 5, 6, 7, 8 year old is juvenile, and not knowing something exists because it’s slightly beneath the surface. Whether Soul becomes the province of the proverbial dinosaur — like a next generation of teddy boys — or a valid C20th Art form in the realm of Modern ( early C20th ) Classical Music, Jazz, Rock and Reggae, will be determined in the coming years. If there isn’t a sensible Soul Night you can’t go, but if there is and you don’t go, you get the Soul Nights you deserve. If Soul Acts don’t perform in your region you can’t go, but if they do and you don’t go, you will get the live acts you deserve. There aren’t enough sensible people in the NE to maintain a night which is there as a resource if you fancy it; you have to go. There may come a time when more people want a bigger picture than in-demand records on vinyl and the various versions of ns, but there may be nothing worthwhile left for them. I’m edging towards a view that major Soul Fans almost have a responsibility to go to a good night, and the scope of this article illustrates that any night I’m involved in is not just another soul night. Those who have already come across me should have known that, and anybody who hadn’t come across me should have come across me, and has now. Certainly I would have gone to a night featuring Paul Mooney or Mike Hoskins, probably John Powney and maybe a couple of others even though, in general, people in the NE are between 20 years and twice that behind me. I’m dumbfounded that people who live a short distance away from a Soul Night with the potential to be as good as any in the world, didn’t go in almost 2 years, but still tell their friends and come on here and claim to be top soul boys and girls. I wonder if and when I will ever be able to take the NE seriously again. Many people are content with the Good Old Days mentality ( even though most weren’t actually there ) and I have some sympathy with this; like my Rocker friend acknowledging the music of Status Quo bears a certain honesty; but it needs to be done tastefully, intelligently and progressively. In many respects, this is preferable to the relentless excavation of 60s Soul which has been trodden continuously for decades in the endless search for that elusive B side missed by Levine, Searling, Soul Sam and a constant procession since. As the great years of Modern Soul came to a close, I came to believe the DJs bringing back stuff like Run for Cover and Dearly Beloved had grasped the future. Treading the various nights on offer today I was often struck, not only by the Music played, but also by the stuff excluded. I felt a modern day Soul Night should be able to play Northern, Modern, Funk, Jazz Funk and — crucially — Just Soul, the bit I thought everybody knew but seems to cause the most difficulty. As I promoted the Manor House I was dumbfounded by ns people protesting that I play Funk, and Jazz Funk people advising me to drop the Northern, presumably because they assumed I was just going to play the tired and should be rested stuff played everywhere else. Somebody involved in another night, told me s/he liked everything and went on to say s/he hates Funk. OK so s/he doesn’t like the Ohio Players, War and P.Funk. Does s/he not like James Brown, the Isleys and Maze? What about Soul Music with a syncopated rhythm by the likes of Marvin, Curtis, Womack, Willie Hutch and the Temptations? Or bona fide NS records by the Commodores, Crown Heights Affair and Cameo. Classic Soul is amongst the great Music of the world which generally attracts the followers it deserves, who then fail to behave in the way it deserves. Next time you call someone a dinosaur, check you don’t whistle when you boil, and the next time you bemoan the state of the Soul Scene in the NE or elsewhere, ensure you’re part of the solution and not part of the problem. I hope Soul Music will have the resilience to survive those intent on interpolating the politics, sport, economics and religion at the expense of the Music and, if it does survive, I have no doubt that playing everything is the way forward, which depends on genuine enthusiasts coming out of the woodwork. I regret the NE, instead of leading the way, will be in the wilderness for a generation. Part 3 to follow shortly....
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Originally titled Soul Wars — a New Hope, but I try not to be too provocative. OK, so I don’t try that hard, but it’s what elevates Art above politics. Has anybody, DJ or otherwise, recently thought twice before playing a record, whether it’s actually... Tap to view this Soul Source News/Article in full
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Soul at the Crossroads - What’s Going On and What’s Happening Brother?
Stevesilktulip posted an article in Articles
What’s Going On? - Soul at the Crossroads Prologue — hey wha’s happenin? Originally titled Soul Wars — a New Hope, but I try not to be too provocative. OK, so I don’t try that hard, but it’s what elevates Art above politics. Has anybody, DJ or otherwise, recently thought twice before playing a record, whether it’s actually any good. Whether they recognise a record because they like it, or like it because they recognise it, and recognise it because they’ve heard it thousands of times over many years, everywhere they go. Something similar happened in the mid-nineties when lots of people realised for the first time just how many Beatles songs we all know and, spurred on by unprecedented bombardment by the combined media, translated quantity to quality. Alternatively, whether somebody likes a record because the only other people who like it are like- minded people who are ‘ in the know.’ Does anybody suspect one of their friends of secretly buying something on CD they couldn’t find or afford on CD, but don’t have access to a lie detector? As Soul Fans, we know too well the potential for people to listen to rubbish, and it’s naïve and arrogant of us to assume we’re immune from this. Like any art form, Soul Music gets better before it gets worse, but it does get worse, drastically worse. Nobody sensible thinks the best Soul Music is the stuff everybody knows: Commitments/ Blues Brothers type stuff, Stevie Wonder, Barry White, and the secret is to know when to stop. I like to think I go far enough before it starts to get rubbishy, but I would wouldn’t I and this is where it becomes important to listen to other Music to contextualise within an ever increasing framework, encompassing Northern Soul ( NS ), Rare Soul, Soul, Black Music, Music, the Arts. An understanding of Art in general can only enhance an appreciation of Soul Music and how can anyone possibly know Soul is the greatest Music on earth, which it is, if it’s all they ever listen to? This article began life as an update on the Soul Scene in the North East ( NE ) but grew into a review of where the scene is and where it might be going. In fact it grew and grew and grew and I apologise for that, but the problems of the Soul Scene are not small. On another site, BOF ( Boring Old …( doggawn it baby you guessed it )) has just said I Ramble On ( Led Zeppelin ) after a couple of pages about Danny Bakers offering on the Beeb about Classic Rock albums, so I’ve stopped tweaking and adding to it and asked my clever son to upload it forthwith. It takes a good hour to read so I’ve divided it into sections for ease of reference, and anybody who doesn’t recognise them should maybe consider country and western. Those sufficiently interested to learn or contribute will relish it, and the rest will probably have stopped reading by now; but beware, if the cap fits you may find yourself wearing it, and it may prove uncomfortable reading for some. Although I’ve listened to stupid amounts of Soul over the last 20 years, I’ve also listened to stupid amounts of Jazz, Reggae, Blues, Rock and lots of other things too. I felt certain some people in the NE, only listening to Soul, or Soul and Jazz, would have forged ahead. On the contrary, we were getting away with better music 20 years ago and it’s hard to think what people have been doing, beyond trying to figure out what the latest crossover and R+B are, and hanging on to, and in some cases reverting back to vinyl as an excuse for everything. But why are so many soul fans looking for excuses not to go places that play quality Soul? In the late eighties the future of the Soul Scene seemed bright, particularly from the barren wasteland of the NE. While the Weekenders weren’t based in the region, it was no secret that this is where they emanated from and, if Alex had no credibility among Soul Fans, others among us did. Alex had all but lost interest in Soul, thinking Jazz more arty and intellectual, even though his idea of Jazz didn’t exceed Grover Washington Jnr and the Jazz Juice albums. When he needed to become a Soul Fan again to get his slot at Caister, he decided Jazz had been exhausted by the Jazz Juice and other compilation albums. A hundred years of Jazz reduced to a dozen or so albums compiled by a very young Soul Boy who didn’t know his Sonny Rollins from his Rosemary Clooney, and now plays dance through the night on Radio 2. It fell to me to tell Alex what to play and he would refer to me as his Soul Man if a London DJ or an American artist rang him while I was there. Once I arrived at his house only to be told he’d had Leon on the phone, like this was normal. OK, who’s Leon I asked. Baby you know you hot today, you guessed it again. I thought of him as my post disco and smooth Jazz man. He eventually got the weekender he always wanted, and now every region in the country, bar the NE, seems to have one. There are very few people left in the NE who remember a brilliant Soul Night in the region. Consequently, it seems people either don’t think it’s possible or don’t actually want one; unless of course it’s theirs. With the exception of Frankie and me, the region has never really had anybody playing records they haven’t first heard a ‘ proper ‘ DJ play — ie one from somewhere else. Alex used to lay claim to the Jackson Sisters, which is embarrassing enough, but he first heard it played by Max Reese, tucked away in Cambridge. There seems to be an assumption in the NE that people from other regions will always play better music than someone from the NE. My old mate Colin Johnson is enjoying something of a rep these days, occasionally even guesting outside the region. I recently asked him what he plays and he admitted - all the records I introduced him to 20 years ago. Sounds good to me I said, though I have always avoided them. In fact everybody playing Modern Soul in the NE seems like they are desperately trying to play the same records I was desperately trying not to play 20 years ago. I’m somewhat surprised by some of the people who have emerged as major players, seemingly because they have decided they are, so just behave as if they are, without ever seeing a live band, reading anything or buying a record without first hearing an established DJ play it. The NE ( and probably beyond ) needed a bomb up its proverbial with some ( big ) heads banged together, so if they don’t want to listen to what a Good Soul Night can entail in the second decade of the third millennium, they can read about it. What’s Happening Brother? — What’s been shakin up and down the line? I first noticed the NE Soul Scene was in crisis going to see the various live acts we’ve had over recent years including James Brown, George Clinton, Maceo Parker, Terry Callier, Irma Thomas, Mavis Staples, Azymuth, Ornette Coleman, Femi Kuti, Swing out Sister, Larry Garner, Chilites, Mary Wilson, Michael Roach, Tavares, Temptations, Four Tops, Charles Walker, Fatback Band, Jack DeJohnette, Polar Bear, Eugene Hideaway ( or as we say up here Haddaway ) Bridges and Leon Ware. With odd exceptions, Soul Fans generally make excuses and stay away. Maybe they’re all going to see hip hop acts, though I understand CDs have now overtaken vinyl for mixing. Incidentally, the wider musical community isn’t doing much better. A friend of mine is the drummer in a top Prog-Metal revival band and also teaches drums. His idols are Miles Davis and Frank Zappa but he didn’t go to see Jack DeJonette, legendary drummer who’s played with just about every Jazz Great of the last 50 years, including Miles ( on Bitches Brew no less ), supported by Polar Bear featuring prominent British Jazz drummer Seb Roachford, ( also of Acoustic Ladyland and Basquiat Strings ); nor Frank’s son Dweezil, who I’ve seen 3 times in as many years. It will be interesting to see if he makes Trilok Gurtu, another legendary Jazz/ Jazz Rock/ World Music drummer due in the region. There’s a plethora of Soul Nights in the NE these days; too many in my view, though I understand the North West has dozens. A review of the ones I’m familiar with might be useful. Anybody not from the NE might want to skip the next few pages although I also discuss some nights in the North-West and Yorkshire and, in any case, I imagine the overall picture is similar everywhere. Apologies to any ns nights on Teeside or North of the Tyne; I know at least one of the Newcastle nights boasts a vinyl only policy but I don’t know if the music is better because of this. The first thing to say is there aren’t any good Soul Nights in the NE, which isn’t to say you will never hear any quality Soul or enjoy a good night out. When I became active again after 10 years in West Yorkshire, loads of ill health, kids etc, several people, including Frankie Lucas, Colin Johnson and Mickey Powney told me the quarterly Seasons of Soul near Newcastle was the best night in the region. I was therefore a little surprised when it was more Walkers/ MacMillans than Fleetwood, Morecambe, early Southport Soul Room - something of a retrograde step in my view; indeed, no less so than the ns nights. Music policy is sublime to ridiculous: Modern, Northern, 60s, 70s, 80s, Jazz, Jazz Funk, Funk, disco, pop soul, Latin and new releases from regulars Deano and Dave Baker and guests culled from night clubs and wine bars in Newcastle and around the NE; which may be why so many Soul Fans seem to have stopped going. I recently had an exchange of emails with someone who questioned how you can have a Soul Night and not play people like Marvin, Curtis, Teddy and Al Green. I think s/he missed Modern Soul which of course preferred Leon Ware, Leroy Hutson, Anthony White and Sidney Joe Qualls, and I let it hang that we got Womack, War and Wilson ( Jackie ). Perhaps I spoilt him at the Manor House. The Northern/ Modern scenes sometimes get a little carried away with this theme. When Leroy Hutson did Fleetwood, Alex made one of his all time, world famous gaffes when he claimed Curtis Mayfield was nothing without Leroy Hutson. Apart from the amazing music by the Impressions before Hutsons career had even begun, and apart from them not really contributing to each others music, whether as singers, songwriters, musicians or producers; Hutson made enough extraordinary music to fill up a CD, but Curtis Mayfield was one of the greatest human beings who ever lived. Interestingly, Hutson was with the Impressions for 2 ½ years and only made 1 album with them, so will have spent a lot of time singing Curtis stuff, which must be the best education imaginable in song-based music. On its release circa 75, a review of JJ Barnes Groovesville Masters said the only difference between JJ and Marvin Gaye was that Marvin was probably a multi- millionaire. Apart from Marvin being somewhat obsessed by the taxman, and most of his wealth going up his nose, JJ made a handful of great records while Marvin was one of the greatest artists of any art form from any period. Berry Gordy described him as the truest genius he ever met, and he met a few. Hoochie Coochie have put on some decent and half decent acts and play some half decent music. When there’s no band on, it’s middle aged men trying to pick up middle aged women to night club music which was upfront in the eighties but we don’t yet know whether it will have any historic resonance, and I for one am doubtful. Modern Soul was at the level of I’m so Happy and Benny Troy and, while I’m happy to take credit for introducing most classic Modern Soul records to the North East, along with Frankie and Ron Edmundson, these were definitely nothing to do with me. Having said that, prior to Leon Ware, we got Cory Blake and Denise LaSalle Here I am Again, so things may be looking up. His monthly Soul on Sundays is a noble venture but he seems to have already succumbed to the allure of those who peddle ns, of whichever denomination ( including Rhetfords version of Just Soul ), as the ultimate in Soul Music, which is not only ridiculous, but preposterous. I fear it will end up just more half-heartedness, more mediocrity, more politics, more vinyl for the sake of it. The cynic in me thinks perhaps he’s been seduced into believing his 20,000 vinyl records won’t come to nothing. It’s interesting to note that he had Charles Walker, prior to Leon Ware the most cred act from the point of view of Soul, give or take Candi Staton ( depending on the time and place ), but none of his purist connoisseurs made it, and only Deano made Leon Ware. Furthermore, he’s advertising the venue as part of the Sage Jazz Festival and I shudder to think what modern day ( Jazz, Funk and ) Soul people play to a Jazz crowd. Like pop people playing to a Soul Crowd I imagine. I have said before that the Swallow in Gateshead is the best of the nostalgia nights but, as with elsewhere, I don’t see the point in bringing in guests like Colin Curtis and Kev Roberts just to play the same records as the resident DJs. That said, all credit to the promoter for having the courage and vision to put on CC. Sister Andrea told me she’s doing a Jazz Funk Night there but I hope she recognises the seventies legacy and reflects this in the DJs. Frankie used to DJ when it was a 2 room event but, while I know he was at a previous one, he wasn’t DJing and, in any case, Frankie held on to ns longer than most. For the first time in ages, Durham has its own Soul Night, at the Gala Theatre. Chocker full of people, some of whom used to travel to Wigan, but would never dream of making the journey to Aycliffe or Easington on a Saturday night now. Some hadn’t seen each other for 35 years which made for a good night out, but the minority of serious punters weren’t impressed; once they get into Motown they’ll never get back out, I commented, and the next one was advertised as a Motown and club night, which ranged from Epitome of Sound to Billy Ocean — yes that Billy Ocean — via the Isleys worst ever record — Disco Nights - all in shiny, shiny vinyl and leaning heavily toward the latter. The promoter, who isn’t from the region, took the view that a not very good soul night is preferable to no soul night, while I think the last thing the NE needs is another poor night. Even more alarmingly, s/he seemed to think that no Soul Night is preferable to a brilliant Soul Night with a little room playing CDs. To my knowledge, Terry Jones is still bringing his Village Soul to Sunderland though I can’t find any trace of it anywhere. It’s 6 years since I’ve been and I’m told it’s not what it used to be, which wasn’t that remarkable anyway. Sunderland has always been something of a mystery to anyone outside its catchment area who isn’t a season ticket holder. The Big Club at Aycliffe is a popular same 200 records night with some really dodgy stuff thrown in for bad measure. It’s a most enjoyable night out with many visitors who should know better. A group of girls go every time and set up their own buffet and lose their shoes to dance around their handbags to the Motown stuff. Haven’t been since they played Judy Street. Never been to the Hydra Soul Night cos the satnav closes down as you enter Aycliffe and you end up in an industrial estate, which I’m told is very near. Apparently it’s a fair night but strictly the Same Old Thing. The Rafa Club in Aycliffe claims, with some justification, to be the most progressive ns night in the region. Ran by the Shoulder brothers, it boasts local hero Paul Acklee who seems to have no shortage of grannies to flog to finance his record box. I’m long in the tooth for this sort of thing, and I don’t hear it as the future of the Soul Scene any more than stompy Wigan classics or 80s nightclub music. It’s a nice little room, friendly with cheap booze, the music isn’t bad but it isn’t great, at least it’s different. A bit like going to a weekender and finding only one small room with a minority interest. Nevertheless, the NE is certainly lucky to have it and it probably deserves your support more than any other ns night, not least cos Paul Shoulder is one of the most genuine lads on the scene. Incidentally, I don’t hear late 80s Modern Soul as the future either, though I think people need to catch up with that, and probably New York Disco and 70s Jazz Funk too, before we will get a Soul Scene for C21st. The Cricket Club in Bishop, formerly the Coachman in Darlington, and maybe now the Wild West Club in Leeholme, offers an alternative approach to forwarding the cause of rare Soul. Been a few times but never for long and I’m not really sure what it is. Its manifesto seems to be that a £5 record can be as good as a £5,000 record which strikes me as stating the bleedin obvious and thinly veiled politics. You won’t hear anything terrible but you’re not likely to hear anything amazing either. The value of vinyl, whether expensive or inexpensive, is a minuscule part of Soul Music discourse which most Soul Fans neither know nor care about and most who do use as a stick to beat us with. I have always thought that, while there are many good commercial Soul records and many good rare Soul records, broadly speaking, the overwhelming, vast majority of Great Soul Music falls somewhere between these two poles, and this is the stuff which is largely ignored by successive generations of DJs on the scene. I was at one night and somebody who’s into such things was telling me this record is 4K and that one’s 2K and another is 3K when Richard Temple came on, one of the best and most important NS discoveries ever, which I can’t believe you don’t hear at every revival night, and blasted them back into oblivion. Back at the Bridge at Catterick seems to have gone quiet, despite having Mike Charlton and Gaz Simons. A victim of its own success, the venue and Music was OK but it claimed a Just Soul policy and delivered a mix of northern and modern. The first one I went to was full to the rafters of people, most of whom missed mid-seventies Northern and late eighties Modern and seemed intent on convincing themselves they were part of something really special. Then Soul Sam turned up and played Joy and Pain and Benson Love x Love. I often wonder whether people realise there are many great records that have never been played on the Northern, Modern or Jazz Funk scenes; lots and lots and lots of them. Worst of the dinosaur nights is the Engineers Club in Darlington which I haven’t been to since Judy Street and blame for me not being able to go back to the Big Club on the same principle. Chatting with Big Ron Edmundson and we were saying how this was when we stopped listening to ns first time round. For me, if James Coit was the final nail in the coffin, Judy Street was the longest and the sharpest. The Grange in Darlington has a Black Music policy on Saturday nights rotating Carlo, Ewan Renton, Massey, Paul Harrison and others. It’s more night club/ wine bar and the model seems to be Seasons of Soul but with a mostly regular Darlington crowd. Easington has the longest running night in the region with an impressive large room playing safe northern and a modern type room which seems like an afterthought and hasn’t really taken off. Can’t knock stuff like Flowers and Cory Blake, even if we were chasing them over 20 years ago, but Love don’t you go through no changes makes me think this sort of level can’t be maintained. It also hosts Jazz Funk/ 70s nights and the last one I went to offered an erratic mix of Edwin Starr Back Street, ns, disco, jazz funk and modern. Sister Sledge, Cashing In AGAIN? My Baby’s got Esp — not something I would play but a fair record if it’s the worst in your box, if it’s the best you’re in trouble. This was the level of Modern Soul in the NE in the mid- eighties when myself, Frankie and Ronnie arrived with our backgrounds in Golden Age NS, Seventies Jazz Funk, Deep Soul and Just Soul and took it up a whole heap of notches, and this was when I decided to do another Manor House, focusing on Classic Modern Soul, something I’d hitherto avoided. All of the Soul Nights are essentially the same, whether they play the same 200 records, the next 200 or the 200 after that, they’re all predominantly preoccupied with obscure plastic. I suppose, for anybody who thinks that’s all there is, it doesn’t really matter where they go to hear them. People who don’t just want the same stuff, but things they don’t know or at least aren’t sick to death of, won’t come because they assume it’s just going to be more of the usual. Like someone I met recently who went to Italy to see John Gary Williams, Syl Johnson and Otis Clay, but doesn’t know vinylism and crossover exist. Despite its shortcomings I am always first to defend the Soul Scene to its critics. Like Phil Collins allowing himself to slag off progrock because he was a part of it ( and not because after nearly 40 years and godzillions of units shifted, discerning listeners still think of Gabriel as THE singer in Genesis ), I feel justified in offering constructive criticism to the Soul Scene because I think we should improve rather than abandon it and I think these critics need some grasp of NS and Modern to be a complete Soul Fan. The most encouraging thing I can say about the NE is that the North West and Yorkshire ain’t doing much better. Lowton is much like Easington but with Richard and Ginger playing the same records as Dom, Rick and Barry at Easington. The Modern Room is more adventurous than Easington, if unremarkable, but also poorly attended. Blackburn hosted a 3 room all-dayer over the August Bank Holiday which seemed to all but kill off the Modern Room, at least while I was there. Or was it the music? Tried in vain to get there in time for Glynn Thornhill, the only type of Soul DJ who excite me these days, and if he can play stuff even long term partner and cohabitee Queen Ethna doesn’t know, he must be pushing boundaries. On my previous visit, there was a wedding in the hotel and I thought I’d crashed it by mistake when I went in the northern room. Others agreed, it seemed much better this time with stuff like the Montclairs — always a better record than the Carstairs in my view — Esther Philips What a Difference, Cameo Find my Way and the Pointer Sisters, which I’m amazed doesn’t get more spins on the nostalgia scene. Perhaps they are thinking more about what they play. Nolan Porter did a PA which reminded me why I generally avoid 1 or 2 hit wonders who can’t really sing any more. The third room was the most tantalising, threatening an eclectic mixture from DJs like Curtis and Dean Johnson, who will always keep you guessing, but the equipment crashed during both their sets. I enjoyed Grooving on a New York Afternoon more than I ever did at the time, but sorry Dean, I still consider it second rate Jazz. I have mentioned the It’s Just Soul nights at Rhetford before but will only add a couple of things here. Before the journey home, my wife and I retired to the lounge for coffee but I kept popping in to hear what was being played. After one pop, Freddies Dead was on and I said - it’s brilliant but I had always played another track off the album. When it was followed by No Thing on Me I said — OK I’m convinced. However, in general it’s like Eric Morecambe said, they play all the right artists but not necessarily the right records; a bit like Andy Peebles. I have thought for over twenty years, this was the way to go, but not from the perspective of NS ideology. Vinylism has no place anywhere but there isn’t even the semblance of an excuse here, and you need people who’ve been doing Just Soul all along, not people who are basically into Rare Soul, picking up bits along the way. Anybody who was doing NS in the seventies will remember hearing all sorts which would not nowadays be thought of as NS. The Just Soul part of Rhetford is hegemonic with the night mostly encompassing bog-standard Modern, some dreadful stuff I took to be crossover and Just Soul, with the odd exception, either clumsily selected, more pointless obscurity or at the level of Radio 2. Like most Soul Nights you’ll probably get half a dozen records that excite you, admittedly a different six to the usual ones, but it’s hardly the breakthrough they and their followers claim. It’s perhaps best summed up by the scene in Diamonds are Forever, when Bond shoots the wrong cat. My only other excursion outside the NE last year was to the monthly night in Keighley. I had planned to go to the RAFA but the missus ran off with the satnav and I figured it would be quicker to get to West Yorkshire than to a night in neighbouring Aycliffe I’d been to half a dozen times recently. I was pleasantly surprised. Although they have a vinyl only policy, it doesn’t seem to be just an excuse for playing not very good music. The Modern Room was closed due to alterations which I think improved the mix and, after about an hour, I was ready for more familiarity. Presumably this was heralded by House for Sale but I decided - when in Keighley - and went for a curry before my journey home. -
Bettye Swann - Cleethorpes June 7-9th Weekender - A Soul Pilgrimage
Stevesilktulip commented on Mike's article in Event News
Very distinctive voice and she must be in her sixties. Don't know how well that will work out and I hope it doesn't just become homage, but Cleethorpes have certainly done it again bringing in an important artist. -
Articles: Blues or Soul?
Stevesilktulip replied to Stevesilktulip's topic in Front Page News & Articles
Couple a things going on in West Yorks and the NE. You will need to join the Bronte Blues Club but well worth it for Larry McCray on 7th Sept, a Soulful voice and a virtuoso guitarist. Not sure of the date ( like I'm your PA now ) but Eugene Hideaway Bridges is there in Oct or Nov and he's very much influenced by Soul. I've seen them both and they're well worth the effort. The night before his Keighley date Hideaway is in Newcastle and the night before McCray at Keighley, the Cluny also plays host to Alvin Youngblood Hart. Only know one album but he ranges from Country Blues to almost Beefheartian. He's performing solo and I can't really stomach music for a band played by one man and his guitar so I'm not taking a night off work for that one. Howewer, I reckon all of these events are worth checking out. Incidentally, the night before Hideaway, Matt Schofield is doing the Cluny - he's one of the British great white hopes of the Blues which means he plays bar-room rock, but he uses a Hammond trio which is always interesting and can certainly play guitar. -
Who are the Great Soul Deejays? No doubt been done a zillion times before but it's probably worth doing periodically as people come and go and perspectives change. When I did my defence of Colin Curtis, I had him among the top 5 Northern Soul C NS ) DJs of all times. I thought I should elaborate and then go beyond just NS. I originally intended to say he was in the top 3 but thought I should acknowledge Soul Sam, who has always had a devoted following and a massive impact albeit, in my view, a negative one. Then I thought I should include Russ Winstanley, probably the most powerful man in NS during its most iconic period, though also in a negative way in my opinion. I suspect that if we were to line up the ultimate list of NS classics, Ian Levine will have uncovered more than anybody else. Reading the In Crowd, the point where it became something that I would recognise as NS was Circa 71 and Levine and Dave Godin were probably the key figures in turning it into a coherent scene. I have never thought of the Wheel as NS proper but that is a discussion for people much older than me. Levine is often written off for his tailor made NS records and for what he became, but his creations proved very popular with many, including a 12/13/14 year old me. Many of us followed him and Curtis into ( what we used to call New York ) Disco, Funk and Jazz Funk and, despite what the history books say, the In Crowd tag stayed with us, while NS went into its dark ages. Levine discovered Eurodisco, had a hand in Take That but seems to have forgiven NS more recently. In Kev Roberts's top 500, he has Levine and Curtis as 1 and 2 respectively in the 70s, NSs only significant decade, but the casino as the number 1 club, which just goes to show how politics and religion can become more important than music, and not just ( original ) vinyl, but bricks and mortar, the idea of the allnighter and tactics to stay awake all night. I would probably switch 2 and 3 and have Searling second. I may be doing CC an injustice but my rationale is that he was second to Levine while Searling was the credible end of Wigan, probably the top club in 73/4 though none of my crowd, Alex included, were going yet. Returning to my list, I imagine Richard uncovered more classics than anybody else besides Levine. I rang Russ Winstanley a few years ago and found him an extremely friendly and decent bloke and he is probably more responsible than anyone else for the increasing popularity of NS during the seventies. However, as the mid- seventies turned into the late seventies, a new generation arrived, with Wigan Casino as it's temple, and many seemed to like plastic more than music, rareity more than quality, and northern more than Soul. In fairness, I think NS had already died of natural causes and, although it became an ever so slightly cool cult in the eighties and has suffered a massive revival since, it's nice to drop in on but no longer my idea of a lifestyle choice. Briefly returning to the issue of ( original ) vinyl, the old argument against pressings was that the artist didn't gain; like Frank Wilson did well out of the 15k. I recently heard the singer out of Epitome of Sound on the radio during his recent visit and it's hard to imagine this could happen if You don't love me hadn't been extensively available at an affordable price. On the issue of CDs, the next time you are talking to a Soul Artist, ask them what they think of CDs and watch their reaction when you tell them that some people don't think it's OK to play Soul on CD. Or are they wrong too? In another article, I claimed too much NS is obscurity for the sake of it and/ or a celebration of the ordinary and I think the key figure here is Soul Sam. I first came across him at an all dayer in 75. Searling had played an excellent set in the afternoon but as the grownups ( the 16/17 year olds ) arrived in the evening, people told me to listen out for Soul Sam. I was really excited and really disappointed when he was terrible. In hindsight I should commend him for at least playing different records to everybody else, but none of them were any good. I have heard him many times since at Durham, Aycliffe, Glasgow, Thorne, Bradford, Cleethorpes, Lowton etc but have never heard him play more than one great record per set: Run for Cover, Carl Hall, Helping Hand, Just ask me, original version of Now that I have you. Once at Parkers I asked him about a Prince Philip Mitchel record on Hi, I don't remember which one, but he didn't know it and became indignant. At this point I should probably mention Arthur Fenn. I have heard him play great Modern sets, and not just the usual suspects, but also heard him terrible, which is incomprehensible. Once in the Modern Room at Bradford, he was playing sub Luther Vandross newies so I asked him if he had Lucky Fellow by Leroy Hutson, one of my favourites at the time. He quite rudely replied yes, turned his back on me and didn't play it. Presumably he thought he was being dead clever, but it would have been far cleverer to play a great record amongst the dross. By now, Aycliffes frontline have no doubt had their suspicions confirmed that I'm too choosy by half but, with so much wonderful music to choose from, there's no excuse for playing rubbish. The only other NS DJ I'd like to single out is John Vincent. I don't really remember why I had him second only to Searling but he once did an alldayer at Aycliffe and it was the first time I heard Adams Apple, briefly a favourite. However, in those days your favourite records changed every other week, so the real reason may be lost in the mists of time. My return to the Soul Scene proper, after the wilderness years of night clubs and NS greatest hits nights, was consolidated at the Trafalgar near Preston and, particularly, Searling playing Love Love Love by Donny Hathaway, a record I'd championed for years. In the ensuing years at Bognor, Caister, Prestatyn, London, Ayre, Berwick, Fleetwood, Thorne, Morecambe, Southport, Manchester etc . etc., I would generally describe him as the best of a not terribly good bunch, though I was stuck in my serious ( Deep ) Soul phase with my head stuck even further up my own a$$ than usual. Recently, at his 2 room bash in Blackburn, my missus asked why he is such a local celeb. I replied that, apart from the Soul tourists come to see the famous Wigan Casino DJ, he has probably been the best Soul DJ in the world. Once at Parkers he dropped in Don't come up here no more by Epicenter featuring Sandra Feva, one of those moments in life you'll never forget, and it's hard to imagine anyone else, apart from me, doing that. Curtis also survived the seventies but mainly by adding Real Jazz to his arsenal. Forgive my cynicism, but I have always been sceptical about Soul DJs playing Real Jazz on the Soul Scene THOUGH I THINK Curtis generally faired better than Chris Hill, Bob Jones, Giles Peterson, Baz fe Jazz, Sylvester or any of the others. None seem to go back to Jazz, but interpret it from a Soul Music perspective, often resulting in second and third rate stuff, easy listening, novelty records and Latin pop. At its best, Soul is an Art form, but Jazz is Post Russian Modernist ( who stole heavily from Jazz ) C20th Classical Music and, as such, must constantly progress, while Soul ( sans Funk ) is predominantly about the grain of the voice. Jazz emerged at a different time in Americas history to Soul and was therefore at a different position in its trajectory in relation to the escalation of capitalism, the Civil Rights Movement and the emergence of the mass media as the dominant cultural force. Unlike Soul, the great Jazz was created mainly by the giants of the genre: Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Lester Young, Bird and Diz, Monk, Mingus, Miles and Trane. Incidentally, there is a similar problem with Keb Darges Deep Funk whereby the great Funk was made almost exclusively by the major bands: James Brown, JBs, P. Funk, Isleys, Ohio Players, War, Kool and his Gang, Earth Wind Fire, Sly Stone, Graham Central Station, Con Funk Shun, Cameo, Commodores, Fatback Band, Maze, Slave, BT Express, Brass Construction, Brothers Johnson, Rufus, Average White Band and one or two others. Curtis could still pull out the odd gem though, like ( 3:36 ) Randy Brown on Parachute on his radio show with Giles Peterson at the Bognor Weekender. Incidentally, where Alex first got the idea for a Jazz Funk Weekender in the North, and I first got the idea to steer him towards a Soul Weekender with its heart in a dedicated Soul Room. Curtis played I'm Here off Intimately while everyone else was pushing I was Blessed. Also his Modern Soul Greatest Hits and radio shows at the early weekenders were terrific. Talking Bognor leads nicely on to London and the South. Make no mistake, there are many fine DJs down there, though it is not a way of life for so many and to the same extent, which is not necessarily a bad thing. Bob Jones is the nearest thing I have ever heard to a Deep Soul DJ. He names himself Dr. Bob Jones and claims to play the Real Jazz and Soul, though his choice of John Coltrane track is a good illustration of what I described above. I met him at Caister and shook his hand but I don't think I was important enough for him. By Southport, perhaps intimidated by the likes of Searling on their home turf, he started playing ( what we used to call ) Street Soul, which is perhaps what he deserved after the handshake. Mark Webster also impressed me playing Real Soul and Albert King - yes Albert King - at a club at London Bridge. He was a Blues and Soul journalist but is now anchor for Channel 5s American Football coverage. He recently guested on the BBCs virtual jukebox where people nominate records and went for Lou Reed ahead of Curtis Move on Up, which is unforgiveable. Speaking of unforgiveable, Nicky Holloway was the Souths answer to Alex; prepared to play whatever he thought might make him rich and famous. Cain Gang manager Phil Mitchell was DJing at Walkers in Newcastle and playing their version of Respect Yourself. Alex thought this shocking so I asked Nicky Holloway, who routinely played equally terrible records, if he would play it. When he said no I asked him if I could redeem myself by requesting some Geater Davis, naively expecting such an important person to know of the great man. He later told Alex I had asked for Tina Turner, at which point Alex, always keen to impress anyone from the south, typically threatened me with violence. Holloway discovered the Balearic Beat, made a heap of money and even Alex eventually admitted he was an irrelevance. Incidentally, Paul Cook was the other Walkers DJ so I gave him a spare copy of the Staple Singers but he continued playing the Cain Gang, which WAS shocking. Terry Jones and Ian Clarke also deserve mention and enjoy popularity among Soul Folk throughout the country, though they lack the gravitas of Bob Jones, Searling et all. Caught Terry Jones at the last Blackburn and he was OK but he was OK, at his best playing Just Soul like Brothers gonna work it out. There were people enthusing about stuff I didn't know and I cringed a little as I wondered whether that was me 20 years ago. However, chatting with Queen Ethna recently, an old flame and one of the countries' most illustrious active Soul Fans, I told her that I haven't heard anything of any significance recently that I didn't know 20 years ago, and she agreed that I have been extraordinarily lucky in Music; and not just catching the best era of Modern Soul, but Rock, Prog Rock, Just Soul, Funk, Northern Soul, Disco and Jazz Funk. Even my Deep Soul years coincided with the revitalised Malaco label before it got safe, as well as Beverly Glenn and Soundtown. The pop/ Rock media even reckon my teenybop years in the sixties was the golden age of pop, though I find the Beatles and their spawn no less lightweight, twee, superficial and passÃÆ’© than any other pop music. Probably the most important Black Music DJ in the country is Chris Hill. I have mentioned elsewhere his appearance in Durham in 78, but would also like to mention an appearance at Prestatyn. Acid House was just becoming massive in the big room and he arrived in the alternative room, erected a banner saying Acid Free Zone, to the cheers of the crowd, and played one of finest sets of Soul Music, not particularly what he's known for, I've ever heard. As he left he looked genuinely brassed off. Were I to invite a guest DJ to play a Soul Night and ask them to play slightly off kilter Soul, I would anticipate he would do a better job than anyone else, expecting Levine, Curtis, Searling or Bob Jones to be either too clever or too complacent. He has been a genuine giant in Black Music in this country for almost 50 years. But the first MBE went to Norman Jay, presumably because he's black and associated with the Notting Hill Carnival which gets extensive media coverage. He's also one of the pioneers of Rare Groove and a big Philly Man. I used to look after his girlfriend while he was off being a superstar. Once in the radio room at Southport, he handed over to Bob Jeffries but forgot his name. Bob thanked him for the last hour and, off the top of his head, outlined his full and extensive itinerary for the week. Somebody had been passing sweets around and Bob had the packet at the time but, when Norman asked for one, he told him he'd had enough. Best of the Scottish jocks, Bob Jeffries played all 3 rooms which just goes to show that broadening your horizons actually improves the Soul Music you listen to. In his top 5, he included the sublime Whats's happening baby by the Soul Children from the seminal album Friction, and Margie Joseph Ridin High, perhaps having heard Paul Cook play my copy on Berwick Radio. Another Scot, Tom Jackson was a genuinely nice bloke who all the girls fancied and whose wife, all the blokes fancied. Because Alex and I weren't getting along and he couldn't bear that my old mate Colin Johnson, famous for nicknaming me Silk, wasn't really contributing for his free weekend, Alex brought him in to help with the DJ timetables. The only consequence was that Tom got better spots than he probably should have which Alex and I allowed for the reasons stated above. He broke Curtis Anderson and JP Bingham at consecutive weekenders but is now mostly blamed for the really naff records which snuck through, which may or not be fair. I'm pleased to say that, unlike others, I was never enamoured with Billy Davison, the third Scott. I recently read an article by him in Blues and Soul where he rubbished the DJs, himself included, for playing so many seventies records. Nowadays it's more or less accepted that, for the last 20 years, after my involvement ended I might add, the Soul Room limped through R n B and Soulful House, but it now seems to be acknowledged that the sixties and seventies, was, is, and almost certainly always will be the Golden Age of Soul. I'd like to conclude my survey in the North East. With the exception of me at the Manor House, Frankie has been the best Soul DJ in the North East, and a cornerstone of the North East Soul Scene for almost 40 years. The Red Lion in Chester le Street was a much loved party night in the eighties featuring Frankie, Alex and Paul Cook. On the bus through we would line up the records we knew for certain we would hear: Joy and Pain, Movin, Aint no stopping us now, Runaway Love, I love music; mostly good stuff but done to death. Frankie would go on first and play Mecca Northern, Modern and, what would now be called crossover, while Alex and Paul cowered at the back, terrified of his Karate black belt and inhuman strength and fitness, moaning that he wasn't playing what they considered classics. For a handful of us, ready to embark on our Weekender Odyssey, this was why we came. Bit of an afterthought. I recently saw Craig Charles and he seemed more interested in dramatically removing his jacket and flinging his arms about like a Superstar than playing anything decent - or perhaps he didn't think anybody could see him behind the decks without a box or his platforms. Checked out some of his radio playlists though and he always plays something good and I'm talking JR Bailey good. However, best show on the radio is Fun Lovin Criminal Hughie who plays a mix of Soul, Funk, Jazz, Blues, Reggae, World Music, hip hop, SinAtra and genuinely alternative Rock - including Zappa - on Radio 2 from midnight on Friday. If I'm honest, he plays more misses than hits, but you never quite know what he's going to play and it's never less than interesting. I only know of one other person who can do what he does , so if you live in the North East, listen to this space.
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Northern Soul Was Built On... (Frontpage)
Stevesilktulip replied to Stevesilktulip's topic in All About the SOUL
members blog type post Music. A constantly changing and evolving body of work, not the same 200, 300 or even 400 orginal vinyl records on a loop. The music was played on a variety of original vinyl, pressings, emi-discs, British reissues, compilation albums, tapes and stages. It was not played on CDs because they didn't exist nor computers because they weren'... Click here to view the soul article in full -
members blog type post Music. A constantly changing and evolving body of work, not the same 200, 300 or even 400 orginal vinyl records on a loop. The music was played on a variety of original vinyl, pressings, emi-discs, British reissues, compilation albums, tapes and stages. It was not played on CDs because they didn't exist nor computers because they weren'... Click here to view the soul article in full
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Whats The Best Weekender You Have Attended And Why?
Stevesilktulip replied to Mrtag's topic in All About the SOUL
Thoroughly enjoyed Bognor and my 2 Caisters. Berwick was a warmup for Fleetwood. The second was probably the pick as the final one was too busy and an indication of how lucky Alex has been that the place didn't burn down or someone crushed to death, however Sam Dees was beyond words. Morecambe seems to have been forgotten even though it was the only one with a decent size Soul Room. I did about 3 at Southport which I loved; more than any of the previous 3 venues the Soul Room at Southport really belonged to me. I'm told it's never been the same since. Prestatyn was great around the time of Acid House, almost solely for Chris Hills extraordinary Soul Set, not particularly what he's known for, when he erected a banner saying Acid Free Zone to the rapturous cheers of the crowd. I know people who go to Cleethorpes, Skegness and the latter day Prestatyn but all agree the early Upnorth Weekenders were the pinnacle. -
Don't know much about the prehistory, but the Soul Weekender as we know it really began in Bognor Regis circa 86. Myself, Alex, Paul Cook and the late Rob Bogie made the trip.The Funk Mafia had abandoned Caister for a brief stop on the south coast before moving on to Prestatyn. Caister had continued but people like Martin Collins had to step in to fill the shoes of the likes of Chris Hill and people like Blues and Soul journalist Mervin Anthony were brought in for the alternative room. We knew Mervin cos he loved Newcastles women and he made regular trips and we all met up at Bognor. Incidentally Colin Curtis and Jonathan from Nottingham were special guests. Through Mervin, Alex was drafted in to replace Bob Jones playing Real Soul and Northern in the alternative room and on the radio at Caister. After Alex left Richard Searling did it briefly. Alex hadn't really played any significant Soul since about 77 so I pretty much told him what to play. These experiences led Alex to explore the possibility of a Weekender in the North East and we turned up in Berwick. Alex wanted a Jazz Funk Weekender like Caister or Bognor but there wasn't any demand for it in the North so myself and I believe Richard Searling guided him towards a weekender with its heart in a dedicated Soul Room. Perpetually frustrated by the crowds packing into the Soul Room leaving big gaps in his Big Room, Morecambe was probably the ultimate Weekender in that respect, with 2 big rooms, but history seems to have all but forgotten Morecambe Eventually he got the Jazz Funk Weekender he had always wanted but only.after we parted company over musical and monetary differences. It's pretty unanimous they were never the same again.
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Manor House Soul Night 23rd June 2012. People journeyed from as far afield as Norfolk and Wigan but most of the North East intent on cutting their noses off to spite their faces. Those who did come were visually shocked and elated by the difference in the quality of music compared to the other nights on offer in the North East. What is it the bible says about prophets and their home town? A local who went to Wigan in its dying days and thinks Gloria Jones is one of the greatest songwriters ever, but hasn't been to a Soul Night or bought a Soul Record since, didn't come over from the bar, presumably because he said to me a few days earlier, you know it's the real deal when you hear the needle hit the plastic. I wonder if, in another 30 years, he'll realise just how stupid he sounds. Since I no longer work there, it's unlikely I'll do another so it will no doubt remain one of those strange anomalies, a fantastic venue with, the best Soul Music ever played in public in the North East, which most North East Soul Fans didn't bother to go to. I suppose if you think there are only the same 200 records ( the ones I was listening to in the mid 70s ) or the alternative 200 records ( the ones I was listening to in the late 80s ) it doesn't really matter where you go to hear them. It's hard to imagine the North East will have another credible Soul Night in our lifetime but I'm hopeful for a mobility scooter dance floor and an antique record store. The scene is no longer sufficiently callow for somebody like Alex to come back from Bolton with 70 records and become a dj or, as happened on the Modern Scene, somebody inherits a pile of money, buys a few expensive records and becomes a dj for 6 months while they're big/ in-demand. It's often said the North East Soul Scene is too crowded so, if you don't have about 36 years including Northern Soul, Jazz Funk, Modern Soul and - CRUCIALLY - Just Soul, and not just from a Northern Soul perspective or picking up odd bits along the way like the Rhetford boys, you should probably step aside. Alternatively, if anyone has youth on their side and no baggage ( prejudice, politics, plastic ), that would be fantastic, but it's hard to imagine young people being attracted to it in its present state. My wife has always asked me why I do it: I don't need to, hate djing, hate doing them, lose money on them, don't do it for me, do it for people who don't actually want me to and, with so much Music going on in my life, don't really have time or need it. I don't particularly care that much if the North East Soul Scene remains a joke, even if I was instrumental in briefly injecting a little credibility a quarter of a century ago by guiding Alex towards the Soul Weekender as opposed to the Jazz Funk weekender he always wanted and eventually got. It all makes for a fantastic chapter for my book though. Hi Kev, understand the ' concise ' response to my views on Rhetford was Peter. Because of my computer skills I thought it was someone else whose ' taste ' is a million miles away from Rhetford and if I'd realised or thought about it I probably wouldn't have done it. I realise the intention in the term Just Soul, but language doesn't always do what it's told and the first 2 connotations are the two I desribed. When Jonathan was playing 3 Soul records on BBC Newcastle Soul Show he called it ' Beneath the Radar ' while I would have called it ' Above the Radar '. IMHO both Jonathan and Rhetford reflect what the language actually says rather than what they wanted it to. Don't forget my degree is in English so I know about the the power of languge. It isn't that Rhetford doesn't float my boat, it's just that it doesn't do what it says on the packet which is another missed opportunity. I can't think of more than 7 good records I heard and I hear that week in, week out in Aycliffe, Gateshead, Easington etc. In 2012 with the right people you should be able to do better than that. I also think it is neither one thing or the other; it isn't a good Modern Night nor a genuine Just Soul Night and I'm surprised either crowd would be quite satisfied which is why I think it's all hype. Also, if they'd had any enthusiasm they'd have been up to hear what I was playing, I hate half-heartedness from people who claim to be committed. This reaks of arrogance. Take care and regards to Peter.
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By any reckoning, CC is one of the 5 most important Northern Soul djs ever and, taking Black Music more broadly, is on his own among them. He requires no defence from me but I'll attempt to do so anyway. In fact this is deja vu for me. In the early days of the weekenders, as word got round I was responsible for the dj schedules, some of the more junior djs would ask me how come he got all the best spots when he always played the same records. Not so, I would protest, sometimes he opens with Flowers, sometimes Beloyd, sometimes Gloria Scott but never Collins and Collins. You never knew if he would play Jesse James or Anthony White, he had 2 Jeff Perry tracks to choose from and 2 versions of Lucky Fellow. Sometimes he played the Carstairs before the Montclairs and sometimes Cashing In before either. Later he added the Dells. If still not convinced, I would remind them that they were all perfectly capable of playing all of these records but none of them actually wanted to. With Searling, he was the only dj with nothing to prove to anyone and, if Richard occasionally appeared to look on with disdain, the rest of us thoroughly enjoyed the opportunity to lighten up for an hour. In short, he got the best spots because he is Colin Curtis and without people like him there wouldn't be people like us. I should also mention his radio shows were far more interesting. Last friday at the Swallow Hotel in Gateshead, emerging as the best of the North East nostalgia nights, he was criticised for committing the cardinal sin playing the incorrect variety of plastic, variously described as crap and disgraceful. In the absence of any explanation why this was so terrible, the presumption must be that it is obvious or common sense, words entirely anathema to anyone with any cultural studies. I have never had an issue with formats, perhaps because I had pocket money for my first 4 years as a Soul Fan and wanted lots of records rather than a few collectable items. Without pressings, British releases and compilation albums djs like Alex could never have become established and Northern Soul could not have thrived beyond a few local pockets and would have quickly imitated the dodo. Also, I always try to catch all the live acts which I consider an important part of music appreciation which clearly has nothing to do with some vinyl/ cd dichotomy. I have never understood why vinyl collectors can't listen to cds like a live performance or a radio show and then buy them on vinyl. I found myself buying cds by accident. I moved into a tiny room with no record player, no records and no space. Since I was mostly listening to music in the car, the obvious format was cassettes and Dean of Expansions named me the cassette king. I recall Malaco were very good at putting out their product on cassette and I was an avid Malaco listener. As cassettes became more scarce I started buying cds and getting people to tape them for me. When I bought a house with my girlfriend she brought her cd player with her. I had always sold records to buy new so selling cds was easy. By buying and selling I got through an astonishing amount of, not only Soul, but Jazz, Blues, Reggae, Rock, Classical, World, pop, rock and roll, folk, country and western, hip hop... For me to do with vinyl what I did with cds would be like crossing the road in LA. My Amazon basket has over 400 items and I buy albums every week, sometimes every day. Away from Soul Music the debate has concerned itself mainly with sound quality. Initially cds were trailed as an improvement but recently the discussion has surrounded compression and authenticity, another word reviled by culture students. I don't worry too much about sound quality lest we all end up listening to Dire Straits and the latest Beatles remasters and never get to hear early Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington and Country Blues or Reggae's premier label Studio One, renowned for its poor sound. All of the above have improved dramatically beyond anything achieved on vinyl. With Soul Music, I get the impression it's not the quality of the sound but that perennial demon politics ( economics, religion, sport ). I always find it ironic that you cannot put on a Soul Night without advertising it via networking but you are not supposed to use technology to mediate the actual music. Whenever I go to Esington I always wonder whether the film footage they show is VHS or Betamax. Recently somebody told me Soul Music will always be intrinsically linked to vinyl, like s/he would know and I wouldn't. Ninety years ago it was widely thought that recorded Classical Music would never catch on but it would always be wealthy, educated people reading music from manuscripts, playing the piano and attending concerts. Nowadays most people cannot read music, do not own a piano and do not attend concerts and it is hard to believe that, in another ninety years, record players and records will exist other than in antique shops. Indeed, it could be argued that cds are already obsolete. Make no mistake, if Soul Music is dependant on vinyl, apart from Marvin Gaye's masterpieces, Stevie Wonders more accomplished albums and a few other odd bits, Soul Music will disappear. Colin Curtis has managed to upset people in the past but has always proved ahead of his time. I see the increased availability of Soul Music via cds and computers as a positive thing. No longer are there big/ in demand/ rare record only available to people with the most money and the greatest access to dealers. This will open up the playlist beyond the same 200 records or the next 200 records or the 200 records after that and Soul Fans will be richer because of it. photo Lucky Hell by tetradtx, on Flickr
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To the connoisseur, Northern Soul has been around since the late sixties, but to the majority of civilians it was one of the things that happened in pop music between the Beatles and punk rock. For either position to deny the other is somewhat disingenuous; certainly there was more to it than mere chart music, not least because it led to bigger and better things for many who stuck around, but it is difficult to deny that something extraordinary happened in its Golden Age. It is easy now to laugh at the fashions, the pop records, dodgyy instrumentals and novelty records and I agree that many of the records haven't aged well. If I were listening to Steve Wright in the afternoon non stop oldies and they were playing records from the last 10 years, I would protest that they are not oldies. In the mid seventies the records played in the name of Northern Soul had been recorded over the previous ten years and many were new releases. Now they are between 35 and 45 years old and, while some have matured magnificently - Mel Britt and Tobi Legend spring to mind, I am certain that if people listened to them beyond pure nostalgia, more would agree that many of them sound at best passe and at worst ridiculous. However, I also think that, with not nearly enough exceptions, the discoveries of the last 35 years represent obscurity for the sake of it and/ or a celebration of the ordinary just to ensure that nobody else knows or cares about them. If I were to line up my favourite Northern Soul records very few were not ' out ' by 78 and I think flipping over Jack Montgomery is the best thing that has happened since. The relationship between Northen and Modern is one which no 2 Soul Fans seem to agree on. Popular myth would have it that everything changed with the Carstairs, but as we know from the Beatles, Wigan and punk rock, myths seldom reconcile with events on the ground. I recall reading an interview with Ian Levine when Russ Winstanley banned Bobby Franklin and Snoopy Dean from the decks at Wigan and he was not saying this was the biggest change since the Carstairs. Indeed, in the excellent book the In Crowd, he claims Crown Heights Affair Dreaming a Dream is the ' definitive late Mecca record. ' Perhaps Ladies Choice and Shake and Bump have fallen through the middle because they are not terribly good records and, in their own ways, the Carstairs and CHA are. And of course you can always rely on Levine, like myself, for a bit of audacity. The conclusion therefore is that the Carstairs did not lead to Modern Soul but to Disco, Funk and Jazz Funk. My own view is that, while there are obvious similarities and parallels, they are essentially separate scenes. The aforementioned Mecca records tended to be let out, mostly by Curtis, as part of his greatest hits set, and there were the 70s records which emerged during the 80s, but the Modern scene probably achieved its apogee at the early weekenders, just before the northern revival took hold, and was dominated by people, often with a background in Northern Soul, who had dug deeper than Marvin, Curtis, Teddy and Womack and discovered Sam Dees, Lamont Dozier, Leroy Hutson, Donny Hathaway and Leon Ware and then dug deeper still. The problem was that, like the northern scene, it quickly developed a same 200 records syndrome, with everybody following Searling and/ or Sam. Natch this is all discursive and dialectical which is what makes it, and us, so rich.
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Thirty years ago I travelled to London to see Buddy Guy and Junior Wells, Albert King and John lee Hooker Tap to view this Soul Source News/Article in full
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Thirty years ago I travelled to London to see Buddy Guy and Junior Wells, Albert King and John lee Hooker ( a lineup the like of which will never be seen again ). I recall being struck by the total lack of Soul representation and a complete takeover by Rock Fans going into raptures over Buddy Guys extraordinary licks. For decades the pop/ Rock media have told us we can have gospell but the Blues is theirs .But it isn't, it's ours too. Recently I saw Michael Roach in Durham; a Black American Country Blues artist and there wasn't a familiar face in the building. Normally I run a mile from a singer with just a guitar but this is how this music is supposed to be played and he is also a Blues Historian and the history of Blues is the pre-history of Soul. About a year ago my son and I saw Larry Garner at the Darlington Arts Centre. LG is a native of Baton Rouge, Louisiana and one of the most important Blues artists to emerge in the last 30 years and there wasn't another Soul fan to be found. My son was carrying a guitar injury so we ended up talking guitars with him and the band and he invited him to join them on stage. Thirteen and with a bandage on his hand, my son can still play a bit and took the roof off. Consequently he became fanatical about Blues which ultimately took us to a Blues Festival in Switzerland to see Howlin Wolf pianist Henry Gray, Soulful Blues singer/ guitarist and another of the modern greats - Joe Louis Walker, top of the bil for my son Larry McCray - another modern great with a Soulful voice and perhaps the finest Blues guitarist since Buddy Guy. Top of the bill for me, Otis Clay, a regular at the festival, because in Switzerland, like most places, Blues and Soul go together. Recently Larry Garner returned to Darlington and, since I'd seen him in Keighley a week earlier ( guess what - no Soul Fans), and knew his set and his jokes, found myself people watching and people clearly couldn't believe they were watching an artist of this calibre making such incredible music in a tiny room in Darlo. Michael Roach, LG and Henry James are not Soul singers in the way Joe Louis Walker, Larry McCray, Bobby Bland, Little Milton, Buddy Guy, Otis Rush, Albert and Freddie King and Robert Cray are, but all Black American Blues Singers are soulful, I like to make the distinction, with a small s. Recently I was at a Soul Night in Sunderland and people kept saying to me - this is better than Muddy Waters and this is better than John lee Hooker - and I was reminded that Frankie Lucas used to say that some of the stuff I listen to is so Soulful it's almost Blues and I figured this is where it came from. I've been listening to Blues for 30 years, alongside Soul, and Reggae and Jazz and lots of other things. In the mid eighties I saw Bobby Bland, Johnnie Taylor and Denise LaSalle ( and Mosley and Johnson ) on the same bill and Latimore and Little Milton on the same bill. Can anybody say categorically, once and for always, whether Bobby Bland or ZZ Hill are Blues or Soul? photo JuniorWells1996 by Masahiro Sumori (Own work), from Wikimedia Commons
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There are more misses than hits at Rhetford. I was flying it and somebody asked me if I play wedding music as well. First Betty Wright single is not great for someone with so many great records. Spinners Could it be is a great record but on Morrisons playlist. I don't want to ttravel 2 hours and pay £6 to hear that. Hello Stranger Barbara Lynne just didn't work. Jean Plum here I go again, Dramatics Watcha See and Lery Hutson Lucky Fellow are Great records but were 20 years ago at Fleetwood, Morecambe and Southport. The Just Soul speil introduced one of the 2 big Staples Singers recordss with the same melody - hardly extraordinary. The wrong Sandra Wright track, lots of what I guess is crossover with poor songs and worse singers. Problem is it just ends up being another northern/ rare Soul Night with a few add-ons. I asked them if I could use the term, not because I don't hate it, but because its following deserve to know there is a genuine Just Soul night 2 hours up the road with no misses. They refused because they want to make lots of money out of it. Had I not hated the term I would have used it anyway. I hate the term because, firstly it means unimportaant ( it's not important, it's just Soul ) and secondly it means borderline ( is Barry White Soul? Just. ) Where would we all be if Dave Godin had told Ian Levine he couldn't use Northern Soul. Don't get me wrong, I enjoyed the night, largely for 3 records: for years I didn't buy Superfly cos I thought I'd have it covered and the rest would be chase/ necking tracks. Finally bought it in early 80s and would play NTOM followed by the album followed by NTOM. However, every nerd with Superfly ( of which there are many ), knows the track. George Jackson I have also known since the early 80s and have played it a couple of times but all credit to them for filling the dancefloor to it. However, every nerd with a Hi compilation, ( of which there are many ) has this also. Still Waters is amongst the best of their post HDH tracks but hardly a revelation. I have missed the last 3 nights at Rhetford because of the Impressionsr, Otis Clay in Switzerland and work commitments. The idea is absolutely right but hardly theres and others do it better.I do it better in the North East and Searling and Terry Jones are doing it in the little room at Blackburn. If you want another rare Soul night which plays a few other things as well then this is for you, but it in no way deserves its hype and others who have been have said the same to me.