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Everything posted by Kenb
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I do know the BPI I can now dance to, is also now proportionate to my BMI. Let’s just say at 140 bpm i have to sit down ½ way through.
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it's a very good book, and well worth reading.
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Songs with a spoken part... What’s the best (or your favourite) ‘talking song’ N.S track?
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see...i'm not just stupid, i'm thick as well-Tuesday morning
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doh! (monday morning) posted pm Henry
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Hi Henry I'll have this one, pls. Mamie Galore It ain't necessary/Don't think I could stand it M-/classic/great flip too St. Lawrence 30 rgds, Ken
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be prepared...how to become a millionaire. Start of with £10 million and then get hooked on N.S. welcome.
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It's not his opinion I object to-however I'll informed it may be. Worse for me...is the "skew" from responses on the guardian site (someone has already mentioned)
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As much as I'm not a fan of the article...and I've put it in the "it's his opinion pile" - what's more irritating is most of the "bandwaggoning and I can pee higher" comments left on the guardian site(not SS), and these I've put in the "this puts the essence of the scene back years"
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Cheers. Go ahead.
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anyone kind enough to post a soundfile/youtube, etc for Leroy & the upstairs maids version please. Not Joey Irving...etc.
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50 years ago, this month R&B Voices of the 1967 Race Riots This is just a short piece to acknowledge the 50th anniversary. Before the Newark and Detroit riots, the 1July 8th 1967 Billboard reported…“the record industry will be a focal point of a campaign attempting to ease racial tensions during the so- called "long hot summer days". Clyde Otis spearheaded the drive to enlist record company support to supply DJ’s with special ’public service records’ that will get a message of brotherhood and good -will across to the listener. Columbia VP Bill Gallagher and Mercury Records executive Charlie Fach okayed “Take A Look", Aretha Franklin and “This Bitter Earth”, Dina Washington. Neither planned to release these records for commercial sale. The A&R issues and assignations of the Motown Corporation during the 1967 Detroit riots are well documented - as dealt with by Stuart Cosgrove in his book Detroit 67 The Year That Changed Soul. But what might be overlooked is one of the other 100+ civil disturbances in 128 American cities that happened in 1967. Newark. July 12th-17th. The Newark riots/rebellion was 12 days or so before Detroit. And 26 died. The Band Leader 2On the night of July 12, 1967 Clement and Bonnie Moorman were driving home from a gig at the Governor Morris Hotel in Morristown, New Jersey. “As we came home,” he recollects, “we had to come through Irvington. The National Guard was there on the streets and they had their machine guns and everything. You had to show identification, and you had to reach very carefully because they were trained to shoot”. Clement Moorman was one of the Piccadilly Pipers. A Newark band. https://www.discogs.com/artist/891081-The-Piccadilly-Pipers The Pipers included Moorman on piano, Al Henderson on bass, Ernie Ransome on guitar and Bonnie Davis on vocals (she was the mother of singer Melba Moore). Several tracks were recorded including "Don't Stop Now" which on March 6, 1943, reached no.1 on the "Harlem Hit Parade", which was later renamed the R&B Chart. Eventually they recorded several songs on Melmar. Right after the Melmar recordings, Ernie Ransome left the Pipers and by November of 1954, Ernie was appearing, in Philadelphia, with a group called the Tempos, (assumed perhaps to be those of ‘Why don’t you write me’ Bofuz 1106 or USA Records 810). The DJ One of the criticisms of R&B radio stations during the outbreaks of violence and destruction of that long hot summer was their total dis-involvement. 3”Thus, all the stronger spotlight should be played on the role of a Negro deejay -and a woman, at that-during the recent Detroit riots. Although threatened by radical elements, Martha Jean Steinberg of WJLB continued on the air, pleading for peace and pleading for her listeners to keep calm. And this first lady of R&B radio has an enormous radio following. It has been said that, without her efforts, the Detroit disaster might have been much, much worse”. The Stores According to local sources, many of the record and high- fidelity shops are out of business. Some, virtually destroyed by fire, looting and general destruction will not reopen. According to one source, 4”Clinton Music Shop and Red Top, a one -stop, are two stores which have shut their doors permanently”. 1http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Billboard -Aug 26th 1967 Billboard 2http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Billboard -July 29th 1967 Billboard 3Siegal, Kimberly, "Silent No Longer: Voices of the 1967 Newark Race Riots" 10 July 2006.CUREJ: College Undergraduate Research Electronic Journal, University of Pennsylvania, http://repository.upenn.edu/curej/31. 4http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Billboard -July 8th 1967 Billboard
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what is the oldest (by first written date) side on an NS release
Kenb replied to Kenb's topic in All About the SOUL
yes-1901 is gonna be hard to beat. -
hope it's not be on thread before? (Bobbi & Michi) The Sound of Soul ‘Wrapped Up Tight’, JOSIE 972. The A side is ‘Stranger in Paradise’ - a popular song from the musical Kismet (1953), and is credited to Robert Wright and George Forrest. There must be other generally known NS releases to have an earlier first written date than this. What are they?
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Time for #7 in this now well established series of Northern Soul 'connections' infographics from @Kenb Northern Soul Connections #7 - Two Ladies Two Songs This time around we are looking at two ladies and two songs with similar melodies, the ladies being La Reine La Mar and Marion Stewart and the songs..... site note have added the two tracks being talked about below La Reine La Mar - That's Not The Way To Love - CLOUD 503-B Marion Stewart - I Must Be Losing You - R Records R-1516-B
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This would make a good 'double headed visit' worthwhile...assuming it happens, and within my lifetime! Founder LaMont Robinson and his board members, have discovered a site that could potentially be the new home for the Rhythm and Blues Hall of Fame Museum. This site is located less than a half mile away from the Motown Hitsville USA Museum. A city-owned building on West Grand Blvd., which was the site of a former nursing home. Cheryl Ruffin, Vice President of the Rhythm & Blues Hall of Fame and the daughter of the late great David Ruffin of the Temptations, also chimed in; “this would bring such a major economic boost to Detroit”. Full story- https://www.soultracks.com/story-rb-hall-of-fame-home
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The Poor Souls-'When My Baby Cries'
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hasn't Wayne Cochran got to be int there soewhere? maybe i'm outta date?
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I do think Takis became Rafters. And guess what...I think Colin Curtis did a DJ stint for a while?
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I'm pretty sure TOTT, Takis and Rowntree's were all owned/run by the same family
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i remember 'Black Skin Blue Eyed Boys'- The Equals...shaking the place to pieces about 1971. TOTT- right next door to Spin Inn where i got my B&S mag's from.